DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 61, February 10, 1960 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
PAGE THREE Six Point Plan to Aid Athlctic Program
Southern
Cal ifornia
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Larry Sherry to Face Trojans on Bovard
VOL. LI
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1960
NO. 61
Lawyer
Finance
Fills
Post
Dr. Carl M. Franklin, returning from a six months position at Naval War College, takes over the job of vice president of financial affairs this week.
A professor of law at SC since 1D53, Dr. Franklin has participated in the instruction program at the Naval War
-------- College, where he filled an honorary chair of international law, for the past six months.
The college is ihe top graduate school of the Navy and gives a concentrated one year program for officers.
Prepared “Blue Book”
Dr. Franklin acted as consultant to the president of the college on current matters of in-ernational law. He also conducted research and prepared the Navy “blue hook” on international law which will be published in the latter part of the year.
The usual term of duty at the college, located in Newport, R.I., is one year, but because of his appointment as vice president of financial affairs, he was released in time to l>e at SC on Feb. 1.
Dr. Franklin plans to start studying the financial problems of the university. “We are now conducting these studies to determine the financial budget for ihe next fiscal year,” he said.
Research in Holland
While in his post at the Naval War College, he was sent to the i Hague, Netherlands, for three weeks to do research work at the Academy of International Law.
‘The Hague, which is the seat of ihe International Court of j Justice, or World Court, has Ihe j greatest library in the field of international law in the world,” Dr. Franklin believes.
He also participated in a dis- ;
cussion of the 1958 Geneva Con- j
ference of the United Nations on
the law of the sea while he was in Europe.
Accompanied By Family Dr. Franklin's wife and four ' children accompanied him on the j trip to Rhode Island. His wife, a former librarian, went to Eu-Huntington Reach fields. Other rope with him and helped with
well known ocean wells are lo- research.
DR. CARL M. FRANKLIN
. . . new vice president
Geologist Says Oil oí Future Lies Offshore
The oil of the future lies offshore. relates Dr. Kenneth O. Emery. SC geology professor and oceanographer, in his recently published book. “The Sea Off Southern California.”
“When the price of oil goes up or supplies of petroleum that can be peached by wells on land run low, man will begin to drill more under the ocean,” he predicted.
About five per cent of the oil In California comes from offshore wells, most important of which are the Wilmington and
CANCER EXPERT TO OPEN MEDICAL SCHOOL TALKS
Dr. Joseph \V. Beard, one of the nation's leading cancer research scientists, will speak on the relationship of cancer and virus-induced tumors before SC medical students and professors today at 4:3ft p.m. in the Los Angeles County General Hospital auditori-u m.
Discussing “The Status of Investigating of Yicur-Induced Tumors,’ D’r. Beard will review the total problem of viruses as one cause of cancer, said Dean Loosli of SC's School of Medicine.
A professor of surgery and associate professor of virology at Duke University, he is the first of eight leading cancer research scientists who will be guest lecturers at SC’s School of Medicine.
Dr. Beard was one of the first researchers to purify animal viruses and to prepare vaccines against influenza viruses, Dean Loosli said.
In his experiments the cancer research scientist worked with several animal viruses, particularly those which have caused tumors in chickens.
After receiving his degree from Yanderbuilt University in 1929 and serving a residency there. Dr. Beard joined the Kockerfeller Institute in New York. There he worked with Dr. Payton Rouse, one of the first scientists to show that tumors in animals could be produced by viruses.
Dr. Beard joined the faculty ranks of Duke in 1937.
Other lecturers in the series will be Dr. Michael B. Shimkin, chief of the biometry branch, National Cancer Institute, Washington. D.C.; Dr. Charles Heldelberger, professor of oncology, University of Wisconsin; and Dr. George O. Gey, associate professor of surgery and director of the l innev-Howell Cancer Research laboratory, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
Also speaking will be Dr. Harry S. N. Greene, professor and chairman of the pathology department, Yale University School of Medicine. New Haven, Conn.; Dr. Jacob Furth, director of research, Roswell Park Memorial Center. Buffalo, N.Y.; Dr. David A. Karnofskv, member of the Sloan-Kettering Institute and co-chief of the chemotherapy service at its Memorial Center in New York City; and Dr. Lester Bre-slow, chief of the bureau of chronic diseases, California State Department of Public Health.
Architecture. Student Blasts Footprint Plan
By HAL DRAKE [president, said today.
Skull and Dagger’s “foot- I “Skull and Dagger has come prints for Tommy” is a good UP with an interesting idea idea, but it is immature and shows a lack of planning. Bill
O'Malley to Go to Bat For Major League Ball
which would give a central location to the university,” he con-
Fellowships Garnered by Grad Students
Thirty-four National Defense Fellowships have been received by SC for graduate students, said Dr. Milton C. Kloetzel, Graduate School dean.
History, philosophy and German graduate departments, have received fellowships for the first ! time.
“The history department received eight, the largest number of history fellowships awarded | to any college in the country,”
■ Dr. Kloetzel said.
Two-Year Period
The philosophy department received six of the followships and j the German department five.
Fifteen fellowships, the largest I number awarded to any one department at SC, are held by the English department. These grants have been received over a two-year period.
Eligibility requirements include completion of baccalaureate degree or its equivalent and U.S. citizenship or residence in this country for other than temporary purposes.
Applicants must also Intend to enter the teaching profession.
Special Purpose
“These fellowships are specifically designed for making available throughout the country a larger teaching force, especially in higher institutions,” he said.
A brochure which acts as a directory and general information pamphlet concerning the fellowships may be purchased in the
bookstore for 75 cents.
PENNANT WINNER—Dodger Owner Walter O'Malley prepares to take the "hot seat" for a question-answer period with SC Faculty Club members at noon today. O'Malley's appearance coincides with "Dodger Day" on campus. The well-known sports figure will be asked to |ustify the existence of major league baseball in the Los Angeles area.
caicd off Alamitos, S^al Rcach. Montalvo. Newport Beach and Redondo Beach.
“Some idea of 1he value of these offshore oil resources can be seen in the total value of production 1o date, which is nearly a billion dollars. Those returns are only from extensions of known o’l fields of Hie coastal area.” Dr. Emery said.
Sediments containing petroleum deposits are found on Iho bottom of the ocean off the Southern California coast.
"These sediments are exactly like those which several million years ago filled a former underwater basin on which Los An-pn'es is hu'lt,” he s?iid.
"The succe-s of o;l wells on lat.d indicate« that oil can also be found at sea.” he poin’edout.
'The Los A'i'teies bac;n is prec-on'ly producing about 100 m>l-
ighy i:
o times fn-tcr ttv<n wa< formed. Dr. Emcrv
' I he sunit.nl required to make this petroleum al=o had Vvvit 10 mil I’on times ihe energy that is presently being recovered as petroleum. However, e'en though nature’s «'ora™ o' 1 he solar energy has b^en in''r-f-ent. it is in a form thrt is cheaper tit tan and use t!iari solai energy at our present level of technology." b« sa;d.
Dr. Emerv has been at work on his own book for 22 years.
KUSC to Air
Money Refcrm
< >ai is. >(. econom-•k on “Monetary i KITSC-FM’s new
nom-
iteli
station in c the econonv
Caris wil| r
svst ‘
m et ’men
Previous lo his present position. he served for five years as assistant to ihe president and five years as director of the academic budget at Ohio State University.
He was formerly executive vice president of the University of Oklahoma and registrar controller of the University of Alaska.
New Grants Will Increase Med Studies
SC's School of Medicine, back- I ed by new funds, will extend its | campaign against sickness in the ! fields of tuberculosis, arthritis and rheumatic disease, it was announced loday.
With hopes of aiding 600,000 arthritis sufferers in Southern California, ihe local chapter of ihe Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation gave SC a -S120.000 grant lo finance the creation of ! a department of rheumatology.
The new dej>ar1men1 will train doctors as rheumalologists and will carry on research.
SC is now considering a proposal made to the Medical School by the Pasadena Tuber- ) culosis Association to finance a research program on tuberculosis. Tlie disease strikes a new | victim every 6 minutes and ki Is every 40 minutes, figures of the local association report.
Directors of the association have offered partial support to SC researchers on a malching-fund basis with the university. J Th«> association would donale up ! to S12.000 annually.
In the event that the associa- ' lion should withdraw its sup- t port. SI00.000 has been pledged as a forfeit.
Art Lecture To Be Held
Walsh, School of Architecture: tinued. And for this reason
--------------------------------------| alone, no one should be against
it.”
Sees No Relation
“Their suggestion of placing SCs collection of athlete's footprints at the base of Tommy Trojan, however, does not include plans to blend them into an interesting scheme that would keep them in relalion to the general campus layout,” the
Lovell to Tell Faculty Wives About Africans
“South Africa: Land of Contrast and Conflict” will be discussed by Dr. Colin R. I^ovell today when he speaks lo the Faculty Wives Club in Town and Gown Foyer.
An SC associate professor of history, Dr. Lovell will illustrate his lecture with slides taken during his year in South Africa as a Fulbright scholar.
Dr. Lovell's knowledge of Africans and their native language. and his familiarity with the South African situation, will give a personal outlook to his lecture
Dr. Lovell was the first scholar given access to the diary and private papers of the late Gen. J. B. M. Hertzog, prime minister of the Union of South Africa from 1924 to 1939.
An arlicle by Dr. l>ovell on South Africa in the June, 1958 issue of Current History magazine was selected as one of ihe ton l>est magazine articles of that month by a council of librarians.
SDX Society Slates Noon Meet Today
Sigma Delta Chi, professional architecture president declared, journalism fraternity, will hold A poll taken on campus yes- a mee1ing today at noon to dis-terday showed that, for the most ^ s for g dinner.meeting
part, nobody would object to the ...
footprint plan. and to consider national conven-
Limey Tide Gives Longevity Secret
Inhabitants of Yorkshire, Eng-1 A new climate discovery — in land, may have found the secret ! the colder zones of the North to Shangri La longevity in their Pole — was also discussed, rigorous climate, said Dr. Rob- Dr. W. Wr. Kellogg, chief of ert E. Stevenson, SC director the Planetary Sciences Group
of inshore research, at a recent I that a hitherto undefined energy I gers
American Geophysical Union source which hovers over the ; home
meeting held here. j North Pole at high altitudes has present West Coast home.
His report, given along with a temperature hotter than any The Dodgers’ moved West
31 other scientific pa[)cis, was j 0,her portion of the globe at a and the Giants’ trek to San
Dodger King Answer Faculty Club
By BARBARA EPSTEIN
Big league baseball goes on the witness stand this afternoon
at SC.
Walter O'Malley, owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball organization, will fire back answers to questions of Faculty Club members at their regular luncheon meeting at 11:45 a.m. in the foyer of Town and Gown.
The owner of the L.A. ball club will be on the “hot seat” to coincide with “Dodger Day” on the campus. Forsaking a planned speech for a flurry of
cross-examination by SC faculty, O'Malley will be asked to justify the presence of major league ball in the Southland.
On th»» Spot
Dr. Russell L. Caldwell, president of the Faculty Club, said that O'Malley will be “put on ; the spot” to examine the rela-i tionship of “big league ball to big league learning.”
“The Dodgers are living in the neighborhood of a great university, and we want to know if O'Malley feels any identification ! with it,” said Dr. Caldwell.
“If he does, we want to know
: what kind of identification it is,” he added.
The present Dodger ballpark is located almost “across the street” from the SC campus, in the Exposition blvd. bordered Coliseum. Exposition blvd. forms the southern border of the Trojan campus.
FI r*t -1)*»
Brooklyn-born O'Malley will be given a first-degree interrogation by SC professors, Dr. Caldw’ell promised.
O’Malley himself has behind him a colorful and exciting career which saw added controversy when he brought the Dod-from their Ebbets Field in Brooklyn into their
Most of the students questioned felt that. Tommy Trojan was a logical location for the footprints.
Needs “Spirit” Point Word s like “appropriate,“ “spirit” and “more significance” were used to express the students' feelings that SC needs a central “spirit.” point.
As engineering student Ray Rocks put it, the footprints, along with Tommy Trojan, would hHp give SC “more of a showpiece.”
Those who felt the idea would detract from the harmony of the I campus did not suggest that it be forgotten entirely.
Jim Glass, a freshman in phar-i macy, felt the program should j be expanded to include educators as well as athletes.
But he pointed out "footprints, whether i athleles.’ are ugly.”
tion resolutions.
David Farmer, president, said that the group would discuss plans for the forthcoming dinner and go over, in some detail, resolutions passed at this year’s SDX convention.
The chapter will also consider admission of a new journalism chapter in Utah which has applied for admission.
read before 200 geophysicists and engineers at the annual Pacific Southwest regional meeting of the American Geophysical Union, part of the National Research Council.
Healthy Climate Dr. Stevenson, who recently returned from a year's oceanographic study in England, said that people who live in York-
similar altitude.
Released Energy
He explained that this newly discovered source of heat is a “release of chemical energy stored in atomic oxygen. Despite the darkness of the Arctic winter, at a 60-mile altitude over the North Pole the temj>erature is 40 to 60 degrees hotter than during the period of the sum-
Theologian Will Speak
Dr. John Cobb, SC professor of theology, will discuss the question. “Is the Idea of God Exist -that entially Relevent?” at 6 tonight poets’ or in the University Methodist ' Church basement.
This feeling was also expres- Dr. Cobb will speak following (Continued on Page 2) I the 5 p.m. dinner.
shire attribute their unusual I mer sun •
vigor and long life to the cli- Dr. Kellogg indicated that the
mate. j next step will be to determine
"The tidal mixing off York- ; what impulse initiates this chem-
shire is responsible for the belt ! jcal actj0n in the mesosphere.
of cold water off that coast, a ; v: . ...
, , .. New Discovery
belt which in turn causes the |
Another “cold” discovery was also reported. Hans Pruppacher, a Swiss student working for his
climate of the area to be rigorous,” he said.
A different kind of correlation of climate and water temperature was discussed by Dr. Gunner L. Roden of Scripps La Jolla Institution of Oceanography for the area off California.
Correlate Well On the basis of statistical re-for Rand Corporation, reported that air and water temperature correlate well but are unrelated to precipitation along the Southern California coast.
Swords Will Fly on Bovard Stage When Old Japanese Tale Unfoids
By BOB COI’RTEMANCHE i the Samurai, by his wife and . maid's daughter, elevates her to ■ ter, but -the result promises to
Furious on-stage sword play the bandit and finally as it real- a lady and believes in her, Jar- I foe very effective.
! zen said.
if
wi.l highlight the action in the | ly happened.
I.os Angeles stage premiere of. In ihe first three episodes, "Rashomon," a tale of old Japan'each person tells it in a manner to be presented by the SC dra- that glorifies himself, ma department in Stop Gap “Rashomon” will be presented Theater this week. in Stop Gap Thealer Thursday
The sword play has l>een through Sunday evenings at 8:30 coached by Moroa Mori, fencing : p.m. Tickets are priced at $1 for
“It's a difficult role, because
“We worked for a month on the dialogue is limited for my I the form and only in the last characler — a lot of it has to 1 |Wo weeks blocked out the fight,” be facial expression,” he added. Jarzen said.
Professional Actor
Pataki has done extensive professional work in Ihe movies and
In tl
tl
a re When t Vi C1 ] fun nea
is listeners !t Tennes-County.
(¡aris ^ays. oor all of
nt 1r;ed io
per
Symbolism of abstract styles ‘s his listeners of oainting will be discussed by Keith Crown. SC associate professor of fine arts, at noon loday in the upstairs gallery of the Fine Arts Building.
Crown, who has been painling in a free abstract style for several years, will use some of his latest creations of tide pools along 1 he California coast in his present at ion. ad Purpose of Ihe discussion is to »'t help the viewer lo belter his understanding of the work of other :un> mat their abstract expressionists and to
l*re»ent is $5 explain ihe symbolism of this
type of painting.
govern
them with mo-» national 1he\ objected be’ause it bankrupted their econ-
coach for the United States opening night and at $1.50 and on such television shows as
3*1 for succeeding performances. | Playhouse 90, M Squad, Adam
Tickets Scarce and Eve and the I^oretta Young
Production manager Bill Show.
White reports that ticket sales He plays the bandit who, in are proceeding rapidly, and. con- , the different episodes, appears sideling Stop Gap's capacity of ; “brutal, whimpering and fairly little more than 100, those wish- gentile.” His costume, a roughing to see it should get their j textured dull orange material, tickets soon. Tickets are at the establishes him as a very poor
Olympic Team and Japan’s national champion in the sport of kendo, an art derived from the swordmanship of the ancient Samurai warriors.
The duel in "Rashomon,” actually two duels, will be performed bv Bob Jarzen as the
husband—an honorable Samurai
and Michael Pataki as the drama office, 3709 Hoover st.
.1 they h and didi lib it. that tin
bandit.
Story Repeat«
The reason for 1 He repetition of the duel is that the story of “Ra>homon,” concerning a rape and murder in a Japanese forest in Kyoto of 1000 years ago. is
Bob Jarzen. the play’s duelist, is an Ohio native and has played in “Boy Friend,” “Carousel” and other productions here, and has worked on several television programs in his home state.
“I play the role of a proud
“The action will be very quick and violent,” he explained.
This will be a return to the type of action which pleased the crowds in Shakespeare’s day, when every play was expected to include a vigorous and lengthy duel or battle.
“Rashomon” is being presented by the campus group of the National Collegiate Players under the direction of John C.
man who has been toughened to Blankenchip. associate professe world. ' SOr of drama.
Mori, the fencing coach, is a The play was adapt ed by personal friend of Michiko Su- Michael and Fay Kanin from
doctorate in meteorology at UCLA. found that when water remains in the form of drops it can remain liquid at lower temperatures.
Meteorologists hope to understand the processes underlying possible artificial stimulation of precipitation through such experiments.
Moon Mineral« Discussing altitudes higher than the clouds and the North Pole, Dr. Jack Green, research geologist for North American Aviation, said that valuable minerals may be found on the moon by the first space pioneers.
“Assuming that the craters on the moon were caused by volcanic activity, scientists could expect to possibly find sulfur, boron and chlorine compounds.
! The process that could enrich such elements on the moon may be similar to the one which enriched these elements in sea
water on the earth,” he said.
Crusoe Existence Since the first man to land
on the moon will have to lead
a Robinson Crusoe existence — using anything and everything he can fintl — existing raw materials on the moon will also be important to his survival, Dr.
Green said.
“For example, sulfur, the most abundant volcanic material, could be mixed with large amounts of rr*ck dust created by volcanic action on the moon to make a waterless cement.
“This material could also be cracks in natural lava caves and
Francisco-is credited to Walter I O’Malley.
1 His first efforts centered not on changing the locale from Ebbets Field, Rrooklyn. to Los An-! geles but upon building a new ¡stadium for his Brooklyn “Bums.”
Wants Challenge
Before his 1947 try for a new stadium he had maintained that | the Dodgers had “deteriorated into a noncontending ball club.”
“I decided that the thing to do was get my new stadium and | get in a competitive position—
| get the customers who could I give me the money to compete again,” O'Malley said.
In 1947 he contracted away Ebbets Field — called by Time magazine to be nothing more than “cribbed, cabined and confined spaces.”.
New Home
But efforts to build a new stadium in the East failed and O’Malley eyed the West Coast as a new home for his team.
In 1956 he visited Los Angele*, talked with Mayor Norris Poul-son and eventually ended up with a contract for Chavez Ravine.
The terms of the contract, dubbed a “giveaway” by many Angelenos eventually raised enough stir to call for a referendum.
The referendum, held in June, 1958, okayed the city’s gift to the team. Chavez Ravine was picked as the new site for a stadium to be erected for the Dodgers.
The stadium has not yet been started, and the Dodgers have spent two seasons playing in the Coliseum, taking the World Series title there in 1959.
Almost immediately after O’Malley’s victory in the June referendum where the measure passed with a final vote of 345.-435 to 321,142, leaving a margin of 24.293. a new flame was added to the still-boiling pot.
(Continued on Page 2)
Today s Weather
three storie* by Ryunosuke used to seal up fissures and Akutagawa, a Japanese writer. 1 tubes on the moon in which Mori also coached the sword man could create air pockets
zuki, a drama major who plays tl.e wife. It has been quite a job for him to train the players in a month in a discipline which scenes for the New York pro- j since the moon has no atmos-
repeated four times, as seen by | man who marries a kitchen | has taken years for him to mas- j duction.
phera- of its ow n,” he said.
Student« should put on their rubber« and pock their umbrella« today to be ready for the rain which Ihe weatherman gives » 7(1 per cent chance of falling thin morning.
The low last night was (5 degrees. The high today will be an exhilerating 62.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 61, February 10, 1960 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 61, February 10, 1960. |
| Full text |
PAGE THREE Six Point Plan to Aid Athlctic Program Southern Cal ifornia DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Larry Sherry to Face Trojans on Bovard VOL. LI LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1960 NO. 61 Lawyer Finance Fills Post Dr. Carl M. Franklin, returning from a six months position at Naval War College, takes over the job of vice president of financial affairs this week. A professor of law at SC since 1D53, Dr. Franklin has participated in the instruction program at the Naval War -------- College, where he filled an honorary chair of international law, for the past six months. The college is ihe top graduate school of the Navy and gives a concentrated one year program for officers. Prepared “Blue Book” Dr. Franklin acted as consultant to the president of the college on current matters of in-ernational law. He also conducted research and prepared the Navy “blue hook” on international law which will be published in the latter part of the year. The usual term of duty at the college, located in Newport, R.I., is one year, but because of his appointment as vice president of financial affairs, he was released in time to l>e at SC on Feb. 1. Dr. Franklin plans to start studying the financial problems of the university. “We are now conducting these studies to determine the financial budget for ihe next fiscal year,” he said. Research in Holland While in his post at the Naval War College, he was sent to the i Hague, Netherlands, for three weeks to do research work at the Academy of International Law. ‘The Hague, which is the seat of ihe International Court of j Justice, or World Court, has Ihe j greatest library in the field of international law in the world,” Dr. Franklin believes. He also participated in a dis- ; cussion of the 1958 Geneva Con- j ference of the United Nations on the law of the sea while he was in Europe. Accompanied By Family Dr. Franklin's wife and four ' children accompanied him on the j trip to Rhode Island. His wife, a former librarian, went to Eu-Huntington Reach fields. Other rope with him and helped with well known ocean wells are lo- research. DR. CARL M. FRANKLIN . . . new vice president Geologist Says Oil oí Future Lies Offshore The oil of the future lies offshore. relates Dr. Kenneth O. Emery. SC geology professor and oceanographer, in his recently published book. “The Sea Off Southern California.” “When the price of oil goes up or supplies of petroleum that can be peached by wells on land run low, man will begin to drill more under the ocean,” he predicted. About five per cent of the oil In California comes from offshore wells, most important of which are the Wilmington and CANCER EXPERT TO OPEN MEDICAL SCHOOL TALKS Dr. Joseph \V. Beard, one of the nation's leading cancer research scientists, will speak on the relationship of cancer and virus-induced tumors before SC medical students and professors today at 4:3ft p.m. in the Los Angeles County General Hospital auditori-u m. Discussing “The Status of Investigating of Yicur-Induced Tumors,’ D’r. Beard will review the total problem of viruses as one cause of cancer, said Dean Loosli of SC's School of Medicine. A professor of surgery and associate professor of virology at Duke University, he is the first of eight leading cancer research scientists who will be guest lecturers at SC’s School of Medicine. Dr. Beard was one of the first researchers to purify animal viruses and to prepare vaccines against influenza viruses, Dean Loosli said. In his experiments the cancer research scientist worked with several animal viruses, particularly those which have caused tumors in chickens. After receiving his degree from Yanderbuilt University in 1929 and serving a residency there. Dr. Beard joined the Kockerfeller Institute in New York. There he worked with Dr. Payton Rouse, one of the first scientists to show that tumors in animals could be produced by viruses. Dr. Beard joined the faculty ranks of Duke in 1937. Other lecturers in the series will be Dr. Michael B. Shimkin, chief of the biometry branch, National Cancer Institute, Washington. D.C.; Dr. Charles Heldelberger, professor of oncology, University of Wisconsin; and Dr. George O. Gey, associate professor of surgery and director of the l innev-Howell Cancer Research laboratory, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Also speaking will be Dr. Harry S. N. Greene, professor and chairman of the pathology department, Yale University School of Medicine. New Haven, Conn.; Dr. Jacob Furth, director of research, Roswell Park Memorial Center. Buffalo, N.Y.; Dr. David A. Karnofskv, member of the Sloan-Kettering Institute and co-chief of the chemotherapy service at its Memorial Center in New York City; and Dr. Lester Bre-slow, chief of the bureau of chronic diseases, California State Department of Public Health. Architecture. Student Blasts Footprint Plan By HAL DRAKE [president, said today. Skull and Dagger’s “foot- I “Skull and Dagger has come prints for Tommy” is a good UP with an interesting idea idea, but it is immature and shows a lack of planning. Bill O'Malley to Go to Bat For Major League Ball which would give a central location to the university,” he con- Fellowships Garnered by Grad Students Thirty-four National Defense Fellowships have been received by SC for graduate students, said Dr. Milton C. Kloetzel, Graduate School dean. History, philosophy and German graduate departments, have received fellowships for the first ! time. “The history department received eight, the largest number of history fellowships awarded to any college in the country,” ■ Dr. Kloetzel said. Two-Year Period The philosophy department received six of the followships and j the German department five. Fifteen fellowships, the largest I number awarded to any one department at SC, are held by the English department. These grants have been received over a two-year period. Eligibility requirements include completion of baccalaureate degree or its equivalent and U.S. citizenship or residence in this country for other than temporary purposes. Applicants must also Intend to enter the teaching profession. Special Purpose “These fellowships are specifically designed for making available throughout the country a larger teaching force, especially in higher institutions,” he said. A brochure which acts as a directory and general information pamphlet concerning the fellowships may be purchased in the bookstore for 75 cents. PENNANT WINNER—Dodger Owner Walter O'Malley prepares to take the "hot seat" for a question-answer period with SC Faculty Club members at noon today. O'Malley's appearance coincides with "Dodger Day" on campus. The well-known sports figure will be asked to ustify the existence of major league baseball in the Los Angeles area. caicd off Alamitos, S^al Rcach. Montalvo. Newport Beach and Redondo Beach. “Some idea of 1he value of these offshore oil resources can be seen in the total value of production 1o date, which is nearly a billion dollars. Those returns are only from extensions of known o’l fields of Hie coastal area.” Dr. Emery said. Sediments containing petroleum deposits are found on Iho bottom of the ocean off the Southern California coast. "These sediments are exactly like those which several million years ago filled a former underwater basin on which Los An-pn'es is hu'lt,” he s?iid. "The succe-s of o;l wells on lat.d indicate« that oil can also be found at sea.” he poin’edout. 'The Los A'i'teies bac;n is prec-on'ly producing about 100 m>l- ighy i: o times fn-tcr ttv |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1362/uschist-dt-1960-02-10~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 61, February 10, 1960

