DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 23, October 22, 1959 |
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PAGE THREE ‘Matodoro' Reveals Life As Novice Fighter
Southern
DAILY
California page four
Norman Invasion Aimed
trojan
At Troy Defenses
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1959
Candidates for Office Reach End of Race
National Newspaper Week died today. The editor or publisher who delivered the final eulogy for freedom of the press is again sitting at his desk putting into prose form the realities of life which persons throughout the Republic will read this afternoon.
We deem it a pity that after the sound of the eulogy has faded away so, too, shall fade away the newspaper readers’ awareness that this “climate of freedom” we have cherished since 1776 is constantly in danger of becoming as snioggv and uninhabitable as lu)s Angeles on a day the winds are wrong.
The danger today is not from government licensing; that battle has long since been won in nearly every court in the land. Today the fight is for what we call freedom of information — or the reader’s right to know. Like the kings and governors of old. government today, from the small-town cop to the executive, legislature and courts in Washington, tries to keep secret certain information, or to let only a certain amount of it or a certain picture of it leak out to the public.
This is contrary to a newspaper’s reason for being which is to present the world as it is. Papers, admittedly, are human institutions, and often are guilty of manipulating the news. But as far as possible, no matter what the pressure brought, newspapers should stick to the business of presenting things just as they are.
Censorship at the source of information or anywhere else attemps to twist the truth. This is the danger of which the public must be aware, not just one week, but 52 weeks a year.
When truth becomes twisted, or when only part of it is told, our climate of freedom must cease to exist. The Bible first expressed it with the words, “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”
Ken Unmacht and Ron Sherman end their race for the sen-»ior-at-large position today when the polls close at 4 p.m. in the freshman elections run-off.
The two candidates were forced into a run-off position last week when Sherman drew a three-vote edge over hopeful May tor McKinley.
This pitted Sherman into battle against the top-man in the contest. Ken Unmacht. for the vacant senatorial seat.
Also seeking election in today’s run-off are the candidates for freshman class president, Dick Messer and Stephen Ber-shad.
Vying Candidate«
Judy Crumrine and Faye Henderson are vying for freshman class vice-president.
The polls, located in front of Doheny Library, will open at 9 a.m.
Elections commissioner Marjorie Hirsch reminded students to bring their identification cards with them when they vote.
“This will make the process function much more smoothly,” «he explained. “No one can vote unless he presents a student body identification card.”
Hopeful
All candidates in the run-off elections are hoping that more «tudents will vote.
Only 900 votes were cast for senator-at-large in last Thursday's voting, said Miss Hirsch.
Freshman turnout was somewhat betier wilh 45% of an estimated 1100 enrollment goirfg to the polls.
Sherman fell that his fhree-vote gain over McKinley would have risen considerably if more voles had been cast.
Confident Lag “I am still confident lhat I ran make up any lag in votes.” he declared.
Out of the 900 votes cast for senator-at-large last week Unmacht received 359 votes. Sherman and McKinley received 276 and 273 votes, respectively.
They are running to fill the vacancy left when Joe Nida, Heeled in last fall's campaign, had to return to Michigan because of an illness in the family.
The position was put on the Freshman election ballcn because | of a provision in the ASSC Con- j stitution which requires a sena- j tor to be enrolled at the univer- j sitv during his term in office.
directly to his family, he finally manages to communicate his sincere love for them.
Popular Song«
Among the well-known songs in "Carousel” are “If I Loved You,” “June Is Busting Out All Over.” “Soliloquy,” “When the Children Are Asleep" and "You'll Never Walk Alone.”
Director Blankenchip also directed "The Boy Friend" and (Continued on Pat»> 2)
The pain of angina pectrois, a chronic heart ailment, can now be relieved by a newly dis-
: covered drug, an SC professor I revealed yesterday.
Speaking before more than
200 doctors attending an SC Medical School symposium at Ihe Statler-Hilton Hotel, Dr.
! George C. Griffith said that the drug, while not a cure “removed y the pain in the chest and left arm of more than 70 per cent of the angina victims studied.’’
Nitro’s End
Angina victims have been treated with nitroglycerin for more than 200 years, but this is j the first time that medical science has been able to find a drug that would allow patients to stop taking nitroglycerin and still find comfort, he said.
“The drug removes the pain i so completely that these pa-: tients will no longer have to lake nitroglycerin,” the doctor ' declared.
The new discovery is a very I potent drug. Dr. Griffith ex-i plained, adding that "no patient ! dare take it unless under care- 1 ful supervision by a physician.
Relieves Pain “At the same time that it relieves pain. it. improves the patient's outlook on life and brings about a feeling of elation,” the SC physician said.
He described the dangers , that could occur if a person were to take the drug w'hile not undergoing medical care.
"With the drug, the patient can walk great distances formerly out of the question. Without pain there is no limiting factor in his physical exertion,” the doclot* pointed out.
Exertion Danger “Therefore there is the dan- '■1 ger that he will overdo himself both physically and mentally,” he continued. 1
For this reason the drug is ' given in small doses and tailored 1 expressly to the needs of each < patient. 1
The drug itself, a monoamine < oxidase (MAO) inhibitor, was accidentally discovered to be effective in treating heart disease, i Dr. Griffith added. c
Club to Guest Ra'1 Tickets Demo Hopeful StiN on Sale
Rooter train tickets to the SC-California football game are still on sale in front of the Student Union, said Mike Thomson, organizer of the project.
Round trip tickets are $22.75. This includes transportation to and from San Francisco, a lunch and entertainment. A oneway ticket is $13.50.
The ticket booth is open from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and will close tomorrow.
DT Photo By Bob Hol.«te
LARKS IN JUNE—Sharon Bliss, left, and Melissa Murphy break into a chorus of "June Is Busting Out All Over," in practice session for "Carousel" by Rodgers and Ham-merstein which opens in Bovard Auditorium this evening.
U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass, a top contender for the 1960 democratic presidential nomination, will appear at SC next month, reports Bob Chick,
| president of the Trojan Demo-: cratic Club.
Senator Kennedy, a leading Democrat and sponsor of the recent Kennedy-Ives Labor Bill, will speak in Founders Hall on Monday, Nov. 2, at 2 p.m.
“Kennedy’s speech should be one of the outstanding events of the year,” Chick said.
The Trojan Democratic Club, which is sponsoring the Kennedy talk, is a senior democratic club chartered w'lth the Los Angeles County Democratic Committee. It is the only college political club in California with such a status, Chick said.
Club officers include Mike Igoshin, vice president; Janet Kazanjian, secretary; Jerry Sherman, treasurer: aurl Dr.
Paul Saltman. faculty adviser.
Dr. Paul Sa Italian, associate professor of biochemistry, will match his university wit with G roue ho Marx tonight at 10
p.m.
Or. Saltman will appear «hi “You Bet Your Life” television program on KRCA, Channel 4. with SC graduate Kay Cantonwine.
Marx spotted Or. Saltman when he appeared on another television program. After two extensive interviews, he was scheduled for the show.
The program will he broadcast on radio Oct. 26.
Drugs Aid Medics In Mental Studies
Kappa Sigmas Await Hearing
Cultural Talk To Be Given
“The Idea of a Cultural Aristocracy" will be discussed today by Dr. Albert J. Guerard when he speaks to SC medical students as part of the Humanities Series being sponsored by the School of Medicine.
Dr. Guerard, professor of English at Harvard University, is now on leave from Harvard while he works at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford.
Last week Dr. William H. Werkmeister. director of the School of Philosophy, spoke in the second of this series.
Show to Gain Individual Acts
Law School Dean Holds Slim Hop For Acceptance of Chessman Plea
\ isuai sensitivity The Homecoming Show, to be
tvpical reaction to the presented Nov. 19 in Bovard Au-an extreme visual sen- ditorium, will consist of individ-to the texture of objects ua, acts in addi-
im and a metallic, tjon ,Q group Sfcjts this year, >ur aste rn h.s mouth saj(j Ruddv Fa Homecom-lonally his sense of ing Shovv chairman.
5 greatly increased, too. “ ,
‘times feel as if my en- ! ralen,ed individuals who smg, iv were being louched dance or have PrePared acts indred hands." he said such ma-ic- ->uS£|inK or com* ic schizophrenics seem • pd-v needed and mav aPP,y the drue- This ind.caies 1 for an interview in 230 SU. pre might be a similar ^arni,n said.
I. a natural metabolite Farnan explained that these ystem. people would be used to supple-
Large l>o*e ment and add community to this
require a dose six to ten year's show.
> large as a normal sub- “We want to present a well-
I are able to recognize rounded evening of entertain-hallucinations produced ment,” he added, drug are not the ones These people will not be en-marily experience. tered in the trophy competition
could be “saturated" and will be billed as “extra at-LSD-like substance and tractions,” he said.
I dose of LSD is only a Faman said that these people 1 the bucket and pro- wou|cj provide a foundation for immediate reaction, he „ list of talented individuals who rould he called upon for other (fonhnoed <»n Pace ?) i university functions as w'ell.
Imittee on Capital Punishment for the Citizen’s Advisory Committee on Crime Prevention to I the State Attorney General, he was questioned as to the feelings and actions of this’ commit tee.
“My committee is merely Irving to change the law concerned with capital punishment,’’ he ev-, plained.
"Some members of the com-i mittee, purely as individuals, have worked on Chessman's behalf,” Dr. Kingsley added. Private Action
'‘This, I must emphasize, was action performed as individuals and not as committee members,” he maintained.
During Chessman's ll12-year execution slay, the red-light bandit witnessed eight stays of ex-(Continued on Pac*> 2)
“To know whether or not Chessman deserved clemency, I would have had to look at all of the material handed to Governor Brow, and I have not the time or the opportunity to do so,” he explained.
Individual Situation
"The clemency matter is an individual situation” he asserted.
I “It is highly individual since it may be given to subject A and not to subject B.
“It is perhaps the most individualistic of judicial decisions,” Dr Kingsley conjectured.
“I don’t know any of the data of the clemency except what I read in the newspapers and this was not eomplete enough to enable me to give a valid opinion.” the dean pointed out.
Since Dr. Kingsley is chairman of the Southern Suhcom- 1
guesses on the decisions of the Supreme Court are only guesses and usually turn out to be wrong,” he added.
The eight-man court decision Chief Justice and former Ca I -; ifornia governor at the time of
j Chessman's conviction, Earl
Warren disqualified himself • -gives Chessman time to file a new appeal which is expected to be based on the technicalities of past court sessions.
Stay Refused
California Gov. Edmund Pat Brown had previously refused to grant Chessman a stay of execution.
“I haven’t had a chance to study the Chessman case in detail so I cannot express an educated opinion.” Dr. Kingsley said when questioned as fo the validity of Gov. Browm's action, j
Trojanaires To Practice
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 23, October 22, 1959 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 51, No. 23, October 22, 1959. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE ‘Matodoro' Reveals Life As Novice Fighter Southern DAILY California page four Norman Invasion Aimed trojan At Troy Defenses LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1959 Candidates for Office Reach End of Race National Newspaper Week died today. The editor or publisher who delivered the final eulogy for freedom of the press is again sitting at his desk putting into prose form the realities of life which persons throughout the Republic will read this afternoon. We deem it a pity that after the sound of the eulogy has faded away so, too, shall fade away the newspaper readers’ awareness that this “climate of freedom” we have cherished since 1776 is constantly in danger of becoming as snioggv and uninhabitable as lu)s Angeles on a day the winds are wrong. The danger today is not from government licensing; that battle has long since been won in nearly every court in the land. Today the fight is for what we call freedom of information — or the reader’s right to know. Like the kings and governors of old. government today, from the small-town cop to the executive, legislature and courts in Washington, tries to keep secret certain information, or to let only a certain amount of it or a certain picture of it leak out to the public. This is contrary to a newspaper’s reason for being which is to present the world as it is. Papers, admittedly, are human institutions, and often are guilty of manipulating the news. But as far as possible, no matter what the pressure brought, newspapers should stick to the business of presenting things just as they are. Censorship at the source of information or anywhere else attemps to twist the truth. This is the danger of which the public must be aware, not just one week, but 52 weeks a year. When truth becomes twisted, or when only part of it is told, our climate of freedom must cease to exist. The Bible first expressed it with the words, “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” Ken Unmacht and Ron Sherman end their race for the sen-»ior-at-large position today when the polls close at 4 p.m. in the freshman elections run-off. The two candidates were forced into a run-off position last week when Sherman drew a three-vote edge over hopeful May tor McKinley. This pitted Sherman into battle against the top-man in the contest. Ken Unmacht. for the vacant senatorial seat. Also seeking election in today’s run-off are the candidates for freshman class president, Dick Messer and Stephen Ber-shad. Vying Candidate« Judy Crumrine and Faye Henderson are vying for freshman class vice-president. The polls, located in front of Doheny Library, will open at 9 a.m. Elections commissioner Marjorie Hirsch reminded students to bring their identification cards with them when they vote. “This will make the process function much more smoothly,” «he explained. “No one can vote unless he presents a student body identification card.” Hopeful All candidates in the run-off elections are hoping that more «tudents will vote. Only 900 votes were cast for senator-at-large in last Thursday's voting, said Miss Hirsch. Freshman turnout was somewhat betier wilh 45% of an estimated 1100 enrollment goirfg to the polls. Sherman fell that his fhree-vote gain over McKinley would have risen considerably if more voles had been cast. Confident Lag “I am still confident lhat I ran make up any lag in votes.” he declared. Out of the 900 votes cast for senator-at-large last week Unmacht received 359 votes. Sherman and McKinley received 276 and 273 votes, respectively. They are running to fill the vacancy left when Joe Nida, Heeled in last fall's campaign, had to return to Michigan because of an illness in the family. The position was put on the Freshman election ballcn because of a provision in the ASSC Con- j stitution which requires a sena- j tor to be enrolled at the univer- j sitv during his term in office. directly to his family, he finally manages to communicate his sincere love for them. Popular Song« Among the well-known songs in "Carousel” are “If I Loved You,” “June Is Busting Out All Over.” “Soliloquy,” “When the Children Are Asleep" and "You'll Never Walk Alone.” Director Blankenchip also directed "The Boy Friend" and (Continued on Pat»> 2) The pain of angina pectrois, a chronic heart ailment, can now be relieved by a newly dis- : covered drug, an SC professor I revealed yesterday. Speaking before more than 200 doctors attending an SC Medical School symposium at Ihe Statler-Hilton Hotel, Dr. ! George C. Griffith said that the drug, while not a cure “removed y the pain in the chest and left arm of more than 70 per cent of the angina victims studied.’’ Nitro’s End Angina victims have been treated with nitroglycerin for more than 200 years, but this is j the first time that medical science has been able to find a drug that would allow patients to stop taking nitroglycerin and still find comfort, he said. “The drug removes the pain i so completely that these pa-: tients will no longer have to lake nitroglycerin,” the doctor ' declared. The new discovery is a very I potent drug. Dr. Griffith ex-i plained, adding that "no patient ! dare take it unless under care- 1 ful supervision by a physician. Relieves Pain “At the same time that it relieves pain. it. improves the patient's outlook on life and brings about a feeling of elation,” the SC physician said. He described the dangers , that could occur if a person were to take the drug w'hile not undergoing medical care. "With the drug, the patient can walk great distances formerly out of the question. Without pain there is no limiting factor in his physical exertion,” the doclot* pointed out. Exertion Danger “Therefore there is the dan- '■1 ger that he will overdo himself both physically and mentally,” he continued. 1 For this reason the drug is ' given in small doses and tailored 1 expressly to the needs of each < patient. 1 The drug itself, a monoamine < oxidase (MAO) inhibitor, was accidentally discovered to be effective in treating heart disease, i Dr. Griffith added. c Club to Guest Ra'1 Tickets Demo Hopeful StiN on Sale Rooter train tickets to the SC-California football game are still on sale in front of the Student Union, said Mike Thomson, organizer of the project. Round trip tickets are $22.75. This includes transportation to and from San Francisco, a lunch and entertainment. A oneway ticket is $13.50. The ticket booth is open from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and will close tomorrow. DT Photo By Bob Hol.«te LARKS IN JUNE—Sharon Bliss, left, and Melissa Murphy break into a chorus of "June Is Busting Out All Over" in practice session for "Carousel" by Rodgers and Ham-merstein which opens in Bovard Auditorium this evening. U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass, a top contender for the 1960 democratic presidential nomination, will appear at SC next month, reports Bob Chick, president of the Trojan Demo-: cratic Club. Senator Kennedy, a leading Democrat and sponsor of the recent Kennedy-Ives Labor Bill, will speak in Founders Hall on Monday, Nov. 2, at 2 p.m. “Kennedy’s speech should be one of the outstanding events of the year,” Chick said. The Trojan Democratic Club, which is sponsoring the Kennedy talk, is a senior democratic club chartered w'lth the Los Angeles County Democratic Committee. It is the only college political club in California with such a status, Chick said. Club officers include Mike Igoshin, vice president; Janet Kazanjian, secretary; Jerry Sherman, treasurer: aurl Dr. Paul Saltman. faculty adviser. Dr. Paul Sa Italian, associate professor of biochemistry, will match his university wit with G roue ho Marx tonight at 10 p.m. Or. Saltman will appear «hi “You Bet Your Life” television program on KRCA, Channel 4. with SC graduate Kay Cantonwine. Marx spotted Or. Saltman when he appeared on another television program. After two extensive interviews, he was scheduled for the show. The program will he broadcast on radio Oct. 26. Drugs Aid Medics In Mental Studies Kappa Sigmas Await Hearing Cultural Talk To Be Given “The Idea of a Cultural Aristocracy" will be discussed today by Dr. Albert J. Guerard when he speaks to SC medical students as part of the Humanities Series being sponsored by the School of Medicine. Dr. Guerard, professor of English at Harvard University, is now on leave from Harvard while he works at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. Last week Dr. William H. Werkmeister. director of the School of Philosophy, spoke in the second of this series. Show to Gain Individual Acts Law School Dean Holds Slim Hop For Acceptance of Chessman Plea \ isuai sensitivity The Homecoming Show, to be tvpical reaction to the presented Nov. 19 in Bovard Au-an extreme visual sen- ditorium, will consist of individ-to the texture of objects ua, acts in addi- im and a metallic, tjon ,Q group Sfcjts this year, >ur aste rn h.s mouth saj(j Ruddv Fa Homecom-lonally his sense of ing Shovv chairman. 5 greatly increased, too. “ , ‘times feel as if my en- ! ralen,ed individuals who smg, iv were being louched dance or have PrePared acts indred hands." he said such ma-ic- ->uS£ inK or com* ic schizophrenics seem • pd-v needed and mav aPP,y the drue- This ind.caies 1 for an interview in 230 SU. pre might be a similar ^arni,n said. I. a natural metabolite Farnan explained that these ystem. people would be used to supple- Large l>o*e ment and add community to this require a dose six to ten year's show. > large as a normal sub- “We want to present a well- I are able to recognize rounded evening of entertain-hallucinations produced ment,” he added, drug are not the ones These people will not be en-marily experience. tered in the trophy competition could be “saturated" and will be billed as “extra at-LSD-like substance and tractions,” he said. I dose of LSD is only a Faman said that these people 1 the bucket and pro- wou cj provide a foundation for immediate reaction, he „ list of talented individuals who rould he called upon for other (fonhnoed <»n Pace ?) i university functions as w'ell. Imittee on Capital Punishment for the Citizen’s Advisory Committee on Crime Prevention to I the State Attorney General, he was questioned as to the feelings and actions of this’ commit tee. “My committee is merely Irving to change the law concerned with capital punishment,’’ he ev-, plained. "Some members of the com-i mittee, purely as individuals, have worked on Chessman's behalf,” Dr. Kingsley added. Private Action '‘This, I must emphasize, was action performed as individuals and not as committee members,” he maintained. During Chessman's ll12-year execution slay, the red-light bandit witnessed eight stays of ex-(Continued on Pac*> 2) “To know whether or not Chessman deserved clemency, I would have had to look at all of the material handed to Governor Brow, and I have not the time or the opportunity to do so,” he explained. Individual Situation "The clemency matter is an individual situation” he asserted. I “It is highly individual since it may be given to subject A and not to subject B. “It is perhaps the most individualistic of judicial decisions,” Dr Kingsley conjectured. “I don’t know any of the data of the clemency except what I read in the newspapers and this was not eomplete enough to enable me to give a valid opinion.” the dean pointed out. Since Dr. Kingsley is chairman of the Southern Suhcom- 1 guesses on the decisions of the Supreme Court are only guesses and usually turn out to be wrong,” he added. The eight-man court decision Chief Justice and former Ca I -; ifornia governor at the time of j Chessman's conviction, Earl Warren disqualified himself • -gives Chessman time to file a new appeal which is expected to be based on the technicalities of past court sessions. Stay Refused California Gov. Edmund Pat Brown had previously refused to grant Chessman a stay of execution. “I haven’t had a chance to study the Chessman case in detail so I cannot express an educated opinion.” Dr. Kingsley said when questioned as fo the validity of Gov. Browm's action, j Trojanaires To Practice |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1369/uschist-dt-1959-10-22~001.tif |
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