SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 9, No. 1, June 22, 1959 |
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ummer Southern O <31 i-Fornì VOL. »X 72 tos ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1959 NO. 1 Strategic Berlin Crisis Attn Women: To Be Luncheon Topic School Ruie Urges Dresses The strategic city ot Berlin R. Townsend, professor in the SC department of German, at the Faculiv luncheon Wednesday noon in the Main Dining Room of the Commons Cafeteria. In his controversial topic. “Berlin, the Critical City,” Dr. Townsend will explain how deep the swirling currents now apparently engulfing Berlin are. * ! He will answer questions concerning a solution of the problem, if any, and he wili tell of the conflict between East and West in what he termed one of the .most significant crisis facing the Western world in our time.” Dr. Townsend has been at SC since 1946. In September he will leave the university to become the head of the Department of Foreign languages at Michigan State University, East Lansing. He received his AB from th<* University of Rochester, his AM and PhD from Northwestern University. Dr. Townsend has taught in China 1933-35, served war, 1943-44. He has also been to Vienna on a Fullbright Scholarship,and is a frequent traveler to Europe. A special invitation to the first Faculty Club Luncheon to the Summer Session has been extended to all Summer. Session visitors and students. Reservations can be made with Mrs. Es-covedo, Ext. 264 before noon on Tuesday. Officers of the Faculty Club are Lois Ellfeklt, president;- Robert L. Brackenbury, vice president; Angeline A. Howard, secretary; and John T. Waterman, historian. 1959 Trojan The Summer Trojan will be available to the students in newsboxes located in Founders Hall, Bovarcl Auditorium and in front of the Student Union. To the incoming Summer Session student, there will be many SC traditions which he will probably never hear about during his short summer stay at the University. But attention all women: You are now officially alerted about a very important and a very old tradition: All women must NOT wear shorts, slacks or pedal pushers to classes or anywhere on campus at any time. Dresses, skirts and blouses are appropriate attire for female students. This ruling as put forth by Assistant Dean of Students-Women Joan M. Schaefer and Summer Session Dean John D. Cooke, is a traditional ruling effective' throughout t lie entire calendar year. It preconcludes that only the accepled manner of dress will be expected. Visiting Professors Start Classes Today Princeton Professor Dark Tryouts To Teach Eastern Life To Be Held in StopGapToday Drama tryouts for an SC student’s original play, “Dark Harvest,’’ will be held today and tomorrow fom 3-6 p.m. in Stop Gap Theater. Dr. Herbert M. Stahl is directing this original play written by graduate student Louis Carlino. Dr. Stahl will also be in charge of the tryout«. “Anyone enrolled in Summer Session is eligible to tryout for the play. All he or she has to do is come to the corner of Exposition and Hoover, the site of ! Stop Gap Theater,” and act he said. Although the tryouts will only be held for two days, special tryout hours may be arranged though Dr. Stahl in the Drama Office. Carlino. now doing work in the graduate division of SC’s Drama department, has written several plays, recently performed by the SC Drama department. They include “The Brick and the Rose” and “Junkyard.” A Phi Beta Kappa while an undergraduate at SC, Carlino has also had a play performed away from the SC campus called “Car for Sale.” Dr. Stahl has directed the Summer Session plays for the past few years. Last summer, he was in charge of the memorable production, “Picnic,” and gained great success this fa!! with his production of the “Waltz of the Toreadors.” The sets are being designed by Harold Johnson * and rehearsers will start immediately j after a cast is found. Dr. Stahl said that he was very pleased with the original j play and he expressed the hope that students will come to the tryout to see how well they can act. I (ICditor's Not*: Tliis i* tlif first in n herips of articleii on visiting protestors teaching courses in S(”s Summer Session.) Dr. Lewis V. Thomas, a Princeton professor who has lived and taught in the Middle East, will teach two courses— International Relations and History—during the six week Summer Session this year. Diplomatic Issues in the Middle East (IR 426) and Islamic History and Culture (His. 418) will be taught this summer. Both are two unit courses. Dr. Thomas is a special au-j thority in Ottoman History. His work in and with Turkey has developed into many publications which include “Turkey: Guardian of the Straits,” (Current History July 1951) and “Turkey: Partner of the West,” (Foreign Policy Bulletin, August 1952). He is also co-author of “U.S. on Turkey and Iran,” 1951. Alter receiving his BA and MA at the University of Chicago, Dr. Thomas obtained his PhD from the University of Brussels. He then lived and taught in the Middle East, principally in Turkey. “The two courses I am teach-in a: during the Summer Session concern recent and contemporary problems in the Middle East and the coming emergence of Islam,” he said. Diplomatic Issues in the Middle East will discuss oil, Middle East nationalism, policies and interest of the Great Powers and recent diplomatic problems in this area. Islamic History and Culture will show the emergence of Islam, its religion, medieval culture, Arab-Islamic expansion from Mohammed to Nasser and other interesting aspects of this area. Professors from SC, 22 other universities in the U.S. and six foreign nations will begin teaching the nearly 8000 students enrolled in summer classes wrhich begin today both on campus and abroad. Six thousand day arid 2000 night students begin classes today for a six-week period which will end on August 1. The four week Postsession will run from August 3 through August 29. Nearly 200 of the students will be aboard the S.S. Mariposa on a six-weeks study cruise, in cooperation with the California Teachers Association, to Tahiti, New Zealand. Australia. Fiji, Samoa and Honolulu. Regular classes in education, internation-' al relations, Asiatic studies, geography, anthropology, psychology and drama will be taught aboard the ship. The faculty and staff, headed by Dr. T. H. Chen, will include Mrs. Chen, Dr. Lionel de Silva, Dr. and Mrs. John Reith, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Weckler and Dr. and Mrs. James Butler. Students have come from 14 states throughout the nation to combine a vacation trip with summer school. Another 25 students will go on a European history study tour conducted by Dr. Russell Cald-well, professor of history. On the campus, the National Science Foundation will offer institutes for high school teachers of biological sciences, chemistry, physics and mathematics. The foundation also offers a special program of instruction in laboratory research in order to improve the educators’ teaching methods and ability to interest able students in a scientific career. In the Journalism School, Di-rector John McCoy is offering a I course designed to assist high , school students in improving: their 1959-60 newspapers. The course is a special workshop being offered as an added feature and will stress staff organization and production of the student publication. Visiting professors from the 22 different universities include Harry C. Allen, University College, London; William V. Hicks, Michigan State University; Stephan Korner, University of Bristol, England; and Joseph A. Lauwerys, University of London. In addition, other visiting educators are David D. Raphael, University of Glasgow. Scotland: Harry L. Stein. University of British Columbia; Franklin Dunham. chief of radio and TV, U.S. Office of Education, Washington, D.C.; and Samuel M. Brownell, Detroit superintendent of schools and former U.S. Commissioner of Education. URA Summer Program Set A full summer of recreation will begin this week with dancing activities, swimming and field trips to the Huntington Library and Art Gallery, Marine-land and -Disneyland. Reservations for the off-campus events must be made - with Dr. Tillman Hall or Miss Eleanor Walsh at the URA (University Recreation Association) office, 112 PE, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Square and Folk dancing will begin tomorrow in the dance studio on the second floor of the PE building. Since the dances are free, students are urged to attend. On Thursday evenings there will be free social dancing and instruction in the dance studio. Change of Classes Official Notice Qualifying Examinations for the PhD examinations will *h* held this week of July IS. A request to take these examinations must he filed with the Dean of the Graduate School the FIRST week of the Summer Session. Instructions and Forms for filing the request may be obtained in the Graduate School Office, Adm. 204. M. C. Kloet/.e! Dean Graduate Sc1*<m>I Following are the class changes for summer session as reported by the office of Dean John D. Cooke. BIOCHEMISTRY £ NUTRITION: Drop 401 S0501. CHEMISTRY: Drop 105aL S0701. COMMERCE: Marketing — Change units of 200 P130T from 200 (3) to 200S (2). COMPARATIVE LITERATI• RE: Add 590b (1-2) DIRECTED RESEARCH to be arr S1625 Hadley Office. EDUCATION: Teacher Training — Add 454b (4) METHODS & DIRECTED TEACHING: Spanish 8-11:53 MTWTF HS3054 Cannon, Robinson, Anx 210. Add 464 b (4) METHODS & .DIRECTED TEACHING: Business Education 8-11:53 MTWTF HS3076 Cannon, Robinson, Adm 353. Add 475 (4) DIRECTED TEACHING IN JUNIOR COLLEGE to be arr HS3077 Cannon. Robinson, Adm 353. ENGINEERING: Electrical — Add 690L (1-4) DIRECTED RESEARCH to be arr HT3238 Staff Office. Add UC — 471 (2) ELECTRICAL TRANSMISSION LINES 7-9:40 p.m. Tu H8065 PCE 315. General — Change heading from University College — 6 weeks to University College — 10 weeks. ENGLISH: Change place of 100a S3701 to Anx 207. Change, place of 441 S3746 to FH 219. Change place of 526b S3772 to Anx 204. Change place of 544 S3778 to FH 202. Change place of 591 S3784 to FH 110. GEP.PGY: Add 550b (2-4) SPECIAL PROBLEMS to be arr S4324 Clements, staff Office. MUSIC: Composition — Add 590a (2) SPECIAL PRQJ- JECTS to he arr HS3119 Stevens WH 8. Individual Instruction — Add Piano HS6048 Bishop. Add String Bass HS6068 Dahl. FINE ARTS: Add 492a (5) SCULPTURE III to be arr HS3883 Gebhardt Sculp. OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY: Add 591L (1-4) «THESIS RESEARCH to be arr T6134 Howard Office. Add 591L (1-4) THESIS RESEARCH to be arr S6I36 Howard Office. PHARMACY: Materia Medica — Add 594a (2) THESIS to be arr S6213 Bliss Office. Pharmacy — Add 308 (1-2) DISPENSARY to be arr S6418 Smith Office. PHILOSOPHY: Change place of S6526 to MM5 Change place of S6530 to MM5 PSYCHOLOGY: Add — Civic Center — 484 (4) WORK GUIDANCE & COUNSELING IN EMPLOYMENT SERVICES 8-5 p.m. MTWTF (6-weeks) H9850 DCI Conference Room. SPANISH: Change place of 100a S7405 to SPB104. Change place of 514 S7431 to FH 209. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Change place of 530a S4626 t* FH 115. 0
Object Description
Description
Title | SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 9, No. 1, June 22, 1959 |
Full text |
ummer
Southern O <31 i-Fornì
VOL. »X
72
tos ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1959
NO. 1
Strategic Berlin Crisis Attn Women: To Be Luncheon Topic School Ruie
Urges Dresses
The strategic city ot Berlin R. Townsend, professor in the SC department of German, at the Faculiv luncheon Wednesday noon in the Main Dining Room of the Commons Cafeteria.
In his controversial topic. “Berlin, the Critical City,” Dr. Townsend will explain how deep the swirling currents now apparently engulfing Berlin are.
* !
He will answer questions concerning a solution of the problem, if any, and he wili tell of the conflict between East and West in what he termed one of the .most significant crisis facing the Western world in our time.”
Dr. Townsend has been at SC since 1946. In September he will leave the university to become the head of the Department of Foreign languages at Michigan State University, East Lansing.
He received his AB from th<* University of Rochester, his AM and PhD from Northwestern University. Dr. Townsend has
taught in China 1933-35, served war, 1943-44. He has also been to Vienna on a Fullbright Scholarship,and is a frequent traveler to Europe.
A special invitation to the first
Faculty Club Luncheon to the Summer Session has been extended to all Summer. Session visitors and students. Reservations can be made with Mrs. Es-covedo, Ext. 264 before noon on Tuesday.
Officers of the Faculty Club are Lois Ellfeklt, president;- Robert L. Brackenbury, vice president; Angeline A. Howard, secretary; and John T. Waterman, historian.
1959 Trojan
The Summer Trojan will be available to the students in newsboxes located in Founders Hall, Bovarcl Auditorium and in front of the Student Union.
To the incoming Summer Session student, there will be many SC traditions which he will probably never hear about during his short summer stay at the University. But attention all women: You are now officially alerted about a very important and a very old tradition:
All women must NOT wear shorts, slacks or pedal pushers to classes or anywhere on campus at any time.
Dresses, skirts and blouses are appropriate attire for female students.
This ruling as put forth by Assistant Dean of Students-Women Joan M. Schaefer and Summer Session Dean John D. Cooke, is a traditional ruling effective' throughout t lie entire calendar year.
It preconcludes that only the accepled manner of dress will be expected.
Visiting Professors Start Classes Today
Princeton Professor Dark Tryouts To Teach Eastern Life To Be Held in
StopGapToday
Drama tryouts for an SC student’s original play, “Dark Harvest,’’ will be held today and tomorrow fom 3-6 p.m. in Stop Gap Theater.
Dr. Herbert M. Stahl is directing this original play written by graduate student Louis Carlino. Dr. Stahl will also be in charge of the tryout«.
“Anyone enrolled in Summer Session is eligible to tryout for the play. All he or she has to do is come to the corner of Exposition and Hoover, the site of ! Stop Gap Theater,” and act he said.
Although the tryouts will only be held for two days, special tryout hours may be arranged though Dr. Stahl in the Drama Office.
Carlino. now doing work in the graduate division of SC’s Drama department, has written several plays, recently performed by the SC Drama department. They include “The Brick and the Rose” and “Junkyard.”
A Phi Beta Kappa while an undergraduate at SC, Carlino has also had a play performed away from the SC campus called “Car for Sale.”
Dr. Stahl has directed the Summer Session plays for the past few years. Last summer, he was in charge of the memorable
production, “Picnic,” and gained great success this fa!! with
his production of the “Waltz of
the Toreadors.”
The sets are being designed by Harold Johnson * and rehearsers will start immediately j after a cast is found.
Dr. Stahl said that he was very pleased with the original j play and he expressed the hope that students will come to the tryout to see how well they can act. I
(ICditor's Not*: Tliis i* tlif first in n herips of articleii on visiting protestors teaching courses in S(”s Summer Session.)
Dr. Lewis V. Thomas, a Princeton professor who has lived and taught in the Middle East, will teach two courses— International Relations and History—during the six week Summer Session this year.
Diplomatic Issues in the Middle East (IR 426) and Islamic History and Culture (His. 418) will be taught this summer. Both are two unit courses.
Dr. Thomas is a special au-j thority in Ottoman History. His work in and with Turkey has developed into many publications which include “Turkey: Guardian of the Straits,” (Current History July 1951) and “Turkey: Partner of the West,” (Foreign Policy Bulletin, August 1952). He is also co-author of “U.S. on Turkey and Iran,” 1951.
Alter receiving his BA and MA at the University of Chicago, Dr. Thomas obtained his PhD from the University of Brussels. He then lived and taught in the Middle East, principally in Turkey.
“The two courses I am teach-in a: during the Summer Session
concern recent and contemporary problems in the Middle East and the coming emergence of Islam,” he said.
Diplomatic Issues in the Middle East will discuss oil, Middle East nationalism, policies and interest of the Great Powers and recent diplomatic problems in this area.
Islamic History and Culture will show the emergence of Islam, its religion, medieval culture, Arab-Islamic expansion from Mohammed to Nasser and other interesting aspects of this area.
Professors from SC, 22 other universities in the U.S. and six foreign nations will begin teaching the nearly 8000 students enrolled in summer classes wrhich begin today both on campus and abroad.
Six thousand day arid 2000 night students begin classes today for a six-week period which will end on August 1. The four week Postsession will run from August 3 through August 29.
Nearly 200 of the students will be aboard the S.S. Mariposa on a six-weeks study cruise, in cooperation with the California Teachers Association, to Tahiti, New Zealand. Australia. Fiji, Samoa and Honolulu. Regular classes in education, internation-' al relations, Asiatic studies, geography, anthropology, psychology and drama will be taught aboard the ship.
The faculty and staff, headed by Dr. T. H. Chen, will include Mrs. Chen, Dr. Lionel de Silva, Dr. and Mrs. John Reith, Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Weckler and Dr. and Mrs. James Butler.
Students have come from 14 states throughout the nation to combine a vacation trip with summer school.
Another 25 students will go on a European history study tour conducted by Dr. Russell Cald-well, professor of history.
On the campus, the National Science Foundation will offer institutes for high school teachers of biological sciences, chemistry, physics and mathematics. The foundation also offers a special program of instruction in laboratory research in order to improve the educators’ teaching methods and ability to interest able students in a scientific career.
In the Journalism School, Di-rector John McCoy is offering a I course designed to assist high , school students in improving:
their 1959-60 newspapers. The course is a special workshop being offered as an added feature and will stress staff organization and production of the student publication.
Visiting professors from the 22 different universities include Harry C. Allen, University College, London; William V. Hicks, Michigan State University; Stephan Korner, University of Bristol, England; and Joseph A. Lauwerys, University of London.
In addition, other visiting educators are David D. Raphael, University of Glasgow. Scotland: Harry L. Stein. University of British Columbia; Franklin Dunham. chief of radio and TV, U.S. Office of Education, Washington, D.C.; and Samuel M. Brownell, Detroit superintendent of schools and former U.S. Commissioner of Education.
URA Summer Program Set
A full summer of recreation will begin this week with dancing activities, swimming and field trips to the Huntington Library and Art Gallery, Marine-land and -Disneyland.
Reservations for the off-campus events must be made - with Dr. Tillman Hall or Miss Eleanor Walsh at the URA (University Recreation Association) office, 112 PE, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Square and Folk dancing will begin tomorrow in the dance studio on the second floor of the PE building. Since the dances are free, students are urged to attend.
On Thursday evenings there will be free social dancing and instruction in the dance studio.
Change of Classes
Official
Notice
Qualifying Examinations for the PhD examinations will *h*
held this week of July IS.
A request to take these examinations must he filed with the Dean of the Graduate School the FIRST week of the Summer Session.
Instructions and Forms for filing the request may be obtained in the Graduate School Office, Adm. 204.
M. C. Kloet/.e!
Dean
Graduate Sc1* |
Filename | uschist-dt-1959-06-22~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1369/uschist-dt-1959-06-22~001.tif |