Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 49, December 01, 1953 |
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-PAGE THREE—
Support Your Basketball Team
a i
an
—PAGE THREE—
Trojans Open Basketball Season in Gym Tonight
XLV
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 1, 1953
No. 49
dams Calls
ew Trade Policy
niversity Avenue losing Starts Today
It’s official. Closing of University Avenue begins today. Mayor Norris Poulson has ed the ordinance to officially close University Avenue betwen 34th Street and Exposi-Boulevard. After the routine public no tice, it became official Friday at midnight. The Mayor signed the ordinance after it passed the City Council last Wednesday, ac-ing to Gifford Miller, administrative as sistant to the Mayor. The closing of Univer-
. Greenwood neral Rites t Tomorrow
Hans P. Greenwood, 45, iate professor of finance, Saturday at Sawtelle Vet-Hospital, ten days after he entered the hospital to unsurgery.
Greenwood, 5381 Coolridge ue, Culver City, had been af-ed with the SC School of merce since 1949, when he made acting head of the dement of finance.
received his Ph.D. degree at ell University, his MA honors he University of Nebraska later studied law at the Unity of Vienna. Dr. Greenwood been associated with the fac-i of Cornell. Iowa State Coland the University of Illi-
1943 he served as senior nmist of the foreign research ion of the Federal Reserve of New' York and was a ultant on local banking prob-
recently Completed a special rch project on the Canadian ice of international payments at SC was a member of the Fe Institute of Business omics. He was a member of American Economic Associa-and of Artus, national pro-onal honorary society, meral services will be 3 p.m. rrow at the Veterans Hos-Cemetery Chapel, Sawtelle. is survived by his wife, sh A. Greenw'ood and a son,
e Overlanders' ill Show Tonight
Arthur Rank’s “The Over-ers*’ will be presented tonight founders Hall rooms 133 and at 7:30 and 8:30 by Delta Alpha, National Honorary ma Fraternity, e film, which deals with the ggles of Australia in colonial s, is the ninth of a series of 'ilm Classics of eight nations, remaining three pictures will shown December 8, 15, and uary 5. They are “Wilson,” ?asure of Sierra Madre,” and tant Journey.” x
sitv Avenue brings to an end a long struggle that began last july. The approval of the Fire Department . Committee, the Traffic Committee, the Police Commission and other county organizations was necessary before it was voted on by the council.
Details Given
University Business Manager Elton Phillips said that work on closing the Avenue will begin today. He gave the details of the closing procedure yesterday.
There will be eight barriers blocking off the avenue. These barriers will be located on University Avenue at Exposition Boulevard, '37th Street, 36th Place, tw’o at 36th Street because it is a through street, 35th Place, 35th Street, and 34th Street.
Barriers at Intersections
The barriers will be placed inside the sidewralk lines at all intersections except Exposition where they will be outside the sidewa lk line.
Thirty-fourth Street will not be blocked off by the barriers. They
will be placed even with the fountain on University Avenue to allow through traffic on 34th Street.
Five-Inch Steel
The posts of the barriers will be made of five-inch steel. The posts will be set in concrete, three feet protruding above the ground, at five-feet intervals. Each post will be painted with four-inch black and white stripes in chevron style. Two red reflectors will be on each post, one on top and the other two feet above the ground.
Each side street that runs into University Avenue from Hoover Boulevard and Hoover Street will have a “Not a Through Street” sign on each corner to warn motorists.
Extended Red Zones
The red no parking zones on the streets that intersect University will be extended from approximately 20 feet to 40 feet. This will allow' cars space to turn around when they are . at the closed end of the side streets.
“Painting to extend the red zones will start today and the digging of the holes for the posts will follow shortly,” said Phillips.
Emergency vehicles and vehicles delivering to and from the university will still have access to the avenue.
1000 PINTS
Blood Drive Quota Topped Says Houser
A record-breaking 1000 pints of blood were donated by SC students during the* recently completed Red Cross blood drive campaign, Co-Chairman Bill Houser announced yesterday.
"This is much better than in 1952, when SC barely reached its record of 900 pints,” according to Sharon Swanton, director of college activities for the Southern California area of the American Red Cross.
Of the fraternities, she said Beta Theta Pi was the highest with 91 per cent of its members contributing. Acacia was second with 59 per cent and Phi Delta Theta third with 58 per cent.
Kappa Kappa Gamma topped the sororities with a percentage of 63. Gamma Phi Beta was next with 34 pei* cent.
Thirty-four per cent of sophomore class council members gave blood, while freshman council donators numbered 12 per cent. Following close behind were the junior and senior councils.
Sixty-five percent of the members of the AFROTC gave blood, and 38 per cent of the NROTC donated.
Western Nations Interdependent
by Charlie Barnett
Sherman Adams, President Eisenhower’s top aide, last night emphasized America’s economic interdependence with other free nations and indicated that a new. freer trade policy will result from Administration studies now in progress.
Speaking before television comeras and a crowd which
overflowed the first floor of Bo-
S her man Adams Praises State, Says It's Great
Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams last night refused to comment on Senator McCarthy’s recent speech, but he had many words of praise for California and its inhabitants.
Adams, who has been in the Golden State for five days, described his visit as “wonderful.” “The people are as hospitable as the people in New Hampshire,” the former governor of that state told a DT reporter.
Adams, who like the President enjoys golf, said he was able to get some golfing in down at Palm Springs where he spent Thanksgiving Day through Saturday.
ICY TOUCH—Barbara Hines, SC drama major, official hostess at Pershing Square Ice Rink, is helping Harry Morrison tighten pipe in
preparation for rink opening. Morrison is general manager of the L.A. Downtown Busi-nëss Men's Association.
—Courtesy L. A.* Times
Fagg to Lecture At Frosh Meet
Freshman students will be excused from 9 a.m. classes today to attend a lecture entitled “Know Your University.”
Speakers will be University President Fred D. Fagg Jr. and Asa V. Call, president of the Board of Trustees. They will speak in Bovard Auditorium on the history of the university and what it is trying to accomplish in the field of education.
The lecture is the first of a series of four designed to acquaint freshman students with the history and traditions of Trov.
City Croup Elects Trojan Ice Maid
Barbara Hines, Alpha Chi Omega, honorary ROTC colonel and sophomore Spanish major, last night appeared as Ice Maid at the opening of the Christmas Ice Rink in Pershing Square. The 80 by 30 foot. rink is sponsored by the Downtown Business Men’s Association.
The opening night program began with a figure skating exhibition by the U.S. Figure Skating Association. The Los Angeles Figure Skating Association and the Blade and Edge also participated.
Visiting dignitaries, with Miss Hines as their official hostess, then dedicated the rink. A special Christmas number for the youngsters in the audience .followed. Santa Claus and a group of talented young skaters entertained and gave goodies to the children in the crowd.
The rink’s regular programs start today and will run until Christmas Eve. Exhibitions will be given daily except Sunday at 11 a.m., 2 p.m., and 6 p.m.
Miss Hines will be hostess again next week when Mexican officials
I arrive by plane in Los Angeles to ! attend a pofada (party) to be ! held at the rink. “I’ll be at the I International Airport to meet them and the pinata (Mexican grab-bag, traditional at parties),” she said.
ORLD NEWS ROUNDUP
RELIGION
N. Y. Newspaper Shutdown till on; Parleys Resume
by United Press
V YORK, Nov. 30—Negoti-ns to end New York City's ’spaper shutdown were retonight but leaders of 400 :ing photo-engravers indicated walkout w-ould stop the of six major pa{lers for at t another day.
-Ut down by the strike wTere Morning Times, New’s and or and afternoon World-Tele-and Sun. Post and Journal erican. Idled by the 400 photo-ivers were 20,000 members }e CIO American Newspapei and the AFL Printing Craft n who refused to cross pick-
orman brought both sides to-;r in the Publishers’ Associa-offices in the Times t<*ver, landmark in the heart of es Square.
he cit \ s thousands of new s ds w ere almost bare and e deliveries of papers were
practically eliminated. The only major Manhattan newspaper still available was the Morning Herald Tribune. It came out in eight-page form without advertising Monday morning to enable a 2,000,000 copy press run.
* * *
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30— The Senate Judiciary Committee announced today it will investigate charges that Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., refused to let the FBI participât in a jury-tampering case in Denver.
Federal Judge Willis W. Ritter sentenced two Denver Gamblers to long prison terms a week ago. He charged that the FBI refused to help in the investigation and that the Democratic district attorney who prosecuted the case was fired.
Sen. • William Langer (R-
N.D.), Judiciary Committee Chairman, said his group “is very much interested in the judge’s charge.” Among other things, he said, it wants to find out “whether the United States attorney was fired because he secured these convictions.”
The case was injected into the national political scene last night when Clayton Fritchey, deputy chairman of the Democratic national committee, challenged Brownell to answer Judge Ritter’s “very serious” conjplaints.
* * *
KINGMAN, Ariz., Nov. 30 — Twenty-six men were arrested when more than 100 Arizona law officers raided the polygamous center of Short Creek, Ariz., on July 26. pleaded guilty to conspiracy today.
But the State requested that charges against all 64 women and
seven other men be dropped, and that the conspiracy charges against those pleading guilty be reduced to conspiracy to commit open and notorious cohabitation. Deleted from the general conspiracy complaints were charges of conspiracy to commit statutory rape and contributing to the delinquency of minors.
* * * EDINBURGH, Scotland, Nov. 30 — Scotsmen in the homeland and abroad wore the kilt and played the pipes today in honor of St. Andrew7, patron saint of Scotland.
They danced the old Scottish reels, drank whiskey, and ate the traditional haggis in the annual celebrations as the saint’s flag of blue crossed with white fluttered in the wind.
Students Jam Experimental Bookstore Sale
More than 1200 bargain-seeking students, faculty and employees of SC, jammed into the basement of the Commons Building yesterday for the University Book Store’s first experimental book sale.
“The response has been way beyond what we expected,” Fred Grayston, manager pf the book store, said.
Grayston said the books are not overstock but w^ere bought especially for the sale from eastern publishers. “They are all new books,” Grayston said.
Grayston revealed that some 3500 books were originally purchased and “I would estimate that 30 or 40 per cent have already been sold.”
Grayston said the University Book Store may make the sale an annual affair. He said the markdown on prices run from 39 cents to $5, and added that some books originally worth $16 are selling for a little under $5.
The sale will continue today and tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. -but Grayston warned “I don’t think there will be any books left by Wednesday afternoon.”
Robe' Ducats To Be Prize
Two tickets to “The Robe” will be awarded to the winning theme submitted for SC’s Religious Emphasis Week contest wrhich ends tomorrow.
REW held Feb. 22-25 has the purpose of emphasizing spiritual values which are so often lost by college students because of their other activities.
“A better understanding of
different faiths through education will also be stressed,” said Religious Emphasis chairman Steve Robertson.
Themes for the REW event should be short and may be turned into the ASSC effice 215 SU, the School of Religion, or Chaplain Neyman’s office. Seven slogans have been submitted so far.
Themes of previous years have included “Values of Crisis,” Religion and Reason,” “What’s the Score,?” and “What Can We Believe?”
54 Calendars To Be Sold
The 1954 editions of the Mortar Board Calendars, a project started by the group four years ago, are now being sold on campus. Fifteen hundred copies have been printed and will sell for 25 cents each, said sales chairman Janet Ewart Eddy.
18 Sweetheart' Candidates To Feast Tonight
Eighteen poten t i a 1 “Sweetheart of Sigma Chi” candidates will attend their first dinner during “Sweetheart Week” tonight at 5:30 at the Sigma Chi House.
Guests to be at the dinner are Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, NROTC Capt. Ronald MacKinnon, and Maj. Richard Nixon.
The final vote to decide the “sweetheart” and her court of two will be taken at the Friday night's Sweetheart' Dance ^nd Dinner at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel’s Mayfair Room.
All candidates, Sigma Chi President Arne Lindgren said, attend two dinners at the Sigma Chi fraternity.
These five girls attend the final dinner and are also invited to attend the “Sweetheart Ball.” On the night of the last dinner a final vote is taken to decide the “sweetheart” and her court of two.
The trio are announced at the
dance.
Eighteen women entered are Doris Ritter, Alpha Chi Omega; Judy Larry, Alpha Delta Pi; Lois Silverstein, Alpha Epsilon Pi; Dona Ross, Alpha Gamma Delta; Marilyn Anderson, Alpha Omicron Pi; Nancy Measham, Alpha Phi; Nancy Richard. Chi Omega; Lee Schrumph, Delta Delta Delta; Denise Mason, Delta Gamma; Beverly Gould, Gamma Phi Beta; Marilyn Mortensen, Kappa Alpha Theta; Judy Valdez, Kappa Delta; Carol Blanchard, Kappa Kap-Beta Phi; Judy Nelson, Zeta Tau Alpha; Barbara Oasthouse, Elizabeth Von Kleinsmid Memorial Hall: Joyce Hanna, University
pa Gamma; Charol Stanton, Pi Hall; Pat Cence, Town and Gown.
Quarterback Club In Last Meeting
Films of the Notre Dame-SC football game played . Saturday will be shown at the last meeting of the Quarterback Club, tomorrow in 229 FH, at noon.
Guest speaker will be Trojan End Coach Don Clark, who will narrate the films and answer pertinent questions pertaining to the game and the players.
“If you just w’ant to get the facts—the facts, Coach—” QB Club President Harvey Palack said, “this last meeting is a must.”
University College Largest in U. S.
University College ranks first of the evening colleges' throughout the country Carl Hancey, UC dean, said yesterday.
Hancey recently returned from the St. Louis convention of the Association of University Evening Colleges where evening school problems and enrollment figures were highlights of discu6sicm.
Enrollment reports presented at the convention show that University College with an enrollment of 10,558 students outranks Indiana University with an enrollment of 9,553 students. Indiana’s figures include two campuses, one at Bloomington and the other at Indianapolis.
i
Maryland was third with 8,602 which includes their overseas divisions. City College of New York was fourth with 8,065 evening students.
Pre-convention figures indicated SC’s University College in third. Eut up-to-date compilations revealed the evening school’s number one position.
Previously released figures for UC included 8,700 credit students, 800 in the Extention Division and 1,000 attending Dr. Baxter’s Shakespeare course.
Hancey said University College has the largest program in the United States. He attributed this to the rapid growth of Los An-
crolos.
vard Auditorium, the assistant to the President said that “the gradual overhauling of the whole structure of American trade relations is long overdue.”
Tangible Hope
“While every free country is searching desperately for sounder economic footings, this nation must offer a plan around which
free people can find tangible hope for the future," the former *New Hampshire governor said.
‘There is nothing in our experience in the last 20 years to indicate that we can support or even substantially raise the economic level of the rest of the world by the neat process of pulling on our own economic bootstraps,” he said.
“It is equally clear that the free world will remain neither free nor friendly unless it has the • opportunities for economic self-betterment through a more liberal exchange of its own goods and services.”
Big Wheels Scheduled
Adams address was the first program sponsored by the new World Affairs Counol of Los Angeles, an organization created to bring a better understanding of worid affairs to Los Angeles through a series of speakers, discussions and the establishment of international relations library services. John A. McCone, president of the Council, told in his introductory remarks of pians to present Secretary of State Dulles, Vice-President Nixon, and Gen. Mark Clark at future Council programs.
Illusion of Independence
“Of all the illusions that seize our immagination, the one of self-sufficiency moves farther and farther away from reality,” Adams said. “Vvnen we think we are aione in the world we delude others and punish ourselves.”
Neither the farmer or the manufacturer has sufficient market without trading with other nations, Adams asserted. To many an American producer in both manufacturing and tarming, he said, "foreign sales mean the (inference between profit and loss.”
Need Foreign Trade ‘The need of this country for foreign trade is but one side of the coin,” Ike’s advisor added. “The other side presents our need for raw materials and ingredients of» products which we not only consume ourselves but sell abroad. Much of our industry and agriculture could not produce anything like its present level without the availability of materials from foreign sources.”
“Governor” Adams detailed examples of dependence on foreign markets and materials on the part of both farm and factory.
Cold Economics “Our foreign trade, buying and selling in the world marketplace,’* he said, “is more than an association of sentiment, of tradition, or of convenience. These relationships are associations of the sheerest necessity in the realm of cold economics.”
A rather short man with small features, Adams spoke with u strong, clear voice. His grey hair is short, crew-cut style, giving him a trim appearance.
Dispute of Methods “There is a universal agreement on the need for economic expansion and higher levels of economic activity,” he said. “Yet there is wide disagreement on the proper course for the free world to pursue in reaching these most desirable objectives.”
‘The shift in America’s world economic position is the shift from debtor to creator status.” During the past 30 years, Adams said, the U.S. excess of exports over imports has amounted to $80 million.
U.S. Obstructs Debtors The money has not been repaid, Adams said, because the United States has made it ‘'difficult if not impossible for the debtors to earn the dollars which would have balanced the books.’*
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 49, December 01, 1953 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 49, December 01, 1953. |
| Full text | -PAGE THREE— Support Your Basketball Team a i an —PAGE THREE— Trojans Open Basketball Season in Gym Tonight XLV Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 1, 1953 No. 49 dams Calls ew Trade Policy niversity Avenue losing Starts Today It’s official. Closing of University Avenue begins today. Mayor Norris Poulson has ed the ordinance to officially close University Avenue betwen 34th Street and Exposi-Boulevard. After the routine public no tice, it became official Friday at midnight. The Mayor signed the ordinance after it passed the City Council last Wednesday, ac-ing to Gifford Miller, administrative as sistant to the Mayor. The closing of Univer- . Greenwood neral Rites t Tomorrow Hans P. Greenwood, 45, iate professor of finance, Saturday at Sawtelle Vet-Hospital, ten days after he entered the hospital to unsurgery. Greenwood, 5381 Coolridge ue, Culver City, had been af-ed with the SC School of merce since 1949, when he made acting head of the dement of finance. received his Ph.D. degree at ell University, his MA honors he University of Nebraska later studied law at the Unity of Vienna. Dr. Greenwood been associated with the fac-i of Cornell. Iowa State Coland the University of Illi- 1943 he served as senior nmist of the foreign research ion of the Federal Reserve of New' York and was a ultant on local banking prob- recently Completed a special rch project on the Canadian ice of international payments at SC was a member of the Fe Institute of Business omics. He was a member of American Economic Associa-and of Artus, national pro-onal honorary society, meral services will be 3 p.m. rrow at the Veterans Hos-Cemetery Chapel, Sawtelle. is survived by his wife, sh A. Greenw'ood and a son, e Overlanders' ill Show Tonight Arthur Rank’s “The Over-ers*’ will be presented tonight founders Hall rooms 133 and at 7:30 and 8:30 by Delta Alpha, National Honorary ma Fraternity, e film, which deals with the ggles of Australia in colonial s, is the ninth of a series of 'ilm Classics of eight nations, remaining three pictures will shown December 8, 15, and uary 5. They are “Wilson,” ?asure of Sierra Madre,” and tant Journey.” x sitv Avenue brings to an end a long struggle that began last july. The approval of the Fire Department . Committee, the Traffic Committee, the Police Commission and other county organizations was necessary before it was voted on by the council. Details Given University Business Manager Elton Phillips said that work on closing the Avenue will begin today. He gave the details of the closing procedure yesterday. There will be eight barriers blocking off the avenue. These barriers will be located on University Avenue at Exposition Boulevard, '37th Street, 36th Place, tw’o at 36th Street because it is a through street, 35th Place, 35th Street, and 34th Street. Barriers at Intersections The barriers will be placed inside the sidewralk lines at all intersections except Exposition where they will be outside the sidewa lk line. Thirty-fourth Street will not be blocked off by the barriers. They will be placed even with the fountain on University Avenue to allow through traffic on 34th Street. Five-Inch Steel The posts of the barriers will be made of five-inch steel. The posts will be set in concrete, three feet protruding above the ground, at five-feet intervals. Each post will be painted with four-inch black and white stripes in chevron style. Two red reflectors will be on each post, one on top and the other two feet above the ground. Each side street that runs into University Avenue from Hoover Boulevard and Hoover Street will have a “Not a Through Street” sign on each corner to warn motorists. Extended Red Zones The red no parking zones on the streets that intersect University will be extended from approximately 20 feet to 40 feet. This will allow' cars space to turn around when they are . at the closed end of the side streets. “Painting to extend the red zones will start today and the digging of the holes for the posts will follow shortly,” said Phillips. Emergency vehicles and vehicles delivering to and from the university will still have access to the avenue. 1000 PINTS Blood Drive Quota Topped Says Houser A record-breaking 1000 pints of blood were donated by SC students during the* recently completed Red Cross blood drive campaign, Co-Chairman Bill Houser announced yesterday. "This is much better than in 1952, when SC barely reached its record of 900 pints,” according to Sharon Swanton, director of college activities for the Southern California area of the American Red Cross. Of the fraternities, she said Beta Theta Pi was the highest with 91 per cent of its members contributing. Acacia was second with 59 per cent and Phi Delta Theta third with 58 per cent. Kappa Kappa Gamma topped the sororities with a percentage of 63. Gamma Phi Beta was next with 34 pei* cent. Thirty-four per cent of sophomore class council members gave blood, while freshman council donators numbered 12 per cent. Following close behind were the junior and senior councils. Sixty-five percent of the members of the AFROTC gave blood, and 38 per cent of the NROTC donated. Western Nations Interdependent by Charlie Barnett Sherman Adams, President Eisenhower’s top aide, last night emphasized America’s economic interdependence with other free nations and indicated that a new. freer trade policy will result from Administration studies now in progress. Speaking before television comeras and a crowd which overflowed the first floor of Bo- S her man Adams Praises State, Says It's Great Presidential Assistant Sherman Adams last night refused to comment on Senator McCarthy’s recent speech, but he had many words of praise for California and its inhabitants. Adams, who has been in the Golden State for five days, described his visit as “wonderful.” “The people are as hospitable as the people in New Hampshire,” the former governor of that state told a DT reporter. Adams, who like the President enjoys golf, said he was able to get some golfing in down at Palm Springs where he spent Thanksgiving Day through Saturday. ICY TOUCH—Barbara Hines, SC drama major, official hostess at Pershing Square Ice Rink, is helping Harry Morrison tighten pipe in preparation for rink opening. Morrison is general manager of the L.A. Downtown Busi-nëss Men's Association. —Courtesy L. A.* Times Fagg to Lecture At Frosh Meet Freshman students will be excused from 9 a.m. classes today to attend a lecture entitled “Know Your University.” Speakers will be University President Fred D. Fagg Jr. and Asa V. Call, president of the Board of Trustees. They will speak in Bovard Auditorium on the history of the university and what it is trying to accomplish in the field of education. The lecture is the first of a series of four designed to acquaint freshman students with the history and traditions of Trov. City Croup Elects Trojan Ice Maid Barbara Hines, Alpha Chi Omega, honorary ROTC colonel and sophomore Spanish major, last night appeared as Ice Maid at the opening of the Christmas Ice Rink in Pershing Square. The 80 by 30 foot. rink is sponsored by the Downtown Business Men’s Association. The opening night program began with a figure skating exhibition by the U.S. Figure Skating Association. The Los Angeles Figure Skating Association and the Blade and Edge also participated. Visiting dignitaries, with Miss Hines as their official hostess, then dedicated the rink. A special Christmas number for the youngsters in the audience .followed. Santa Claus and a group of talented young skaters entertained and gave goodies to the children in the crowd. The rink’s regular programs start today and will run until Christmas Eve. Exhibitions will be given daily except Sunday at 11 a.m., 2 p.m., and 6 p.m. Miss Hines will be hostess again next week when Mexican officials I arrive by plane in Los Angeles to ! attend a pofada (party) to be ! held at the rink. “I’ll be at the I International Airport to meet them and the pinata (Mexican grab-bag, traditional at parties),” she said. ORLD NEWS ROUNDUP RELIGION N. Y. Newspaper Shutdown till on; Parleys Resume by United Press V YORK, Nov. 30—Negoti-ns to end New York City's ’spaper shutdown were retonight but leaders of 400 :ing photo-engravers indicated walkout w-ould stop the of six major pa{lers for at t another day. -Ut down by the strike wTere Morning Times, New’s and or and afternoon World-Tele-and Sun. Post and Journal erican. Idled by the 400 photo-ivers were 20,000 members }e CIO American Newspapei and the AFL Printing Craft n who refused to cross pick- orman brought both sides to-;r in the Publishers’ Associa-offices in the Times t<*ver, landmark in the heart of es Square. he cit \ s thousands of new s ds w ere almost bare and e deliveries of papers were practically eliminated. The only major Manhattan newspaper still available was the Morning Herald Tribune. It came out in eight-page form without advertising Monday morning to enable a 2,000,000 copy press run. * * * WASHINGTON, Nov. 30— The Senate Judiciary Committee announced today it will investigate charges that Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., refused to let the FBI participât in a jury-tampering case in Denver. Federal Judge Willis W. Ritter sentenced two Denver Gamblers to long prison terms a week ago. He charged that the FBI refused to help in the investigation and that the Democratic district attorney who prosecuted the case was fired. Sen. • William Langer (R- N.D.), Judiciary Committee Chairman, said his group “is very much interested in the judge’s charge.” Among other things, he said, it wants to find out “whether the United States attorney was fired because he secured these convictions.” The case was injected into the national political scene last night when Clayton Fritchey, deputy chairman of the Democratic national committee, challenged Brownell to answer Judge Ritter’s “very serious” conjplaints. * * * KINGMAN, Ariz., Nov. 30 — Twenty-six men were arrested when more than 100 Arizona law officers raided the polygamous center of Short Creek, Ariz., on July 26. pleaded guilty to conspiracy today. But the State requested that charges against all 64 women and seven other men be dropped, and that the conspiracy charges against those pleading guilty be reduced to conspiracy to commit open and notorious cohabitation. Deleted from the general conspiracy complaints were charges of conspiracy to commit statutory rape and contributing to the delinquency of minors. * * * EDINBURGH, Scotland, Nov. 30 — Scotsmen in the homeland and abroad wore the kilt and played the pipes today in honor of St. Andrew7, patron saint of Scotland. They danced the old Scottish reels, drank whiskey, and ate the traditional haggis in the annual celebrations as the saint’s flag of blue crossed with white fluttered in the wind. Students Jam Experimental Bookstore Sale More than 1200 bargain-seeking students, faculty and employees of SC, jammed into the basement of the Commons Building yesterday for the University Book Store’s first experimental book sale. “The response has been way beyond what we expected,” Fred Grayston, manager pf the book store, said. Grayston said the books are not overstock but w^ere bought especially for the sale from eastern publishers. “They are all new books,” Grayston said. Grayston revealed that some 3500 books were originally purchased and “I would estimate that 30 or 40 per cent have already been sold.” Grayston said the University Book Store may make the sale an annual affair. He said the markdown on prices run from 39 cents to $5, and added that some books originally worth $16 are selling for a little under $5. The sale will continue today and tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. -but Grayston warned “I don’t think there will be any books left by Wednesday afternoon.” Robe' Ducats To Be Prize Two tickets to “The Robe” will be awarded to the winning theme submitted for SC’s Religious Emphasis Week contest wrhich ends tomorrow. REW held Feb. 22-25 has the purpose of emphasizing spiritual values which are so often lost by college students because of their other activities. “A better understanding of different faiths through education will also be stressed,” said Religious Emphasis chairman Steve Robertson. Themes for the REW event should be short and may be turned into the ASSC effice 215 SU, the School of Religion, or Chaplain Neyman’s office. Seven slogans have been submitted so far. Themes of previous years have included “Values of Crisis,” Religion and Reason,” “What’s the Score,?” and “What Can We Believe?” 54 Calendars To Be Sold The 1954 editions of the Mortar Board Calendars, a project started by the group four years ago, are now being sold on campus. Fifteen hundred copies have been printed and will sell for 25 cents each, said sales chairman Janet Ewart Eddy. 18 Sweetheart' Candidates To Feast Tonight Eighteen poten t i a 1 “Sweetheart of Sigma Chi” candidates will attend their first dinner during “Sweetheart Week” tonight at 5:30 at the Sigma Chi House. Guests to be at the dinner are Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, NROTC Capt. Ronald MacKinnon, and Maj. Richard Nixon. The final vote to decide the “sweetheart” and her court of two will be taken at the Friday night's Sweetheart' Dance ^nd Dinner at the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel’s Mayfair Room. All candidates, Sigma Chi President Arne Lindgren said, attend two dinners at the Sigma Chi fraternity. These five girls attend the final dinner and are also invited to attend the “Sweetheart Ball.” On the night of the last dinner a final vote is taken to decide the “sweetheart” and her court of two. The trio are announced at the dance. Eighteen women entered are Doris Ritter, Alpha Chi Omega; Judy Larry, Alpha Delta Pi; Lois Silverstein, Alpha Epsilon Pi; Dona Ross, Alpha Gamma Delta; Marilyn Anderson, Alpha Omicron Pi; Nancy Measham, Alpha Phi; Nancy Richard. Chi Omega; Lee Schrumph, Delta Delta Delta; Denise Mason, Delta Gamma; Beverly Gould, Gamma Phi Beta; Marilyn Mortensen, Kappa Alpha Theta; Judy Valdez, Kappa Delta; Carol Blanchard, Kappa Kap-Beta Phi; Judy Nelson, Zeta Tau Alpha; Barbara Oasthouse, Elizabeth Von Kleinsmid Memorial Hall: Joyce Hanna, University pa Gamma; Charol Stanton, Pi Hall; Pat Cence, Town and Gown. Quarterback Club In Last Meeting Films of the Notre Dame-SC football game played . Saturday will be shown at the last meeting of the Quarterback Club, tomorrow in 229 FH, at noon. Guest speaker will be Trojan End Coach Don Clark, who will narrate the films and answer pertinent questions pertaining to the game and the players. “If you just w’ant to get the facts—the facts, Coach—” QB Club President Harvey Palack said, “this last meeting is a must.” University College Largest in U. S. University College ranks first of the evening colleges' throughout the country Carl Hancey, UC dean, said yesterday. Hancey recently returned from the St. Louis convention of the Association of University Evening Colleges where evening school problems and enrollment figures were highlights of discu6sicm. Enrollment reports presented at the convention show that University College with an enrollment of 10,558 students outranks Indiana University with an enrollment of 9,553 students. Indiana’s figures include two campuses, one at Bloomington and the other at Indianapolis. i Maryland was third with 8,602 which includes their overseas divisions. City College of New York was fourth with 8,065 evening students. Pre-convention figures indicated SC’s University College in third. Eut up-to-date compilations revealed the evening school’s number one position. Previously released figures for UC included 8,700 credit students, 800 in the Extention Division and 1,000 attending Dr. Baxter’s Shakespeare course. Hancey said University College has the largest program in the United States. He attributed this to the rapid growth of Los An- crolos. vard Auditorium, the assistant to the President said that “the gradual overhauling of the whole structure of American trade relations is long overdue.” Tangible Hope “While every free country is searching desperately for sounder economic footings, this nation must offer a plan around which free people can find tangible hope for the future" the former *New Hampshire governor said. ‘There is nothing in our experience in the last 20 years to indicate that we can support or even substantially raise the economic level of the rest of the world by the neat process of pulling on our own economic bootstraps,” he said. “It is equally clear that the free world will remain neither free nor friendly unless it has the • opportunities for economic self-betterment through a more liberal exchange of its own goods and services.” Big Wheels Scheduled Adams address was the first program sponsored by the new World Affairs Counol of Los Angeles, an organization created to bring a better understanding of worid affairs to Los Angeles through a series of speakers, discussions and the establishment of international relations library services. John A. McCone, president of the Council, told in his introductory remarks of pians to present Secretary of State Dulles, Vice-President Nixon, and Gen. Mark Clark at future Council programs. Illusion of Independence “Of all the illusions that seize our immagination, the one of self-sufficiency moves farther and farther away from reality,” Adams said. “Vvnen we think we are aione in the world we delude others and punish ourselves.” Neither the farmer or the manufacturer has sufficient market without trading with other nations, Adams asserted. To many an American producer in both manufacturing and tarming, he said, "foreign sales mean the (inference between profit and loss.” Need Foreign Trade ‘The need of this country for foreign trade is but one side of the coin,” Ike’s advisor added. “The other side presents our need for raw materials and ingredients of» products which we not only consume ourselves but sell abroad. Much of our industry and agriculture could not produce anything like its present level without the availability of materials from foreign sources.” “Governor” Adams detailed examples of dependence on foreign markets and materials on the part of both farm and factory. Cold Economics “Our foreign trade, buying and selling in the world marketplace,’* he said, “is more than an association of sentiment, of tradition, or of convenience. These relationships are associations of the sheerest necessity in the realm of cold economics.” A rather short man with small features, Adams spoke with u strong, clear voice. His grey hair is short, crew-cut style, giving him a trim appearance. Dispute of Methods “There is a universal agreement on the need for economic expansion and higher levels of economic activity,” he said. “Yet there is wide disagreement on the proper course for the free world to pursue in reaching these most desirable objectives.” ‘The shift in America’s world economic position is the shift from debtor to creator status.” During the past 30 years, Adams said, the U.S. excess of exports over imports has amounted to $80 million. U.S. Obstructs Debtors The money has not been repaid, Adams said, because the United States has made it ‘'difficult if not impossible for the debtors to earn the dollars which would have balanced the books.’* |
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