Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 47, November 25, 1953 |
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ECK INJURY PROVES FATAL TO LAWPROFESSOR
—PAGE FOUR—
Chancellor Speaks To Blue Key
ßlätfoTHCA,
Daily
oi a n
—PAGE THREE—
Sixteen Senators In Final Game
XLV
Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Nov. 25, 1953
No. 47
ccidental Fall Kills C Legal Professor
uev Blair Hawerton Jr., 32, day afternoon in his apartment
~tant professor of law, died rday at 1 p.m. in the Good aritan Hospital from the ef-of an accidental fall Sun-
ng
M Drive Begin Pearl rbor Day
he fund raising drive for the War Memorial scholar-begins Dec. 7, Pearl Harbor it was announced by A1 'a, publicity chairman for the e*
(he Living War Memorial is gned as a practical tribute to men who died in combat in Id War II and the Korean lict.
insored by the SC Trovets, LWM raises money for scholr lips to be awarded to the sons daughters of men killed in serv ice of their country.
Drive Chairmen ppointments for the drive be-s Dieda include John Bir-ham, chairman and Ed Wil-on, collections. Beta Alpha accounting fraternity, will le the accounting for the e.
;he LWM Committee is seek-volunteers to work on the Sec-rial Committee and the Col-ions Committee, he average time required to k will be two hours, and all lents, whether they are veter-or not, are eligible to work the campaign, Dieda said. Annual Event drive has been held each since 1948. Officials have ex-ssed the feeling that paying a ring” tribute to war heroes is appropriate than the erec-of a statue or a bronze
Each scholarship pays $304 tuition per semester for four years. The funds which are collected are invested, and only the interest is used for tuition pur-s, thereby making the schol-hip perpetual.” Dieda said. Like other university scholar-the Faculty Scholarship mittee will consider all appli-
at 3036 South Hoover Boulevard. Professor Hawerton, who joined
GOVERNOR'S DAUGHTER OK AFTER APPENDECTOMY
Gov. Goodwin J. .Knight’s 20-year-old daughter, SC student Carolyn Knight, was in “good condition” after an emergency appendectomy last night at the Free Methodist Hospital.
Miss Knight, a junior, tele-
from his office in the Los Angeles State Building to the hospital.
Following the operation, doctors told the governor, who had paced the floor outside the operating room, that his daughter
the SC faculty this semester, had j phoned her father from the hos-been suffering from a bad case Pital last of arthritis which had affected his spine, making it difficult for him to walk. While walking'across his room he fell and hit the back of his head on a window sill, breaking his neck.
Called for Help Four hours later he was heard calling for help by Ed Hookstrai-ten, former SC student and baseball star, who was passing by.
Hookstratten broke into tht-apartment, called an ambulance, and got Professor Hawerton to the hospital.
A graduate of the University of Mississippi with degrees in political science and law, Professor Hawerton also did graduate work in law at Yale University and received the Sterling Fellow award in law at Yale.
Supreme Court Clerk Last year he was law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Hugo L.
Black.
In addition to teaching history and law at the University of Mississippi, he algo taught law at Louisiana State University.
He is survived by his parents,
Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Hawerton.
His father is a history professor at the University of Mississippi.
Funeral services have not yet been announced»
should make a quick .recovery barring complications.
‘‘She’s a game kid,” Governor Knight said. “She didn’t want to worry me when she became ill so she went to the doctor and he had her hospitalized before she called me.
‘‘The suddenness of her being that she was being prepared for, taken to surgery made me appre-surgery. Governor Knight rushed hensive, but now I hope every-
thing will be fine,” he added.
A blood count revealed Miss Knight was suffering from appendicitis and immediate surgery would be required, according to Dr. Joseph A. Parker, a close friend of the Knight family.
Special Tax For Students Not Likely
Congress will not give parents of college students preferential tax treatment, Robert W. Oliver, professor of economics, said yesterday.
The House Ways and Means Committee is now discussing a tax bill which would let college students earn more than $600 a year and still be claimed as dependents by their parents.
“There are those in Congress who feel that college students are receiving too much as it is now,” said Oliver.
“In the event that this tax re-
ts who meet the requirements, vision goes into effect, I believe, will make their choices from it will have only slight effect on group. The first recipient of tax revenue and college enroll-scholarship is now attending ment,” he said, at SC,” he said. j The present tay law reads that,
e purpose of this year’s drive if a child earns $600 or more increase the principal of the during a given year, he cannot larship fund and thus make be claimed as a dependent by his •ater number of scholarships parents. Thus the parents’ tax ilable, explained Dieda. I bill becomes larger.
Court Orders Supervisors to
Pay $419,000
The District Court of Appeals yesterday ordered John Anson Ford, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, to pay SC $419,000 of county funds.
Payment will go to medical science teachers at SC for medical instruction and clinical aid given the staff of the County General Hospital.
The order also included payment to teachers from the College of Medical Evangelists and | the College of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons.
In the past, teachers from the medical schools have donated their services free on the ur>der- j standing that the schools them- j
WARREN CLENDENING
. . . honorary chairman
ASSC Head
Given Post for RE Week
Warren Clendening, ASSC president, has been named honorary chairman of the Trojan Religious Emphasis Committtrt?, announced Steve Robertson, REW chairman.
REW stresses the need of spiri-
. _ .. . tual values in university life as
schools contributing a great por- weU ag and e5ucationai
tion to the County Hospital s values, Robertson explained,
clinical work, monetary reim- Subcommittee chairmen will be
bursement in addition to use of chosen today, 2:15 p.m. in Inter-
,, * , j national Lounge.
the county s facilities. * . . . 6. .
, I An invitation to representatives At that time Ford refused to
selves benefitted from* the reresearch possibilities represented in the medical center.
Several weeks ago, however, the County Board of Supervisors, voted to allot the three medical
SC-Oxford Debaters Poke Puns at Television
Hour-Long Farce'Kept Audience in Laughter
KNOW SC
sign the bill, which would SC some $400,000. annually, on the grounds that private schools should not be reimbursed with county funds, questioning validity of the teaching contracts held by the school doctors.
The idea of county financial aid to the private schools participating in the county program had long been considered with the aim of a “friendly legal settlement.” Ford’s disagreement turned it into a real legal case which was closed yesterday when the court decided in favor of the private schools.
I is extended to all campus organi-give zations.
“We are permanently organizing now in order to assure a successful REW in February,” Rob^ ertson said.
Male Members Of Senior Class Council Told
The list of previously unannounced male members of the Senior Council was released yesterday.
The first membership list unintentionally contained only the names of women members.
The male members include Dan Andrain, Ron Bernkeisel, Alan Carpenter, Jack Cashin, Larry Courtney, Charles F. De Witt. Dick Dupar, Rudy Foitsch, Dave Griffiths, Robert Hopkins, Preston Howell, Peter La Sha, Joseph Levy, Jim Lucostic, John G. Mc-Candless, Charles McClure,' Jim McClune.
Jim McGregor, Ted Mariani, Mark Matlock, Pete McDermott, Richard Moore, David' Murray, Lloyd Ownbey Jr., George Ott, Jim Paul, William Pellegrini, Bob Rosenwall, Ernnie Schag, Cameron Smith, A1 Shonk, Robert Simon, Marvin Solomon, Don Stein, Hillard Torgan, John Witt, Harold Atwood, Gil Stephenson, Conway Leovy, and Ed Ripley.
There will be no meeting of the Senior Class Council today, as a reward for excellent attendance *t council meetings, Senior President George Root has announced. The council will hold their regular meeting in two weeks.
Root thanked ail council members for their support of class activities and helpfu. work on the council.
Danforth Grants Now Available
Danforth Graduate Fellowships are available for the academic year 1954-55, announced spokesmen of the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis.
E DO WANT PEACE!'
Arab Student Replies to Speedi by Jew
_C Arab student Salim Salim terday labeled Harry Levin’s ursdav night speech, “C a n re Be Peace in the Near it?" as “twisted to serve the ■pose of his topic.”
Levin, a counselor at the Is- j li Embassy in Washington, said I his local talk that “there can no peace between the Arab na-and Israel for the ‘simple1 son that the Arabs don’t want can’t afford peace.”
contradicted Levin's tement by saying, ‘The Arabs want peace—and a lasting one i a peace that is built on respectable and guaranteed than just the talk of peace the practice and planning of
Jfc; '
Arab- Suspicious Arabs will always be sus-of future inevitable ag-by the Zionists to ambitions of build-‘State’ by force,”
certainly wise of Mr. to mention to his audi-re plans of aggres-continued, “but I’U the job for him.” contents of a said. was dis-;vn Zionist published by a He said that can be found
in the campus library, proves the exact opposite of what Levin was “colorfully drawing for his audience.”
He named as the sponsor of the leaflet Brit Trumpelor Betar, (“Zionist Youth Organization”), 276 West 43rd Street, New York. The article states:
“Appartitioned. divided Erets* Israel, deprived of the Jordan River, the fertile plains of Transjordan, and historic Jerusalem is a mockery and a violation of the most sacred ideals and principles of the Jewish people.
“A glance at the map of the State of Israel will prove that as it now stands, the Jewish State is a freak, crippled by the mu-. tilation of its boundaries and the severance of four-fifths of its or-j iginal territory.
‘Time Against Us
“It is no secret that the basic economic, security, and political problems now facing the State of Israel are in one way or another a result of our failure to establish Jewish sovereignty over all of Erets-Israel on both sides of the Jordan.
''Time is working against us. The sooner we act, the quicker will we avert the inevitable tragedy. *
“This is our immediate task: ithe reuniting of Jerusalem old
and new, the elimination of the propaganda hoax called the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and the re-establishment of Jewish rule over all of Erets-Israel on both sides of the Jordan.
Permanent Solution “Jews: Don’t be deceived. Charity will not solve Israel’s economic ills. Only an Ertes-Israel within its natural boundaries offers a permanent solution.”
Salim contends that such ideas as contained in this Zionist pamphlet, as he calls it, are the real reasons why there can be
Official
Notice
Students now enrolled in the University who will complete the two-year pre-Pharmacy requirements this semester and plan to apply for admission to the School of Pharmacy for the class beginning February 1954 are requested to notify the Office of Admissions by December 1. Applications required of all Pharmacy applicants may be obtained at the Office of Admissions.
Dorothy P. Nelson Assistant Director of Admissions
no peace in Palestine.
“Such Zionist appeals and mobilizations for future ‘sacred’ actions, combined with massacres as that of Kibya, make the Arabs believe less and less in nicely arranged talks of peace in Palestine,” he emphasized.
The Arab student said that if Zionists are willing to establish peace, they should support a UN plan to stand collectively behind an offer of non-aggression in the Middle East.
“Why not try honestly and sincerely to compensate and solve your (Zionist) share of responsibility in the case of the million Arab refugees? Why not accept the demand of the UN in relation
to the status of Jerusalem?” he
said.
UN Offers Plan
The UN has offered a plan by which it would govern Jerusalem as a free city, such as Trieste, Salim pointed out. He said that if this plan were adopted, Moslems, Jews, and Christians could all use the city as a shrine.
Salim, in a statement directed specifically at Levin, said that “these actions mentioned in the pamphlet and many others explain more the real intentions of the Zionists in Palestine than does a little Thursday evening talk of how much you would love to establish peace in Palestine.”
by Rex Nevins
Television was “viewed with alarm,,” “a ?contrivence worked by steam,” and “likened to the misused institution of beds,” by SC-Oxford debaters before more than 1,000 persons last night in Bovard Auditorium.
In the farcial debate which drew laughs and applause
for more than an hour, SC was represented by Ken Shanks and Joe Flynn, both graduate students in speech, on the debate “Resolved That We View Television .with Alarm.”
Representing the British team were Patrick Mayhew and John Peters, both of Oxford’s Baliel College.
Introducing the debaters was W. Charles Redding, assistant professor of speech, who said that, “This was one event that SC couldn’t lose.”
The debate was not judged. There were^no ties, or losers or
winners.
Opening the debate, Flynn said he hoped “to get the audience home on time to ,hear Senator McCarthy. I really do hope that, too.” The crowded Bovard Auditorium broke with applause. Surrey-Born The 24-year-old Surrey-b o r n Peters said he took an oath not to overthrow the constitution. Conversely; he said he hoped that American tourists wouldn’t overthrow the King and Queen and Britain’s Parliament.
Applause again echoed through the auditorium.
But Peters added that, “t h e flowing tide will not be stemmed. And television should be viewed | with hope and sober confidence, j Flynn, however, had a different approach. He said that as he was watching TV in bed the other night, a voice said. “Wouldn’t you like to be laid to rest in Forest Lawn?”
“Hell no,” Flynn returned.
View TV With Alarm “Now is the time to view television with alarm. Now,” he said comparing Sophie Tucker’s $8000 an hour to a university professor’s ... an hour.
“The main thing wrong with television,” Flynn joked, “it resembles radio. No new ideas since the Hoover administration.” Later, the lanky Mayhew pierced the debate with:
“Both America and Englana are on the verge of dark age. And tonight, lights will be going out all over the U. S.”
Sit Inert
“But,” he explained in his very British accent, “it’s easier to switch off the lights and sit inert.” He then compalined of the lacking gayety*in England’s pubs. Television has taken the place of songs and merrymaking.
At one point, the Berkshire-born student drew steady applause in a bit of. impersonation of Britain’s Sir Winston Churchill. The crowd seemed to approve heartily of the heavy English accent.
Winding up the TV oral barrage, Shanks declared that “TV is the lowest common denominator of education.
‘La Chambre de Air Wick’ Shanks also described the kitchen as “la chambre de Air Wick.”
“Television, when ‘ dad’s away, also provides mom with another man,”, he said, “bringing Arthur Godfrey into the picture.”
Grid Banquet e . = ,
To Honor 1928 SPe£lal Ledure
Football Team To Freshmen
Professors to Attend Meet
SC faculty members in the departments of English, French, German, Spanish and classical languages will attend the 51st annual meeting of the Philological' Association of the Pacific Coast at Stanford University Friday and Saturday. f
Dr. Drew B. Pallette, secretary-treasurer of the association and associate professor of English at SC, who coordinated arrangements for the meeting and the program, will make his annual report at the convention. Dr. Rene Belle, head of the SC French department is vice-president of the association, and Dr. Lionel Stevenson, head cf the English department, is chairman of the nominating committee.
Three SC professors of English will read research papers at the meeting. Dr. Aerol Arnold, associate professor, will speak on “The Recapitulation Dreams’ in Richard III and Macbeth.”
. Dr. Florence R. Scott, professor emeritus, will speak on “The Propaganda Drama of the Revolution,” and. Dr. B. R. McElderry Jr., professor, will have as his topic, “Some Other Poetry of 1789.”
Official
Notice
The Thanksgiving recess will be from Thursday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 29.
All offices of the University wTill be closed from Thursday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 29.
J. E. Fields R. D. Fisher A. S. Raubenheimer
Official
Notice
There will be a rehearsal for all Trojan band members and lancers, Wednesday at 3:15 p.m. at I.O.
Tommy Walker Director of marching band * * *
Instructors are reminded that unsatisfactory scholarship reports covering the first ten weeks of the semester are due in the Registrar’s Office on Monday, Nov. 30.
D. W. Evans Assistant Registrar
The 1928 SC football team, which beat Notre Dame 27-14, will celebrate its 25th anniversary at the 30th annual Men’s Alumni Football Banquet Friday at 6:30 in the men’s gymnasium.
Jess Hibbs. captain of the team which included Jess Hill, Jess Mortensen and Ward Bond, will be honored.
Notre Dame’s head coach Frank Leahy and executive vice-president Rev. Edmund P.
Joyce, C.S.C., will be special guests.
ARO Major To Lecture For TV Show
The war in Indo-China and what it means to the United States will be discussed on “Halls of Science” Sunday at 3 p.m. over KNBH, Channel 4, by Maj. John R. Buttervvorth, USAF, assistant professor of air science and tactics for the Air Force ROTC unit on campus.
Major Butterworth will discuss the theory of geopolitics, the geography and people of Indo-China, and the background and present state of the war, and the relation of the United States to the conflict.
‘“Specifically,” Major Butter-worth said, “I will discuss the two major geopolitical theories, the ‘Heartland of MacKinder’ and the ‘Rimland of Spykman,’ and relate them to the security policy of the free world.”
Set Tuesday
The first of four “Know Your University” assemblies for all freshmen will be held in Bovard Auditorium Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 9 a.m., it was announced yesterday.
All schools with freshman students are cooperating, and all freshmen are expected and required to attend, the University administration said.
President Fred D. Fagg Jr. of the University and Asa .V. Call, president of the Board of Trustees, will speak at the first assembly.
The series has been designed to acquaint students with the history and traditions of Troy, the financial and development aspects of the University, plans for the future, and the contributions of SC to the community and the nation.
Speakers at future assemblies, which will be held about once a month, will be Financial Vice President Robert D. Fisher, Educational Vice president A. S. Raubenheimer, Development Vice President John E. Fields, and various faculty members and alumni.
The series has been planned by Deans Tracy E. Strevey of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, Lawrence C. Lockley of the School of Commerce, Robert E. Vivian of the School of Engineering, Raymond Kendall of the School of Music, aund Arthur B. Gallion of the School of Architecture.
Freshmen students will be excused from their regular 9 o’-clocks on Tuesday in order that they may attend the compulsor-ary assembly which will replace the scheduled Man and Civilization lecture.
NEWS ROUNDUP
McCarthy Gives Reply to Truman
by United Press
NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (UP) — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy charged tonight that former President Harry S. Truman is a “defeated and discredited politician who has put his party above the interest of the country, “regardless of how much the country is damaged thereby.”
The Wisconsin Republican made a half hour nationwide radio and television speech in reply to Mr. Truman’s speech last week charging the Eisenhower Administration had “fully embraced . . . Mc-Carthyism.”
McCarthy, who demanded and was granted equal TV and radio facilities, devoted most of his speech to an attack on Mr. Truman, but he did not spare some of his fellow Republicans or President Eisenhower.
In his speech, made in a small CBS television studio with no audience present, McCarthy:
1. Criticized the Eisenhower Administration for not doing all it could to stop Communism and disagreed with President Eisenhower that Communism in government would no! be an issue in 1954.
2. Called for a halt of payment of “blood money” to any American Ally who traded with the Red Nations and for a blockade of Red China.
3. Said he was prepared for the American people to judge “Mc-Carthyism” at the ballot box.
* * *
UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 24 —The Cnited Nations Security Council tonight expressed “the strongest censure” of Israel for last month’s raid on the Jordanian Village of Kibya.
Russia and Lebanon abstained as the Council voted, 9-0, for
the resolution sponsored by the United States, Britain and France.
The measure was passed without the presentation of amendments which had been expected from the Arab countries, whose spokesmen on the council in this issue have been Pakistan and Lebanon.
* * *
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 24—The population of Los Angeles County reached an all-time high of 4,716,-872 on Oct. 31, an increase of 48,775 since July 1, the Regional Planning Commission announced today.
The Commission estimated the population of Los Angeles at the end of last month was 2,089,189, although a Federal census conducted a month earlier showed only 2,071,271.
The increase was based on the estimate that about a one per cent error could be anticipated in the preliminary census figures. If that estimate should prove correct, it would make the city of Los Angeles’ population greater than that of Philadelphia, third-ranking in the nation. The last Philadelphia census in 1950 gave the city 2,071,605.
-* * *
SACRAMENTO, Nov. 23 —
Plans for a new $3,000,000 race track near Palm Springs, were revealed in the filing of articles of corporation with the Secretary of State today.
Articles were filed for the Palm Springs Jockey Club. It’s directors were listed as George Brunn, M. H. Molthan, and C. A. Miller of San Francisco, Leslie C. Rogers of Berkeley, and William B. Wright of Menlo Park.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 47, November 25, 1953 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 45, No. 47, November 25, 1953. |
| Full text | ECK INJURY PROVES FATAL TO LAWPROFESSOR —PAGE FOUR— Chancellor Speaks To Blue Key ßlätfoTHCA, Daily oi a n —PAGE THREE— Sixteen Senators In Final Game XLV Los Angeles, Calif., Wednesday, Nov. 25, 1953 No. 47 ccidental Fall Kills C Legal Professor uev Blair Hawerton Jr., 32, day afternoon in his apartment ~tant professor of law, died rday at 1 p.m. in the Good aritan Hospital from the ef-of an accidental fall Sun- ng M Drive Begin Pearl rbor Day he fund raising drive for the War Memorial scholar-begins Dec. 7, Pearl Harbor it was announced by A1 'a, publicity chairman for the e* (he Living War Memorial is gned as a practical tribute to men who died in combat in Id War II and the Korean lict. insored by the SC Trovets, LWM raises money for scholr lips to be awarded to the sons daughters of men killed in serv ice of their country. Drive Chairmen ppointments for the drive be-s Dieda include John Bir-ham, chairman and Ed Wil-on, collections. Beta Alpha accounting fraternity, will le the accounting for the e. ;he LWM Committee is seek-volunteers to work on the Sec-rial Committee and the Col-ions Committee, he average time required to k will be two hours, and all lents, whether they are veter-or not, are eligible to work the campaign, Dieda said. Annual Event drive has been held each since 1948. Officials have ex-ssed the feeling that paying a ring” tribute to war heroes is appropriate than the erec-of a statue or a bronze Each scholarship pays $304 tuition per semester for four years. The funds which are collected are invested, and only the interest is used for tuition pur-s, thereby making the schol-hip perpetual.” Dieda said. Like other university scholar-the Faculty Scholarship mittee will consider all appli- at 3036 South Hoover Boulevard. Professor Hawerton, who joined GOVERNOR'S DAUGHTER OK AFTER APPENDECTOMY Gov. Goodwin J. .Knight’s 20-year-old daughter, SC student Carolyn Knight, was in “good condition” after an emergency appendectomy last night at the Free Methodist Hospital. Miss Knight, a junior, tele- from his office in the Los Angeles State Building to the hospital. Following the operation, doctors told the governor, who had paced the floor outside the operating room, that his daughter the SC faculty this semester, had j phoned her father from the hos-been suffering from a bad case Pital last of arthritis which had affected his spine, making it difficult for him to walk. While walking'across his room he fell and hit the back of his head on a window sill, breaking his neck. Called for Help Four hours later he was heard calling for help by Ed Hookstrai-ten, former SC student and baseball star, who was passing by. Hookstratten broke into tht-apartment, called an ambulance, and got Professor Hawerton to the hospital. A graduate of the University of Mississippi with degrees in political science and law, Professor Hawerton also did graduate work in law at Yale University and received the Sterling Fellow award in law at Yale. Supreme Court Clerk Last year he was law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black. In addition to teaching history and law at the University of Mississippi, he algo taught law at Louisiana State University. He is survived by his parents, Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Hawerton. His father is a history professor at the University of Mississippi. Funeral services have not yet been announced» should make a quick .recovery barring complications. ‘‘She’s a game kid,” Governor Knight said. “She didn’t want to worry me when she became ill so she went to the doctor and he had her hospitalized before she called me. ‘‘The suddenness of her being that she was being prepared for, taken to surgery made me appre-surgery. Governor Knight rushed hensive, but now I hope every- thing will be fine,” he added. A blood count revealed Miss Knight was suffering from appendicitis and immediate surgery would be required, according to Dr. Joseph A. Parker, a close friend of the Knight family. Special Tax For Students Not Likely Congress will not give parents of college students preferential tax treatment, Robert W. Oliver, professor of economics, said yesterday. The House Ways and Means Committee is now discussing a tax bill which would let college students earn more than $600 a year and still be claimed as dependents by their parents. “There are those in Congress who feel that college students are receiving too much as it is now,” said Oliver. “In the event that this tax re- ts who meet the requirements, vision goes into effect, I believe, will make their choices from it will have only slight effect on group. The first recipient of tax revenue and college enroll-scholarship is now attending ment,” he said, at SC,” he said. j The present tay law reads that, e purpose of this year’s drive if a child earns $600 or more increase the principal of the during a given year, he cannot larship fund and thus make be claimed as a dependent by his •ater number of scholarships parents. Thus the parents’ tax ilable, explained Dieda. I bill becomes larger. Court Orders Supervisors to Pay $419,000 The District Court of Appeals yesterday ordered John Anson Ford, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, to pay SC $419,000 of county funds. Payment will go to medical science teachers at SC for medical instruction and clinical aid given the staff of the County General Hospital. The order also included payment to teachers from the College of Medical Evangelists and the College of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons. In the past, teachers from the medical schools have donated their services free on the ur>der- j standing that the schools them- j WARREN CLENDENING . . . honorary chairman ASSC Head Given Post for RE Week Warren Clendening, ASSC president, has been named honorary chairman of the Trojan Religious Emphasis Committtrt?, announced Steve Robertson, REW chairman. REW stresses the need of spiri- . _ .. . tual values in university life as schools contributing a great por- weU ag and e5ucationai tion to the County Hospital s values, Robertson explained, clinical work, monetary reim- Subcommittee chairmen will be bursement in addition to use of chosen today, 2:15 p.m. in Inter- ,, * , j national Lounge. the county s facilities. * . . . 6. . , I An invitation to representatives At that time Ford refused to selves benefitted from* the reresearch possibilities represented in the medical center. Several weeks ago, however, the County Board of Supervisors, voted to allot the three medical SC-Oxford Debaters Poke Puns at Television Hour-Long Farce'Kept Audience in Laughter KNOW SC sign the bill, which would SC some $400,000. annually, on the grounds that private schools should not be reimbursed with county funds, questioning validity of the teaching contracts held by the school doctors. The idea of county financial aid to the private schools participating in the county program had long been considered with the aim of a “friendly legal settlement.” Ford’s disagreement turned it into a real legal case which was closed yesterday when the court decided in favor of the private schools. I is extended to all campus organi-give zations. “We are permanently organizing now in order to assure a successful REW in February,” Rob^ ertson said. Male Members Of Senior Class Council Told The list of previously unannounced male members of the Senior Council was released yesterday. The first membership list unintentionally contained only the names of women members. The male members include Dan Andrain, Ron Bernkeisel, Alan Carpenter, Jack Cashin, Larry Courtney, Charles F. De Witt. Dick Dupar, Rudy Foitsch, Dave Griffiths, Robert Hopkins, Preston Howell, Peter La Sha, Joseph Levy, Jim Lucostic, John G. Mc-Candless, Charles McClure,' Jim McClune. Jim McGregor, Ted Mariani, Mark Matlock, Pete McDermott, Richard Moore, David' Murray, Lloyd Ownbey Jr., George Ott, Jim Paul, William Pellegrini, Bob Rosenwall, Ernnie Schag, Cameron Smith, A1 Shonk, Robert Simon, Marvin Solomon, Don Stein, Hillard Torgan, John Witt, Harold Atwood, Gil Stephenson, Conway Leovy, and Ed Ripley. There will be no meeting of the Senior Class Council today, as a reward for excellent attendance *t council meetings, Senior President George Root has announced. The council will hold their regular meeting in two weeks. Root thanked ail council members for their support of class activities and helpfu. work on the council. Danforth Grants Now Available Danforth Graduate Fellowships are available for the academic year 1954-55, announced spokesmen of the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis. E DO WANT PEACE!' Arab Student Replies to Speedi by Jew _C Arab student Salim Salim terday labeled Harry Levin’s ursdav night speech, “C a n re Be Peace in the Near it?" as “twisted to serve the ■pose of his topic.” Levin, a counselor at the Is- j li Embassy in Washington, said I his local talk that “there can no peace between the Arab na-and Israel for the ‘simple1 son that the Arabs don’t want can’t afford peace.” contradicted Levin's tement by saying, ‘The Arabs want peace—and a lasting one i a peace that is built on respectable and guaranteed than just the talk of peace the practice and planning of Jfc; ' Arab- Suspicious Arabs will always be sus-of future inevitable ag-by the Zionists to ambitions of build-‘State’ by force,” certainly wise of Mr. to mention to his audi-re plans of aggres-continued, “but I’U the job for him.” contents of a said. was dis-;vn Zionist published by a He said that can be found in the campus library, proves the exact opposite of what Levin was “colorfully drawing for his audience.” He named as the sponsor of the leaflet Brit Trumpelor Betar, (“Zionist Youth Organization”), 276 West 43rd Street, New York. The article states: “Appartitioned. divided Erets* Israel, deprived of the Jordan River, the fertile plains of Transjordan, and historic Jerusalem is a mockery and a violation of the most sacred ideals and principles of the Jewish people. “A glance at the map of the State of Israel will prove that as it now stands, the Jewish State is a freak, crippled by the mu-. tilation of its boundaries and the severance of four-fifths of its or-j iginal territory. ‘Time Against Us “It is no secret that the basic economic, security, and political problems now facing the State of Israel are in one way or another a result of our failure to establish Jewish sovereignty over all of Erets-Israel on both sides of the Jordan. ''Time is working against us. The sooner we act, the quicker will we avert the inevitable tragedy. * “This is our immediate task: ithe reuniting of Jerusalem old and new, the elimination of the propaganda hoax called the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and the re-establishment of Jewish rule over all of Erets-Israel on both sides of the Jordan. Permanent Solution “Jews: Don’t be deceived. Charity will not solve Israel’s economic ills. Only an Ertes-Israel within its natural boundaries offers a permanent solution.” Salim contends that such ideas as contained in this Zionist pamphlet, as he calls it, are the real reasons why there can be Official Notice Students now enrolled in the University who will complete the two-year pre-Pharmacy requirements this semester and plan to apply for admission to the School of Pharmacy for the class beginning February 1954 are requested to notify the Office of Admissions by December 1. Applications required of all Pharmacy applicants may be obtained at the Office of Admissions. Dorothy P. Nelson Assistant Director of Admissions no peace in Palestine. “Such Zionist appeals and mobilizations for future ‘sacred’ actions, combined with massacres as that of Kibya, make the Arabs believe less and less in nicely arranged talks of peace in Palestine,” he emphasized. The Arab student said that if Zionists are willing to establish peace, they should support a UN plan to stand collectively behind an offer of non-aggression in the Middle East. “Why not try honestly and sincerely to compensate and solve your (Zionist) share of responsibility in the case of the million Arab refugees? Why not accept the demand of the UN in relation to the status of Jerusalem?” he said. UN Offers Plan The UN has offered a plan by which it would govern Jerusalem as a free city, such as Trieste, Salim pointed out. He said that if this plan were adopted, Moslems, Jews, and Christians could all use the city as a shrine. Salim, in a statement directed specifically at Levin, said that “these actions mentioned in the pamphlet and many others explain more the real intentions of the Zionists in Palestine than does a little Thursday evening talk of how much you would love to establish peace in Palestine.” by Rex Nevins Television was “viewed with alarm,,” “a ?contrivence worked by steam,” and “likened to the misused institution of beds,” by SC-Oxford debaters before more than 1,000 persons last night in Bovard Auditorium. In the farcial debate which drew laughs and applause for more than an hour, SC was represented by Ken Shanks and Joe Flynn, both graduate students in speech, on the debate “Resolved That We View Television .with Alarm.” Representing the British team were Patrick Mayhew and John Peters, both of Oxford’s Baliel College. Introducing the debaters was W. Charles Redding, assistant professor of speech, who said that, “This was one event that SC couldn’t lose.” The debate was not judged. There were^no ties, or losers or winners. Opening the debate, Flynn said he hoped “to get the audience home on time to ,hear Senator McCarthy. I really do hope that, too.” The crowded Bovard Auditorium broke with applause. Surrey-Born The 24-year-old Surrey-b o r n Peters said he took an oath not to overthrow the constitution. Conversely; he said he hoped that American tourists wouldn’t overthrow the King and Queen and Britain’s Parliament. Applause again echoed through the auditorium. But Peters added that, “t h e flowing tide will not be stemmed. And television should be viewed with hope and sober confidence, j Flynn, however, had a different approach. He said that as he was watching TV in bed the other night, a voice said. “Wouldn’t you like to be laid to rest in Forest Lawn?” “Hell no,” Flynn returned. View TV With Alarm “Now is the time to view television with alarm. Now,” he said comparing Sophie Tucker’s $8000 an hour to a university professor’s ... an hour. “The main thing wrong with television,” Flynn joked, “it resembles radio. No new ideas since the Hoover administration.” Later, the lanky Mayhew pierced the debate with: “Both America and Englana are on the verge of dark age. And tonight, lights will be going out all over the U. S.” Sit Inert “But,” he explained in his very British accent, “it’s easier to switch off the lights and sit inert.” He then compalined of the lacking gayety*in England’s pubs. Television has taken the place of songs and merrymaking. At one point, the Berkshire-born student drew steady applause in a bit of. impersonation of Britain’s Sir Winston Churchill. The crowd seemed to approve heartily of the heavy English accent. Winding up the TV oral barrage, Shanks declared that “TV is the lowest common denominator of education. ‘La Chambre de Air Wick’ Shanks also described the kitchen as “la chambre de Air Wick.” “Television, when ‘ dad’s away, also provides mom with another man,”, he said, “bringing Arthur Godfrey into the picture.” Grid Banquet e . = , To Honor 1928 SPe£lal Ledure Football Team To Freshmen Professors to Attend Meet SC faculty members in the departments of English, French, German, Spanish and classical languages will attend the 51st annual meeting of the Philological' Association of the Pacific Coast at Stanford University Friday and Saturday. f Dr. Drew B. Pallette, secretary-treasurer of the association and associate professor of English at SC, who coordinated arrangements for the meeting and the program, will make his annual report at the convention. Dr. Rene Belle, head of the SC French department is vice-president of the association, and Dr. Lionel Stevenson, head cf the English department, is chairman of the nominating committee. Three SC professors of English will read research papers at the meeting. Dr. Aerol Arnold, associate professor, will speak on “The Recapitulation Dreams’ in Richard III and Macbeth.” . Dr. Florence R. Scott, professor emeritus, will speak on “The Propaganda Drama of the Revolution,” and. Dr. B. R. McElderry Jr., professor, will have as his topic, “Some Other Poetry of 1789.” Official Notice The Thanksgiving recess will be from Thursday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 29. All offices of the University wTill be closed from Thursday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 29. J. E. Fields R. D. Fisher A. S. Raubenheimer Official Notice There will be a rehearsal for all Trojan band members and lancers, Wednesday at 3:15 p.m. at I.O. Tommy Walker Director of marching band * * * Instructors are reminded that unsatisfactory scholarship reports covering the first ten weeks of the semester are due in the Registrar’s Office on Monday, Nov. 30. D. W. Evans Assistant Registrar The 1928 SC football team, which beat Notre Dame 27-14, will celebrate its 25th anniversary at the 30th annual Men’s Alumni Football Banquet Friday at 6:30 in the men’s gymnasium. Jess Hibbs. captain of the team which included Jess Hill, Jess Mortensen and Ward Bond, will be honored. Notre Dame’s head coach Frank Leahy and executive vice-president Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., will be special guests. ARO Major To Lecture For TV Show The war in Indo-China and what it means to the United States will be discussed on “Halls of Science” Sunday at 3 p.m. over KNBH, Channel 4, by Maj. John R. Buttervvorth, USAF, assistant professor of air science and tactics for the Air Force ROTC unit on campus. Major Butterworth will discuss the theory of geopolitics, the geography and people of Indo-China, and the background and present state of the war, and the relation of the United States to the conflict. ‘“Specifically,” Major Butter-worth said, “I will discuss the two major geopolitical theories, the ‘Heartland of MacKinder’ and the ‘Rimland of Spykman,’ and relate them to the security policy of the free world.” Set Tuesday The first of four “Know Your University” assemblies for all freshmen will be held in Bovard Auditorium Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 9 a.m., it was announced yesterday. All schools with freshman students are cooperating, and all freshmen are expected and required to attend, the University administration said. President Fred D. Fagg Jr. of the University and Asa .V. Call, president of the Board of Trustees, will speak at the first assembly. The series has been designed to acquaint students with the history and traditions of Troy, the financial and development aspects of the University, plans for the future, and the contributions of SC to the community and the nation. Speakers at future assemblies, which will be held about once a month, will be Financial Vice President Robert D. Fisher, Educational Vice president A. S. Raubenheimer, Development Vice President John E. Fields, and various faculty members and alumni. The series has been planned by Deans Tracy E. Strevey of the College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, Lawrence C. Lockley of the School of Commerce, Robert E. Vivian of the School of Engineering, Raymond Kendall of the School of Music, aund Arthur B. Gallion of the School of Architecture. Freshmen students will be excused from their regular 9 o’-clocks on Tuesday in order that they may attend the compulsor-ary assembly which will replace the scheduled Man and Civilization lecture. NEWS ROUNDUP McCarthy Gives Reply to Truman by United Press NEW YORK, Nov. 24 (UP) — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy charged tonight that former President Harry S. Truman is a “defeated and discredited politician who has put his party above the interest of the country, “regardless of how much the country is damaged thereby.” The Wisconsin Republican made a half hour nationwide radio and television speech in reply to Mr. Truman’s speech last week charging the Eisenhower Administration had “fully embraced . . . Mc-Carthyism.” McCarthy, who demanded and was granted equal TV and radio facilities, devoted most of his speech to an attack on Mr. Truman, but he did not spare some of his fellow Republicans or President Eisenhower. In his speech, made in a small CBS television studio with no audience present, McCarthy: 1. Criticized the Eisenhower Administration for not doing all it could to stop Communism and disagreed with President Eisenhower that Communism in government would no! be an issue in 1954. 2. Called for a halt of payment of “blood money” to any American Ally who traded with the Red Nations and for a blockade of Red China. 3. Said he was prepared for the American people to judge “Mc-Carthyism” at the ballot box. * * * UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 24 —The Cnited Nations Security Council tonight expressed “the strongest censure” of Israel for last month’s raid on the Jordanian Village of Kibya. Russia and Lebanon abstained as the Council voted, 9-0, for the resolution sponsored by the United States, Britain and France. The measure was passed without the presentation of amendments which had been expected from the Arab countries, whose spokesmen on the council in this issue have been Pakistan and Lebanon. * * * LOS ANGELES. Nov. 24—The population of Los Angeles County reached an all-time high of 4,716,-872 on Oct. 31, an increase of 48,775 since July 1, the Regional Planning Commission announced today. The Commission estimated the population of Los Angeles at the end of last month was 2,089,189, although a Federal census conducted a month earlier showed only 2,071,271. The increase was based on the estimate that about a one per cent error could be anticipated in the preliminary census figures. If that estimate should prove correct, it would make the city of Los Angeles’ population greater than that of Philadelphia, third-ranking in the nation. The last Philadelphia census in 1950 gave the city 2,071,605. -* * * SACRAMENTO, Nov. 23 — Plans for a new $3,000,000 race track near Palm Springs, were revealed in the filing of articles of corporation with the Secretary of State today. Articles were filed for the Palm Springs Jockey Club. It’s directors were listed as George Brunn, M. H. Molthan, and C. A. Miller of San Francisco, Leslie C. Rogers of Berkeley, and William B. Wright of Menlo Park. |
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