DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 82, March 05, 1962 |
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HARE TO SEEK YELL KING POST
PAGE THREE
Student Faculty Probes Intellectual Climate
Universrty o-f Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Trojan Teams Ready For New Foes
VOL. Llll
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1962
NO. 82
Hayes to Try for Write-In Vote
Committee Taps Grandchildren Society Picks DEADLINE DRAWS NEAR
New Yell Sauad Physics Head F0R BATTLE columns
■ ^ ▼▼ I I I U Cl vJ " * Battle column statements and photographs
I bride served as attendants _ _ _ ■ ... . . , .... ... .. .
As Member
By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter
Only one of five students selected last week to be next year’s yell leaders announced he would run for yell king in time to be added to the official ballot Friday.
Dick Hare, a junior in Chi Phi fraternity, announced he would bid for the
Board Bans Ail Biologists From Ballot
at the winter wedding of a retired USC physics professor and an alumna of sociology.
Dr. Arthur Wiekes Xye married Mrs. Gilbert Gid-dings Benjamin.
Dr. Xye, now a frequent visitor of the campus, retired from the faculty in 1949. He is a member of the Sixty-| Five Club of USC. His bride was the widow of the late Prof. Renjamin of the history department here.
The couple now on a brief trip to Xorthern California, plan to reside in Los An-geles. ,
top spirit post shortly after being selected by a special committee Thursday night.
The other yell leaders were . # Bart Arajo, a freshman in Phi j RlAmHlctf Kappa Psi; Bob Bach, sopho-DlUlUy IjIj more in Tau Epsilon Phi; Pete Kendall, freshman in Theta Xi; : and Bob Ternune, sophomore in i ! Theta Xi.
Hare will be the only candi-Biological sciences will not | date to have his name on the participate in the spring elec- ballot since the Election Com-tions this year because its con- mittee had to submit names of stitution makes it impossible yell king candidates to the for anyone to meet require-i printers by 2:15 p.m. Friday, ments, the Board of Inquiry! *0 Complaints
decided Friday. j pjch Miailovich, present yell
Both defendants and accusers king and chairman of the se-in biological science were eli-ilection board, said he did not mmated by the board decision, anticipate any complaints simi-ending a feud that began two lar to the ones that resulted in The American Airlines trag-weeks ago when senatorial can- his election last year. ecjy jn Xew York last week
didate Dave Goldberg challeng- Miailovich supporters had claimed the life of an instruc-ed the eligibility of six of nine!cried “foul" when he was drop- tor jn ^j1e Graduate School of
|Plane Crash Claims Life Of USC Man
office seekers in biological. ped from the competition early sciences. in the elimination process.
The board held that the field naimine Miailovich was eli-
constitution contained so manv minated dirty P°,itics’ his requirements that none of the supporters "aged a vigorous present candidates or any wnte-" campaign. Miailovich write-in candidates could ever "0n ^ votes and the elec" qualify.
Student Council
One clause said students must
The board also eliminated!
Business Administration, Dean Robert J. Dockson reported Friday.
Jay B. Hayne, who had begun teaching at USC this semester. was returning from a meeting of the American Man-tion. jagement Association in New
A Senate resolution, suggest- York, where he had presented ed by Steve Harris, Miailo-ja paper.
, vich’s opponent, waived regu- Mr. Heyne, who was to have
be approved by the field s stu- lar yey ]eader procedures and i>een 33 iast Friday, was also
dent council before they could ,macie Miailovich yell king. working on his
officially be approved as candi- Clean Effort Graduate School of Business
dates for any of its offices. The “This year’s selection was Administration.
board pointed out that it was c]ean anrj represents the selec- Heyne, an instructor in
too late for any candidates to tion committee's best effort.” basic data processing, worked
meet this requirement. Miailovich said. “We graded : at System Development Corp.,
The candidates whose eligi- them on what would be best Santa Monica. Dean Dockson
bility was being questioned for the university.” pointed out he had made two
were Richard Luros, candidate He said he could see no innovations in the field of busi-
for field president; Steve Kle- legitimate claim anyone could ^ness decision making.
vens, vice president; and Dave have for protesting the selec- “His development of work
Barthold, Garry Rodrigue. I tions. with computers and business
Steve Schwartz and Russell | The selection board consisted problems indicated that he was
Hicks, senators. I of Dean of Students Robert J. ,a true genius in that field,”
, Downey; Marvin Goux, repre- Dean Dockson said. “We had
jsenting Athletic Director Jes-jbeen counting on him for im-
... . . ., . se T. Hill; Bob Jani, coordina- provements in the area of candidates for field president . , j j >
i -.u tor of special events; ASSC j quantitative methods and anal-along with Goldburg. __TI , .... .
President Hugh Helm; Mike lysis.
Xext Fall Gless, chief justice of Men's i “This is a tremendous loss to
Tlie board recommended the Judicial; Hedy Davis, chief the community and to the busi-
Biological Sciences Field Coun-justice of Women's judicial; j ness administration field,” he
eil revise the constitution in an(j Miailovich. I added. “He will be deeply
time to elect officers at the ioft Toints missed by every faculty mem-
freshman elections next fall, j Voting was done on a 100 ber who knew him and worked Goldberg originally complain- j point basis, Miailovich said. I with him.” ed that most of the students Twenty-five points were dis- Mr. Heyne had left New running for biological sciences tributed for enthusiasm, 25 for York on the flight that took offices had not served on the appearance, 25 for execution of the lives of 95 persons to be field's council, another require-j yells and 25 for knowledge of back in Los Angeles in time ment of the constitution. |Troydition. ;for his night class.
Later he backed his com- Twenty-two students origi-! He is survived by his wife.
nallv began participation in a Patricia: a son, Michael, 6; three-meeting instruction pro- and a daughter, 14 months. He gram and 17 aspirants were iwas educated at the University letier listed the students who still in the program at the end of Pennsylvania, Drexel Insti-
had served on the council. of the third meeting._tute of Technology and UCLA.
Election Commissioner John Moyer eliminated six candidates at that time.
Nonexistent Meanwhile, candidate Hicks charged that Goldberg's council did not exist. He protested that he and the others couldn’t
be expected to serve on some-! Noted physiologist Dr. Carl thing that never existed. \ W. Gottschalk has been chosen Hicks said Dr. James W. by the School ** Medicine to
Dr. John R. Holmes, head of the physics department, was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society and appointed a member of the Los Angeles county atomic energy committee last week.
The fellowship, conferred upon Dr. Holmes at a New York meeting, was in a recognition of his contributions to the advancement of physics.
Supervisor Kenneth Hahn appointed him as a member of the Atomic Energy Development and Radiation Protection Committee, which advises the Board of Supervisors on all matters pertaining to atomic energy and radiation.
The 12 members, five of whom are appointed by the supervisors, must be trained in the application and monitoring of nuclear materials.
Dr. Holmes has an extensive background in the field of| atomic energy and radiation.' having been one of the pioneer j scientists on the Manhattan Project which developed the first atomic bomb.
Recently he has carried out extensive studies on radiation protection.
Dr. Holmes has published
for the special election edition of the Daily Trojan must he submitted by 5 p.m. Thursday, Barbara Epstein, Daily Trojan editor, announced last week.
The special six-page edition will appear on Wednesday, March 14, the day before student body elections begin. Miss Epstein said.
Candidates for all ASSC and class offices may submit free statements, limited to 250 words for ASSC presidential candidates and 100 words for all other candidates. The statements may be edited at the discretion of the editors.
Statements must be typed and double spaced and should include the candidate’s name, office for which he is a candidate, address and phone number. They should be submitted to Jo Ann Madron, assistant to the editor, in 432 SU.
Candidates who wish to run photographs with their statements must contact Steve Somody, photo editor, in 420 SU.
If a candidate wishes to run a picture, he may either submit his own glossy print or make an appointment with Somody for a Daily Trojan photographer to take his picture.
The cost for processing and printing a battle column photograph is S5. The fee must he paid when the picture is left at the photo office or when the picture is taken. Checks should be made payable to the Daily Trojan.
No statements or pictures will be accepted after the Thursday deadline.
TRG Leader Hits Student Protesters
'j Surprise Entry For Presidency Hits Inefficiency
By HAL DRAKE Daily Trojan City Editor
Pharmacy Senator Dennis Hayes made a stab at becoming a drak horse in the ASSC presidential contest Friday with a surprise announcement that he would conduct a write-in campaign to bring “efficiency and stability” to student government.
Hayes, who said he would submit posters for approval so : he could begin campaigning J with other candidates today,
I was announced as a hopeful for | the number one position at a i meeting of the School of Phar-| macy.
Songfest Chairman Bill |
; Heeres, who is also outgoing | j president of pharmacy’s Skull j J and Mortar honoraiy, present- j j ed Hayes as a candidate after |
| giv ing a loud denunciation of i : so-called government clique Theta Nu Epsilon.
Meets Qualifications
ASSC President Hugh Helm;
I said Hayes, a fifth-year phar-1 I macy student, met all qualifi- j j cations for the office and was entitled under the ASSC con-! stitution to wage a write-in j contest.
Hayes said he decided to run; because all the other candidates, are “the same types that have j
DENNIS HAYES
. . . dark horse
AMS presidential candidate ate asking a set of require- been running for years
■'I'm a commuter, I'm married and I think I understand
Phil Bonnell challenged a stu- i ments be established for reg dent protest group Friday to I ulation of political parties.
form its own political machine! Bonnell countered the com-,many of the problems indepen-if it doesn't like the organiza- plaint by asking how a group: dents such as myself face,” widely in his field and is a tion of the Trojans for Rep- of 10 students could claim to Hayes said. “I hope that if I member of other leading sci- resentative Government Party represent all student factions, as an independent get into of-
entific societies, including Sigma Xi, the American Associa-DRA in the tion f°r the Advancement of Science and the Optical Society of America.
plaint with a letter signed by Dr. Jay M. Savage, assistant head of biological sciences. The
Digest Tells
j edcre of TRG's organization.
A ,1 ^ « Hal Stokes, organizer of the
Author nUnT protesting students and an-
Reader’s Digest Foundation 0,her candidate for AMS pres-
is offering a total of $2,000 in:ident- said latcr that DwiShl cash prizes to collegiate au- ^P^ TRG P31^ chairman, thors in a short story contest!had explained the party sys-designed to discover talented lem to him early last week‘ young American writers. ! The protesting group, which
met Thursday, complained that representation on TRG's executive cabinet was not fair
War Poetry
Will Be Read During Noon
A selection of poems written
(TRG). He said the “pitifully narrow” i fice, I will be able to draw during the Civil War, "Drum
Bonnell a TRG candidate. gI>ouP was guilty of the of- others on this campus not ordi- Taps” by Walt Whitman, will charged that the group, call- fense jt protested. narily interested in government be the subject of the English
ing itself the Student Protest “TRG has equal representa- into active participation.” iNoon Reading today at 12:30 ! Group for Responsible Govern- tion in its organizations, com- *ot AH , ^ 133 * H-
iment, had made wild accusa- prising dormitories, foreign Hayes stressed that he does Dr. Charles R. Metzger, vis-tions without accurate knowl- student groups, many fratemi- j n°t want to de-emphasize the iting associate professor of
ties and sororities and com- importance of the P.ow, but English, will read from the se-
Prize for the best short story will be $500, while the number two entry will receive S350 and third place will get S250. The next 18 winners will receive honorable mention awards of $50 apiece.
Contest winners will have their stories published in an annual hard-cover volume “Best College Writing.”
Manuscripts should be from 1,500 to 9,000 words in length and should be submitted to Story Magazine College Contest, care of the Reader’s Di gest, Pleasantville, N.Y.
Manuscripts, certified by i faculty member, must be submitted before the deadline, April 20.
Noted Authority Annual Memorial
to Give
Lecture
Bartholomew, sponsor of the deIlver the annual Moms Hen-Biological Sciences Council, had ry Nathanson Memorial Lec-told him no council activities: turc* the medical campus or meeting dates had been filed this week.
with his office. An authority on kidney proc-
esses, Dr. Gottschalk will dis-
The bo»rd also fined nine other candidates $5 each for not turning in campaign sheets by Feb. 22 at the afternoon session.
! cuss “The Countercurrent Hypothesis for Urine Concentration” at noon on Wednesday in 1645 Los Angeles County General Hospital, 1200 N. The candidates being fined State S{
Include Jean Campbell, candi- j^e w,jjj gjve another lecture date for dentistry senator: Leon on “Hydrostatic Pressures and Faure. physical science senator; f1ow of t]le Kidney ’ on Thurs-Joel Harwin, business senator: ^ay night at 8 in the same and Barbara Hayes, AWS room.
secretary. Dr. Gottschalk, a career in-1
Also fined were Chuck, Mar- vestigator of the American son, humanities senator; Don Heart Association and profes-1 Moss, business senator; Dick sor of medicine and physiology Moss, humanities senator. Nan- at the University of North cv Price, business senator; and Carolina School of Medicine, Terri Waxman, educational) be the ninth outstanding president. i scientist in the area of cardio-
| by the Morris Henry Nathanson Memorial Fund, establish-! ed by associates, friends and patients of the Los Angeles 1 physician, who died in 1952.
At 40, Dr. Gottschalk is one of the nation's leading younger scientists, best known for his ultra-microscopic kidney studies.
Using high-powered magnification and special manipulating devices. Dr. Gottschalk has been able to operate on kidney of living experimental animals, removing l-100th of a microliter (l-10.000,000th of an ounce) of urine from a single one of the kidney’s millions of tubules.
He has been able to determine where in the tubules the vascular pharmacology and sample came from and to ana-physiology to take part in the lyze the tiny bit of fluid for Nathanson Lectureship. nine different chemical and
The lectureship is supported; physical properties.
to foreign, dormitory and commuting students. The students decided to prepare a recommendation to the ASSC Sen-
Ticket Sale Will Begin For Play
muters,” Bonnell said.
Improvements
merely to show that the Row j lection of poems that Whit-“is not all.” j man wrote from his personal
He said that TRG would re-i Pharmacist. who is na- experience with the war.
move its “semi-open” system president of 12,000 stu- "Whitmans brother was a
soon after the spring elections. |dents in American Pharma- soldier in the Civil War,” the He promised a complete list ceut-^caI Association, said that English teacher explained, of its representatives would be >n(I‘^eience on campus stems Battle Front
from a lack of organization in | “Whitman went to the aid student government. of his wounded brother who
“Any time a student does was in a hospital near the bat-want to participate in govern- tie front and while he was ment, he is discouraged by the there he served in hospitals
DR. CARL W. GOTTSCHALK
. . . kidney expert
Tickets will go on sale today for the United States premiere of a new English translation by USC students of Lope de Vega’s “Gentleman from Olme-do.”
The play was translated by seminar students in Spanish literature under the direction of Dr. Everett W. Hesse, professor of Spanish.
The 17th century play of love, intrigue and murder will have a five-day run in Bovard Auditorium on March 16, 17, 22, 23 and 24. The evening performances will begin at 8:30, and the one matinee performance March 17 at 2 p.m. will include a special lecture on the play.
General admission is $1.50 and students may purchase tickets for 50 cents with activity book coupon 26. Tickets will be sold from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the drama office, 3709 Hoover St.
The play, based on an old Spanish ballad, focuses on a young woman, Dona Ines, who is pledged to marry villainous Don Rodrigo. But she falls in love with Don Alonso, a dashing hero, bullfighter and gentleman from Olmedo.
Alonzo communicates with his love by smuggling letters to her with the help of a witch and a Latin teacher. Rodrigo leams of the incognito affair
and vows vengeance. Jealous and envious, he hires a henchman to do away with his rival.
released later this week.
Bonnell said TRG had made( what he considers the most important improvement in political parties — above-ground,. . , . ... , presentation of candidate* and I disorganization of everything, , and described what he saw. CToajs ihe said. J “In the poems, Whitman ° I Hayes said he plans to bring deals with awe-i n s p i r i n g Piote&ter Stoke» caime , a statute before the ASSC events, terrible sacrifices and however, that Chapin s exp>a- Senate Wednesday that would the issues he considered to be
improve the organization of the: at stake, but he also deals major fields of study and would with individual experiences, force the ASSC president to fears and dangers of the war,’* act on a statute passed last | Dr. Metzger said, year establishing a field of . All Phase*
study president’s council. j The poems Dr. Metzger will “The vice president of one I read cover all phases of the not want to see a party legal-1 fieid couldn't even find out the war including the beginning ized on a semi-open basis be- name of her field president un- when everyone was ready to cause it might decide never [jj jUSt; recently,” he noted. fight, battle and action scenes, to completely open its organi- Hayes said the well-organized hospital scenes and soldiers’ zation. | pharmacy Council has been nightmares.
“Semi-open’’ suggests it is “very helpful” to the student Other selections will de-semi-secret, Stokes declared, body of his school and has j scribe returning veterans, the He wanted to know what was | helped make the school close ; ancient slave women saluting being kept secret and from as well as informed. | the Union troops as they pass-
whom. ! “It’s very unusual for some- ed and Whitman’s letters to
Stokes said the protest one from a professional school families regarding the fate of group had nearly 20 petitions to take a chance at this type the soldiers, circulating on campus with of office, since he knows he Dr. Metzger chose “Drum more than 70 signatures al- will lose without Row backing,”] Taps” to celebrate the 100th ready returned to him. ! Hayes admitted. anniversary of the Civil War.
nation of party organization did not allow representation to 10 dormitories, foreign students, the School of Pharmacy and commuters.
Only Reason Stokes said his group did
35 Groups Will Compete In Annual Songfest Fete
Thirty-five campus groups competing in 27 song and dance routines applied for berths in Songfest 1962, Chairmen Bill Heeres and Vivian von Hagen announced Friday.
Many of the groups are
Chi Omega; Phi Mu Alpha, na- The novelty division, which tional music fraternity; Kappa only pulled in one contestant
Delta; ami Delta Sigma Delta,|jas^ Sprjng came through with
national dental fraternity.
., , ... n-., , ifive this time including Sigma
A pha Phi with Theta Xi,I , , „ .4.
Du• r, Alpha Mu with Alpha Epsilon SAE w ith Gamma Phi Beta, „ ..
, IT11 , : Phi. Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Al-
the Hillel Foundation, and a *, f , .
.... pha. Phi Kappa Tau, and Alpha group with the exotic title of ,’A________^
scheduled to begin rehearsing ........Chi 0mega with t^
tonight for Songfest prelims, The Hashers Three Plus One
set for April 11 and 12. The compete the not-so-small, small Alpha Delta Pi w ith Alpha
ninth annual musical spectacu- division field. a u m^a’.
lar will be staged in the Holly- Potential mixed division con- Gamma with Sigma Chi Alpha
wood Bowl the evening of May testants are Sigma Phi Epsilon ™hSAFwm
12. . I with Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Alpha Phi Beta with SAE will confine
Ironically, the small group Theta with Beta Theta Pi, the their ‘‘s°und warfare to the division had the largest num-1.School of Dentistry, Phi Delta production category, ber of entries with 10. Small Theta with Tri-Delt. Phi Kappa The Naval Reserve Unit and group hopefuls are The Barris- Psi with Delta Gamma and Tau Chi Omega are single entries ters, representing the School of Kappa Epsilon with Alpha in the all-men's and all-wom-Law; University Hall; Alpha;Gamma Delta. jens division.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 82, March 05, 1962 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 82, March 05, 1962. |
| Full text | HARE TO SEEK YELL KING POST PAGE THREE Student Faculty Probes Intellectual Climate Universrty o-f Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Trojan Teams Ready For New Foes VOL. Llll LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1962 NO. 82 Hayes to Try for Write-In Vote Committee Taps Grandchildren Society Picks DEADLINE DRAWS NEAR New Yell Sauad Physics Head F0R BATTLE columns ■ ^ ▼▼ I I I U Cl vJ " * Battle column statements and photographs I bride served as attendants _ _ _ ■ ... . . , .... ... .. . As Member By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter Only one of five students selected last week to be next year’s yell leaders announced he would run for yell king in time to be added to the official ballot Friday. Dick Hare, a junior in Chi Phi fraternity, announced he would bid for the Board Bans Ail Biologists From Ballot at the winter wedding of a retired USC physics professor and an alumna of sociology. Dr. Arthur Wiekes Xye married Mrs. Gilbert Gid-dings Benjamin. Dr. Xye, now a frequent visitor of the campus, retired from the faculty in 1949. He is a member of the Sixty- Five Club of USC. His bride was the widow of the late Prof. Renjamin of the history department here. The couple now on a brief trip to Xorthern California, plan to reside in Los An-geles. , top spirit post shortly after being selected by a special committee Thursday night. The other yell leaders were . # Bart Arajo, a freshman in Phi j RlAmHlctf Kappa Psi; Bob Bach, sopho-DlUlUy IjIj more in Tau Epsilon Phi; Pete Kendall, freshman in Theta Xi; : and Bob Ternune, sophomore in i ! Theta Xi. Hare will be the only candi-Biological sciences will not date to have his name on the participate in the spring elec- ballot since the Election Com-tions this year because its con- mittee had to submit names of stitution makes it impossible yell king candidates to the for anyone to meet require-i printers by 2:15 p.m. Friday, ments, the Board of Inquiry! *0 Complaints decided Friday. j pjch Miailovich, present yell Both defendants and accusers king and chairman of the se-in biological science were eli-ilection board, said he did not mmated by the board decision, anticipate any complaints simi-ending a feud that began two lar to the ones that resulted in The American Airlines trag-weeks ago when senatorial can- his election last year. ecjy jn Xew York last week didate Dave Goldberg challeng- Miailovich supporters had claimed the life of an instruc-ed the eligibility of six of nine!cried “foul" when he was drop- tor jn ^j1e Graduate School of Plane Crash Claims Life Of USC Man office seekers in biological. ped from the competition early sciences. in the elimination process. The board held that the field naimine Miailovich was eli- constitution contained so manv minated dirty P°,itics’ his requirements that none of the supporters "aged a vigorous present candidates or any wnte-" campaign. Miailovich write-in candidates could ever "0n ^ votes and the elec" qualify. Student Council One clause said students must The board also eliminated! Business Administration, Dean Robert J. Dockson reported Friday. Jay B. Hayne, who had begun teaching at USC this semester. was returning from a meeting of the American Man-tion. jagement Association in New A Senate resolution, suggest- York, where he had presented ed by Steve Harris, Miailo-ja paper. , vich’s opponent, waived regu- Mr. Heyne, who was to have be approved by the field s stu- lar yey ]eader procedures and i>een 33 iast Friday, was also dent council before they could ,macie Miailovich yell king. working on his officially be approved as candi- Clean Effort Graduate School of Business dates for any of its offices. The “This year’s selection was Administration. board pointed out that it was c]ean anrj represents the selec- Heyne, an instructor in too late for any candidates to tion committee's best effort.” basic data processing, worked meet this requirement. Miailovich said. “We graded : at System Development Corp., The candidates whose eligi- them on what would be best Santa Monica. Dean Dockson bility was being questioned for the university.” pointed out he had made two were Richard Luros, candidate He said he could see no innovations in the field of busi- for field president; Steve Kle- legitimate claim anyone could ^ness decision making. vens, vice president; and Dave have for protesting the selec- “His development of work Barthold, Garry Rodrigue. I tions. with computers and business Steve Schwartz and Russell The selection board consisted problems indicated that he was Hicks, senators. I of Dean of Students Robert J. ,a true genius in that field,” , Downey; Marvin Goux, repre- Dean Dockson said. “We had jsenting Athletic Director Jes-jbeen counting on him for im- ... . . ., . se T. Hill; Bob Jani, coordina- provements in the area of candidates for field president . , j j > i -.u tor of special events; ASSC j quantitative methods and anal-along with Goldburg. __TI , .... . President Hugh Helm; Mike lysis. Xext Fall Gless, chief justice of Men's i “This is a tremendous loss to Tlie board recommended the Judicial; Hedy Davis, chief the community and to the busi- Biological Sciences Field Coun-justice of Women's judicial; j ness administration field,” he eil revise the constitution in an(j Miailovich. I added. “He will be deeply time to elect officers at the ioft Toints missed by every faculty mem- freshman elections next fall, j Voting was done on a 100 ber who knew him and worked Goldberg originally complain- j point basis, Miailovich said. I with him.” ed that most of the students Twenty-five points were dis- Mr. Heyne had left New running for biological sciences tributed for enthusiasm, 25 for York on the flight that took offices had not served on the appearance, 25 for execution of the lives of 95 persons to be field's council, another require-j yells and 25 for knowledge of back in Los Angeles in time ment of the constitution. Troydition. ;for his night class. Later he backed his com- Twenty-two students origi-! He is survived by his wife. nallv began participation in a Patricia: a son, Michael, 6; three-meeting instruction pro- and a daughter, 14 months. He gram and 17 aspirants were iwas educated at the University letier listed the students who still in the program at the end of Pennsylvania, Drexel Insti- had served on the council. of the third meeting._tute of Technology and UCLA. Election Commissioner John Moyer eliminated six candidates at that time. Nonexistent Meanwhile, candidate Hicks charged that Goldberg's council did not exist. He protested that he and the others couldn’t be expected to serve on some-! Noted physiologist Dr. Carl thing that never existed. \ W. Gottschalk has been chosen Hicks said Dr. James W. by the School ** Medicine to Dr. John R. Holmes, head of the physics department, was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society and appointed a member of the Los Angeles county atomic energy committee last week. The fellowship, conferred upon Dr. Holmes at a New York meeting, was in a recognition of his contributions to the advancement of physics. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn appointed him as a member of the Atomic Energy Development and Radiation Protection Committee, which advises the Board of Supervisors on all matters pertaining to atomic energy and radiation. The 12 members, five of whom are appointed by the supervisors, must be trained in the application and monitoring of nuclear materials. Dr. Holmes has an extensive background in the field of atomic energy and radiation.' having been one of the pioneer j scientists on the Manhattan Project which developed the first atomic bomb. Recently he has carried out extensive studies on radiation protection. Dr. Holmes has published for the special election edition of the Daily Trojan must he submitted by 5 p.m. Thursday, Barbara Epstein, Daily Trojan editor, announced last week. The special six-page edition will appear on Wednesday, March 14, the day before student body elections begin. Miss Epstein said. Candidates for all ASSC and class offices may submit free statements, limited to 250 words for ASSC presidential candidates and 100 words for all other candidates. The statements may be edited at the discretion of the editors. Statements must be typed and double spaced and should include the candidate’s name, office for which he is a candidate, address and phone number. They should be submitted to Jo Ann Madron, assistant to the editor, in 432 SU. Candidates who wish to run photographs with their statements must contact Steve Somody, photo editor, in 420 SU. If a candidate wishes to run a picture, he may either submit his own glossy print or make an appointment with Somody for a Daily Trojan photographer to take his picture. The cost for processing and printing a battle column photograph is S5. The fee must he paid when the picture is left at the photo office or when the picture is taken. Checks should be made payable to the Daily Trojan. No statements or pictures will be accepted after the Thursday deadline. TRG Leader Hits Student Protesters 'j Surprise Entry For Presidency Hits Inefficiency By HAL DRAKE Daily Trojan City Editor Pharmacy Senator Dennis Hayes made a stab at becoming a drak horse in the ASSC presidential contest Friday with a surprise announcement that he would conduct a write-in campaign to bring “efficiency and stability” to student government. Hayes, who said he would submit posters for approval so : he could begin campaigning J with other candidates today, I was announced as a hopeful for the number one position at a i meeting of the School of Phar- macy. Songfest Chairman Bill ; Heeres, who is also outgoing j president of pharmacy’s Skull j J and Mortar honoraiy, present- j j ed Hayes as a candidate after giv ing a loud denunciation of i : so-called government clique Theta Nu Epsilon. Meets Qualifications ASSC President Hugh Helm; I said Hayes, a fifth-year phar-1 I macy student, met all qualifi- j j cations for the office and was entitled under the ASSC con-! stitution to wage a write-in j contest. Hayes said he decided to run; because all the other candidates, are “the same types that have j DENNIS HAYES . . . dark horse AMS presidential candidate ate asking a set of require- been running for years ■'I'm a commuter, I'm married and I think I understand Phil Bonnell challenged a stu- i ments be established for reg dent protest group Friday to I ulation of political parties. form its own political machine! Bonnell countered the com-,many of the problems indepen-if it doesn't like the organiza- plaint by asking how a group: dents such as myself face,” widely in his field and is a tion of the Trojans for Rep- of 10 students could claim to Hayes said. “I hope that if I member of other leading sci- resentative Government Party represent all student factions, as an independent get into of- entific societies, including Sigma Xi, the American Associa-DRA in the tion f°r the Advancement of Science and the Optical Society of America. plaint with a letter signed by Dr. Jay M. Savage, assistant head of biological sciences. The Digest Tells j edcre of TRG's organization. A ,1 ^ « Hal Stokes, organizer of the Author nUnT protesting students and an- Reader’s Digest Foundation 0,her candidate for AMS pres- is offering a total of $2,000 in:ident- said latcr that DwiShl cash prizes to collegiate au- ^P^ TRG P31^ chairman, thors in a short story contest!had explained the party sys-designed to discover talented lem to him early last week‘ young American writers. ! The protesting group, which met Thursday, complained that representation on TRG's executive cabinet was not fair War Poetry Will Be Read During Noon A selection of poems written (TRG). He said the “pitifully narrow” i fice, I will be able to draw during the Civil War, "Drum Bonnell a TRG candidate. gI>ouP was guilty of the of- others on this campus not ordi- Taps” by Walt Whitman, will charged that the group, call- fense jt protested. narily interested in government be the subject of the English ing itself the Student Protest “TRG has equal representa- into active participation.” iNoon Reading today at 12:30 ! Group for Responsible Govern- tion in its organizations, com- *ot AH , ^ 133 * H- iment, had made wild accusa- prising dormitories, foreign Hayes stressed that he does Dr. Charles R. Metzger, vis-tions without accurate knowl- student groups, many fratemi- j n°t want to de-emphasize the iting associate professor of ties and sororities and com- importance of the P.ow, but English, will read from the se- Prize for the best short story will be $500, while the number two entry will receive S350 and third place will get S250. The next 18 winners will receive honorable mention awards of $50 apiece. Contest winners will have their stories published in an annual hard-cover volume “Best College Writing.” Manuscripts should be from 1,500 to 9,000 words in length and should be submitted to Story Magazine College Contest, care of the Reader’s Di gest, Pleasantville, N.Y. Manuscripts, certified by i faculty member, must be submitted before the deadline, April 20. Noted Authority Annual Memorial to Give Lecture Bartholomew, sponsor of the deIlver the annual Moms Hen-Biological Sciences Council, had ry Nathanson Memorial Lec-told him no council activities: turc* the medical campus or meeting dates had been filed this week. with his office. An authority on kidney proc- esses, Dr. Gottschalk will dis- The bo»rd also fined nine other candidates $5 each for not turning in campaign sheets by Feb. 22 at the afternoon session. ! cuss “The Countercurrent Hypothesis for Urine Concentration” at noon on Wednesday in 1645 Los Angeles County General Hospital, 1200 N. The candidates being fined State S{ Include Jean Campbell, candi- j^e w,jjj gjve another lecture date for dentistry senator: Leon on “Hydrostatic Pressures and Faure. physical science senator; f1ow of t]le Kidney ’ on Thurs-Joel Harwin, business senator: ^ay night at 8 in the same and Barbara Hayes, AWS room. secretary. Dr. Gottschalk, a career in-1 Also fined were Chuck, Mar- vestigator of the American son, humanities senator; Don Heart Association and profes-1 Moss, business senator; Dick sor of medicine and physiology Moss, humanities senator. Nan- at the University of North cv Price, business senator; and Carolina School of Medicine, Terri Waxman, educational) be the ninth outstanding president. i scientist in the area of cardio- by the Morris Henry Nathanson Memorial Fund, establish-! ed by associates, friends and patients of the Los Angeles 1 physician, who died in 1952. At 40, Dr. Gottschalk is one of the nation's leading younger scientists, best known for his ultra-microscopic kidney studies. Using high-powered magnification and special manipulating devices. Dr. Gottschalk has been able to operate on kidney of living experimental animals, removing l-100th of a microliter (l-10.000,000th of an ounce) of urine from a single one of the kidney’s millions of tubules. He has been able to determine where in the tubules the vascular pharmacology and sample came from and to ana-physiology to take part in the lyze the tiny bit of fluid for Nathanson Lectureship. nine different chemical and The lectureship is supported; physical properties. to foreign, dormitory and commuting students. The students decided to prepare a recommendation to the ASSC Sen- Ticket Sale Will Begin For Play muters,” Bonnell said. Improvements merely to show that the Row j lection of poems that Whit-“is not all.” j man wrote from his personal He said that TRG would re-i Pharmacist. who is na- experience with the war. move its “semi-open” system president of 12,000 stu- "Whitmans brother was a soon after the spring elections. dents in American Pharma- soldier in the Civil War,” the He promised a complete list ceut-^caI Association, said that English teacher explained, of its representatives would be >n(I‘^eience on campus stems Battle Front from a lack of organization in “Whitman went to the aid student government. of his wounded brother who “Any time a student does was in a hospital near the bat-want to participate in govern- tie front and while he was ment, he is discouraged by the there he served in hospitals DR. CARL W. GOTTSCHALK . . . kidney expert Tickets will go on sale today for the United States premiere of a new English translation by USC students of Lope de Vega’s “Gentleman from Olme-do.” The play was translated by seminar students in Spanish literature under the direction of Dr. Everett W. Hesse, professor of Spanish. The 17th century play of love, intrigue and murder will have a five-day run in Bovard Auditorium on March 16, 17, 22, 23 and 24. The evening performances will begin at 8:30, and the one matinee performance March 17 at 2 p.m. will include a special lecture on the play. General admission is $1.50 and students may purchase tickets for 50 cents with activity book coupon 26. Tickets will be sold from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the drama office, 3709 Hoover St. The play, based on an old Spanish ballad, focuses on a young woman, Dona Ines, who is pledged to marry villainous Don Rodrigo. But she falls in love with Don Alonso, a dashing hero, bullfighter and gentleman from Olmedo. Alonzo communicates with his love by smuggling letters to her with the help of a witch and a Latin teacher. Rodrigo leams of the incognito affair and vows vengeance. Jealous and envious, he hires a henchman to do away with his rival. released later this week. Bonnell said TRG had made( what he considers the most important improvement in political parties — above-ground,. . , . ... , presentation of candidate* and I disorganization of everything, , and described what he saw. CToajs ihe said. J “In the poems, Whitman ° I Hayes said he plans to bring deals with awe-i n s p i r i n g Piote&ter Stoke» caime , a statute before the ASSC events, terrible sacrifices and however, that Chapin s exp>a- Senate Wednesday that would the issues he considered to be improve the organization of the: at stake, but he also deals major fields of study and would with individual experiences, force the ASSC president to fears and dangers of the war,’* act on a statute passed last Dr. Metzger said, year establishing a field of . All Phase* study president’s council. j The poems Dr. Metzger will “The vice president of one I read cover all phases of the not want to see a party legal-1 fieid couldn't even find out the war including the beginning ized on a semi-open basis be- name of her field president un- when everyone was ready to cause it might decide never [jj jUSt; recently,” he noted. fight, battle and action scenes, to completely open its organi- Hayes said the well-organized hospital scenes and soldiers’ zation. pharmacy Council has been nightmares. “Semi-open’’ suggests it is “very helpful” to the student Other selections will de-semi-secret, Stokes declared, body of his school and has j scribe returning veterans, the He wanted to know what was helped make the school close ; ancient slave women saluting being kept secret and from as well as informed. the Union troops as they pass- whom. ! “It’s very unusual for some- ed and Whitman’s letters to Stokes said the protest one from a professional school families regarding the fate of group had nearly 20 petitions to take a chance at this type the soldiers, circulating on campus with of office, since he knows he Dr. Metzger chose “Drum more than 70 signatures al- will lose without Row backing,”] Taps” to celebrate the 100th ready returned to him. ! Hayes admitted. anniversary of the Civil War. nation of party organization did not allow representation to 10 dormitories, foreign students, the School of Pharmacy and commuters. Only Reason Stokes said his group did 35 Groups Will Compete In Annual Songfest Fete Thirty-five campus groups competing in 27 song and dance routines applied for berths in Songfest 1962, Chairmen Bill Heeres and Vivian von Hagen announced Friday. Many of the groups are Chi Omega; Phi Mu Alpha, na- The novelty division, which tional music fraternity; Kappa only pulled in one contestant Delta; ami Delta Sigma Delta, jas^ Sprjng came through with national dental fraternity. ., , ... n-., , ifive this time including Sigma A pha Phi with Theta Xi,I , , „ .4. Du• r, Alpha Mu with Alpha Epsilon SAE w ith Gamma Phi Beta, „ .. , IT11 , : Phi. Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Al- the Hillel Foundation, and a *, f , . .... pha. Phi Kappa Tau, and Alpha group with the exotic title of ,’A________^ scheduled to begin rehearsing ........Chi 0mega with t^ tonight for Songfest prelims, The Hashers Three Plus One set for April 11 and 12. The compete the not-so-small, small Alpha Delta Pi w ith Alpha ninth annual musical spectacu- division field. a u m^a’. lar will be staged in the Holly- Potential mixed division con- Gamma with Sigma Chi Alpha wood Bowl the evening of May testants are Sigma Phi Epsilon ™hSAFwm 12. . I with Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Alpha Phi Beta with SAE will confine Ironically, the small group Theta with Beta Theta Pi, the their ‘‘s°und warfare to the division had the largest num-1.School of Dentistry, Phi Delta production category, ber of entries with 10. Small Theta with Tri-Delt. Phi Kappa The Naval Reserve Unit and group hopefuls are The Barris- Psi with Delta Gamma and Tau Chi Omega are single entries ters, representing the School of Kappa Epsilon with Alpha in the all-men's and all-wom-Law; University Hall; Alpha;Gamma Delta. jens division. |
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