DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 91, March 19, 1962 |
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PAGE THREE
Professors Choose ‘Bests' fn Literary World
VOL. Llll
U niveKsl-fey o’f
DAILY
Southern Cal [fornia *v,‘" ' TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Sportswriters Describe New Season
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1962
NO. 91
Leddel, Moss, Garcetti Battle Into ASSC Presidential Runoff
66 Capture Posts In Close Contests
ASSC PRESIDENT
Gil Garcetti
(Independent) ................533*
Bart Leddel (TRG) ............861*
Dann Moss ............................543*
Mike Robinson.....................258
Dennis Hayes
(write-in) ..........................379
ASSC VICE PRESIDENT Betty Knox (write-in)
(elected) ............................548
ASSC SECRETARY Kathi Waters
(elected) .......................... 1701
YELL KING
Dick Hare (elected) ..........1710
ASSC SENATE PRESIDENT AMENDMENT (passed)
YES ......................................1271
NO ........................................948
AMS CONSTITUTION (passed)
YES ........................................756
NO ..........................................365
AMS PRESIDENT
Phil Bonnell (TRG) ..........573
Hal Stokes (elected) ...... 735
AMS VICE PRESIDENT William Broesamle (TRG)..701
Ron Mandell (elected)......719
AMS
SECRETARY-TREASURER
•‘Red’’ Cavaney (TRG)
(elected) ..........................746
, AWS PRESIDENT Priscilla Partridge Holbert
^ (elected) ............................640
AWS VICE PRESIDENT
Judith Dyer (elected)........617
AWS SECRETARY
Sharon Case (elected)_____295
Barbara Hays ......................278
Sharon Tarver ....................177
AWS TREASURER
Andrea Haley ......................294
Judy Webster (elected) ....481 SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Steve Croddy ......................182*
Skip Hartquist (TRG)......254*
Ned Taylor ..........................131
SENIOR CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Donna Kay Dye (elected)..393 JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Bob Bardin (TRG) ............264
Dick Popko (elected) ........284
JUNIOR CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Alice Huber (TRG)
(elected) .......................... 70
SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT Rich Moore (TRG)
(elected) ........................ 328
SOPHOMORE CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Joyce Bowman
(elected) ....................._... 402
ARCHITECTURE PRESIDENT Pete Brandow
(elected) .................. ..... 22
ARCHITECTURE VICE PRESIDENT Dave Rubnan (write-in)
(elected) .......................... 3
ARCHITECTURE SENATOR Carl McFarand (write-in)
(elected) .......................... 4
BUSINESS PRESIDENT
DENTISTRY PRESIDENT (none) DENTISTRY VICE PRESIDENT Jim Withers (wTite-in) (elected) ............................2
DENTISTRY SENATOR
Jean Campbell .....................38
Pat Fry (elected) ..............66
Bob Price (write-in)
(elected) ............................74
EDUCATION PRESIDENT Terrie Waxman (elected) ..151
EDUCATION VICE PRESIDENT
Toni Krukenber (write-in)
(elected) ............................6
Jane Lowe (write-in) ........3
Coralyn Powell (write-in) ........................3
EDUCATION SENATOR
Janet J. Cady (elected) ...107 Karen Sandoz (elected) ....130 ENGINEERING PRESIDENT
Otto Bixler ..........................70
Preston Smith (elected) . .108
ENGINEERING VICE PRESIDENT
Richard Sheinberg
(elected) .......................... 100
ENGINEERING
SENATOR
Carl L. Burnett
(elected) ..................;.......78
Eddie Lee Dawes
(elected) ........................• 81
David Feassel (TRG) ......63
Roger E. Luth ....................63
Herb Upton (TRG)
(elected) .......................... 74
Dave Jacobson ................,... 71
HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION PRESIDENT (none)
HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION VICE PRESIDENT (none)
HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION SENATOR Bonnie Armstrong
(elected) ......................... 21
Carolyn L. Gordon ......... 13
HUMANITIES PRESIDENT Barry Cohen (write-in)
(elected) .........................5
HUMANITIES VICE PRESIDENT Lorin Salob (write-in)
(elected) .......................... 6
HUMANITIES SENATOR
Barry Cohen .................... 85
Ken Del Conte (TRG)
(elected) ......................... 170
Diane George (TRG)
(elected) ......................... 131
Chuck Marson ................. 65
Susan Strom (TRG)
(elected) .......................... 149
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PRESIDENT
Ken Payne (elected) ..........55
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS VICE PRESIDENT
John Glaser (elected)........63
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SENATOR
TRIUMVIRS—Two days of voting last week thrust (l-r) yell leader Bart Leddel, Junior Class President Dann Moss and AMS President Gil Garcetti into a three-way runoff for the ASSC presidency. The presidential hopefuls will lead 14 other candidates in four runoff elec-
Daily Trojan Photo by Communication President Hal Drake
tion races tomorrow from 9 to 4 in Alumni Memorial Park. The new Trojans for Representative Government Party elected 18 Of its 29 candidates in the primaries and put two more into runoff positions. All social studies senator candidates will be in runoff.
Three Experts Join New Institute In Study of Communist Techniques
Stephen Imhoff ............... 116 Karen Hubenthal
Robert Quinn
(elected) .......................... 163
BUSINESS VICE PRESIDENT
Allen Katz
(elected) ........................ 246
BUSINESS SENATOR
Joel Behr ............................ 144
Jerry Bell (TRG)
• elected) .......................... 206
James E. Cain ................ 142
Jerry Craig (TRG)
(elected) .......................... 212
Paul De Nunzio ................ 132
Barry Friedman
(elected) .......................... 160
Joel S. Harwin ................ 128
Dick Kaplan (TRG)
(elected) .......................... 212
Don Moss .................-...... 154
Nancy Price (elected)......207
Don Segretti (TRG)
(elected) .........................215
COMMUNICATIONS
PRESIDENT
Hul Drake (write-in)
(elected) ..........................9
COMMUNICATIONS VICE PRESIDENT (none) COMMUNICATIONS SENATOR
Mel Mandel (elected) ........33
Larry Peterson (elected)......19
First staff appointments for the Research Institute on Com-minuist Strategy and Propaganda were announced over the weekend by Dr. Rodger Swearingen, director of the institute, which was created recently by $325,000 gift from trustee Henry Salvatori and Mrs. Sal-vatori.
All three appointees have had wide experience in affairs bearing on the Soviet Union, one as an educator and rearcher in international relations, one as a military affairs expert and one as a professional journalist. All are widely traveled; all are multi-lingual, according to the report.
One will headquarter at USC, hile another will be the institute’s Washington representative, dividing his time between USC and the national capital and the third will head a “for-w a r d information echelon” with headquarters at the Free University of Berlin.
Russian Service (Europe) fortervals the Voice of America. Named senior research associate of the institute, Malamuth will be based at USC. One of his pri mary assignments is the prepa ration of a study on Soviet Peace Propaganda, which he has already begun.
The military affairs expert is Col. Clyde R. McBride (U.S.
A. Ret.), former senior military attache to the U. S. Embassy in Moscow and widely known as a lecturer and consultant on Soviet affairs.
As a research associate, colonel McBride will be the institute’s Washington representative. In addition to being the institute’s principal adviser on Soviet military strategy and propaganda, he will assist in keeping the institute staff at USC and elsewhere in the world in touch with current developments, resources and ideas from the Washington perspective.
Although stationed in Wash-
for extensive confer-j bureau in Moscow for a time, ences and briefings. j Immediately before coming
Tlie educator is Richard to USC, Malamuth was policy Lowenthal, who i s presently anc* planning adviser for Radio professor of international rela-, Liberty, which broadcasts to tions in the Free University of Soviet Berlin. As a research assiciate,
Dr. Lowenthal will have as his
(TRG) ................................32
Ken Kloepfer (elected)......45
MUSIC PRESIDENT
Paul Katz (write-in)............3* j
Chris Wance (write-in) ........3*j
MUSIC VICE PRESIDENT j Marty Katz (write-in)
(elected) ............................2
MUSIC SENATOR Mario Guarneri (TRG)
(elected) ............................21
Marty Katz ........................16
PHARMACY PRESIDENT
Ted Hill ................................100
Fred Weissman
(electcd) ............................151
PHARMACY VICE PRESIDENT
Bob Jones (elected) ............217
PHARMACY SECRETARY-TREASURER Janice Kukota (elected) ... 235 PHARMACY SENATOR Barry Brotman
(elected) ............................256
Brrnie Miller (write-in)
(elected) ............................220
Stanley B. Widre
(write-in) ..........................79
PHYSICAL SCIENCES PRESIDENT Dave Ilarn (write-in)
(elected) ...........................3
(Continued on Page 2)
The journalist is Charles jington, Colonel McBride will Malamuth, former chief of the I travel to USC at six-week in-
Hofstadter Illustrates Anti-lntellectualism'
Pulitzer Prize-winning histor- senhower with the people, Dr.
ian Richard Hofstadter told an overflow audience in Founders Hall Friday night that degradation of formal learning and intellectualism i n the 1950’g contributed to the development of anti-intellectualism in the United States.
Dr. Hofstadter, in the second of five Haynes Foundation lectures, said that anti-in-jtellectualism developed into a hi usehold word in that period. He will continue his series on “Anti-lntellectualism in American Life” at 8 tonight in 229 FH with a lecture on "The Decline of the Gentleman.”
An awareness of anti-intellectualism came out of the contrasts of the 1952 Presidential election, when Adlai Stevenson was identified with the intellectuals and Dwight Ei-
Hofstadter said.
The use of the term “egg-nead” during the election campaign and the word's subsequent pejoritive connotation was the exhibit Dr. Hofstadter presented as the first sign of agitation against intellectuals.
“Egghead took on the character of an epithet for the election,” he noted.
"Stevenson’s overwhelming defeat was tanen as a measure of their reputation by the intellectuals,” the Columbia University professor said.
Dr. Hofstadter cited examples from speeches and actions during the Eisenhower administration which he said gave approval to the “egghead” pejoritive viewr of intellect.
Eisenhower’s comments on (Continued on Page 2)
principal function keeping the institute in touch with the Soviet strategy and propaganda in Europe. He will furnish the USC staff with pert ment Euro-p e a n studies, bibliographies and current views of scholars and diplimats in the field of Soviet affairs.
Present plans call f.o r Dr Lowenthal to make one extend- ^eSe-ed visit to the USC campus each year, at which time he will also visit other major U. S. centers in the field of Russian,
Chinese and Communist studies.
Institute Director Swearingen said that negotiations are now being completed to bring an authority on Soviet economic warfare to the institute staff. A number of consultants in the areas of both Soviet po litical and economic affairs ai-1 Observer, ready have been engaged.
Educated in the public j schools of Pasadena and at thc University of California, sen-, nior associate Malamuth1 speaks, reads and writes Russian: has traveled extensively in areas of Soviet domination while an American newspaper correspondent and was in charge of the United Press
Union in Russian and 16 other languages of the USSR.
Col. McBride was bom in Brooklyn and is a West Point graduate. During the past two years he has served frequently as a guest lecturer and consultant at most of the nation’s senior military schools, including the National and Army War Colleges and the Command and General Staff Col-
Dr. Lowenthal, a native of Berlin, is a graduate of the universities of both Berlin and Heidelberg. During World W'ar II he was engaged in the activities of political exiles from Germany in Czechoslovakia, France and England.
Before entering the field of education, he served 15 years as a Reuters correspondent ir.
2,600 Vote in
Record Turnout
By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter
Yell leader Bart Leddel, Junior Class President Dann Moss and AMS President Gil Garcetti will compete tomorrow in a three-way runoff for ASSC president after eliminating two other candidates last week in a hotly contested race.
A new voting record was set as more than 2,61)0 students cast ballots Thursday and Friday and pushed Representation Party President Mike Robinson and write-in candidate Dennis Hayes off the presidential ballot.
An overflow crowd in the Senate Chambers Friday night heard Election Commissioner John Moyer read the complete elections results and reveal that runoffs for three offices would be held tomorrow.
TRG candidate Leddel polled 861 votes to lead the presidential race, while Moss, with 543 votes, outdistanced Garcetti’s 533 by a slight margin of 10 ballots. The close heat caused Dean of Students Robert J. Downey to call a three-way runoff.
Betty Knox, a write-in candidate, was elected ASSC vice president while Kathi Waters won the ASSC secretary post.
The AMS presidency was won by Hal Stokes, and Priscilla Partridge Holbert won AWS president unopposed.
Rich Moore garnered the Sophomore Class leadership and Dick Popko took the Junior Class top spot. Steve Croddy and Skip Hartquist will compete in the runoff for Senior Class President.
The voters passed an amendment to the ASSC constitution separating the powers of the ASSC president and ASSC Senate president. A new AMS constitution was also approved.
The Elections Committee was forced to void the balloting for social studies senator when Don Greenberg protested that his name had been misspelled on the ballot. The candidates for this office will appear on the ballot again tomorrow.
Ken Del Conte received the required plurality of votes for humanities president but was not given the office because he had already been elected humanities senator, the job for which he petitioned.
Garcetti, highly nervous after the five-hour wait since the polls closed, said he was gratified that so many students had expressed confidence in him and asked all voters to come to the runoffs regardless of the candidates they wrere backing.
Leddel, acknowledging that it had been a rough campaign, said he hoped the voters would choose a leader who will be able to unite USC student govern* ment so that it will be effective and purposeful.
He said the candidate who wins will need the support of every eligible voter if he is to be an outstanding leader.
Moss promised a compaign for the runoffs “vig'-orous and as original” as he waged for the primaries. He said he planned to hold a rally Monday “like you’ve never seen before.”
All three candidates thanked their supporters.
Friday’s voting procedures didn’t receive the complaints of the previous day. Moyer said the Elections Committee had tried to keep a close watch on all people around the voting area.
However, several students claimed they were handed incorrect field-of-study ballots and were forced to exchange them for the ones to which they were entitled.
Complaints after the first day’s voting included protests that ineligible students had been permitted to vote and that campaigning was being done within the 150 feet limit.
No date for a Board of Inquiry meeting to consider these complaints, nor an earlier Daily Trojan protest against fraudulent insertion of Dann Moss campaign
Europe. He is still a foreign af- _ fairs writer for ’Tie London flyers in last Wednesday's paper, had been called as of Observer. late Friday evening.______
Blood Drive Will Kick Off At Kampus Koffee Klatch
A
Commons
“Kickoff Koffee” in the|tors and campus leaders havefcludes students, faculty and Lounge will herald1 been invited to the Kickoff | employees,'” Walsh noted. “If
Journalists Will Meet
“Crisis in Journalism” will be the topic for today’s noon meeting of Sigma Delta Chi Journalistic Society in 420 SU, "hapter president Hal Drake announced Friday.
The meeting, open only to SDX members, will also allow the chapter to form plans for a “press lubrication seminar” to be held at the Los Angeles Press Club. Sports IX'.itor Dick Calhoun is in charge of ar-rMigements for the affair.
Drake urged all mem i>ers to attend.
the beginning of the annual1 Koffee to start the drive, and Blood Drive today from 3 to members of the Red Cross and 14:30, Chairman Jim Walsh an-. Blood Drive Committee will nounced Friday. ! also be present,” Walsh said
StudenLs wishing to make deposits in the university’s blood bank may sign up all week from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at stations in front of the Student Union and Doheny Library. Spurs and Squires will handle the signups.
“We would like the student body to stop in and have a free cup of coffee with us,” he added.
Tonight, student leaders will visit fraternities, sororities and dormitories to explain the drive and its benefits. Repre-
Aiming for 600 pints in the sentatives also will be there
annual race with UCLA, the bank will accept blood from donors between the ages of 18 and 60 who weigh at least 110 pounds. Persons under 21, excluding those who are married or are servicemen, must have a parental consent slip.
“Forty-five top admnjistra- (
to take signups in their groups.
The Red Cross credits the amount of blood given to the university’s account which may be drawn on by any member of the “university family” or members of their immediate family.
“The university family in-
you need blood, you may have as much as you need, but the simple fact is the Red Cross can’t give what isn’t there.”
To spur the drive on. competitions will be held between the fraternities and sororities, schools and service organizations.
Two trophies will be awarded to the fraternity, sorority and dormitory that gives the most pints and has the highest percentage of donors.
Walsh said that competition results will be determined by points. Each group will receive one and one-half points for each member who signs up and gives; one point for each member who gives; and one-half (Continued on Page 2)
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 91, March 19, 1962 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 53, No. 91, March 19, 1962. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE Professors Choose ‘Bests' fn Literary World VOL. Llll U niveKsl-fey o’f DAILY Southern Cal [fornia *v,‘" ' TROJAN PAGE FOUR Sportswriters Describe New Season LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1962 NO. 91 Leddel, Moss, Garcetti Battle Into ASSC Presidential Runoff 66 Capture Posts In Close Contests ASSC PRESIDENT Gil Garcetti (Independent) ................533* Bart Leddel (TRG) ............861* Dann Moss ............................543* Mike Robinson.....................258 Dennis Hayes (write-in) ..........................379 ASSC VICE PRESIDENT Betty Knox (write-in) (elected) ............................548 ASSC SECRETARY Kathi Waters (elected) .......................... 1701 YELL KING Dick Hare (elected) ..........1710 ASSC SENATE PRESIDENT AMENDMENT (passed) YES ......................................1271 NO ........................................948 AMS CONSTITUTION (passed) YES ........................................756 NO ..........................................365 AMS PRESIDENT Phil Bonnell (TRG) ..........573 Hal Stokes (elected) ...... 735 AMS VICE PRESIDENT William Broesamle (TRG)..701 Ron Mandell (elected)......719 AMS SECRETARY-TREASURER •‘Red’’ Cavaney (TRG) (elected) ..........................746 , AWS PRESIDENT Priscilla Partridge Holbert ^ (elected) ............................640 AWS VICE PRESIDENT Judith Dyer (elected)........617 AWS SECRETARY Sharon Case (elected)_____295 Barbara Hays ......................278 Sharon Tarver ....................177 AWS TREASURER Andrea Haley ......................294 Judy Webster (elected) ....481 SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT Steve Croddy ......................182* Skip Hartquist (TRG)......254* Ned Taylor ..........................131 SENIOR CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Donna Kay Dye (elected)..393 JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT Bob Bardin (TRG) ............264 Dick Popko (elected) ........284 JUNIOR CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Alice Huber (TRG) (elected) .......................... 70 SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT Rich Moore (TRG) (elected) ........................ 328 SOPHOMORE CLASS VICE PRESIDENT Joyce Bowman (elected) ....................._... 402 ARCHITECTURE PRESIDENT Pete Brandow (elected) .................. ..... 22 ARCHITECTURE VICE PRESIDENT Dave Rubnan (write-in) (elected) .......................... 3 ARCHITECTURE SENATOR Carl McFarand (write-in) (elected) .......................... 4 BUSINESS PRESIDENT DENTISTRY PRESIDENT (none) DENTISTRY VICE PRESIDENT Jim Withers (wTite-in) (elected) ............................2 DENTISTRY SENATOR Jean Campbell .....................38 Pat Fry (elected) ..............66 Bob Price (write-in) (elected) ............................74 EDUCATION PRESIDENT Terrie Waxman (elected) ..151 EDUCATION VICE PRESIDENT Toni Krukenber (write-in) (elected) ............................6 Jane Lowe (write-in) ........3 Coralyn Powell (write-in) ........................3 EDUCATION SENATOR Janet J. Cady (elected) ...107 Karen Sandoz (elected) ....130 ENGINEERING PRESIDENT Otto Bixler ..........................70 Preston Smith (elected) . .108 ENGINEERING VICE PRESIDENT Richard Sheinberg (elected) .......................... 100 ENGINEERING SENATOR Carl L. Burnett (elected) ..................;.......78 Eddie Lee Dawes (elected) ........................• 81 David Feassel (TRG) ......63 Roger E. Luth ....................63 Herb Upton (TRG) (elected) .......................... 74 Dave Jacobson ................,... 71 HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION PRESIDENT (none) HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION VICE PRESIDENT (none) HEALTH & PHYSICAL EDUCATION SENATOR Bonnie Armstrong (elected) ......................... 21 Carolyn L. Gordon ......... 13 HUMANITIES PRESIDENT Barry Cohen (write-in) (elected) .........................5 HUMANITIES VICE PRESIDENT Lorin Salob (write-in) (elected) .......................... 6 HUMANITIES SENATOR Barry Cohen .................... 85 Ken Del Conte (TRG) (elected) ......................... 170 Diane George (TRG) (elected) ......................... 131 Chuck Marson ................. 65 Susan Strom (TRG) (elected) .......................... 149 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PRESIDENT Ken Payne (elected) ..........55 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS VICE PRESIDENT John Glaser (elected)........63 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS SENATOR TRIUMVIRS—Two days of voting last week thrust (l-r) yell leader Bart Leddel, Junior Class President Dann Moss and AMS President Gil Garcetti into a three-way runoff for the ASSC presidency. The presidential hopefuls will lead 14 other candidates in four runoff elec- Daily Trojan Photo by Communication President Hal Drake tion races tomorrow from 9 to 4 in Alumni Memorial Park. The new Trojans for Representative Government Party elected 18 Of its 29 candidates in the primaries and put two more into runoff positions. All social studies senator candidates will be in runoff. Three Experts Join New Institute In Study of Communist Techniques Stephen Imhoff ............... 116 Karen Hubenthal Robert Quinn (elected) .......................... 163 BUSINESS VICE PRESIDENT Allen Katz (elected) ........................ 246 BUSINESS SENATOR Joel Behr ............................ 144 Jerry Bell (TRG) • elected) .......................... 206 James E. Cain ................ 142 Jerry Craig (TRG) (elected) .......................... 212 Paul De Nunzio ................ 132 Barry Friedman (elected) .......................... 160 Joel S. Harwin ................ 128 Dick Kaplan (TRG) (elected) .......................... 212 Don Moss .................-...... 154 Nancy Price (elected)......207 Don Segretti (TRG) (elected) .........................215 COMMUNICATIONS PRESIDENT Hul Drake (write-in) (elected) ..........................9 COMMUNICATIONS VICE PRESIDENT (none) COMMUNICATIONS SENATOR Mel Mandel (elected) ........33 Larry Peterson (elected)......19 First staff appointments for the Research Institute on Com-minuist Strategy and Propaganda were announced over the weekend by Dr. Rodger Swearingen, director of the institute, which was created recently by $325,000 gift from trustee Henry Salvatori and Mrs. Sal-vatori. All three appointees have had wide experience in affairs bearing on the Soviet Union, one as an educator and rearcher in international relations, one as a military affairs expert and one as a professional journalist. All are widely traveled; all are multi-lingual, according to the report. One will headquarter at USC, hile another will be the institute’s Washington representative, dividing his time between USC and the national capital and the third will head a “for-w a r d information echelon” with headquarters at the Free University of Berlin. Russian Service (Europe) fortervals the Voice of America. Named senior research associate of the institute, Malamuth will be based at USC. One of his pri mary assignments is the prepa ration of a study on Soviet Peace Propaganda, which he has already begun. The military affairs expert is Col. Clyde R. McBride (U.S. A. Ret.), former senior military attache to the U. S. Embassy in Moscow and widely known as a lecturer and consultant on Soviet affairs. As a research associate, colonel McBride will be the institute’s Washington representative. In addition to being the institute’s principal adviser on Soviet military strategy and propaganda, he will assist in keeping the institute staff at USC and elsewhere in the world in touch with current developments, resources and ideas from the Washington perspective. Although stationed in Wash- for extensive confer-j bureau in Moscow for a time, ences and briefings. j Immediately before coming Tlie educator is Richard to USC, Malamuth was policy Lowenthal, who i s presently anc* planning adviser for Radio professor of international rela-, Liberty, which broadcasts to tions in the Free University of Soviet Berlin. As a research assiciate, Dr. Lowenthal will have as his (TRG) ................................32 Ken Kloepfer (elected)......45 MUSIC PRESIDENT Paul Katz (write-in)............3* j Chris Wance (write-in) ........3*j MUSIC VICE PRESIDENT j Marty Katz (write-in) (elected) ............................2 MUSIC SENATOR Mario Guarneri (TRG) (elected) ............................21 Marty Katz ........................16 PHARMACY PRESIDENT Ted Hill ................................100 Fred Weissman (electcd) ............................151 PHARMACY VICE PRESIDENT Bob Jones (elected) ............217 PHARMACY SECRETARY-TREASURER Janice Kukota (elected) ... 235 PHARMACY SENATOR Barry Brotman (elected) ............................256 Brrnie Miller (write-in) (elected) ............................220 Stanley B. Widre (write-in) ..........................79 PHYSICAL SCIENCES PRESIDENT Dave Ilarn (write-in) (elected) ...........................3 (Continued on Page 2) The journalist is Charles jington, Colonel McBride will Malamuth, former chief of the I travel to USC at six-week in- Hofstadter Illustrates Anti-lntellectualism' Pulitzer Prize-winning histor- senhower with the people, Dr. ian Richard Hofstadter told an overflow audience in Founders Hall Friday night that degradation of formal learning and intellectualism i n the 1950’g contributed to the development of anti-intellectualism in the United States. Dr. Hofstadter, in the second of five Haynes Foundation lectures, said that anti-in-jtellectualism developed into a hi usehold word in that period. He will continue his series on “Anti-lntellectualism in American Life” at 8 tonight in 229 FH with a lecture on "The Decline of the Gentleman.” An awareness of anti-intellectualism came out of the contrasts of the 1952 Presidential election, when Adlai Stevenson was identified with the intellectuals and Dwight Ei- Hofstadter said. The use of the term “egg-nead” during the election campaign and the word's subsequent pejoritive connotation was the exhibit Dr. Hofstadter presented as the first sign of agitation against intellectuals. “Egghead took on the character of an epithet for the election,” he noted. "Stevenson’s overwhelming defeat was tanen as a measure of their reputation by the intellectuals,” the Columbia University professor said. Dr. Hofstadter cited examples from speeches and actions during the Eisenhower administration which he said gave approval to the “egghead” pejoritive viewr of intellect. Eisenhower’s comments on (Continued on Page 2) principal function keeping the institute in touch with the Soviet strategy and propaganda in Europe. He will furnish the USC staff with pert ment Euro-p e a n studies, bibliographies and current views of scholars and diplimats in the field of Soviet affairs. Present plans call f.o r Dr Lowenthal to make one extend- ^eSe-ed visit to the USC campus each year, at which time he will also visit other major U. S. centers in the field of Russian, Chinese and Communist studies. Institute Director Swearingen said that negotiations are now being completed to bring an authority on Soviet economic warfare to the institute staff. A number of consultants in the areas of both Soviet po litical and economic affairs ai-1 Observer, ready have been engaged. Educated in the public j schools of Pasadena and at thc University of California, sen-, nior associate Malamuth1 speaks, reads and writes Russian: has traveled extensively in areas of Soviet domination while an American newspaper correspondent and was in charge of the United Press Union in Russian and 16 other languages of the USSR. Col. McBride was bom in Brooklyn and is a West Point graduate. During the past two years he has served frequently as a guest lecturer and consultant at most of the nation’s senior military schools, including the National and Army War Colleges and the Command and General Staff Col- Dr. Lowenthal, a native of Berlin, is a graduate of the universities of both Berlin and Heidelberg. During World W'ar II he was engaged in the activities of political exiles from Germany in Czechoslovakia, France and England. Before entering the field of education, he served 15 years as a Reuters correspondent ir. 2,600 Vote in Record Turnout By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter Yell leader Bart Leddel, Junior Class President Dann Moss and AMS President Gil Garcetti will compete tomorrow in a three-way runoff for ASSC president after eliminating two other candidates last week in a hotly contested race. A new voting record was set as more than 2,61)0 students cast ballots Thursday and Friday and pushed Representation Party President Mike Robinson and write-in candidate Dennis Hayes off the presidential ballot. An overflow crowd in the Senate Chambers Friday night heard Election Commissioner John Moyer read the complete elections results and reveal that runoffs for three offices would be held tomorrow. TRG candidate Leddel polled 861 votes to lead the presidential race, while Moss, with 543 votes, outdistanced Garcetti’s 533 by a slight margin of 10 ballots. The close heat caused Dean of Students Robert J. Downey to call a three-way runoff. Betty Knox, a write-in candidate, was elected ASSC vice president while Kathi Waters won the ASSC secretary post. The AMS presidency was won by Hal Stokes, and Priscilla Partridge Holbert won AWS president unopposed. Rich Moore garnered the Sophomore Class leadership and Dick Popko took the Junior Class top spot. Steve Croddy and Skip Hartquist will compete in the runoff for Senior Class President. The voters passed an amendment to the ASSC constitution separating the powers of the ASSC president and ASSC Senate president. A new AMS constitution was also approved. The Elections Committee was forced to void the balloting for social studies senator when Don Greenberg protested that his name had been misspelled on the ballot. The candidates for this office will appear on the ballot again tomorrow. Ken Del Conte received the required plurality of votes for humanities president but was not given the office because he had already been elected humanities senator, the job for which he petitioned. Garcetti, highly nervous after the five-hour wait since the polls closed, said he was gratified that so many students had expressed confidence in him and asked all voters to come to the runoffs regardless of the candidates they wrere backing. Leddel, acknowledging that it had been a rough campaign, said he hoped the voters would choose a leader who will be able to unite USC student govern* ment so that it will be effective and purposeful. He said the candidate who wins will need the support of every eligible voter if he is to be an outstanding leader. Moss promised a compaign for the runoffs “vig'-orous and as original” as he waged for the primaries. He said he planned to hold a rally Monday “like you’ve never seen before.” All three candidates thanked their supporters. Friday’s voting procedures didn’t receive the complaints of the previous day. Moyer said the Elections Committee had tried to keep a close watch on all people around the voting area. However, several students claimed they were handed incorrect field-of-study ballots and were forced to exchange them for the ones to which they were entitled. Complaints after the first day’s voting included protests that ineligible students had been permitted to vote and that campaigning was being done within the 150 feet limit. No date for a Board of Inquiry meeting to consider these complaints, nor an earlier Daily Trojan protest against fraudulent insertion of Dann Moss campaign Europe. He is still a foreign af- _ fairs writer for ’Tie London flyers in last Wednesday's paper, had been called as of Observer. late Friday evening.______ Blood Drive Will Kick Off At Kampus Koffee Klatch A Commons “Kickoff Koffee” in the tors and campus leaders havefcludes students, faculty and Lounge will herald1 been invited to the Kickoff employees,'” Walsh noted. “If Journalists Will Meet “Crisis in Journalism” will be the topic for today’s noon meeting of Sigma Delta Chi Journalistic Society in 420 SU, "hapter president Hal Drake announced Friday. The meeting, open only to SDX members, will also allow the chapter to form plans for a “press lubrication seminar” to be held at the Los Angeles Press Club. Sports IX'.itor Dick Calhoun is in charge of ar-rMigements for the affair. Drake urged all mem i>ers to attend. the beginning of the annual1 Koffee to start the drive, and Blood Drive today from 3 to members of the Red Cross and 14:30, Chairman Jim Walsh an-. Blood Drive Committee will nounced Friday. ! also be present,” Walsh said StudenLs wishing to make deposits in the university’s blood bank may sign up all week from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at stations in front of the Student Union and Doheny Library. Spurs and Squires will handle the signups. “We would like the student body to stop in and have a free cup of coffee with us,” he added. Tonight, student leaders will visit fraternities, sororities and dormitories to explain the drive and its benefits. Repre- Aiming for 600 pints in the sentatives also will be there annual race with UCLA, the bank will accept blood from donors between the ages of 18 and 60 who weigh at least 110 pounds. Persons under 21, excluding those who are married or are servicemen, must have a parental consent slip. “Forty-five top admnjistra- ( to take signups in their groups. The Red Cross credits the amount of blood given to the university’s account which may be drawn on by any member of the “university family” or members of their immediate family. “The university family in- you need blood, you may have as much as you need, but the simple fact is the Red Cross can’t give what isn’t there.” To spur the drive on. competitions will be held between the fraternities and sororities, schools and service organizations. Two trophies will be awarded to the fraternity, sorority and dormitory that gives the most pints and has the highest percentage of donors. Walsh said that competition results will be determined by points. Each group will receive one and one-half points for each member who signs up and gives; one point for each member who gives; and one-half (Continued on Page 2) |
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