DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 89, March 19, 1958 |
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PAGE TWO Ex-Boss Peron Flees Island Republic
Southern
California
N
trojan
PAGE FOUR SC Baseball Team Defeats Cai Poly
VOL. XLIX
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1958
NO. 89
Political Ambitions Cited
By I’LVW I.KKNOI \
Power, prestige, well are are the primary reasons people run foi office. Dr. Tot ion ,T. Anderson. professor of polii-ica! science, lold an informal fo-rtnn on c.impus politics yester-day the YWCA.
Sponsored by the AMS cabinet. the panel was also composed of Pi Wesley Robb, head of the department of Religion:
nomic or emotional or actually urity and want to serve others.-’
Agreeing with Dr. Anderson's la t point. Starla Cotfee stated I ha t “most of us want to serve because we respect and esteem the student body, and because our relatives and Iriends approve of this feeling.’
Larry Sipes
good working grou Robb's theory.
"Parties are es en sion making proe 'ssc ing candidates for o making inrlivdurds once they are inst: lice " stated Dr. Am
“One reason stud don’t want politicé countered Sipes, "is I feel it is much easie a small group's sujj than a larger one's."
Agreeing with Sip det'son added that " when we have had conventions, for ex tients have been i>ooe
txi:
Dr. R(
SOLEMN GREETING
W ¡is io Harrv Black1
giver
one,
rama
at the tu opened last night, w irough Saturday.
of the century. The play, continue its
Loyola Priest Talks On Aquinas, Aristotle
Official
Notk<
felt that "this de-ire to servo is also supplement-Larry Sipes. ASSC president; ed by personal needs and hopes.''
Starla Coffee. ASSC vice presi- | According to Dr. Robb, the dedent: and Rich Amerian. sena- sire to s°rve and to serve hon-tor at large, who acted as mod- estly is one of altruism versus orator. self-ego.
"Students become interested "II vve could operate on a in campus politics. Dr. Ander- higher lavel of standards on son continued, "because ol thesr campus,’ he stated, "perhaps we they have been four basic desires. Hither they could instill this i lea of altruism unsuccessful."
V- >nt to exert lev e rage on some- into the student leader’s mind." one. want to become well-known, Ail the panel members agreed feel a need for security, eeo- that political parties were a
Flowers Exemplify Christ s Passion
ause t!
»liticai
ulu:
However, the pa hat parties would )t oi "nefarious ;
ate a -s b/
In t:
organ: vt>oi plav in it. Accordili;
too ni jliv s
were
frit.
id the part tl > Dr. Anders
Indent-
prov i
It v In
Ml / MW
I McCdoin.
isic philosop
I he ! low (M . bui t licit g sadness ist ol these plant?
SC botanist Pro!
Hastet a i e lov e-iiii overwhelm-
Iliseiisses Kant
Mudd M(
liega n spring f . deep-t<
ow ledi
ev meneeo
Next
d ai
He w
Prof* i Un
diil
Ml students who ii.i\r- deferred tuition accounts arc reminded that the first payment
is due March IT except lor those students registered under Public Law .WO. Payments made alter .March 17 will he subject to a S.kIIO late payment fee unless an e\ elision has been granted bv the Office of Deferred Tuition. Checks and money orders lor the exact amount are acceptable by mail or in person at the Bursar’s Office, cash payments must Ik* made at the Bursar’s Office. B. K. ( ulvi-r
Head of student loans and deferred tuition
f Jesus, the sacred blood, He hod on the wav to Calvary, is their beauty. A said to have dripped on a flower
ording she was wearing, leaving on it
the imprint of Ciirisi’s face. And Wheeler, are intimately con- the Veronica flower named in
ted with the Bible account of her honor does seem to bear the
imprint of a human fa;e. It also
sor Loui.'
passion and death oi Chri>
i'he "Judas 'fre-
on which grows m
utheiu Calilo
'The Passion Flower has live petals and live sepals, which together represent the 10 apostles remaining alter the denial by svmbolizing a blush Peter and the betrayal by Judas
Judas hanged himself in an agony of self-accusation for his betrayal of Christ, once put out white buds, but now bears pur-pliii 1 lowers
ol -hamp. It grows in Palestine. Iscariot. Above the 10
ment.-
lut has a close cousin called the there is a
Oil
a of narrower
"red bud" that is found in Southern California. The red bud i.-sometimes called the "Judas Tree."
The Crow n < the Palestiniai
Thorns, probably coiled and seem h a w I h o r n e . used for Chi ist
segments symbolizing the crown of thorns. Five anthers aie the live v ounds of Christ.
The tendrils of the stem are > lorm whips scourging at
resemble the fingers on the hands of Christ's persecutors. Common in California, t h e lower is strictly a New never
l*e! w e know
I caí
Entry Petitions For Songfest Due Friday
grows here in Southern Califor- the pillar. And the plants leaves nia. There is a legend surrounding the Crown ol Thorns. According to the story, Joseph of Arimathea, who helped anoint passion the body of the dead Christ, un- world plant and hf wound ihc crown of thorns from j grown in Palestine. The legend the head of Je>us and latei used associated with it probably ori-i: as a walking stick. ginated with the Conquistadores
Hventually Joseph went on a of tropical America, missionary expedition to Kng- y[le night before He died, land, and finding a place wheie Christ prayed at the rock of iie determined to establish head- ^cr0nv in the Garden of Gethse-
quarters, he thrust the stick into
mane where now stands the
Frid,
the \ in
90S
213
it repeaiod.
isopher in Ihe Thomist which has a«itscenter> ings of St. Thomas Ac id tlie basic philosophy atholie church. Fat hei bn Hr.’ Iil int he old adag«
•onci
don.
om-
Songlest <. hairi Quinn warned that tions will be accept« Fridav deadline.
i applica after the
divisions , novelty w omen's
•n’>» \ Crowd
given to the lirst ami place winners in each The (hand Sweepstakes my” is now on display in the south end of Houndcr's Hall.
The Songfest Committee includes three advisers whose sole job is to assist and help the groups with their entires. These
the ground, whereupon it im- famed Church of Twelve Nations mediately took root and bloomed Jerusalem. Beside the church lor the fir>t time on Christmas a)(> 0|jXf, t¡-oos sprung from seeds Day on Weaiyall Hill, Glaston- 0<- j¡1(, ttecs that were mute vvit-
ness to the agony of Christ in While it is a legend, there is the garden. A pilgrim to the Glastonbury Thorn at Glaston- Holv Land is usually presented bury Abbey, England, and it is with a crucifix fashioned from a peculiarity of the species that the wood of these trees when it blooms every Christmas he visits the Gethsemane church, which probably accounts for the The date palm's leaf symbo-origin of Ihe legend. Another iizrs the triumphal entry of thorn species, the Madagascai Christ into Jerusalem, when the
rum 'ady ix ed
1 II
i in-
ippoin
>f Thorns.
The reed, which Christ was clothed the body of Christ when I .on as a mock sceptre during He was taken down from the |
y was i d with
rrowth in
ipet
Me
assistants are Mike Frettum. Thorn, grows here in Southern j populace threw palm in His
Mai k Mandala and Mary Lou ' California and is called Crown) path, a token of triumph. Flax.
Drummond °f Thorns. ; a major product of California,
Backstage Advice
lei II 1U I
Dn<‘ ’ois a. i ui_i-d to a>K ,oi ^js j1ja|_ could have been a cat- cross. The body was embalmed
groups help on lighting, costumes, color. ta]| ot- the* ordinary reed. Both with my rrh and with aloes, the
talent arrangements, delivcrv and the grow in Southern California. The latter a common
intied. oilier many phases of musical common reed grows in the desert Southern California,
a 11ei production. areas. At the crucifixion. Christ And the Faster Lily, a native
was offered a sponge soaked in of the Japanese Islands, has long gall, and fixed on a reed. This been the symbol of purity in could have been the giant reed Christian religious at t. which is native both to Pales- Professor Wheeler has made tine and Southern California. a study of plants of the Bible It might have been this type for over l.i years. An ethnobo-that was used to strike Christ tanist. a student of the botany on 'he head by the soldiers and of the humanities, he is also an centurions expert on the plants of Shakes*
When Veronica wiped the face pea re.
BLOOD DONOR-J im Clark signs volunteer list to give blood in current drive Super-
Tiuj;in photo by Di* k Elan vising sign-ups are Spur members Margaret Davies and Sheila Palmer
11 ic
Today s Weather
\ high of tiX degrees will It It; li I: ji l«t today's weather at SC, with sunshine by mid-morning. There will be low clouds tonight hut no evidence of rain.
Church, State Are Divided In Mexico, Consul Says
FREEDOM LOVER
Ex-Olympic Champ Seeks To Aid Foreigners Lot
Mexico is one of the few Lai in
American countries where Ihe
church and the state are two separate bodies, according to Mexican Consul, Adolfo ti Dominguez.
Dominguez spoke y esterday before a group of SC students in the Commons d u r i n g the weekly Latin-American seminar sponsored by the School of International Relations.
He said lhat fanaticism, which he called “too much respect for the church," is forbidden by Mexico.
Thev are not allowed lo think Deutsch said that he was
tl
students act on their own."
He went on to say that he is
»tate university in Hungary and io into athletics. Ho began to local swimming a
In comparing the coaching methods behind the Iron Cur-
HAPPY HUNGARIAN
11 ic Hoi i».lai in i v * .del
pia
wi1
Trojan photo by Dirk Blank>=-nb*»rg Joe Deutsch, one of the members of |.»'I.j lejm v»'lil<li a-drJ I. I puldkol iukj the- W‘j6 Olympics, d.icuisei his for Foreign Students' Representative India. Democratic student politics is heard of in Soviet occupied Hungary,
Bv -IAC KIF. BROOKS
> Deutsch, who litlle more a vear ago was one of the top-ranking water polo players
in Communist Hungary , today is interested in democratic politics
taking an active part in some- | and wants to try to promote a compete
thing which is unheard of in better relationship lie tween meets in liHo. In 1952 he wai
present-day Hungary demo- foreign studcnls and American niemlx'r of the Hungarian squai
cratic studenl jwilitics. students. competing in the Olympics a
Deutsch. the only Foreign • "Here it is very hard for Ihe jjolsinki
Studcnls' Representative candi- foreign students to accustom date in this year's ASSC elec- 1 themselves to American way of tion, came to SC last fall after life. The customs are different fscaning troin Communist domi- and in many cases the language tain and the coaching methods nation during the Hunt arian re- is a barrier. I would also like m ,|)e West, Deutsch said that volt in la-Xi. He and more 1 ban , to see more social events for the Il Vmers force athIetes prae-7(i other Hungarian athletes ¡foreign students, he said.
e in the Olvmpic “Xot So Good” ‘'L<>ng hours are spent
irne when the Deutsch also said that he every day practicing. Here, the
and the entire thought that the way Knglish coach 15 vour fncnd’ hp sa,ri’ political asylum is taught lo tho foreign students The professor-student rela-from the Australian government, here is poor "Something should tionship is also different here.
Pnrtv Line Followed be done about il." he said. Deutsch went on to say. In
When asked why he was going "When I left my own coun- Hungary professors are like
into student politics at SC. the try, I savva big difference. There gods in the classroom. It is a '.*.i vear old captain of Ihe SC j is freedom here At home yoit strictly formal relationship. The Jill replied, dO liol h.a\c Ilcrdulll Ot 3l*-e»li prolessors never £trl down lullir
He admitted that t h o laws Mexico
concerning relations bet w o e n Me-
the church and the state, laws "Only
which he himself to rmed “rad- r e 1 i s: i
ical." are not being i enforced as added.
thoroughly as expect ed. Domin- Reply
guez added, however. that most eiuiry ah
laws are carried tl irough and tesi ant i> said I ha
that tiie situation is improving.
These laws were enacted at the end of the 19th century by the Mexican refcrmisi Benito Juarez, who aimed at the complete sovereignty of t he state over the church. The laws, Dominguez explained, did not apply specifically to a certain denomination and their purpose was to “confine religious worship inside the buildings"
He said, according to the law. ministers of any sects from a foreign country cannot enter to preach their ideas.
Mexica ns n within
Mr
preat
Student To Speak On Youth
aie
Vol
T
e comp nes in Molb lit broke out *d sought
'.l\ vvatel p«il lluilealA all
Y oui i the
the student or even writing or reading, and studenis level
\ ¡ic n orders from what is important for a human I'he studenis d<
Communist Party l>eing. I lx>lieve. is freedom and any choice as
me all members of. j individual liberty," he said.
•I J.rtt It ill
i-ii have
i and instructors.'’
Tuesday Set For Column Deadline
Oulv two il.iv«, remain until the deadline Friday at 3 p.m. for submitting battle columns to the Dailv Trojan ti*r tin-special election issue nc\t Tupsdav.
The columns, illustrating tie-candidates campaign platform, must not exceed 120 words. II a picture is desired, the negative should be brought to the lliiil'. trojan piloto oline, I “ I
si , b\ I rida.v.
Il :t Iiliished print i*> i>i light, it must he exactly 'I inches by 3 inches.
it a I protestant poni 11 ii< time in Mexico. “At
“Rf
ountnes tel )f the loop v de )en as!
Bui
th'
,'t
he said. !•!
h a I
oniic
cue/, lie
According to Domin private» and public schools ar controlled bv the governmen and the teaohin? of religion i pxoressly forbidden.
'I'he eiiliii «-émeut of Ibi* i ni
Psychology Head To Travel East
Dr. the «
v.dl s
Neil E »partmr
psyi
die1
that edili
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 89, March 19, 1958 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 89, March 19, 1958. |
| Full text |
PAGE TWO Ex-Boss Peron Flees Island Republic Southern California N trojan PAGE FOUR SC Baseball Team Defeats Cai Poly VOL. XLIX LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1958 NO. 89 Political Ambitions Cited By I’LVW I.KKNOI \ Power, prestige, well are are the primary reasons people run foi office. Dr. Tot ion ,T. Anderson. professor of polii-ica! science, lold an informal fo-rtnn on c.impus politics yester-day the YWCA. Sponsored by the AMS cabinet. the panel was also composed of Pi Wesley Robb, head of the department of Religion: nomic or emotional or actually urity and want to serve others.-’ Agreeing with Dr. Anderson's la t point. Starla Cotfee stated I ha t “most of us want to serve because we respect and esteem the student body, and because our relatives and Iriends approve of this feeling.’ Larry Sipes good working grou Robb's theory. "Parties are es en sion making proe 'ssc ing candidates for o making inrlivdurds once they are inst: lice " stated Dr. Am “One reason stud don’t want politicé countered Sipes, "is I feel it is much easie a small group's sujj than a larger one's." Agreeing with Sip det'son added that " when we have had conventions, for ex tients have been i>ooe txi: Dr. R( SOLEMN GREETING W ¡is io Harrv Black1 giver one, rama at the tu opened last night, w irough Saturday. of the century. The play, continue its Loyola Priest Talks On Aquinas, Aristotle Official Notk< felt that "this de-ire to servo is also supplement-Larry Sipes. ASSC president; ed by personal needs and hopes.'' Starla Coffee. ASSC vice presi- According to Dr. Robb, the dedent: and Rich Amerian. sena- sire to s°rve and to serve hon-tor at large, who acted as mod- estly is one of altruism versus orator. self-ego. "Students become interested "II vve could operate on a in campus politics. Dr. Ander- higher lavel of standards on son continued, "because ol thesr campus,’ he stated, "perhaps we they have been four basic desires. Hither they could instill this i lea of altruism unsuccessful." V- >nt to exert lev e rage on some- into the student leader’s mind." one. want to become well-known, Ail the panel members agreed feel a need for security, eeo- that political parties were a Flowers Exemplify Christ s Passion ause t! »liticai ulu: However, the pa hat parties would )t oi "nefarious ; ate a -s b/ In t: organ: vt>oi plav in it. Accordili; too ni jliv s were frit. id the part tl > Dr. Anders Indent- prov i It v In Ml / MW I McCdoin. isic philosop I he ! low (M . bui t licit g sadness ist ol these plant? SC botanist Pro! Hastet a i e lov e-iiii overwhelm- Iliseiisses Kant Mudd M( liega n spring f . deep-t< ow ledi ev meneeo Next d ai He w Prof* i Un diil Ml students who ii.i\r- deferred tuition accounts arc reminded that the first payment is due March IT except lor those students registered under Public Law .WO. Payments made alter .March 17 will he subject to a S.kIIO late payment fee unless an e\ elision has been granted bv the Office of Deferred Tuition. Checks and money orders lor the exact amount are acceptable by mail or in person at the Bursar’s Office, cash payments must Ik* made at the Bursar’s Office. B. K. ( ulvi-r Head of student loans and deferred tuition f Jesus, the sacred blood, He hod on the wav to Calvary, is their beauty. A said to have dripped on a flower ording she was wearing, leaving on it the imprint of Ciirisi’s face. And Wheeler, are intimately con- the Veronica flower named in ted with the Bible account of her honor does seem to bear the imprint of a human fa;e. It also sor Loui.' passion and death oi Chri> i'he "Judas 'fre- on which grows m utheiu Calilo 'The Passion Flower has live petals and live sepals, which together represent the 10 apostles remaining alter the denial by svmbolizing a blush Peter and the betrayal by Judas Judas hanged himself in an agony of self-accusation for his betrayal of Christ, once put out white buds, but now bears pur-pliii 1 lowers ol -hamp. It grows in Palestine. Iscariot. Above the 10 ment.- lut has a close cousin called the there is a Oil a of narrower "red bud" that is found in Southern California. The red bud i.-sometimes called the "Judas Tree." The Crow n < the Palestiniai Thorns, probably coiled and seem h a w I h o r n e . used for Chi ist segments symbolizing the crown of thorns. Five anthers aie the live v ounds of Christ. The tendrils of the stem are > lorm whips scourging at resemble the fingers on the hands of Christ's persecutors. Common in California, t h e lower is strictly a New never l*e! w e know I caí Entry Petitions For Songfest Due Friday grows here in Southern Califor- the pillar. And the plants leaves nia. There is a legend surrounding the Crown ol Thorns. According to the story, Joseph of Arimathea, who helped anoint passion the body of the dead Christ, un- world plant and hf wound ihc crown of thorns from j grown in Palestine. The legend the head of Je>us and latei used associated with it probably ori-i: as a walking stick. ginated with the Conquistadores Hventually Joseph went on a of tropical America, missionary expedition to Kng- y[le night before He died, land, and finding a place wheie Christ prayed at the rock of iie determined to establish head- ^cr0nv in the Garden of Gethse- quarters, he thrust the stick into mane where now stands the Frid, the \ in 90S 213 it repeaiod. isopher in Ihe Thomist which has a«itscenter> ings of St. Thomas Ac id tlie basic philosophy atholie church. Fat hei bn Hr.’ Iil int he old adag« •onci don. om- Songlest <. hairi Quinn warned that tions will be accept« Fridav deadline. i applica after the divisions , novelty w omen's •n’>» \ Crowd given to the lirst ami place winners in each The (hand Sweepstakes my” is now on display in the south end of Houndcr's Hall. The Songfest Committee includes three advisers whose sole job is to assist and help the groups with their entires. These the ground, whereupon it im- famed Church of Twelve Nations mediately took root and bloomed Jerusalem. Beside the church lor the fir>t time on Christmas a)(> 0 jXf, t¡-oos sprung from seeds Day on Weaiyall Hill, Glaston- 0<- j¡1(, ttecs that were mute vvit- ness to the agony of Christ in While it is a legend, there is the garden. A pilgrim to the Glastonbury Thorn at Glaston- Holv Land is usually presented bury Abbey, England, and it is with a crucifix fashioned from a peculiarity of the species that the wood of these trees when it blooms every Christmas he visits the Gethsemane church, which probably accounts for the The date palm's leaf symbo-origin of Ihe legend. Another iizrs the triumphal entry of thorn species, the Madagascai Christ into Jerusalem, when the rum 'ady ix ed 1 II i in- ippoin >f Thorns. The reed, which Christ was clothed the body of Christ when I .on as a mock sceptre during He was taken down from the y was i d with rrowth in ipet Me assistants are Mike Frettum. Thorn, grows here in Southern j populace threw palm in His Mai k Mandala and Mary Lou ' California and is called Crown) path, a token of triumph. Flax. Drummond °f Thorns. ; a major product of California, Backstage Advice lei II 1U I Dn<‘ ’ois a. i ui_i-d to a>K ,oi ^js j1ja _ could have been a cat- cross. The body was embalmed groups help on lighting, costumes, color. ta] ot- the* ordinary reed. Both with my rrh and with aloes, the talent arrangements, delivcrv and the grow in Southern California. The latter a common intied. oilier many phases of musical common reed grows in the desert Southern California, a 11ei production. areas. At the crucifixion. Christ And the Faster Lily, a native was offered a sponge soaked in of the Japanese Islands, has long gall, and fixed on a reed. This been the symbol of purity in could have been the giant reed Christian religious at t. which is native both to Pales- Professor Wheeler has made tine and Southern California. a study of plants of the Bible It might have been this type for over l.i years. An ethnobo-that was used to strike Christ tanist. a student of the botany on 'he head by the soldiers and of the humanities, he is also an centurions expert on the plants of Shakes* When Veronica wiped the face pea re. BLOOD DONOR-J im Clark signs volunteer list to give blood in current drive Super- Tiuj;in photo by Di* k Elan vising sign-ups are Spur members Margaret Davies and Sheila Palmer 11 ic Today s Weather \ high of tiX degrees will It It; li I: ji l«t today's weather at SC, with sunshine by mid-morning. There will be low clouds tonight hut no evidence of rain. Church, State Are Divided In Mexico, Consul Says FREEDOM LOVER Ex-Olympic Champ Seeks To Aid Foreigners Lot Mexico is one of the few Lai in American countries where Ihe church and the state are two separate bodies, according to Mexican Consul, Adolfo ti Dominguez. Dominguez spoke y esterday before a group of SC students in the Commons d u r i n g the weekly Latin-American seminar sponsored by the School of International Relations. He said lhat fanaticism, which he called “too much respect for the church" is forbidden by Mexico. Thev are not allowed lo think Deutsch said that he was tl students act on their own." He went on to say that he is »tate university in Hungary and io into athletics. Ho began to local swimming a In comparing the coaching methods behind the Iron Cur- HAPPY HUNGARIAN 11 ic Hoi i».lai in i v * .del pia wi1 Trojan photo by Dirk Blank>=-nb*»rg Joe Deutsch, one of the members of .»'I.j lejm v»'lil |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1402/uschist-dt-1958-03-19~001.tif |
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