DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 42, November 20, 1957 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
VCL. XLIX L0S ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1957 NO
Songleader Controversy Revived
ABSTRACT
J>aily Trojan Photo by i^am Hyun AMATEUR GOURMET — Mrs. Beula Keough, left, dorm mother of Stonier Hall, samples cup of peaches from Chef Alfred Vollenweider at a taste test panel yesterday in the Commons dining rooms to determine if the food SC purchases for its cafeterias is of the highest quality. More than 25 persons participated in the taste tests.
Cafeteria Food Undergoes Test
More than 1000 tiny cups dec- break even financially, orated the long tables in Dining “Last month we came really Rooms A. B and C of ihe Uni- very close to matching our food versitv Commons yesterday costs and our food income,” he where 30 SC people gave their said.
the Under Chef Allied Vollen-good of the universtiy. vv eider, the university operates
In the while c-ps were five five separate kitchens and em-brands of pears, apricots, fruit ploys 250 persons to piepare salad, grap iruit. freestone «inri serve the f(iod. Assisting p!\;; iie.s nr! ct’i • 'lime p- ;i"rr> Vollenweider is sous chef (as-A 35-cup 1 rayload of each w;.s sistant chefi li. S. Watts, provided ! t i ie !1 ■ 1 'asic.s Truineil in Furope
<.ape at (.rapefniif Volenvveider, by the way, is a
Fr in 1 he student body. f.ic- Swiss who was trained in Kurope u 1 t y , administration and ihe and has worked in Europe, Ca-universitv secretary pool, tasters ttada and Bermuda before cornea me to pick at the peaches. lng U) SC three months ago. He gape at lire tpefruit and fondle I ls the only Kuropean-t rained the fruit salad. ! chef any university in the Los
t Angeles area.
Disc Jockey I Will.Be Host At Senior Day
’n's Tickets for Senior Ditch Day will be on sale today. Thursday and Friday in front of the Stu-our dent Union from 9 to 3 p.m.
of The ticket price of SI includes >w- a box lunch, entertainment and our entrance to the Coliseum at iiov 10:30 Saturday, nds “Boy Disc Jockey," B. Mitchell Reed, will emcee the entire tertainment. Reed graduated "st from the University of Illinois ned and began his radio career in \V, Connecticut broadcasting to ind Yale students. Since then he has moved to Los Angeles and leir is now affiliated with station rbbard on KFWB.
light house All-Stars
Howard Rumsev and The Lighthouse All-Stars will also t>e on hand to spice up the program with a touch of popular jazz, said Rob Kasha re. Senior Day chairman. Following their performance a drawing will be he!d in which five Rumsev LPs will be given to lucky winners.
The pre-game event at 10:30 p.m. is especially for seniors but i> in past years other students will be allowed to attend.
Senior < ¡ass Tradition It is a tradition of the senior class to sponsor this day as a commemoration of their last home game, he said.
According to Kashare. the gates will be closed from 11:30 to 12:30. “Those students without Senior Day tickets w ill have to rush to get good seats,” he
rp. now o tasto tc ìrding lo
D. 1 mons ,U!nd'r’su p copie a àc
we d o v' e wat il
verv he ss 1 lu tlie best tasti bhard pitv * l*OS»l 's 1 lie foot
Studf Grill. >nt Unii . Harris
EVK and Toul women’s
mitor ics and D a v i( I Marks n
doni ii
«Tu Choose 1 1 he r.ast rop Bran :1s
canne •d goods ori the basi
qualit ever, custoi v atrd p vve are ti noe '. Now, 1 g to have
like b icst hot vve« no t»rand Ihe ton hr
availa ihlc. ' 1 luti d said.
troupi e of tast a t t he
testili g derbv w ero 1 ru 11 s ca
lincici Glorie 'tta Mor lare h SKI!
iVl Mil' T\Vf i vountT 1? S tostili0" '
Faculty Club Present Art Luncheon Set
Explained in Forum Talk
The techniques, interpretations, expressions, and fundamentals of “Abstraction and Contemporary Expression,” were told in detail by Professor Donald R. Goodall. guest speaker at the sixth and final lecture of the semi-annual Philosophy Forum Series yesterday. Using illustrations, including j colored slies of famous paint-I i n g s , Dr. Goodall answered questions about abstract expressions in contemporary paintings.
Space of Surface
“The abstractionist starts with the lateral space of th*3 surface. There is no set style, no figures, saints, statesmen or myths. Many times, massive black areas on the white space, project the true expression oi the contemporary artist,” he said.
To illustrate his points, Dr. Goodall showed famous contem-porarv paintings including "April Free 1954." '‘Christ be-: ing led to Calvary,” “Farmer's j i Daughter-’ (a modern clay Eve), and other famous and impres-| sionistic paintings.
Vocabulary of Sight “The Abstractionist." he add-j ed,” uses the vocabulary of •
! sight exclusively.”
Dr. Goodall, head of the fine I arts department, toid of the us-j age of color, lines, brush-stroke I and other important methods in ■ which the artist communicates I with his audience and himself, j “Agony,” painted in 1947, was an example of the contemporary expression of the artist's soul and creative desires, he said.
Moved By Life
i The artist is deeply moved by I the life around him and he can create his own ideals of spiritual and realistic principles, he
| sa'd.
Utilizing a favorite quotation. Dr. Goodall said that “art begins when to live is not sufficient to express life.”
He had previously given illustrations supporting this popular belief.
The artist's ability to express himself, he continued, is to draw-on specific experiences in nature and to fulfill bis knowledge of memories and associations.
Expression Eliminated He maintained that an abstract painting is one in which figurial expression has been eliminated.
Dr. William H. Werkmeister, director of the School of Phi-losophy. commented that Dr. Goodall’s effective use of slides as well as his interpretative text of abstraction and contemporary expressions, made the last lecure in the series a verv valuable one.
He also expressed his thanks to the people who have supported the lecture series making it the “success it has been this semester.”
Dr. Stanley R. Townsend, associate professor «if (ierman, will he guest speaker today at the Faculty Club luncheon at noon in the main «lining room of the Commons.
The topic of his talk will be “Austria: Showcase of Freedom."
Dr. Townsend held a Fun-bright Research Fellowship at the Fniversity *»f Vienna during the academic year 1 itrsii-.-jT, where he completed the necessary research for a hook on the latter years of (jioethe’s life.
The theme of his presentation today centers upon the exemplary role being played by Austria in demonstrating to her Iron Curtain neighbors how good life can be outside of Ihe Soviet hegemony.
Refugees Are Tool, Claims Israeli Official
By LARRY FISHER
The refugee problem is something which the Arab leaders really do not want to solve, Moshe Leshem, press secretary of the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told an SC audience yesterday.
The Arab relugees, displaced in 1948 when the new state of Israel was formed, are instead being used as political tools by the Moslem states,” be said.
“The Israeli press and people,” on the other hand, feel that it is a humanitarian problem, and if the Arab states would realize this a very easy solution could lie achieved.” he said.
Resettlement of Refugees In reply to a question from the audience asking how these homeless refugees were to be resettled. be said that there is sufficient land in neighboring Arab states to accommodate them and enough money available to take them there.
“The United Nations has a fund of $200 million earmarked for refugee use, but Arab countries refuse to take advantage of it because it would ruin the political advantage they are gaining through keeping these people homeless,” he said.
Billions In Oil In addition many billions of dollars are being made by Arabian countries through oil royalties, he declared. “I don't know j where the money goes, but I do know the Cadillac manufactur- j ers are very happy.”
I>eshem believes that such oil-rich Arabian states do not finance refugee resettlement at- j tempts because they hope these people may he able to one day j destroy Israel.
Syrian Refugee Act “A Syrian congress, for example, passed a resolutior. that (Continued on Page 2) |
ASSC Senate Will Evaluate Spirit Boosters
The old and oft-debated question of whether SC should have songleaders will once ag-.in come before the ASSC Senate at tonight’s 7 p.m. meeting.
A committee of Senate members will be appointed “to examine and evaluate the benefits and disadvantages of
adding songleaders to SC's group
Daily Trojan Photo l.y I-Vri English FINAL PLANS—Activities for representatives from national fraternities to the IFC Planning Conference are planned by, from left, Scott FitzRandolf, secretary; Dr. Jerry Wulk, counselor of men; and Al Green, cneirmen.
CONFERENCE
IFC Discu
Problem Areas
Eleven discussion groups continued a week-long IFC plan-j ning conference by reviewing i and acting on the various problem areas throughout the SC fraternity system, said Al Green, chairman of tire conference.
The groups, consisting of national fraternity representatives, alumni advisers and house presidents, have singled out the five most prominent areas of trouble and these will be discussed tonight and tomorrow. These are the selection of members, scholarship, service, standards and society.
From these discussions, a possible solution and a probable plan of action will be devised.
Breakfast For Delegates
This morning the Interfraternity Mothers Club gave a breakfast for the delegates. The breakfast was held in the Town and Gown Foyer.
Tomorrow morning there will be a program by the Interfraternity Alumni Association of Southern California at the University Club in downtown Los Angeles.
Various other programs, in-eludir?g a trip through Warner Brother Studio and the tradi- . tional SC-UCLA game. are planned for Friday and Saturday.
“Through these conferences, it is our hope that we will be able to get some ideas and plans for a better fraternity system at SC,” Green said.
The week-long conference began Sunday night at the Ambassador Hotel featuring guest speakers from represented fraternities.
Terzian Speaks At Junior High
value of leadership ex-s and the challenges that youth faces today were discussed hv former ASSC President Carl Terzian before a selected group of junior high school boys and girls at Gage Junior High yesterday.
Terzian discussed also types of governments used by college student bodies and extra-curricular campus activities. Terzian, a graduate in political science, will be a delegate of the State Department's goodwill trip to Australia.
Terzian's speech is part of a series of lectures on government being given by civic and coileee leaders to promising boys and girls from the Los Angeles area.
Routes of Student Cases Traced From Origin to Judicial Courts
Dahl To Talk
Today s Weather
The Trojan campus will l>e sunny a^ain today w 11 li t tie thermometer reai liii^g a high of . 1 decrees. Typical of a November day. yesterday’s high was clear b!) degrees, while the low w as 50 last night. |
(Editor's note: This is the fifth in a series of articles by Daily Trojan staff reporter Priscilla Rockwell explaining Ihe history and purpose of the SC student judicial system.)
By PRISCILLA ROCKWELL
A consideration of the several routes by which the SC judicial courts get their cases raises an interesting and important point.
The cases which come from residence halls or from private citizens in complaints direct to the counselors are ones in which only the principals are involved. When the courts recommend action on cases such as these, they are acting as the first link in the chain of rule-enforcement agencies which operate for the protection of the student and the reputation of the university.
But the cases coming from the police are handled in two ways that do not concern the principals.
Sometimes word comes to the counselors about cases which the police feel that the university should handle. These cases concern infractions on which no punishment has yet been set. and the councils offer their recommendation for the only punishment that, the student must pay.
But the ca^e of the student who has been apprehended by the law and jailed or fined by .them may not end there. Cases such as these that come before the judicial councils may have an extra penalty added to that already exacted L*y tne civil law1.
This would seem to make an Individual pay twice for the .same infraction, and the term "double jeopardy” comes to mind immediately.'
But an argument against this double penalty is not countered by use of this term. i
Double jeopardy, as lawyers consider it. is the term which is used to describe the situation an individual faces when he is prosecuted twice for the same crime. The important point here is to note that even though he may be accused by different courts for this breach of the law, the term “double jeopardy” can only be u^ed when these courts all operate under a single system of law.
But a student who pays twice for his infraction of the rules by being punished both under civil law and under the university judiciary system is not placed in double jeopardy,” because these two agencies do not derive theii judicial powers under the same set of laws.
Nevertheless, the effect of double jeopardy may be
accomplished in a case like this, even though the appli-
cation of the term is not technically correct.
A justification of this twofold punishmen may be made by answering the question: When is an SC student-not an SC student?
If we say that an SC student is not an SC student when he is off the campus, then we must conclude that when he is outside the university grounds, or is not representing the university formally (as at a conference, etc.). he is acting as a private citizen. Thus he cannot be called to account for his outside actions by any agency of the university.
*IIowever, if we say that an SC student is an SC student wherever he toes, and I hat vvhatevei he doe- reflect* upon the university and on hnnsclr as a repi emulative * * r it, then it would seem that the university has Ihe right
to hold him accountable for all his actions.
The SC student judiciary operates under this laUer conclusion. a . i
Political View Of California To Be Aired
Two of the top active members of the Democratic and Rp-| publican parties w ill be featured at a meeting Friday of the SC chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science honorary fraternity.
Roger Kent, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee. and Philip Knox Jr.. executive director of Republican Associates, will discuss California politics at the gathering scheduled for 6 p.m. at Town and Gow n.
Native of California
Kent, a native Californian, was an unsuccessful candidate for Congress in 1948 and for the last 10 years has been campaign chairman for numerous Democratic candidates.
He served as director of the California Democratic Council < irst Congressional District) from August, 1953. to August, i 1954. and from 1954 to 1956 was chairman of the Northern California Division of the Democratic State Central Committee.
Kent received his I.LB from Vale Law School in 1931. In 193 * he was appointed senior attorney for the San Francisco Regional Office of Securities and Exchange Commission.
During World War II Kent spent three years in the Navy and for one year was assistant to the Air Plans Officer on Admiral King’s staff in Washington. D. C.
Department of Defence In 1952 he was appointed general counsel of the Department of Defense aird he also served as deputy assistant secretary of defense.
Knox, who has lived in Cali-! fornia since 1923. was designated j ■"Outstanding Young Man of j Oakland” in 1955. He came to Southern California last fall to serve as director of Republican | Associates, a Los Angeles Countv organization that sponsors a , vear-round sales program on be- , half of the Republican Party ; and the “American free enterprise system.
Fniversity of California
In 1949 Knox received an LLR degree from the University of California’s Hastings College of Law and in 1954 he was elected state president of the Junior Chamber of Commerce.
Last \ear he was appointed general legal counsel and parliamentarian for the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. He is presently serving in this capacity and as a member of the executive committee and finance committee of that organization.
! of spirit boosters,” ASSC Pres-j ident Larry Sipes said.
I ‘'This committee will then re-i port back to tho Senate and I submit information concerning | their use at other schools and how they are selected,” he said.
Defeated L'cst Year
A motion recommending tho adoption of songleaders was j hroueht before last year's Sen-; ate. hut was defeated.
The appointment of Gordon i Baird as chairman of the Forum I Committee will also be recommended to the Senate. Baird is ' a senior who has served on the committee this year, Sipes said. He will replace Anne Durfe* who resigned because of ill health.
A resolution expressing the student body's appreciation to those who wrote the new fight j song “Go On Mr. Trojan” w hich !was introduced at last week's i game will he recommended by Sophomore Class President Ken Smith.
Parking Committee Plan
In addiion, Indeoendent Men's Representative Stan Arkin will introduce a plan to form a fac-ulty-student parking committee. “This committee will attempt to I regulate student parking lots.”
! Arkin said, “and should h e | ease commuter’s parking pr<
I lems.”
i According to Sipe«. a move ! group the presidents of SC I various schools together into organization which will me weekly to discuss problem arc and common projects will al be introduced.
Faculty Members Invited
“Factulty members will he invited to these meetings.” he said. “They will not come as speakers but rather as guests who will have dinner with the students and chat with them about their problems afterward.” “This group held its first, meeting at the Pi Kappa Alpha house last night.” Sipes said, “and if is hoped that it will become a regular activity of the school presidents.”
Music Dean To Represent SC at Meet
Official
Notices
Faculty season ticket holders may now pick up their I Cl.A game tickets at the Ticket Office. Tickets may be picked up daily from 9 to 4:30.
John Morley Ticket Manager
All students registered under PL 550 who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the fii«t payments are due Nov. 2t>. Pav ments made after Nov. 2b will be subject to the S5 late pavment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Office of Deferred Tuition. Checks and money orders for the exact amount are acceptable by mail in in per sou a I I he < )l 1 ice of Deferred Tuition «‘ash payment» must be made at the t >tfn e ot the Bursar ill Owen's Hall .
B. K. Culver Robert I) Fisher
I Dr. Raymond Kendall, dean of ! the School of Music, w ill represent the university at the 33rd annual meeting of the National Association of Schools of Music to be held at the Palmer House 1 in Chicago Nov. 29 and 30.
In addition to being the university's official representative. Dr. Kendall is also a member of , the National Curriculum Com-. mission.
SC has been 3 member of the NASM since 192«.
Official Accrediting Body
Deliberations of the National Association of Schools of Music
■ have become increasingly impor-I tant since the association has
■ been designated by the National ! Commission on Accreditation as
the official accrediting body for collegiate music school
The results which will comp out of those meetings will \m\ p an important influence on coming trends in music education. The association now includes most of the leading universities, colleges and conservatories in the U.S.
An Fmistial Feature
New schools will be admitted to memltership and reports will be submitted hv v.irous commissions. A program feature or unusual interest will t.-ke place on Nov. 29 when the delegates will be asked to pit the accuracy of their hearing arainst the latest electronic sound measuring devices
The visitors will r a concert given bv il Svmphony < )i chestra. direction' of Fritz I guest 5 of the Ore he: nation.
PAGE THREE Shcrfcr, Ecjgy Styles Cause Much Talk
Southern
DAI LY
OcSliforr-ïiâ
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Coach Narr.es Tentative Starting Cagers
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 42, November 20, 1957 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 42, November 20, 1957. |
| Full text | VCL. XLIX L0S ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1957 NO Songleader Controversy Revived ABSTRACT J>aily Trojan Photo by i^am Hyun AMATEUR GOURMET — Mrs. Beula Keough, left, dorm mother of Stonier Hall, samples cup of peaches from Chef Alfred Vollenweider at a taste test panel yesterday in the Commons dining rooms to determine if the food SC purchases for its cafeterias is of the highest quality. More than 25 persons participated in the taste tests. Cafeteria Food Undergoes Test More than 1000 tiny cups dec- break even financially, orated the long tables in Dining “Last month we came really Rooms A. B and C of ihe Uni- very close to matching our food versitv Commons yesterday costs and our food income,” he where 30 SC people gave their said. the Under Chef Allied Vollen-good of the universtiy. vv eider, the university operates In the while c-ps were five five separate kitchens and em-brands of pears, apricots, fruit ploys 250 persons to piepare salad, grap iruit. freestone «inri serve the f(iod. Assisting p!\;; iie.s nr! ct’i • 'lime p- ;i"rr> Vollenweider is sous chef (as-A 35-cup 1 rayload of each w;.s sistant chefi li. S. Watts, provided ! t i ie !1 ■ 1 'asic.s Truineil in Furope <.ape at (.rapefniif Volenvveider, by the way, is a Fr in 1 he student body. f.ic- Swiss who was trained in Kurope u 1 t y , administration and ihe and has worked in Europe, Ca-universitv secretary pool, tasters ttada and Bermuda before cornea me to pick at the peaches. lng U) SC three months ago. He gape at lire tpefruit and fondle I ls the only Kuropean-t rained the fruit salad. ! chef any university in the Los t Angeles area. Disc Jockey I Will.Be Host At Senior Day ’n's Tickets for Senior Ditch Day will be on sale today. Thursday and Friday in front of the Stu-our dent Union from 9 to 3 p.m. of The ticket price of SI includes >w- a box lunch, entertainment and our entrance to the Coliseum at iiov 10:30 Saturday, nds “Boy Disc Jockey" B. Mitchell Reed, will emcee the entire tertainment. Reed graduated "st from the University of Illinois ned and began his radio career in \V, Connecticut broadcasting to ind Yale students. Since then he has moved to Los Angeles and leir is now affiliated with station rbbard on KFWB. light house All-Stars Howard Rumsev and The Lighthouse All-Stars will also t>e on hand to spice up the program with a touch of popular jazz, said Rob Kasha re. Senior Day chairman. Following their performance a drawing will be he!d in which five Rumsev LPs will be given to lucky winners. The pre-game event at 10:30 p.m. is especially for seniors but i> in past years other students will be allowed to attend. Senior < ¡ass Tradition It is a tradition of the senior class to sponsor this day as a commemoration of their last home game, he said. According to Kashare. the gates will be closed from 11:30 to 12:30. “Those students without Senior Day tickets w ill have to rush to get good seats,” he rp. now o tasto tc ìrding lo D. 1 mons ,U!nd'r’su p copie a àc we d o v' e wat il verv he ss 1 lu tlie best tasti bhard pitv * l*OS»l 's 1 lie foot Studf Grill. >nt Unii . Harris EVK and Toul women’s mitor ics and D a v i( I Marks n doni ii «Tu Choose 1 1 he r.ast rop Bran :1s canne •d goods ori the basi qualit ever, custoi v atrd p vve are ti noe '. Now, 1 g to have like b icst hot vve« no t»rand Ihe ton hr availa ihlc. ' 1 luti d said. troupi e of tast a t t he testili g derbv w ero 1 ru 11 s ca lincici Glorie 'tta Mor lare h SKI! iVl Mil' T\Vf i vountT 1? S tostili0" ' Faculty Club Present Art Luncheon Set Explained in Forum Talk The techniques, interpretations, expressions, and fundamentals of “Abstraction and Contemporary Expression,” were told in detail by Professor Donald R. Goodall. guest speaker at the sixth and final lecture of the semi-annual Philosophy Forum Series yesterday. Using illustrations, including j colored slies of famous paint-I i n g s , Dr. Goodall answered questions about abstract expressions in contemporary paintings. Space of Surface “The abstractionist starts with the lateral space of th*3 surface. There is no set style, no figures, saints, statesmen or myths. Many times, massive black areas on the white space, project the true expression oi the contemporary artist,” he said. To illustrate his points, Dr. Goodall showed famous contem-porarv paintings including "April Free 1954." '‘Christ be-: ing led to Calvary,” “Farmer's j i Daughter-’ (a modern clay Eve), and other famous and impres- sionistic paintings. Vocabulary of Sight “The Abstractionist." he add-j ed,” uses the vocabulary of • ! sight exclusively.” Dr. Goodall, head of the fine I arts department, toid of the us-j age of color, lines, brush-stroke I and other important methods in ■ which the artist communicates I with his audience and himself, j “Agony,” painted in 1947, was an example of the contemporary expression of the artist's soul and creative desires, he said. Moved By Life i The artist is deeply moved by I the life around him and he can create his own ideals of spiritual and realistic principles, he sa'd. Utilizing a favorite quotation. Dr. Goodall said that “art begins when to live is not sufficient to express life.” He had previously given illustrations supporting this popular belief. The artist's ability to express himself, he continued, is to draw-on specific experiences in nature and to fulfill bis knowledge of memories and associations. Expression Eliminated He maintained that an abstract painting is one in which figurial expression has been eliminated. Dr. William H. Werkmeister, director of the School of Phi-losophy. commented that Dr. Goodall’s effective use of slides as well as his interpretative text of abstraction and contemporary expressions, made the last lecure in the series a verv valuable one. He also expressed his thanks to the people who have supported the lecture series making it the “success it has been this semester.” Dr. Stanley R. Townsend, associate professor «if (ierman, will he guest speaker today at the Faculty Club luncheon at noon in the main «lining room of the Commons. The topic of his talk will be “Austria: Showcase of Freedom." Dr. Townsend held a Fun-bright Research Fellowship at the Fniversity *»f Vienna during the academic year 1 itrsii-.-jT, where he completed the necessary research for a hook on the latter years of (jioethe’s life. The theme of his presentation today centers upon the exemplary role being played by Austria in demonstrating to her Iron Curtain neighbors how good life can be outside of Ihe Soviet hegemony. Refugees Are Tool, Claims Israeli Official By LARRY FISHER The refugee problem is something which the Arab leaders really do not want to solve, Moshe Leshem, press secretary of the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told an SC audience yesterday. The Arab relugees, displaced in 1948 when the new state of Israel was formed, are instead being used as political tools by the Moslem states,” be said. “The Israeli press and people,” on the other hand, feel that it is a humanitarian problem, and if the Arab states would realize this a very easy solution could lie achieved.” he said. Resettlement of Refugees In reply to a question from the audience asking how these homeless refugees were to be resettled. be said that there is sufficient land in neighboring Arab states to accommodate them and enough money available to take them there. “The United Nations has a fund of $200 million earmarked for refugee use, but Arab countries refuse to take advantage of it because it would ruin the political advantage they are gaining through keeping these people homeless,” he said. Billions In Oil In addition many billions of dollars are being made by Arabian countries through oil royalties, he declared. “I don't know j where the money goes, but I do know the Cadillac manufactur- j ers are very happy.” I>eshem believes that such oil-rich Arabian states do not finance refugee resettlement at- j tempts because they hope these people may he able to one day j destroy Israel. Syrian Refugee Act “A Syrian congress, for example, passed a resolutior. that (Continued on Page 2) ASSC Senate Will Evaluate Spirit Boosters The old and oft-debated question of whether SC should have songleaders will once ag-.in come before the ASSC Senate at tonight’s 7 p.m. meeting. A committee of Senate members will be appointed “to examine and evaluate the benefits and disadvantages of adding songleaders to SC's group Daily Trojan Photo l.y I-Vri English FINAL PLANS—Activities for representatives from national fraternities to the IFC Planning Conference are planned by, from left, Scott FitzRandolf, secretary; Dr. Jerry Wulk, counselor of men; and Al Green, cneirmen. CONFERENCE IFC Discu Problem Areas Eleven discussion groups continued a week-long IFC plan-j ning conference by reviewing i and acting on the various problem areas throughout the SC fraternity system, said Al Green, chairman of tire conference. The groups, consisting of national fraternity representatives, alumni advisers and house presidents, have singled out the five most prominent areas of trouble and these will be discussed tonight and tomorrow. These are the selection of members, scholarship, service, standards and society. From these discussions, a possible solution and a probable plan of action will be devised. Breakfast For Delegates This morning the Interfraternity Mothers Club gave a breakfast for the delegates. The breakfast was held in the Town and Gown Foyer. Tomorrow morning there will be a program by the Interfraternity Alumni Association of Southern California at the University Club in downtown Los Angeles. Various other programs, in-eludir?g a trip through Warner Brother Studio and the tradi- . tional SC-UCLA game. are planned for Friday and Saturday. “Through these conferences, it is our hope that we will be able to get some ideas and plans for a better fraternity system at SC,” Green said. The week-long conference began Sunday night at the Ambassador Hotel featuring guest speakers from represented fraternities. Terzian Speaks At Junior High value of leadership ex-s and the challenges that youth faces today were discussed hv former ASSC President Carl Terzian before a selected group of junior high school boys and girls at Gage Junior High yesterday. Terzian discussed also types of governments used by college student bodies and extra-curricular campus activities. Terzian, a graduate in political science, will be a delegate of the State Department's goodwill trip to Australia. Terzian's speech is part of a series of lectures on government being given by civic and coileee leaders to promising boys and girls from the Los Angeles area. Routes of Student Cases Traced From Origin to Judicial Courts Dahl To Talk Today s Weather The Trojan campus will l>e sunny a^ain today w 11 li t tie thermometer reai liii^g a high of . 1 decrees. Typical of a November day. yesterday’s high was clear b!) degrees, while the low w as 50 last night. (Editor's note: This is the fifth in a series of articles by Daily Trojan staff reporter Priscilla Rockwell explaining Ihe history and purpose of the SC student judicial system.) By PRISCILLA ROCKWELL A consideration of the several routes by which the SC judicial courts get their cases raises an interesting and important point. The cases which come from residence halls or from private citizens in complaints direct to the counselors are ones in which only the principals are involved. When the courts recommend action on cases such as these, they are acting as the first link in the chain of rule-enforcement agencies which operate for the protection of the student and the reputation of the university. But the cases coming from the police are handled in two ways that do not concern the principals. Sometimes word comes to the counselors about cases which the police feel that the university should handle. These cases concern infractions on which no punishment has yet been set. and the councils offer their recommendation for the only punishment that, the student must pay. But the ca^e of the student who has been apprehended by the law and jailed or fined by .them may not end there. Cases such as these that come before the judicial councils may have an extra penalty added to that already exacted L*y tne civil law1. This would seem to make an Individual pay twice for the .same infraction, and the term "double jeopardy” comes to mind immediately.' But an argument against this double penalty is not countered by use of this term. i Double jeopardy, as lawyers consider it. is the term which is used to describe the situation an individual faces when he is prosecuted twice for the same crime. The important point here is to note that even though he may be accused by different courts for this breach of the law, the term “double jeopardy” can only be u^ed when these courts all operate under a single system of law. But a student who pays twice for his infraction of the rules by being punished both under civil law and under the university judiciary system is not placed in double jeopardy,” because these two agencies do not derive theii judicial powers under the same set of laws. Nevertheless, the effect of double jeopardy may be accomplished in a case like this, even though the appli- cation of the term is not technically correct. A justification of this twofold punishmen may be made by answering the question: When is an SC student-not an SC student? If we say that an SC student is not an SC student when he is off the campus, then we must conclude that when he is outside the university grounds, or is not representing the university formally (as at a conference, etc.). he is acting as a private citizen. Thus he cannot be called to account for his outside actions by any agency of the university. *IIowever, if we say that an SC student is an SC student wherever he toes, and I hat vvhatevei he doe- reflect* upon the university and on hnnsclr as a repi emulative * * r it, then it would seem that the university has Ihe right to hold him accountable for all his actions. The SC student judiciary operates under this laUer conclusion. a . i Political View Of California To Be Aired Two of the top active members of the Democratic and Rp- publican parties w ill be featured at a meeting Friday of the SC chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science honorary fraternity. Roger Kent, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee. and Philip Knox Jr.. executive director of Republican Associates, will discuss California politics at the gathering scheduled for 6 p.m. at Town and Gow n. Native of California Kent, a native Californian, was an unsuccessful candidate for Congress in 1948 and for the last 10 years has been campaign chairman for numerous Democratic candidates. He served as director of the California Democratic Council < irst Congressional District) from August, 1953. to August, i 1954. and from 1954 to 1956 was chairman of the Northern California Division of the Democratic State Central Committee. Kent received his I.LB from Vale Law School in 1931. In 193 * he was appointed senior attorney for the San Francisco Regional Office of Securities and Exchange Commission. During World War II Kent spent three years in the Navy and for one year was assistant to the Air Plans Officer on Admiral King’s staff in Washington. D. C. Department of Defence In 1952 he was appointed general counsel of the Department of Defense aird he also served as deputy assistant secretary of defense. Knox, who has lived in Cali-! fornia since 1923. was designated j ■"Outstanding Young Man of j Oakland” in 1955. He came to Southern California last fall to serve as director of Republican Associates, a Los Angeles Countv organization that sponsors a , vear-round sales program on be- , half of the Republican Party ; and the “American free enterprise system. Fniversity of California In 1949 Knox received an LLR degree from the University of California’s Hastings College of Law and in 1954 he was elected state president of the Junior Chamber of Commerce. Last \ear he was appointed general legal counsel and parliamentarian for the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. He is presently serving in this capacity and as a member of the executive committee and finance committee of that organization. ! of spirit boosters,” ASSC Pres-j ident Larry Sipes said. I ‘'This committee will then re-i port back to tho Senate and I submit information concerning their use at other schools and how they are selected,” he said. Defeated L'cst Year A motion recommending tho adoption of songleaders was j hroueht before last year's Sen-; ate. hut was defeated. The appointment of Gordon i Baird as chairman of the Forum I Committee will also be recommended to the Senate. Baird is ' a senior who has served on the committee this year, Sipes said. He will replace Anne Durfe* who resigned because of ill health. A resolution expressing the student body's appreciation to those who wrote the new fight j song “Go On Mr. Trojan” w hich !was introduced at last week's i game will he recommended by Sophomore Class President Ken Smith. Parking Committee Plan In addiion, Indeoendent Men's Representative Stan Arkin will introduce a plan to form a fac-ulty-student parking committee. “This committee will attempt to I regulate student parking lots.” ! Arkin said, “and should h e ease commuter’s parking pr< I lems.” i According to Sipe«. a move ! group the presidents of SC I various schools together into organization which will me weekly to discuss problem arc and common projects will al be introduced. Faculty Members Invited “Factulty members will he invited to these meetings.” he said. “They will not come as speakers but rather as guests who will have dinner with the students and chat with them about their problems afterward.” “This group held its first, meeting at the Pi Kappa Alpha house last night.” Sipes said, “and if is hoped that it will become a regular activity of the school presidents.” Music Dean To Represent SC at Meet Official Notices Faculty season ticket holders may now pick up their I Cl.A game tickets at the Ticket Office. Tickets may be picked up daily from 9 to 4:30. John Morley Ticket Manager All students registered under PL 550 who have deferred tuition accounts are reminded that the fii«t payments are due Nov. 2t>. Pav ments made after Nov. 2b will be subject to the S5 late pavment fee unless an extension has been granted by the Office of Deferred Tuition. Checks and money orders for the exact amount are acceptable by mail in in per sou a I I he < )l 1 ice of Deferred Tuition «‘ash payment» must be made at the t >tfn e ot the Bursar ill Owen's Hall . B. K. Culver Robert I) Fisher I Dr. Raymond Kendall, dean of ! the School of Music, w ill represent the university at the 33rd annual meeting of the National Association of Schools of Music to be held at the Palmer House 1 in Chicago Nov. 29 and 30. In addition to being the university's official representative. Dr. Kendall is also a member of , the National Curriculum Com-. mission. SC has been 3 member of the NASM since 192«. Official Accrediting Body Deliberations of the National Association of Schools of Music ■ have become increasingly impor-I tant since the association has ■ been designated by the National ! Commission on Accreditation as the official accrediting body for collegiate music school The results which will comp out of those meetings will \m\ p an important influence on coming trends in music education. The association now includes most of the leading universities, colleges and conservatories in the U.S. An Fmistial Feature New schools will be admitted to memltership and reports will be submitted hv v.irous commissions. A program feature or unusual interest will t.-ke place on Nov. 29 when the delegates will be asked to pit the accuracy of their hearing arainst the latest electronic sound measuring devices The visitors will r a concert given bv il Svmphony < )i chestra. direction' of Fritz I guest 5 of the Ore he: nation. PAGE THREE Shcrfcr, Ecjgy Styles Cause Much Talk Southern DAI LY OcSliforr-ïiâ TROJAN PAGE FOUR Coach Narr.es Tentative Starting Cagers |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1403/uschist-dt-1957-11-20~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 49, No. 42, November 20, 1957

