DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 6, September 29, 1958 |
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TATUM NEXT AFTER MICHIGAN NIPS SC
into tr Ln bet >lace.
suppt
retur
Dc
to
ri
By GARRY SHORT Daily Trojan Sports Editor
im Tatum brings his North Carolina Tar-le Coliseum to tussle with SC Friday night, that no easy patty-cake session is going to
um is madder than a soaking wet cat. He has the most experienced team since he his alma mater. Yet. he hasn't won a foot-1 two starts this season, ark’s Trojans, meanwhile, will be picking
- PAGE TWO -ASSC Seeks More Interest On Committees
their own fight after dropping a thriller to Michigan in Ann Arbor Saturday, 20-19.
The spirited Trojans were clearly the better team on the field Saturday. But penalties, costly mistakes and fumbles killed them.
A last quarter rally brought the Troymen within one point of the Big Teners.
But two penalties, one for illegal substitution and one for illegal procedure, forced them to try for the two - pointer from Michigan’s 13. From there, they couldn’t push it over.
Southern
A crowd of 77.005, including some 12.000 kids from high school bands, watched the game in beautiful football weather.
The day was just like a painting. The leaves on the trees were falling. There was a crisp breeze. The temperature was in the 60s. And men wore overcoats.
The thousands of kids in high school bands formed a colorful picture in the stands. And a halftime, after Merridith W’lson led the entire group in “Seventy-six Trobones,” the Michigan crowd stood and applauded the spectacle.
California
The Michigan team was a mass of meat compared to the smaller Trojans. SC saw it could move this meat around in the first quarter. But after a little while, it got a little frightening and frustrating looking up at these animals.
The big gun for the Wolverines was Fullbacl;-Cap-tain John Herrnstein. A big man himself (6-1. 215), Herrnstein penetrated Trojan defenses in the first half ln horrifying fashion. Clark’s crew managed to put the halts' on him better in the second half, but the
(Continued on Pas** 4)
DAI LY TROJAN
- PAGE FOUR -Saltman Bounds Into Early Grid Derby Lead
VOL. L
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1958
NO. 6
Probation Lists Hit Record High
IFC Moves Slowly In Bonfire Incident
IS
Hind
ranee
Mob Action Factor To Proper Judicial Investigation
HUGE FUTURE ARENA - Office Engineer Russ Kimble, L. E. Dixon Construction Co., points out the steel structure that will
form the roof of the huge arena near SC that is to accommodate such sports as basketball, ice hockey and horse shows.
$6,000,000 Sports Arena
Rising Near Troy Campus
Those steel beams rising out of the excavation next to the Coliseum are the beginning of what will be one of the largest sports arenas in the world. Begun last April, the project is now two months ahead of schedule, and should be ready for occupancy June 15, 1959, county official report.
It will be one of the busiest arenas of its kind in the nation. The Coliseum Commission. operators of the new structure, have already received I _ j. _
368 requests from different or- j I I %?CJll
ganizations for its use during __ .
the lirst year. It will be used 1 | Q Q T^cini^C
Veteran Pilot To Lecture
David Goodman Weaver, former fighter pilot and developer of a highly effective aviation safety program as an aviation safety officer with the U.S. Navy, is a now lecturer in Air Accident Investigation and Prevention at SC.
Mr. Weaver has more than 2500 hours flight time in single and multi-engine reciprocating and jet planes.
During World War II he served in Fighter Pilot Squadron. Air Group 60. and in the Korean conflict, he was stationed on hoard the Aircraft Carrier Hon Homme Richard. On this assignment he flew jet aircraft with squadrons 71 and 72 on various combat missions.
Official
Notice
Office Notice sta hed
Applications for thè FUL-KKKtlIT Au uni aire due in flit* <• railu j le Si'hool Oltiir, Arìiiiiiitatration Kuilding, Kooni Ziti, imi la ter (bau October 1. —inrtuded are a!l p.tper* ami thè Imo re*i;i‘rrd ¡ut *r\ i«‘Ms.
•loliti D. Cfloke !'?ill»ri;jlil Arlvivir
for basketball games, ice hockey, horse shows, boxing matches and numerous other activities.
Air Cooled
The arena will offer to the public of Los Angels the latest in modern conveniences. An elaborate air-conditioning unit has been installed to be used to both cool and heat the seating area. No expense was spared lor the comfort of its patrons. Theatre-type seats are used throughout, weather they be §1 or $5 locations.
Two escaltors have been placed at each end of the arena, and runway for wheelchairs is also available for those who may need it. There will be two levels into the seating area, one on floor level and and one half way up.
View Unobstructed
The structure has already drawn national attention. Archi-tets from all parts of the country have watched the progress closely, and some have even: come to Los Angeles to see it in j person.
It is arranged so that there are no obstructions indoors, with the roof constructed, as Office Engineer Russ Kimble explained, “in the shape of a bowl sitting on top of the ground work."
There are nearly 225 men I working on the $6 million project at the present time. When completed, it is estimated that ! there will hr over 16.000 yards J of cement used.
The SC Forensic Squad will hold an open organizational meeting Wednesday at 3 p.m. 1 in 203 Speech Bldg. B for all returning debaters and speakers, new speech students and other potential debators.
Dr. James H. McBath, associate director of forensics, extended the invitation especially to freshmen and transfer students !
|
who have had some speaking experience but hestiate to enter speech competition on intercollegiate level.
An outline of the season’s i schedule of tournaments, invi-tationals and other plans will be discussed at the meeting, and practice debate sessions will be scheduled, he said.
Official
Notice
Sales of rooter tickets for the Stanford game on November l«»t al Palo Alio will be sold in the Ticket Office, Sf.T ioB from October 6 until Oct. 18 only. A Student ID eard is needed to purchase these tickets.
•John Morley Ticket Manager
IFC judicial action against the I unknown conspirators in the ¡Sept. 29 victory bonfire on the Row moved at a slow pace this | week because of the difficulty ! involved in following up leads.
John Burns. IFC adviser, de-I clarcd that “in any large mob ' action, it is difficult to single out individuals.”
Burns pointed to this fact as the underlying problem in turning up the students responsible for the bonfire incident in which | firefighting trucks called to the | scene were stripped of much of i their equipment and rendered I useless.
R??.Vze Implications
The Inter-Fraternity adviser confirmed the council’s position in the action by declaring that judicial action can and should be taken if possible, but that the primary concern is to make students aware of the implications of taking equipment from firefighting trucks.
A similar observation Mas made early last week by Joe
Opera Head To Conduct SC Orchestra
Dr. Walter Ducloux, head of the opera department in the SC School of Music for the past five years, has also been appointed conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra and head of the conducting department.
Dr. Ducloux, who was an assistant to the late Arturo Toscanini and guest conductor of his NBC Symphony, will conduct his first symphony concert at SC Nov. 2.
Ducloux, a native of Lucerne, Switzerland, received his Ph.D. in phiolsophy at the University of Munich in 1935, and then was one of the few students accepted by Felix Weingartner at the State Academy of Music in Vienna where he was an honor graduate with a diploma in conducting in 1937.
Ducloux and his wife, the former Gina Rifino; operatic soprano, have three children.
SC To Host 20 Pakistanis
Twenty civil servants from Pakistan have arrived in Los Angeles to begin six month's training with SC’s School of Public Administration.
The trainees are here to learn American administrative “know how” and are slated for top-level administrative posts in Pakistan within a few years after their return.
This is the second group of Pakistanis who have come to SC under terms of an agreement between the University and the International Cooperation Administration. Four more groups are scheduled for training within the next two years.
The 20 trainees have begun a schedule of seminars, field trips and “on the-job-association,” which will have the foreign visitors working in local government and business offices for first-hand observation.
In the field trip phase, they will observe federal, state and local administrative organizations, climaxed by a trip across the United States in which they will visit TVA, the Public Administration Office in Chicago and U.S. Government agencics in Washington, D.C.
Degenkolb, fire prevention engineer in the Public Safety Development Division, who asserted that the real damage was the fact that while students were playing and removing equipment, the fire fighting truck would not have been able to respond to other emergencies.
Area For Bonfires While most of the firefighting equipment has been returned, the fate of a 4-inch suction hose cap and a 2'-_* inch double male fitting still remains a mystery, j Burns said that as soon as in- , { formation on the cost of the art-: icles is made available, the Fire ! Department would receive full payment.
I Another development resulting ' from the bonfire rally, is a com-i bined investigation by the IFC | and Rally Committee into the' | possibility of setting aside an area for bonfire celebrations.
, Gary Zimmerman, IFC presi-i dent, said that as yet no defin- j ! ite plans had been made in establishing such area.
Crash. Victim Is Recovering
Stephen DePatie, the most seriously injured of the three SC students involved in the 28th St. crash Thursday, is progressing well after plastic surgery.
St. Vincents hospital author ¡ties reported yesterday that DePaie also had several stitches taken in his forehead over his right eye, and in his abdomen. Plastic surgery was performed on his ear, and Doctors disclosed he should he released in four to five days.
Frank Eyraud, who ‘•uffered minor injuries in the accident, is reported to be recovering satisfactory at the <>‘>o'l Samaritan hospital.
The third of the trio. Thomas Mackel, was not hurt.
Air Victim Has Home Eulogies
Last rites will be given today for Khalid Jallow at his home in Iraq, forty days after his death in a KLM Airline crash that claimed 99 lives.
Jallow's intended destination was the SC campus where he planned to enroll as a freshman and major in chemical engineering.
It is Islamic tradition that friends and relatives gather to address eulogies to the dead on the fortieth day of their departure.
Khalid's brother Abshil Raz-7.ak JalloM’, former SC student and Foreign Student President in 1956, traveled to Galway Island to search for his brother’s body which has not yet been found.
Faculty Men Get Awards
Grants totaling more than $22,000 have been given to SC professors in the field of medical research by the American Cancer Society
A research grant of $6094 was given to Dr. Franz K. Bauer, associate clinical professor of medicine, and Dr. Boris Catz, assistant clinical professor of medicine. They will do preperation
diagnosis of thyroid cancer nodules with l^dioactive iodine and phosphorus.
Dr. Paul Starr, emeritus pro-
sor of pathology at SC who is also on the staff of the County Hospital and the cancer commision of the California Medical Association, received $13,575 for maintenance of tumor tissue registry.
Dr. Paul Starr, emeritus professor of medicine at SC, received $2754 for determination of the clinical carcinogenicity of radioactive iodine.____________
Clock Back? -■Right Track
Students who wandered around an empty campus this morning and fuund their eight o’clock classes empty have daylight saving time to blame.
AH clocks were set back an hour at two a.m. yesterday as California returned to Pacific Standard Time.
STAFF MEETS
The Daily Trojan staff will meet today at noon in the City Room. Roll will be taken and absences filed.
All Daily Trojan reporters, copyreaders and editors must attend as plans for the coming year will be discussed and formulated. Editor Jim Bylin emphasized.________________
Official
Notices
All student organizations are required to file a recognition petition with the student activities office. Failure to gain official recognition deprives the organization of the right to use University facilities in connection with its activities, the use of the Daily Trojan for advertising, or the use of the University bulletin boards for announcements. Recognition petitions may be obtained in SU 224. •
Dudley Johnson.
Student Activities Adviser
Rooters tickets for the UCLA and Xotre Dame football games can 4be picked up from October 20 to November 7, only in the Ticket Office, SU j 21)9. An activity book is required to obtain these tickets. Xo tickets will be exchanged alter November 7th.
John Morley,
Ticket Manager
Registrar Says Spring Failures Up 100 Percent
The number of students disqualified from the university shot up aimost 100 percent last spring while SC probation lists this semester are running close to an all-time
high.
These lists show an increase of some 400 percent over
the same figures last year, ac-
TYR Flans Nixon Rally
Tomorrow afternoon the Trojan Young Republicans will greet Vice President Richard Nixon when he arrives at Los Angeles International Airport at 3:40 p.m.
The Young Republicans from UCLA, Occidental and Whittier will also be on hand for the welcome, reports TYR President Burt Pines.
The greeting was planned at last week's meeting of TRY, at the Zeta Beta Tau house. Art Snyder, past president of TYR. was the speaker of the evening. Snyder is currently running for the State Assembly, 65th District. He pointed out to the 52 members, the importance of youth in politics.
Committees were formed to plan and coordinate the year's activities. The committee for the Knowland rally is now making ! plans for the gubernatorial candidate to speak at the Troy rally-
The club is taking applications from coeds who Mould like to ; participate in the Young Miss | I Republican contest. Any women j I student w ho is a Republican is i ! eligible to enter. Finals will be ! held at the Huntington Sheraton i Hotel in Pasadena.
same
cording to Registrar How aid \V. Patmore.
Probation status for a.l students with a grade average under 2. has been in effect since Sept. 1, 1957, a raise from the previous 1.5 requirement. This rise caused the large increase in i he number ol probationers, registrar Patmore said todav, with an increase from 556 during spring semester of 1957 to 2259
last spring.
Under Old Plan
★ ★ ★ Frcshs Flunk Fears Fought
Jittery freshmen who are worried about joining the ranks of probationers may find encouragement in the advice of an SC educator who specializes in indoctrinating students w th constructive study habits.
Dr. Leslie J. Nason, an assist-June of 1957 saw 253 students ant Professor of education who tail under the old svstem, with j has spent the past 20 years cultivating study methods, says that the "freshman year is an ideal time for students to develop the proper method of reading for study.” Since freshm* n make up the largest proportion of SC’s probation list. Dr. Nason prints out to entering students that "good study habits can pay handsome scholastic dividends."
til
402 disqualified last June.
The new system provides that if a student's grade point coverage is 12 or more short of a 2. average, he is automatically disqualified.
One reason that last semester's probationary figure was unusually large. Patmore said, was that the new
regulations
i .i *. o oioracrpi A. study method, he savs, can a so provided that the 2. average' . -
p , _____; be as simple as this:
1. read the material in the table of contents of whatever book you are study ing: 2. read the first paragraph or two of the first chapter; 3. skim through rapidly: read the summary at the end of the chapter. 4. then, read the chapter carefully and absorb the meat of
Larue Tells About Man Pessimism
must be cumulative and not I based on individual semesters, j as opposed to the semester-by semester average previously in
I effect.
Many Caught
Thus, low cumulative averages crept up on a large number of I students. Because of this fact,
."SC will probably never again; (hfi ma!eriaj;
have a probation figure this-------------------------------------------
large.” he said. "Students seem
to be meeting the challenge—or NEW DIMENSION the threat, and the quality of —
student work has gradually risen,” Patmore added.
With a gradual adjustment coming about, last June's figure \ ol 1863 probationers Mas approximately 240 percent above I the 1957 spring semester figure of 475.
Row Unaffected
Entrance requirements were laised proportionately at the, "Present <7ay Christianity same time, but evidently served j fends- to either look ha c R to only to increase the numbei of: n e w Testament items as the applications for admission. Act- g0jfjen age or fonvard jn
ing Dean of Admissions John K. a Kingdom of God. when all the Steinbaugh explained that t e; gQ0(j jn wj]j re_
number of applications received | warded and the bad punished, for this semester increased 30 Dr Larup sajd at yester_
percent over last veai s. day’s worship service.
Fraternities were affected ver> Both of these ideals are pes-
. it tie by the regulations, Mith simistic. because they indicate a
the total fraternity average; Ioss of faith in man showing an increase last serrv?s- Basing his message on the
ter in relation to the all mens of Revelations Dr. Larue,
average. Inter - Fraternity ad- ¡s a associate professor of
visor John Burns said. religion at SC, stated that “the
Individual sorority house re- , writer Mho expected the immedi-quirements have always required; ate return of Jesus and the end a 2. average, and. therefore, were 0[ the Morld was Mrong.” not affected by the change. out of Date
' There is, however, a Christian
faith which is not of the past or the future, it deals M’ith the present and with the future, it sets forth a hope for a Kingdom of | God in Mhich men are involved I as creative agents, and it equipts man to deal with the space age
of the future with a wholly
Christian attitude,” Larue said.
Dr. Larue further stated. "The space age demands a new dimension in religious nut look. Much church teaching is after a pattern which is fifty years out of date. We need to think in terms of the new tomorrow and catch a vision of the need for the ed# cation of total communities, ¡r viding the latest and most if ant religious knowledge/ j able.”
Hunger For
Religion needs other fields, for yf “security and pulpit, and ¡jK i ministry j.
tudes com pie I nificance,, f
Spurs Sell Movie Tags
The. NSA-Fox Theater discount cards will go on sale beginning today in front of the Student Union.
The theater discount card entitles holders to junior admission prices at any Fox Theater any time during the year. In addition, the card this year bears an extra stub for one free admission redeemable at any time. The card may be purchased from the Trojan Spurs for $1.
Cards may be purchased from the Spurs from 10 a m. until 3 p.m. any day this week Proceeds from the sale are put at the disposal of the NSA and are to be used to send ASSC Senate membbers to a national conference.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 6, September 29, 1958 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 6, September 29, 1958. |
| Full text | TATUM NEXT AFTER MICHIGAN NIPS SC into tr Ln bet >lace. suppt retur Dc to ri By GARRY SHORT Daily Trojan Sports Editor im Tatum brings his North Carolina Tar-le Coliseum to tussle with SC Friday night, that no easy patty-cake session is going to um is madder than a soaking wet cat. He has the most experienced team since he his alma mater. Yet. he hasn't won a foot-1 two starts this season, ark’s Trojans, meanwhile, will be picking - PAGE TWO -ASSC Seeks More Interest On Committees their own fight after dropping a thriller to Michigan in Ann Arbor Saturday, 20-19. The spirited Trojans were clearly the better team on the field Saturday. But penalties, costly mistakes and fumbles killed them. A last quarter rally brought the Troymen within one point of the Big Teners. But two penalties, one for illegal substitution and one for illegal procedure, forced them to try for the two - pointer from Michigan’s 13. From there, they couldn’t push it over. Southern A crowd of 77.005, including some 12.000 kids from high school bands, watched the game in beautiful football weather. The day was just like a painting. The leaves on the trees were falling. There was a crisp breeze. The temperature was in the 60s. And men wore overcoats. The thousands of kids in high school bands formed a colorful picture in the stands. And a halftime, after Merridith W’lson led the entire group in “Seventy-six Trobones,” the Michigan crowd stood and applauded the spectacle. California The Michigan team was a mass of meat compared to the smaller Trojans. SC saw it could move this meat around in the first quarter. But after a little while, it got a little frightening and frustrating looking up at these animals. The big gun for the Wolverines was Fullbacl;-Cap-tain John Herrnstein. A big man himself (6-1. 215), Herrnstein penetrated Trojan defenses in the first half ln horrifying fashion. Clark’s crew managed to put the halts' on him better in the second half, but the (Continued on Pas** 4) DAI LY TROJAN - PAGE FOUR -Saltman Bounds Into Early Grid Derby Lead VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1958 NO. 6 Probation Lists Hit Record High IFC Moves Slowly In Bonfire Incident IS Hind ranee Mob Action Factor To Proper Judicial Investigation HUGE FUTURE ARENA - Office Engineer Russ Kimble, L. E. Dixon Construction Co., points out the steel structure that will form the roof of the huge arena near SC that is to accommodate such sports as basketball, ice hockey and horse shows. $6,000,000 Sports Arena Rising Near Troy Campus Those steel beams rising out of the excavation next to the Coliseum are the beginning of what will be one of the largest sports arenas in the world. Begun last April, the project is now two months ahead of schedule, and should be ready for occupancy June 15, 1959, county official report. It will be one of the busiest arenas of its kind in the nation. The Coliseum Commission. operators of the new structure, have already received I _ j. _ 368 requests from different or- j I I %?CJll ganizations for its use during __ . the lirst year. It will be used 1 Q Q T^cini^C Veteran Pilot To Lecture David Goodman Weaver, former fighter pilot and developer of a highly effective aviation safety program as an aviation safety officer with the U.S. Navy, is a now lecturer in Air Accident Investigation and Prevention at SC. Mr. Weaver has more than 2500 hours flight time in single and multi-engine reciprocating and jet planes. During World War II he served in Fighter Pilot Squadron. Air Group 60. and in the Korean conflict, he was stationed on hoard the Aircraft Carrier Hon Homme Richard. On this assignment he flew jet aircraft with squadrons 71 and 72 on various combat missions. Official Notice Office Notice sta hed Applications for thè FUL-KKKtlIT Au uni aire due in flit* <• railu j le Si'hool Oltiir, Arìiiiiiitatration Kuilding, Kooni Ziti, imi la ter (bau October 1. —inrtuded are a!l p.tper* ami thè Imo re*i;i‘rrd ¡ut *r\ i«‘Ms. •loliti D. Cfloke !'?ill»ri;jlil Arlvivir for basketball games, ice hockey, horse shows, boxing matches and numerous other activities. Air Cooled The arena will offer to the public of Los Angels the latest in modern conveniences. An elaborate air-conditioning unit has been installed to be used to both cool and heat the seating area. No expense was spared lor the comfort of its patrons. Theatre-type seats are used throughout, weather they be §1 or $5 locations. Two escaltors have been placed at each end of the arena, and runway for wheelchairs is also available for those who may need it. There will be two levels into the seating area, one on floor level and and one half way up. View Unobstructed The structure has already drawn national attention. Archi-tets from all parts of the country have watched the progress closely, and some have even: come to Los Angeles to see it in j person. It is arranged so that there are no obstructions indoors, with the roof constructed, as Office Engineer Russ Kimble explained, “in the shape of a bowl sitting on top of the ground work." There are nearly 225 men I working on the $6 million project at the present time. When completed, it is estimated that ! there will hr over 16.000 yards J of cement used. The SC Forensic Squad will hold an open organizational meeting Wednesday at 3 p.m. 1 in 203 Speech Bldg. B for all returning debaters and speakers, new speech students and other potential debators. Dr. James H. McBath, associate director of forensics, extended the invitation especially to freshmen and transfer students ! who have had some speaking experience but hestiate to enter speech competition on intercollegiate level. An outline of the season’s i schedule of tournaments, invi-tationals and other plans will be discussed at the meeting, and practice debate sessions will be scheduled, he said. Official Notice Sales of rooter tickets for the Stanford game on November l«»t al Palo Alio will be sold in the Ticket Office, Sf.T ioB from October 6 until Oct. 18 only. A Student ID eard is needed to purchase these tickets. •John Morley Ticket Manager IFC judicial action against the I unknown conspirators in the ¡Sept. 29 victory bonfire on the Row moved at a slow pace this week because of the difficulty ! involved in following up leads. John Burns. IFC adviser, de-I clarcd that “in any large mob ' action, it is difficult to single out individuals.” Burns pointed to this fact as the underlying problem in turning up the students responsible for the bonfire incident in which firefighting trucks called to the scene were stripped of much of i their equipment and rendered I useless. R??.Vze Implications The Inter-Fraternity adviser confirmed the council’s position in the action by declaring that judicial action can and should be taken if possible, but that the primary concern is to make students aware of the implications of taking equipment from firefighting trucks. A similar observation Mas made early last week by Joe Opera Head To Conduct SC Orchestra Dr. Walter Ducloux, head of the opera department in the SC School of Music for the past five years, has also been appointed conductor of the University Symphony Orchestra and head of the conducting department. Dr. Ducloux, who was an assistant to the late Arturo Toscanini and guest conductor of his NBC Symphony, will conduct his first symphony concert at SC Nov. 2. Ducloux, a native of Lucerne, Switzerland, received his Ph.D. in phiolsophy at the University of Munich in 1935, and then was one of the few students accepted by Felix Weingartner at the State Academy of Music in Vienna where he was an honor graduate with a diploma in conducting in 1937. Ducloux and his wife, the former Gina Rifino; operatic soprano, have three children. SC To Host 20 Pakistanis Twenty civil servants from Pakistan have arrived in Los Angeles to begin six month's training with SC’s School of Public Administration. The trainees are here to learn American administrative “know how” and are slated for top-level administrative posts in Pakistan within a few years after their return. This is the second group of Pakistanis who have come to SC under terms of an agreement between the University and the International Cooperation Administration. Four more groups are scheduled for training within the next two years. The 20 trainees have begun a schedule of seminars, field trips and “on the-job-association,” which will have the foreign visitors working in local government and business offices for first-hand observation. In the field trip phase, they will observe federal, state and local administrative organizations, climaxed by a trip across the United States in which they will visit TVA, the Public Administration Office in Chicago and U.S. Government agencics in Washington, D.C. Degenkolb, fire prevention engineer in the Public Safety Development Division, who asserted that the real damage was the fact that while students were playing and removing equipment, the fire fighting truck would not have been able to respond to other emergencies. Area For Bonfires While most of the firefighting equipment has been returned, the fate of a 4-inch suction hose cap and a 2'-_* inch double male fitting still remains a mystery, j Burns said that as soon as in- , { formation on the cost of the art-: icles is made available, the Fire ! Department would receive full payment. I Another development resulting ' from the bonfire rally, is a com-i bined investigation by the IFC and Rally Committee into the' possibility of setting aside an area for bonfire celebrations. , Gary Zimmerman, IFC presi-i dent, said that as yet no defin- j ! ite plans had been made in establishing such area. Crash. Victim Is Recovering Stephen DePatie, the most seriously injured of the three SC students involved in the 28th St. crash Thursday, is progressing well after plastic surgery. St. Vincents hospital author ¡ties reported yesterday that DePaie also had several stitches taken in his forehead over his right eye, and in his abdomen. Plastic surgery was performed on his ear, and Doctors disclosed he should he released in four to five days. Frank Eyraud, who ‘•uffered minor injuries in the accident, is reported to be recovering satisfactory at the <>‘>o'l Samaritan hospital. The third of the trio. Thomas Mackel, was not hurt. Air Victim Has Home Eulogies Last rites will be given today for Khalid Jallow at his home in Iraq, forty days after his death in a KLM Airline crash that claimed 99 lives. Jallow's intended destination was the SC campus where he planned to enroll as a freshman and major in chemical engineering. It is Islamic tradition that friends and relatives gather to address eulogies to the dead on the fortieth day of their departure. Khalid's brother Abshil Raz-7.ak JalloM’, former SC student and Foreign Student President in 1956, traveled to Galway Island to search for his brother’s body which has not yet been found. Faculty Men Get Awards Grants totaling more than $22,000 have been given to SC professors in the field of medical research by the American Cancer Society A research grant of $6094 was given to Dr. Franz K. Bauer, associate clinical professor of medicine, and Dr. Boris Catz, assistant clinical professor of medicine. They will do preperation diagnosis of thyroid cancer nodules with l^dioactive iodine and phosphorus. Dr. Paul Starr, emeritus pro- sor of pathology at SC who is also on the staff of the County Hospital and the cancer commision of the California Medical Association, received $13,575 for maintenance of tumor tissue registry. Dr. Paul Starr, emeritus professor of medicine at SC, received $2754 for determination of the clinical carcinogenicity of radioactive iodine.____________ Clock Back? -■Right Track Students who wandered around an empty campus this morning and fuund their eight o’clock classes empty have daylight saving time to blame. AH clocks were set back an hour at two a.m. yesterday as California returned to Pacific Standard Time. STAFF MEETS The Daily Trojan staff will meet today at noon in the City Room. Roll will be taken and absences filed. All Daily Trojan reporters, copyreaders and editors must attend as plans for the coming year will be discussed and formulated. Editor Jim Bylin emphasized.________________ Official Notices All student organizations are required to file a recognition petition with the student activities office. Failure to gain official recognition deprives the organization of the right to use University facilities in connection with its activities, the use of the Daily Trojan for advertising, or the use of the University bulletin boards for announcements. Recognition petitions may be obtained in SU 224. • Dudley Johnson. Student Activities Adviser Rooters tickets for the UCLA and Xotre Dame football games can 4be picked up from October 20 to November 7, only in the Ticket Office, SU j 21)9. An activity book is required to obtain these tickets. Xo tickets will be exchanged alter November 7th. John Morley, Ticket Manager Registrar Says Spring Failures Up 100 Percent The number of students disqualified from the university shot up aimost 100 percent last spring while SC probation lists this semester are running close to an all-time high. These lists show an increase of some 400 percent over the same figures last year, ac- TYR Flans Nixon Rally Tomorrow afternoon the Trojan Young Republicans will greet Vice President Richard Nixon when he arrives at Los Angeles International Airport at 3:40 p.m. The Young Republicans from UCLA, Occidental and Whittier will also be on hand for the welcome, reports TYR President Burt Pines. The greeting was planned at last week's meeting of TRY, at the Zeta Beta Tau house. Art Snyder, past president of TYR. was the speaker of the evening. Snyder is currently running for the State Assembly, 65th District. He pointed out to the 52 members, the importance of youth in politics. Committees were formed to plan and coordinate the year's activities. The committee for the Knowland rally is now making ! plans for the gubernatorial candidate to speak at the Troy rally- The club is taking applications from coeds who Mould like to ; participate in the Young Miss I Republican contest. Any women j I student w ho is a Republican is i ! eligible to enter. Finals will be ! held at the Huntington Sheraton i Hotel in Pasadena. same cording to Registrar How aid \V. Patmore. Probation status for a.l students with a grade average under 2. has been in effect since Sept. 1, 1957, a raise from the previous 1.5 requirement. This rise caused the large increase in i he number ol probationers, registrar Patmore said todav, with an increase from 556 during spring semester of 1957 to 2259 last spring. Under Old Plan ★ ★ ★ Frcshs Flunk Fears Fought Jittery freshmen who are worried about joining the ranks of probationers may find encouragement in the advice of an SC educator who specializes in indoctrinating students w th constructive study habits. Dr. Leslie J. Nason, an assist-June of 1957 saw 253 students ant Professor of education who tail under the old svstem, with j has spent the past 20 years cultivating study methods, says that the "freshman year is an ideal time for students to develop the proper method of reading for study.” Since freshm* n make up the largest proportion of SC’s probation list. Dr. Nason prints out to entering students that "good study habits can pay handsome scholastic dividends." til 402 disqualified last June. The new system provides that if a student's grade point coverage is 12 or more short of a 2. average, he is automatically disqualified. One reason that last semester's probationary figure was unusually large. Patmore said, was that the new regulations i .i *. o oioracrpi A. study method, he savs, can a so provided that the 2. average' . - p , _____; be as simple as this: 1. read the material in the table of contents of whatever book you are study ing: 2. read the first paragraph or two of the first chapter; 3. skim through rapidly: read the summary at the end of the chapter. 4. then, read the chapter carefully and absorb the meat of Larue Tells About Man Pessimism must be cumulative and not I based on individual semesters, j as opposed to the semester-by semester average previously in I effect. Many Caught Thus, low cumulative averages crept up on a large number of I students. Because of this fact, ."SC will probably never again; (hfi ma!eriaj; have a probation figure this------------------------------------------- large.” he said. "Students seem to be meeting the challenge—or NEW DIMENSION the threat, and the quality of — student work has gradually risen,” Patmore added. With a gradual adjustment coming about, last June's figure \ ol 1863 probationers Mas approximately 240 percent above I the 1957 spring semester figure of 475. Row Unaffected Entrance requirements were laised proportionately at the, "Present <7ay Christianity same time, but evidently served j fends- to either look ha c R to only to increase the numbei of: n e w Testament items as the applications for admission. Act- g0jfjen age or fonvard jn ing Dean of Admissions John K. a Kingdom of God. when all the Steinbaugh explained that t e; gQ0(j jn wj]j re_ number of applications received warded and the bad punished, for this semester increased 30 Dr Larup sajd at yester_ percent over last veai s. day’s worship service. Fraternities were affected ver> Both of these ideals are pes- . it tie by the regulations, Mith simistic. because they indicate a the total fraternity average; Ioss of faith in man showing an increase last serrv?s- Basing his message on the ter in relation to the all mens of Revelations Dr. Larue, average. Inter - Fraternity ad- ¡s a associate professor of visor John Burns said. religion at SC, stated that “the Individual sorority house re- , writer Mho expected the immedi-quirements have always required; ate return of Jesus and the end a 2. average, and. therefore, were 0[ the Morld was Mrong.” not affected by the change. out of Date ' There is, however, a Christian faith which is not of the past or the future, it deals M’ith the present and with the future, it sets forth a hope for a Kingdom of God in Mhich men are involved I as creative agents, and it equipts man to deal with the space age of the future with a wholly Christian attitude,” Larue said. Dr. Larue further stated. "The space age demands a new dimension in religious nut look. Much church teaching is after a pattern which is fifty years out of date. We need to think in terms of the new tomorrow and catch a vision of the need for the ed# cation of total communities, ¡r viding the latest and most if ant religious knowledge/ j able.” Hunger For Religion needs other fields, for yf “security and pulpit, and ¡jK i ministry j. tudes com pie I nificance,, f Spurs Sell Movie Tags The. NSA-Fox Theater discount cards will go on sale beginning today in front of the Student Union. The theater discount card entitles holders to junior admission prices at any Fox Theater any time during the year. In addition, the card this year bears an extra stub for one free admission redeemable at any time. The card may be purchased from the Trojan Spurs for $1. Cards may be purchased from the Spurs from 10 a m. until 3 p.m. any day this week Proceeds from the sale are put at the disposal of the NSA and are to be used to send ASSC Senate membbers to a national conference. |
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