DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 114, April 28, 1959 |
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Banquet To Honor Miss SC Candidates
he
he n ’ed i
ro\
Qi
t Irr ipal >OP] ig flashbulbs and the
rfum ie o n 15 of s Cs queens, will all be
ojar i Hi ill at 511 50 toi light when entrants
Jniversil ‘V of So; .It] her n California contest
lanqi net in th pit* h one )r.
con lelv of th ie 1 5 coi itestants will be an-
fro ni ] page sto; rv in the special History
on o f tt ie Da ■iiy T roj an on May 13.
n of He arts.
ip fr ir tl he tit le ar e:
Competi
Pi Beta Phi CONNIE CHAMBERLIN—Sigma Phi
Gamr Psi Cc Delta
la Phi Beta NANCI ELLISON—Alpha Kap-mmerce Queen.
Gamma CHERYL FOOTE — Engineering
Kappa Alpha Theta ANN GOLDING — Delta Sig ma Phi Neptune’s Daughter.
Alpha Delta Pi DIANE HALFHILL—Maid of Cotton.
Kappa Alpha Theta ARLENE HANCEY — Kappa Alpha Rose.
Kappa Alpha Theta CAROL HOIBY—El Rodeo Queen and Chi Phi Kick-off Queen.
Kappa Alpha Theta LYNN HUSTED—Phi Sigma Kappa Moonlight Girl ana Tau Epsilon Phi Queen.
Kappa Kappa Gamma LYNDA LIVINGSTON— Our Girl of Phi Kappa Tau.
Alpha Delta Pi LAURIE MILLS — Sweetheart of Sigma Chi.
Alpha Delta Pi ELLEN MONTAGUE—Sweetheart of Alpha Tau Omega.
Alpha Delta Pi NANELLE RAPPOPORT — Theta Chi Dream Girl.
Delta Gamma -SYLVIA RUDD—Rose of Delta Sig ma Pi.
Kappa Alpha Theta GENNEL THUESEN—White Rose of Sigma Nu.
Kappa Delta LINDA MORRIS—Miss Trojan Young Republicans.
Prizes for the first Miss SC in addition to a four-day trip for two at the Las Vegas Sands Hotel and the use of an MGA sports car, include:
1—All she and her boyfriend can eat for a week.
2—Portraits of her to be mounted on the wall in the Grill.
3—Radio and television appearances to advertise SC’s Songfest.
4—Numerous night club passes.
5—Appearances at Wacner Bros. Studios, Disneyland and the Los Angeles Advertising Club.
The duties of the queen of queens will be to act as hostess of Songfest and of Alumni Day, both on May 1.6.
The first and only elimination for the queen will be held by members of faculty, alumni and administration Thursday night at Julie's. This event is open to the public.
Members of the committee planning the contest are Sandy Quinn, chairman. Jim Bylin. Steve DePatie,
Eber Jaques, Joe Jares, Joyce Lambeau, Sue McQuil-kan, Bill Thompson and Ron Zigler.
PAGE TV/O Kappa President Tells Pinning to Karabian
Southern
California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Track Coach Predicts Close UCLA Meet
VOI. L
- 7
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1959
NO. 114
Cuba Sandions Reds Dhvcirict In Government Posts
Support Pledged to US By Castro Representative
COLLINS
Dr. McCorkle Gives Last Noon Reading
this semesters was concluded Dr. Julia N. Mc-e professor of selections from ‘The Woman in
four ec
apers
cvpaic fusper t he ei A tvi.
?e, t he creat
\V
i collection IV each of n that sec-rirama. By hor easily osphere of
lasts tnrc
the results of this novel's publication, ihe reader asserled. were such later stories in the same vein as Stoker's famous chill-thriller. “Dracula” and the Agatha Christie and Conan Doyle series.
ICTo Hold Meet Today
Ai t important meeti ing for all
Tnte rnaiional student s will be
held today at 2 p.m. i in 129 FH.
Ai I the meeting, pla ins for • In-
tern ational Week whi 11 be
held in two weeks w ill he dis-
cuss ed. Isaias Medin la. foi •eign
? t u dents represen' tative. an-
Cuba is on the United States’ side in the cold war. yet is willing to employ communists in its government and legally recognize the party, agreed Fidel Castro’s representatives at press conferences held during last week’s Model United Nations session at SC.
Manuel Gonzalez, Los Angeles director of the 26th of July Movement, said at a press luncheon here that Castro is more concerned about how good a job a government official can do than what party he belongs to. “However, as soon as these men deviate from Castro's proscribed policy, they will be thrown out,” he said.
Ferrer Agrees idern Cf’zsar Ferrer, transitional co- j ork ordinator between Castro's par-arles ty and other Cuban political the factions, backed up Gonzalez's it all- statements.
pre- When asked about Raul. Cas-i in tro's brother, who spent some orm. lime in Russia studying, he said n 30 that “Raul was in Russia during >d in the 1945-46 period when Ameri-was can ties with Russia were the 'arly strongest, and he certainly ; p. should not be labeled a com- ! ist because of this.”
»wever. Ferrer refused to . ally say directly that Raul j not communist, referring j ad to statements made to j effect by Castro on tele- | n (Castro said he had no I is about his brother's po- : il affiliations I.
Pro I'.S.
Gonzalez also said that Castro Cuba is so pro-United States that it would be willing to have American missile bases on the island. “Even though we are only 90 miles from Ihe mainland we want bases to show that we are really interested in standing with America in the cold war,” he said.
Gonzalez also explained Cas- : tro's philosophy on elections in ! Cuba (Castro reportedly doesn't i want 1o hold them for another four years).
‘‘There are two reasons why i Castro wishes to put off elec- ‘ tions. First, he does not feel that it would be fair to have j them so soon because, being the national hero who freed Cuba from Batista's dictatorship, he would be almost unanimously elected. Second, what he wants to accomplish cannot be done under a regular government,” j Gonzalez pointed out.
Harnwell Will Speak at Commencement
acti
was
HEART MACHINE—Dr. Jerome H. Kay of
the SC Medical School (left)’ and Dr. Morse Shapirc of the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital make final inspection of the equipment they will use in operations to be
Daily Trojan Photo
performed at the Hebrew University-Hadas-sah Medical School in 'Jerusalem. They will make extensive use of the Kay-Anderson Pump Oxygenator shown here.
lit
SC Professor To Show Use of New Heart Machine in Israel
Youth Replaces SC President
The student body president of I^os Angeles high school will temporarily replace a 19$6 graduate of his school as president of SC today.
David Bartlett. 18. will serve as SC’s chief executive officer as a feature of the 37th annual Boys’ Day in Government.
Bartlett, son of Hr. Gene Bartlett, minister of the First Baptist Church of Los Angeles. Is a debater and honor society member.
! Dr. Jerome H. .Kay, associate professor of surgery in SC’s School of Medicine, will spend ; a month in Israel teaching doc-I tors and technicians the use of
It enables surgeons to work inside the heart in a bloodless field for as long as an hour and a half. Officially named the
Tells Topic For Speech June 11
Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the University of Pennsylvania and nationally-known atomic physicist, will speak at SC's 76th annual commencement exercises on June 11, it was announced today by Dr. Norman Topping.
“Education for Liberalism"
I' will be the subject of Dr. Harwell’s address to the 3300 men |
! and women who will receive diplomas.
j The graduation ceremonies j will be held at 2 p.m. in Alumni j Memorial Park in front of the |
SC library. More than 80.000 de- j grees will have been conferred in the history of SC at the conclusion of this year’s ceremonies.
This will be the first time that commencement has been held on a Thursday afternoon, which was chosen to enable more parents and students to attend.
Degrees Held
Dr. Harnwell was graduated from Haverford College in Pennsylvania. He attended Cambridge University in England and then earned the degrees of master of arts and doctor of philosophy from Princeton University.
He was a National Research Council Fellow at Caltech in 1927-28 and then returned to Princeton to teach physics for ten years.
He joined the Pennsylvania faculty in 1938 as director of the Randal Morgan Laboratory of >
Physics and professor of radio-
DR. GAYLORD P. HARNWELL
... to address graduates
Escapade Features Troy Life
his Kay-Anderson Oxygenator, a “Kay-Anderson Heart-Lung Ma-new machine for use in heart op- chine,” the device is effective erations. for treating congenital, as well
The Oxygenator was perfected _rnl]ired hearl ailments by Drs. Kay and Robert Ander- as aC(lunea neart aiimen s.
son at SC School of Medicine. The “apparatus, as Dr. Kay
while they were working on a refers to the machine, was degrant from the American Heart ve]oped about a year and a half
Association and the Los Angeles
County Heart Association.
and
the
Escapade Magazine, a publication usually devoted. like
logic physics In the university’s Playboy, to babes, booze Graduate School of Medicine.
Over Topping Dr. Harnwell became President of the University of Pennsylvania July 1, 1953. Dr. Topping was vice president for med-
Former New Deal Counselor To Hit Taxes at TYR Meet
Cards Ready For Seniors
Seniors who have paid their $4 for Senior Activity Cards may pick them up today in the Senior Class office, 217 SU, and seniors who have not yet purchased cards can do so at any time at the Seniors Activities Office, reports Senior Class
ago. It was the product of three years of research work and 300 laboratory experiments employing total cardiac by-pass. Taking over the w'ork of both heart and lungs, it allows a doctor to perform delicate and difficult surgery in the heart area.
Accompany Kay
Dr. Kay, who is also head of Thoracic Surgery at the Los Angeles County Hospital, will be accompanied by Drs. Morse J. Shapiro and Montrose Bernstein. | Dr. Kay is the cardiac surgeon on the team.
Dr. Shapiro, Chief of Pediatric
masculine humor, “visits’’
SC campus this month.
Author of the article is former Dailv Trojan sports columnist Mike Navarro, who sold it to
, ,, . A ; the magazine last summer. The
ical affairs at Pennsylvania be- ”
, , , r.--,. +u color photographs that accom-
fore he became SCs seventh £ - J., „
., A , ,, panv the visit’ were taken bv
president last fall. TT ~ ™
. i , , .• Fred Lnger. Dailv Trojan pho-
Already widely known for his , , _T
. .. . j tographer and member of Theta
coorpU li-nrL' in atAniip and nil-
research wrork in atomic and nu clear physics and acoustics. Dr.
Xi fraternity.
Harnwell was one of the first j Included in the 52 inches of Pennsvivania faculty members copy and five photographs are to he’ called into government Songfest. Homecoming. Trolios. service in World War II. campus hangouts such as Julie's.
From 1942 to 1946 he was di- and the Trojan Barrel and
rector of the University of Cali- the great crosstown rivalry be-fornia Division of War Research, tween SC and UCLA, and later bead of U.S. Navy Ra- Since the article was written dio and Sound Laboratory in last summer, several things men-San Diego. tioned are out of date.
$18,051
New School To Be Given Large Grant
Dr. Clayton G. Loosli. dean of the School of Medicine, an-
: nounced yesterday that research grants totaling 518.051 have been given to the SC School of Medicine.
The Lederle Laboratories, division of American Cyanamid Co.. New York, granted 54500 for steriod research carried on by Dr. Edmund L. Dubois, assistant clinical professor of med-| icine. *
Donations
The Muscular Dystrophy Association of America. Inc.. New York, donated $2754 for work in muscular dystrophy by Dr. Ros-lyn B. Alfin-Slater. visiting associate professor of biochemistry and nutrition.at SC. The Best . Foods Inc. donated $5000 for nutrition research also being ; conducted by Dr. Alfin-Slater.
Dr. Judson S. Denson, professor of surgery-, was granted $2500 for his studies on anesthesia by the Abbott Laboratories scientific division of North Chicago.
Stock Proceeds
Proceeds for the sale of 250 shares of common stock was given by Frank G. Jameson for the i support of studies conducted by Dr. Eloise Jameson, research associate in medicine.
The G. D. Searle and Co.. Chicago. has contributed $1250 for* heart research currently being conducted by Dr. Jessie Marin or s ton. clinical professor of
medicine, and also $4^0 for other studies by the Medical School.
The National Foundation of Chicaso. donated $1697 for fellowship grants to be given to four students.
Today s Weather
Clear skies are predicted for the SC campiw today with a high of 90 degrees. There will be no smog and the weatherman says there is no chance of rain.
id M
Rooseveli puide wl “perversi Deal poi
»ley. Franklin D. « former political i later renounced Ihe i" of his own New ies. will speak at an open meeting of the Trojan Young Rrpuhlic^n Club today at 12:30 p.m. in the YWCA.
Molev. a political strategist who helped engineer FDR’s 1930-32 presidential campaign und later became the New Deal's chief policy maker, became the subject of a national controversev when he switched his loyallies to the Republican Partv and accused the New Deal
in
laking “once
Administrât! sound principles and perverting them into a dancerous drive toward centralized federal power.” A syndicated political anti economic commentator and contributing Editor of Newsweek. Molev is presently on a nationwide sne«kine tour on ljeiialf of the Reuubi'^r, party.
President Abe Somer.
Somer pointed nut that lh« c^ioVogTatVedars nVLeb^non 1 card will entitle seniors to one HospMa| Cardjac Consuhant t0
his 27 talks in the Los Angeles ^rimUsinn tn "The ihe Los Angeles Children's Hos-;
Association, admission to the uPart Consult- 1
area. He added that he deplored 1959 Honors Convocation to be pitfa!1 I
............... . , I, .. . „ . . ... . ant for the Los Angeles Board
the liberalist ideal of everybody held in Bovard Auditorium on Qf Education jn rharge of al, !
doing less and less work «nd i M*>’ 19 and the J? . school heart clinics in Los An-:
scheduled on May 20 at Whites making more and more money. featurp ..,iquid^ refreshments.
SC Debate Team Ninth In Nation Loses To Kansas In Close Battle
“You can't have government and abundance and not loss j some of your liberties,” he said. !
Charles Söderström, chairman i of the Los Angeles United Re- | bulican Finance Committee. wrho : is accompanying Moley on his S speaking tour, will also talk j briefly to TYR at today’s noon meeting.
TYR President Jerry Coon pointed out that free refreshments would he served at the , meetting and urged all students to attend.
“Trojans should not miss this opportunity to compare theories of economics and politics with tho=e of a'man who helped bring ' what is probably the most pot- I putting the „burden of taxes on ent political force the United I the man in the street,’’ Moley ! States has ever known to pow- [
eature “liquid” refreshments.
DR. RAYMOND MOLEY
. . fermer "New Dealer'
Official
Notice
Students desiring residence hall accommodations for the coming Fall Semester may secure application forms in the Housing Office Room 216. Student Union Building, commencing Tuesday, April 28. 1959. Completed applications will not be accepted in the H u u « 1 n if Office, prior to Wednesday, May 6, 19f>9.
geles. will diagnose the patients | ! and select those suitable for j surgical intervention.
Guest Lecturer Dr. Shapiro, who was formerly professor of Medicine and Pe- j iatrics at the University of Min- j nesota Medical School, w'as in Israel last October as guest lec- | turer at the Hebrew University. His subject was heart conditions capable of cure er amelioration by surgical intervention. While there, he noted that Israeli surgeons were doing, excellent work 1 on such conditions as mitral stenosis and congenital lesions, which dod not require actual opening of the heart. They were not able to do open heart surgery because no heart pump was available and they had had no
:>o-canen liberals in Congre • ie passing legislation that is ¡ charged last week in the first of ¡ -er,” he said.
F.lvvyn E. Brooks Housing Director experience in this type of surg-1 ery- j
SC is the ninth best debate team in the U.S. for 1959.
Troy’s team of seniors John Fraser and squad captain Paul Sonnenburg defeated North Texas State. Marietta Colege. Southern Illinois University, the Air Force Academy and Fordham University to make their w ay to the octofinals of the National Debate Tournament held at West Point, N.Y., April 22-25.
Lose to Kansas
At that point SC lost to Kansas University in a tight debate that split the five judges into a 3-2 decision.
Kansas reached the semifinals before losing to the Wisconsin State team from Eau Claire. Wise.
The same pair of Northwest- . ern debaters that had won the national debate title last year , met and defeated Wisconsin j Stat« to win the gigantic gold ‘
trophy for their second straight season.
Their names. William Welsh and Richard Kirshberg. stand out as a combination that has an amazing record after only two years of collegiate debating. However. SC defeated the very same two in the Kansas debate tournament earlier this year.
Troy was selected from 1000 schools in the U.S. as one of our country’s top 36 debate teams by winning the Regional Tournament for the War West on April 11.
9 Out of 14
It was the ninth time out of 15 years that SC has participated in the national championships.
Also, for the secon<7 successive year SC has won the sweepstakes of the Occidental College debate tournament after a blue ribbon performance of Troy’s *
speakers Saturday.
The SC contingent posted the best record of the tourney in winning six of their eight debates. Dave Allswang. Ted Jones. Jerri Corbin. Burt Pines and Alan Fox represented SC in the debate division of the tournament, which included 25 schools from California and Utah.
In interpretation, Trojan Eleanor Gobrecht received a Superior award and Roy Sorrels won an Excellent award.
Dr. James H. McBath. SC speech director, returned to the university yesterday after a week of tournament pressure. “SC’s team was generally recognized as one of the several outstanding ones in the tournament,” he said. “We bowed out to a fine Kansas team in a close debate regarded by many as one of the best in the tournament.
V
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 114, April 28, 1959 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 114, April 28, 1959. |
| Full text | Banquet To Honor Miss SC Candidates he he n ’ed i ro\ Qi t Irr ipal >OP] ig flashbulbs and the rfum ie o n 15 of s Cs queens, will all be ojar i Hi ill at 511 50 toi light when entrants Jniversil ‘V of So; .It] her n California contest lanqi net in th pit* h one )r. con lelv of th ie 1 5 coi itestants will be an- fro ni ] page sto; rv in the special History on o f tt ie Da ■iiy T roj an on May 13. n of He arts. ip fr ir tl he tit le ar e: Competi Pi Beta Phi CONNIE CHAMBERLIN—Sigma Phi Gamr Psi Cc Delta la Phi Beta NANCI ELLISON—Alpha Kap-mmerce Queen. Gamma CHERYL FOOTE — Engineering Kappa Alpha Theta ANN GOLDING — Delta Sig ma Phi Neptune’s Daughter. Alpha Delta Pi DIANE HALFHILL—Maid of Cotton. Kappa Alpha Theta ARLENE HANCEY — Kappa Alpha Rose. Kappa Alpha Theta CAROL HOIBY—El Rodeo Queen and Chi Phi Kick-off Queen. Kappa Alpha Theta LYNN HUSTED—Phi Sigma Kappa Moonlight Girl ana Tau Epsilon Phi Queen. Kappa Kappa Gamma LYNDA LIVINGSTON— Our Girl of Phi Kappa Tau. Alpha Delta Pi LAURIE MILLS — Sweetheart of Sigma Chi. Alpha Delta Pi ELLEN MONTAGUE—Sweetheart of Alpha Tau Omega. Alpha Delta Pi NANELLE RAPPOPORT — Theta Chi Dream Girl. Delta Gamma -SYLVIA RUDD—Rose of Delta Sig ma Pi. Kappa Alpha Theta GENNEL THUESEN—White Rose of Sigma Nu. Kappa Delta LINDA MORRIS—Miss Trojan Young Republicans. Prizes for the first Miss SC in addition to a four-day trip for two at the Las Vegas Sands Hotel and the use of an MGA sports car, include: 1—All she and her boyfriend can eat for a week. 2—Portraits of her to be mounted on the wall in the Grill. 3—Radio and television appearances to advertise SC’s Songfest. 4—Numerous night club passes. 5—Appearances at Wacner Bros. Studios, Disneyland and the Los Angeles Advertising Club. The duties of the queen of queens will be to act as hostess of Songfest and of Alumni Day, both on May 1.6. The first and only elimination for the queen will be held by members of faculty, alumni and administration Thursday night at Julie's. This event is open to the public. Members of the committee planning the contest are Sandy Quinn, chairman. Jim Bylin. Steve DePatie, Eber Jaques, Joe Jares, Joyce Lambeau, Sue McQuil-kan, Bill Thompson and Ron Zigler. PAGE TV/O Kappa President Tells Pinning to Karabian Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Track Coach Predicts Close UCLA Meet VOI. L - 7 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1959 NO. 114 Cuba Sandions Reds Dhvcirict In Government Posts Support Pledged to US By Castro Representative COLLINS Dr. McCorkle Gives Last Noon Reading this semesters was concluded Dr. Julia N. Mc-e professor of selections from ‘The Woman in four ec apers cvpaic fusper t he ei A tvi. ?e, t he creat \V i collection IV each of n that sec-rirama. By hor easily osphere of lasts tnrc the results of this novel's publication, ihe reader asserled. were such later stories in the same vein as Stoker's famous chill-thriller. “Dracula” and the Agatha Christie and Conan Doyle series. ICTo Hold Meet Today Ai t important meeti ing for all Tnte rnaiional student s will be held today at 2 p.m. i in 129 FH. Ai I the meeting, pla ins for • In- tern ational Week whi 11 be held in two weeks w ill he dis- cuss ed. Isaias Medin la. foi •eign ? t u dents represen' tative. an- Cuba is on the United States’ side in the cold war. yet is willing to employ communists in its government and legally recognize the party, agreed Fidel Castro’s representatives at press conferences held during last week’s Model United Nations session at SC. Manuel Gonzalez, Los Angeles director of the 26th of July Movement, said at a press luncheon here that Castro is more concerned about how good a job a government official can do than what party he belongs to. “However, as soon as these men deviate from Castro's proscribed policy, they will be thrown out,” he said. Ferrer Agrees idern Cf’zsar Ferrer, transitional co- j ork ordinator between Castro's par-arles ty and other Cuban political the factions, backed up Gonzalez's it all- statements. pre- When asked about Raul. Cas-i in tro's brother, who spent some orm. lime in Russia studying, he said n 30 that “Raul was in Russia during >d in the 1945-46 period when Ameri-was can ties with Russia were the 'arly strongest, and he certainly ; p. should not be labeled a com- ! ist because of this.” »wever. Ferrer refused to . ally say directly that Raul j not communist, referring j ad to statements made to j effect by Castro on tele- n (Castro said he had no I is about his brother's po- : il affiliations I. Pro I'.S. Gonzalez also said that Castro Cuba is so pro-United States that it would be willing to have American missile bases on the island. “Even though we are only 90 miles from Ihe mainland we want bases to show that we are really interested in standing with America in the cold war,” he said. Gonzalez also explained Cas- : tro's philosophy on elections in ! Cuba (Castro reportedly doesn't i want 1o hold them for another four years). ‘‘There are two reasons why i Castro wishes to put off elec- ‘ tions. First, he does not feel that it would be fair to have j them so soon because, being the national hero who freed Cuba from Batista's dictatorship, he would be almost unanimously elected. Second, what he wants to accomplish cannot be done under a regular government,” j Gonzalez pointed out. Harnwell Will Speak at Commencement acti was HEART MACHINE—Dr. Jerome H. Kay of the SC Medical School (left)’ and Dr. Morse Shapirc of the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital make final inspection of the equipment they will use in operations to be Daily Trojan Photo performed at the Hebrew University-Hadas-sah Medical School in 'Jerusalem. They will make extensive use of the Kay-Anderson Pump Oxygenator shown here. lit SC Professor To Show Use of New Heart Machine in Israel Youth Replaces SC President The student body president of I^os Angeles high school will temporarily replace a 19$6 graduate of his school as president of SC today. David Bartlett. 18. will serve as SC’s chief executive officer as a feature of the 37th annual Boys’ Day in Government. Bartlett, son of Hr. Gene Bartlett, minister of the First Baptist Church of Los Angeles. Is a debater and honor society member. ! Dr. Jerome H. .Kay, associate professor of surgery in SC’s School of Medicine, will spend ; a month in Israel teaching doc-I tors and technicians the use of It enables surgeons to work inside the heart in a bloodless field for as long as an hour and a half. Officially named the Tells Topic For Speech June 11 Dr. Gaylord P. Harnwell, president of the University of Pennsylvania and nationally-known atomic physicist, will speak at SC's 76th annual commencement exercises on June 11, it was announced today by Dr. Norman Topping. “Education for Liberalism" I' will be the subject of Dr. Harwell’s address to the 3300 men ! and women who will receive diplomas. j The graduation ceremonies j will be held at 2 p.m. in Alumni j Memorial Park in front of the SC library. More than 80.000 de- j grees will have been conferred in the history of SC at the conclusion of this year’s ceremonies. This will be the first time that commencement has been held on a Thursday afternoon, which was chosen to enable more parents and students to attend. Degrees Held Dr. Harnwell was graduated from Haverford College in Pennsylvania. He attended Cambridge University in England and then earned the degrees of master of arts and doctor of philosophy from Princeton University. He was a National Research Council Fellow at Caltech in 1927-28 and then returned to Princeton to teach physics for ten years. He joined the Pennsylvania faculty in 1938 as director of the Randal Morgan Laboratory of > Physics and professor of radio- DR. GAYLORD P. HARNWELL ... to address graduates Escapade Features Troy Life his Kay-Anderson Oxygenator, a “Kay-Anderson Heart-Lung Ma-new machine for use in heart op- chine,” the device is effective erations. for treating congenital, as well The Oxygenator was perfected _rnl]ired hearl ailments by Drs. Kay and Robert Ander- as aC(lunea neart aiimen s. son at SC School of Medicine. The “apparatus, as Dr. Kay while they were working on a refers to the machine, was degrant from the American Heart ve]oped about a year and a half Association and the Los Angeles County Heart Association. and the Escapade Magazine, a publication usually devoted. like logic physics In the university’s Playboy, to babes, booze Graduate School of Medicine. Over Topping Dr. Harnwell became President of the University of Pennsylvania July 1, 1953. Dr. Topping was vice president for med- Former New Deal Counselor To Hit Taxes at TYR Meet Cards Ready For Seniors Seniors who have paid their $4 for Senior Activity Cards may pick them up today in the Senior Class office, 217 SU, and seniors who have not yet purchased cards can do so at any time at the Seniors Activities Office, reports Senior Class ago. It was the product of three years of research work and 300 laboratory experiments employing total cardiac by-pass. Taking over the w'ork of both heart and lungs, it allows a doctor to perform delicate and difficult surgery in the heart area. Accompany Kay Dr. Kay, who is also head of Thoracic Surgery at the Los Angeles County Hospital, will be accompanied by Drs. Morse J. Shapiro and Montrose Bernstein. Dr. Kay is the cardiac surgeon on the team. Dr. Shapiro, Chief of Pediatric masculine humor, “visits’’ SC campus this month. Author of the article is former Dailv Trojan sports columnist Mike Navarro, who sold it to , ,, . A ; the magazine last summer. The ical affairs at Pennsylvania be- ” , , , r.--,. +u color photographs that accom- fore he became SCs seventh £ - J., „ ., A , ,, panv the visit’ were taken bv president last fall. TT ~ ™ . i , , .• Fred Lnger. Dailv Trojan pho- Already widely known for his , , _T . .. . j tographer and member of Theta coorpU li-nrL' in atAniip and nil- research wrork in atomic and nu clear physics and acoustics. Dr. Xi fraternity. Harnwell was one of the first j Included in the 52 inches of Pennsvivania faculty members copy and five photographs are to he’ called into government Songfest. Homecoming. Trolios. service in World War II. campus hangouts such as Julie's. From 1942 to 1946 he was di- and the Trojan Barrel and rector of the University of Cali- the great crosstown rivalry be-fornia Division of War Research, tween SC and UCLA, and later bead of U.S. Navy Ra- Since the article was written dio and Sound Laboratory in last summer, several things men-San Diego. tioned are out of date. $18,051 New School To Be Given Large Grant Dr. Clayton G. Loosli. dean of the School of Medicine, an- : nounced yesterday that research grants totaling 518.051 have been given to the SC School of Medicine. The Lederle Laboratories, division of American Cyanamid Co.. New York, granted 54500 for steriod research carried on by Dr. Edmund L. Dubois, assistant clinical professor of med- icine. * Donations The Muscular Dystrophy Association of America. Inc.. New York, donated $2754 for work in muscular dystrophy by Dr. Ros-lyn B. Alfin-Slater. visiting associate professor of biochemistry and nutrition.at SC. The Best . Foods Inc. donated $5000 for nutrition research also being ; conducted by Dr. Alfin-Slater. Dr. Judson S. Denson, professor of surgery-, was granted $2500 for his studies on anesthesia by the Abbott Laboratories scientific division of North Chicago. Stock Proceeds Proceeds for the sale of 250 shares of common stock was given by Frank G. Jameson for the i support of studies conducted by Dr. Eloise Jameson, research associate in medicine. The G. D. Searle and Co.. Chicago. has contributed $1250 for* heart research currently being conducted by Dr. Jessie Marin or s ton. clinical professor of medicine, and also $4^0 for other studies by the Medical School. The National Foundation of Chicaso. donated $1697 for fellowship grants to be given to four students. Today s Weather Clear skies are predicted for the SC campiw today with a high of 90 degrees. There will be no smog and the weatherman says there is no chance of rain. id M Rooseveli puide wl “perversi Deal poi »ley. Franklin D. « former political i later renounced Ihe i" of his own New ies. will speak at an open meeting of the Trojan Young Rrpuhlic^n Club today at 12:30 p.m. in the YWCA. Molev. a political strategist who helped engineer FDR’s 1930-32 presidential campaign und later became the New Deal's chief policy maker, became the subject of a national controversev when he switched his loyallies to the Republican Partv and accused the New Deal in laking “once Administrât! sound principles and perverting them into a dancerous drive toward centralized federal power.” A syndicated political anti economic commentator and contributing Editor of Newsweek. Molev is presently on a nationwide sne«kine tour on ljeiialf of the Reuubi'^r, party. President Abe Somer. Somer pointed nut that lh« c^ioVogTatVedars nVLeb^non 1 card will entitle seniors to one HospMa Cardjac Consuhant t0 his 27 talks in the Los Angeles ^rimUsinn tn "The ihe Los Angeles Children's Hos-; Association, admission to the uPart Consult- 1 area. He added that he deplored 1959 Honors Convocation to be pitfa!1 I ............... . , I, .. . „ . . ... . ant for the Los Angeles Board the liberalist ideal of everybody held in Bovard Auditorium on Qf Education jn rharge of al, ! doing less and less work «nd i M*>’ 19 and the J? . school heart clinics in Los An-: scheduled on May 20 at Whites making more and more money. featurp ..,iquid^ refreshments. SC Debate Team Ninth In Nation Loses To Kansas In Close Battle “You can't have government and abundance and not loss j some of your liberties,” he said. ! Charles Söderström, chairman i of the Los Angeles United Re- bulican Finance Committee. wrho : is accompanying Moley on his S speaking tour, will also talk j briefly to TYR at today’s noon meeting. TYR President Jerry Coon pointed out that free refreshments would he served at the , meetting and urged all students to attend. “Trojans should not miss this opportunity to compare theories of economics and politics with tho=e of a'man who helped bring ' what is probably the most pot- I putting the „burden of taxes on ent political force the United I the man in the street,’’ Moley ! States has ever known to pow- [ eature “liquid” refreshments. DR. RAYMOND MOLEY . . fermer "New Dealer' Official Notice Students desiring residence hall accommodations for the coming Fall Semester may secure application forms in the Housing Office Room 216. Student Union Building, commencing Tuesday, April 28. 1959. Completed applications will not be accepted in the H u u « 1 n if Office, prior to Wednesday, May 6, 19f>9. geles. will diagnose the patients ! and select those suitable for j surgical intervention. Guest Lecturer Dr. Shapiro, who was formerly professor of Medicine and Pe- j iatrics at the University of Min- j nesota Medical School, w'as in Israel last October as guest lec- turer at the Hebrew University. His subject was heart conditions capable of cure er amelioration by surgical intervention. While there, he noted that Israeli surgeons were doing, excellent work 1 on such conditions as mitral stenosis and congenital lesions, which dod not require actual opening of the heart. They were not able to do open heart surgery because no heart pump was available and they had had no :>o-canen liberals in Congre • ie passing legislation that is ¡ charged last week in the first of ¡ -er,” he said. F.lvvyn E. Brooks Housing Director experience in this type of surg-1 ery- j SC is the ninth best debate team in the U.S. for 1959. Troy’s team of seniors John Fraser and squad captain Paul Sonnenburg defeated North Texas State. Marietta Colege. Southern Illinois University, the Air Force Academy and Fordham University to make their w ay to the octofinals of the National Debate Tournament held at West Point, N.Y., April 22-25. Lose to Kansas At that point SC lost to Kansas University in a tight debate that split the five judges into a 3-2 decision. Kansas reached the semifinals before losing to the Wisconsin State team from Eau Claire. Wise. The same pair of Northwest- . ern debaters that had won the national debate title last year , met and defeated Wisconsin j Stat« to win the gigantic gold ‘ trophy for their second straight season. Their names. William Welsh and Richard Kirshberg. stand out as a combination that has an amazing record after only two years of collegiate debating. However. SC defeated the very same two in the Kansas debate tournament earlier this year. Troy was selected from 1000 schools in the U.S. as one of our country’s top 36 debate teams by winning the Regional Tournament for the War West on April 11. 9 Out of 14 It was the ninth time out of 15 years that SC has participated in the national championships. Also, for the secon<7 successive year SC has won the sweepstakes of the Occidental College debate tournament after a blue ribbon performance of Troy’s * speakers Saturday. The SC contingent posted the best record of the tourney in winning six of their eight debates. Dave Allswang. Ted Jones. Jerri Corbin. Burt Pines and Alan Fox represented SC in the debate division of the tournament, which included 25 schools from California and Utah. In interpretation, Trojan Eleanor Gobrecht received a Superior award and Roy Sorrels won an Excellent award. Dr. James H. McBath. SC speech director, returned to the university yesterday after a week of tournament pressure. “SC’s team was generally recognized as one of the several outstanding ones in the tournament,” he said. “We bowed out to a fine Kansas team in a close debate regarded by many as one of the best in the tournament. V |
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