DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 31, November 03, 1958 |
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— PAGE TWO — University Grants Offer Money
Southern
DAILY
California
TROJAN
-PAGE THREE-Demo Leaders Predict Landslide Victory
VOL I
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1958
NO. 31
Freshman, Night Enrollments Lag
Hoax Haunts
Decrease Laid To
The Reverend Bryan Green of the Church of England, callcd “the beot .speaker in the Anglican Church” by his colleague.«-, will participate in a series of campus programs highlighting Religious Emphasis Week today through Sunday.
f Ail 10 a.m. classes will Ik?
closed tomorrow for an all-campus convocation in Bovard Audi-! lorium ai which Canon Green will talk on "Religion in the Modern World.'*
Canon Green will deliver a scries of open iectures on "Marriage and Modern Life" today through Thursday in 133 FH at 3:15 p.m. Jle will lead discussions on "Basic Christianity” at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in 133 FH and Wednesday and Thursday at I the same time in 129 FH.
At 8:30 p.m., following Wednesday’s discussion in 129 FH,
, Canon Green will debate the ! ouestion. "Is traditional Chris-tianitv irrevelant in the modern world?” with Dr. Wilbur H. Long, professor of philosophy, and Dr. Paul Saltman. assistant professor of biochemistry and ! nutrition.
Canon Green will also take part in several luncheon and I dinner engagements in various | living groups, lie will close his visit by speaking at the Sunday j Morning Worship Service in Eo-\ard Auditorium at 10.
The middle-aged Rector of the Fpiscopalcan Parish of Birmingham. England, spends two months of each year travelling around the world on speaking engagements, llis programs are interdenominational and of an open meeting-discussion nature. Many are completely devoid of
Harvey In Bigfoot Hunt
Haney Waterman's findings in his search for “Mr. Big Foot” has resulted in the discovery of the same time a year ago.
REV. BRYAN GREEN
. . . visits SC
Bacteria Is Nccn Topic
Dr
Carl Bovell. professor ot bacteriology at ihe University of California at Riverside, will lecture, at noon today, on ‘‘Hydrogen of Bacteria*’ in bacteriology barracks 104.
Dr. Bovell graduated from the
University of Brooklyn. He religious music or formal pray-
taught ihere for several years cr.
alter graduation and then re- Canon Green has spoken to
ceived his PhD from the Univer- large crowds all over the world
Sity of California at Davis.
lie spent a year as a National Scicnce Fellow, on a post doc-1 orale fellowship, at Hopkins Marine Station, lie then went 1o Riverside, where he has laught for iwo years.
Members of ihe department of baeleriology ana their guests will attend. The public is also invited.
Topping Talks at Commerce Lunch
Dr. Norman Topping will be the guest speaker at an annual SC School of Commerce luncheon at the Bi It more Bowl Wednesday.
Tickets arc on sale in ihe office of Hie dean of Commerce. 100 Bridge Hall. The admission price is S2.75 for students and S3.25 for alumni and faculty.
Classes in commerce will l>e cancelled from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the dav of the luncheon.
and drew 40,000 persons in a week in New York City. Twen-tv thousand heard him in a five-day mission at Stanford in 1954.
He has conducted “college mission” programs at such institutions as Smith. Princeton and Amherst. A student from Yale University said:
"I had always believed that to listen to an evangelist you have to leave your mind behind. But Bryan Green presents the Gospel against a background of modern thought. One of the rea-
DR. ARTHUR ADAMSON
. . . with geiger counter
BOMB BOMBAST
“Mr. Big Hoax.”
The SC anthropology student sent to Northern California by television program “Truth or Consequences” to investigate "Big Foot” rumors, revealed that the seven-foot Indian with a 10-foot stride is the child of a practical joker.
Although his identity is known, the joker refuses to acknowledge that the foot prints are his invention. However, it is known that he used a special foot-like apparatus to set the prints throughout the Eureka, Calif, area. Waterman reported on his return to Los Angeles.
“Mr. Big Hoax” is infamous for his practical jokes. Waterman claims that the man once approached a tribe of Indians and told them that a chain-saw which he was operating flew from his hands and became em-beded in the neck of a huge boar. After the accident, the boar ran away with the saw still in his neck.
The joker offered a S250 re-! ward to the Indian who could j find the boar with a chain-saw in his neck. After hunting for , two-weeks without success, the
Standards, Tuition
Raised tuition and higher admission standards combined to drop SC's overall enrollment for the fall semester 696 students below that of the 1957 period.
Enrollment figures compiled by the Registrar’s Office show that registration for the 1958 fall semester totals 17,891 compared to 18.5S7 for !
Huxley Essay is Featured at Neon Reading
By JILL HARVIlH
All history of mankind has been destructive. Only six iacets of civilization have survived destruction: art, science, philosophy, religion, morality and politics.
This opinion is expressed by Aldous Huxley, contemporary English prose writer. Huxley expounds these views in his book. “Tomorrow and Tomorrow anti caused the enrollment drop in' Tomorrow from which Dr. the evening divisions.'* said the Janet Bolton, assistant professor registrar. Registration in night | speech at SC will read an
essay entitled ‘Usually Destro>-
Registrar Howard Patmore pointed out that the decrease occurred in the freshman class and evening divisions only. He reported that total University Park enrollment increased by more than 500 students.
Tuition Caused Drop Explaining the decreased registration for the freshman class, Patmore said. "There were 25 per cent more applications for admission than last year, but the number of students actually accepted was less because of the stricter admissions standards established this year.”
Total enrollment in the 1958 freshman class reachcd 1059 students as compared to 1210 for the 1957 class.
"Raised tuition undoubtedly
classes totaled 4118, but this figure is 1245 under the 1957
count.
Graduate Students
ed” at today's noon reading. ‘Great Writer’
The readings are a series of
C ivic Center classes had an weekly programs conducted by enrollment of 530 students, and the English department at 12:30
p.m. in 129 FH. Theme of this
Professors Over Rise
Have Verbal Conflict in Nuclear Fallout
By JOE SALTZMAN | amount can hurt you genetical-Chemist Arthur Adamson and 11>-Biochemist Paul Saltman. both j “The accumulation of all radi-
of SC, held their own private nuclear war this week with a barrage of verbal fallout over
the record-high reading of ra-
sons for his success in American dioactivity occurring last Thurs-schools and universities is that day.
he makes thinking people realize The radiation level was 30% that to be a Christian you need higher than normal (a normal not give up your intellect." ; .02 milliroentgons per hour as For 10 months of the year compared to a peak of .03 mr/-Canon Bryan ads as official i hr) and it reached a peak of
100 in the last 25 years by the health officials.”
Dr. Saltman repeatedly em-ation makes the probability of phasized ,he fact that lhese a,.e mutation far greater; that is to say that the probability of muta-
UC registered a total of 3588.
Patmore observed that the higher tuition fee had no adverse effect on University Park registration and reported that
Indians realized that they were rjav ciasses above the freshman the brunt of his joke. ievel were not touched by tne
This time “Mr. Big Hoax's” humor may earn S1000 for another Indian tribe. If representatives from “Truth or Consequences” are successful in persuading him to appear on the show and show his apparatus, he will collect the money for “solv-l ing” the mystery. In turn, he j would probably agree to donate
enrollment drop.
“For the most part.’’ he said, “a registration of 593 graduate
semester’s readings is “Men and Events.” Dr. Bolton stated that she selected Huxley's essay for the penetrating things he writes about civilization and man’s inability to communicate with each other.
Dr. Bolton, who received her ! M.A. at North Western and
students accounts for the Uni- ph D in speech from SC. says versity Park increase.” More than 5300 students entered SC
for graduate work during the fall semester.
.Most in LAS Enrollment statistics sho w
tion increases with the amount
only man-made figures and the simple truth is that “we do not
of radiation which falls,” he said. ; know how much radiation man
“A little at a time,” he con-; can consume without feeling the
50% at 8 a.m. Thursday but Dr. Adamson pointed out that “this
chaplain of the city of Birmingham and is rector of the city’s largest church. He writes for English newspapers and has regular radio and television shows.
Canon Green is a graduate of the University of London and was for some years a chaplain “the problem is that there is no of the University of Oxford. safe level of radiation since any
tinued. “still affects the individual genetically and since Dr. Adamson is not a biologist nor a geneticist, his facts are based purely on physical science statistics.”
Dr. Adamson, chalk in hand
was only an increase of 1/3 of 1 a,ld busily explaining equations percent of a year's accumulated on Ihe blackboard, said that “the dosage.” I !over anxious statements made
Dr. Saltman agreed with this by various individuals around fact but he quickly said that ! campus are made without being
Conservation Expert Cites
U
Man s Race With Famine
Civilization is running a race with lamine and the outcome is still in doubl. it was reported yesterday bv Dr. Walter C. Lowdermilk. former assistant director of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service.
This race is not so much due to the hm.tation of Ihe earth's resources, alt hough they have been badly depleted in many places, bui rather to the iag in the acceptance of science, technology and progressive agriculture by 70 percent of the world’s population, he told a conferencc on management of natural resources paving tribute to the late President Theodore Koosc-\elt.
Koosevclt first alerted this na-tion and the world to the need to conserve resources 50 years ago.
' If Roosevelt's foresight was needed a half century ago. it is certainly needed now." he said. “Man's conservation of the earth has been more of a failure than a success.
“Tht Uniied States is still under-populated, however, and it wt had the same number of
l^ople prv square mile of cultivated land as France, we could have a population of 330 million. he said.
Another speaker. Dr. Stanley Cain of th< University of Michigan, said, "There are no inde- ! pt-nd.-m or piovincal conseiva-tion nroblems. Yhev at'e worldwide and complicated by ihe fact that a-- p >pulation increases.
| informed of the problem.”
“Their ideas stem from their political committments on the ¡atom bomb controversy and ihey | are not totally familiar with the ‘subject,” he added.
When asked if Dr. Saltman was a part of this group, he said I that he most certainlv was.
“I know that the radiation i was small,” Dr. Saltman an-duction with which we are so swered, “but it is still bad. for
this increase in radiation is
tamiliar. This is a problem that
harmful to man.”
we are psychologically unpre- . He saM |hat a|, boMs down pared to cope with because it | to a set of values. “Dr. Teller is not compatible with our con- Isays that the radiactive damage I ventional wisdom to attack the ; ta man is only 1/100 of 1 per-
; cent negligible yet Dr. Pauling j says that this sum is 35,000 i lives,” he continued, the death rate.” j “Our values must dictate as
The paramount problem is not 1 to what emphasis we place on,.T , _ . , , .
Nuclear Test had decreased by
j 70 percent during the weekend
and that a decreasing 30 percent
amount of radiation over the 1 of the maximum allowable
birth rate with the same sense and vigor that we have attacked
radioactive fallout effects.”
Dr. Adamson maintained that the question of testing is simply if disarmanent can be obtained by the lack of testing, quit testing and if disarmanent can be obtained with testing, go on testing.
Dr. Saltman, however, claimed that people should sit down and devote their entire energy to constructive means and not destructive means.
“It is our duty to find answers to our problem, not create additional problems,” he said. )
Dr. Adamson, slide rule in hand, pointed out that the argu-; ment of health problems is like a man rubbing his eye w’hen a ; beam of light hits him; the use of atomic weapons is the de-terming and NOT the health problem.
To this Dr. Saltman said that we must do the most possible good for the most possible people and we cannot do this by exposing man to radiation.
Mean while the City Health : Department of Los Angeles saio that the record level of radioac-j tive fallout from the Nevada
I the money to an Indian hospital that 536 Trojans are classified
i project in the Eureka area, as special students. Patmore ex-
j Waterman said.
I The hospital project of the ! Hoopah Indians came to light
j when the tribe wrote to a local i newspaper that “Mr. Big Foot” j was a very sick Indian who was I looking for a hospital but
| couldn't find it because it did not exist.
Acting as a judge and anthropology consultant to the
that, although she does not endorse Huxley's viewpoints, she thinks of him as a great writer of satirism. pacifism and cynicism. I
Only Worthwhile Thins* Huxley's essay. “Usually De-
plained that if a student takes storyed. describes modern Jeru-
less than 10 units of class work he is ineligible for full-time standing.
LAS received the largest number of students with 2903 registrants. The School of Commerce was second in line with a total enrollment of 2566. Smallest registrations were in the Schools of Librarv Science and Public
television program. Waterman Administration
came across several other theories pertaining to “Mr. Big Foot.” None proved to be conclusive, he said.
One person suggested that the prints were made by a rheumatic bear that was forced to walk on his hind legs because his front legs were paralyzed by a bear trap, he reported.
In another letter Waterman read that “Mr. Big Foot” was Paul Bunyon’s son.
Other proposed that the footprints were made by a giant member of the Civilian Conservation Corps, who ran away into j year.
NATO s Film
Maker Joins SC s Staff
The job of directing NATO films for Turkey in 1951 was one of the many tasks undertaken by Professor Robert Wagner before he became head of SC's department of cinema this
salem through the sightseeing eyes of a man walking along the streets. As he stops to admire the monuments built by ancient kings, he thinks back to the bloody history of mankind. He relates it to the present time of constant destructiong and rebuilding.
Huxley writes that the only worthwhile things to come out of all the confusion created by mankind are the six items he lists—they are man’s only means of perpetuating himself.
Dr. Bolton states that since Huxley comes from a line of great educators and scientists he could hardly miss being great. Some of his more humorous essays are satires on Hollywood, billboards and Pershing Square.
the woods to escape the constant ridicule of fellow workers.
Beside “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow,” Huxley's books include “After Many a Summer Dies a Swan,” “Brave New World,” “Ape and Essence," “Point Counterpoint.” “Chrome Yellow.” and Hav.”
While in Turkey he shot army training films for Turkish military forces and wrote scripts for a ‘Health and Basic Economics” movie series which was designed to help them to understand self-government better.
Professor W'agner did most of
DR. JOHN HICKS
. . . talks on Teddy
raise their standard of 1 iv-
cne of food, a third speaker said, but of the intelligent adjustment between numbers and space, wisely planned and allocated.
"Although conservation of human resources is the ultimate aim. we often attack the problem of unemployment at the wrong end, said Dr. Paul B. Sears of Yale.
“History would suggest that unemployment is the result of overpopulation. One of the most
35,000 lives or 1/100 of lr the population,” he said.
Dr. Adamson said that
the
normal amount was equal to a two minute htndling of a radioactive package received daily through the mail pt the univer-sitv raidologv headquarters.
“Mind you." he said, “onlv two minutes of handling a radioactive package through the U. S. mails, is w?hnt this overdoes of radiation was from ihe fallout over the SC campus.”
Dr. Saltman said 1hat “if it
amount over an extended period j remained and would, in time. I “decay.”
But back on the SC campus, the verbal fallout was just be-gining to fall and the outlook for a decrease in the argumentative radioactivity was exceedingly worst — and w-as expected to rise this week.
He said there will l>e four billion 2:’0 million people in the world by 1980. Thai would be an increase of 71 per cent in 31 \ears Bv ISS'i A: ta and Africa will have a population considerably larger than that of the entire world today.
“The population increases,” he pointed out. "produce more mouths that are increasingly more difficult to feed. Here is
dangerous fallacies of our time should have rained during this is the idea that without contin- oeriod of high radiation, it could
have cause considerable dam-i age.” '
“If is vvierd that over television and in the newspapers.
name was connected
ous increase in numbers tnere can be no prosperity. So long as
population stays within reasonable bounds, there is more man enough work for all hands.
Forced labor pyramids and useless public works, the creation of great standing armies, and easie systsms (whatever we call them i that insist on unnecessarily high specialization of
only my with an official objection” he said, “for there are an awful lot of people who feel the same
way as I do.”
“It has become an unfashionable position 1o be against atim-ie testing and this is unfortunate
labor, are all expressions of too for the actual maximum of per
a problem thaï can t he solved many people for the work to be missable doesage of radiation has
more people want more things j alone by the techniques of pro- | done,” he concluded.
I b e e n decreased by a factor of,
Official
Notice
CLASSES CANCELLED All campus classes will be dismissed at 10 a.m. Tuesday in order that faculty and student» may attend a lecture by Canon Bryan Green from England in Bovard Auditorium on “Religion in the Modern Mind.” A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice President
El Rod Lists Group Photos
The following organizations are scheduled to have their pictures taken for El Rodeo, the university yearbook, this week: Amazons, Spurs. Kappa Alpha Theta. Chimes, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta and Kappa Delta.
For El Rodeo pictures, fraternities and sororities should make appointments at least a week in advance at the photo office. Men should wear white shirts with black or very dark V-neck sweaters. Women should wear white or very light pastel round-neck. plain sweaters. Clotiling will not be provided at the photo office.
Bring $2 with you when the picture is taken. If you do not have your picture taken when your organization is scheduled, or you miss your appointment or you are late for your appointment, it will cost $3 tor the picture.
Antic ; his work in Anatolia and Istan-| bul.
“The Turkish people were suppressed for so long that they were eager to learn the wavs of democracy,” he said.
In addition to his NATO work, done under the auspices of the State department. Professor Wagner was a writer and director of films for the Office of War Information during World War II, and furnished movies for the Office of Co-ordinator i for Inter-American Affairs In ! 1943.
After the war, Professor Wagner taught at Ohto State University, where he previously received his BA and MA degrees.
During the summers of 1950 and 1953. he instructed at SC's department of cinema, and in Sept., 1958. he took on a per-| manent position as head of the department.
‘Our department of cinema is the oldest and best known in the U.S., w ith a reputation for turning out graduates who have a well-rounded and thorough understanding of cinema as a medium of communication,” Professor Wagner said.
Goblins Frolic at Trick-Treat Hop
As the clock struck twelve on Friday night, the goblins and ghosts of Kappa Alpha Psi. were already cavorting with their annual bag of tricks.
Scene of the dual trick or treat dance, between Beta Omega chapter of SC and Upsilon
chapter of UCLA, w as the Los
Angeles Breakfast club. Highlight of the occasion was the presentation of the fraternity’s Dream Girl, actress-singer. Dia-han Carroll. Miss Carroll was chosen at the beginning of the “It is our job,” he said, "to j school year as the girl any fra-
see t'%‘H these high standards ternity man would like to spe~d
j are maintained.” i the last days of vacation with.
Dr. Hicks to Discuss TR
Dr. John D. Hicks will discuss “Theodore Roosevelt: A
Man of His Time.” today at 2:15 in 133 FH.
Dr. Hicks is an emeritus professor of history at UC f Berkeley) and is distinguished in his record at that university and at several eastern schools. He has served as chairman of the his-torv department at Berkeley, as well as dean of the graduate school there.
Dr. Flicks will speak here on three occasions, today, tomorrow and Wednesday. Wednesday’s lecture will cover the teaching of history as a profession. and will be given at 4:15 in 210 FH.
Evangelist To
Visit Campus
Englishman Wiil Debate Religion With Professors
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 31, November 03, 1958 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 31, November 03, 1958. |
| Full text | — PAGE TWO — University Grants Offer Money Southern DAILY California TROJAN -PAGE THREE-Demo Leaders Predict Landslide Victory VOL I LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1958 NO. 31 Freshman, Night Enrollments Lag Hoax Haunts Decrease Laid To The Reverend Bryan Green of the Church of England, callcd “the beot .speaker in the Anglican Church” by his colleague.«-, will participate in a series of campus programs highlighting Religious Emphasis Week today through Sunday. f Ail 10 a.m. classes will Ik? closed tomorrow for an all-campus convocation in Bovard Audi-! lorium ai which Canon Green will talk on "Religion in the Modern World.'* Canon Green will deliver a scries of open iectures on "Marriage and Modern Life" today through Thursday in 133 FH at 3:15 p.m. Jle will lead discussions on "Basic Christianity” at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in 133 FH and Wednesday and Thursday at I the same time in 129 FH. At 8:30 p.m., following Wednesday’s discussion in 129 FH, , Canon Green will debate the ! ouestion. "Is traditional Chris-tianitv irrevelant in the modern world?” with Dr. Wilbur H. Long, professor of philosophy, and Dr. Paul Saltman. assistant professor of biochemistry and ! nutrition. Canon Green will also take part in several luncheon and I dinner engagements in various living groups, lie will close his visit by speaking at the Sunday j Morning Worship Service in Eo-\ard Auditorium at 10. The middle-aged Rector of the Fpiscopalcan Parish of Birmingham. England, spends two months of each year travelling around the world on speaking engagements, llis programs are interdenominational and of an open meeting-discussion nature. Many are completely devoid of Harvey In Bigfoot Hunt Haney Waterman's findings in his search for “Mr. Big Foot” has resulted in the discovery of the same time a year ago. REV. BRYAN GREEN . . . visits SC Bacteria Is Nccn Topic Dr Carl Bovell. professor ot bacteriology at ihe University of California at Riverside, will lecture, at noon today, on ‘‘Hydrogen of Bacteria*’ in bacteriology barracks 104. Dr. Bovell graduated from the University of Brooklyn. He religious music or formal pray- taught ihere for several years cr. alter graduation and then re- Canon Green has spoken to ceived his PhD from the Univer- large crowds all over the world Sity of California at Davis. lie spent a year as a National Scicnce Fellow, on a post doc-1 orale fellowship, at Hopkins Marine Station, lie then went 1o Riverside, where he has laught for iwo years. Members of ihe department of baeleriology ana their guests will attend. The public is also invited. Topping Talks at Commerce Lunch Dr. Norman Topping will be the guest speaker at an annual SC School of Commerce luncheon at the Bi It more Bowl Wednesday. Tickets arc on sale in ihe office of Hie dean of Commerce. 100 Bridge Hall. The admission price is S2.75 for students and S3.25 for alumni and faculty. Classes in commerce will l>e cancelled from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the dav of the luncheon. and drew 40,000 persons in a week in New York City. Twen-tv thousand heard him in a five-day mission at Stanford in 1954. He has conducted “college mission” programs at such institutions as Smith. Princeton and Amherst. A student from Yale University said: "I had always believed that to listen to an evangelist you have to leave your mind behind. But Bryan Green presents the Gospel against a background of modern thought. One of the rea- DR. ARTHUR ADAMSON . . . with geiger counter BOMB BOMBAST “Mr. Big Hoax.” The SC anthropology student sent to Northern California by television program “Truth or Consequences” to investigate "Big Foot” rumors, revealed that the seven-foot Indian with a 10-foot stride is the child of a practical joker. Although his identity is known, the joker refuses to acknowledge that the foot prints are his invention. However, it is known that he used a special foot-like apparatus to set the prints throughout the Eureka, Calif, area. Waterman reported on his return to Los Angeles. “Mr. Big Hoax” is infamous for his practical jokes. Waterman claims that the man once approached a tribe of Indians and told them that a chain-saw which he was operating flew from his hands and became em-beded in the neck of a huge boar. After the accident, the boar ran away with the saw still in his neck. The joker offered a S250 re-! ward to the Indian who could j find the boar with a chain-saw in his neck. After hunting for , two-weeks without success, the Standards, Tuition Raised tuition and higher admission standards combined to drop SC's overall enrollment for the fall semester 696 students below that of the 1957 period. Enrollment figures compiled by the Registrar’s Office show that registration for the 1958 fall semester totals 17,891 compared to 18.5S7 for ! Huxley Essay is Featured at Neon Reading By JILL HARVIlH All history of mankind has been destructive. Only six iacets of civilization have survived destruction: art, science, philosophy, religion, morality and politics. This opinion is expressed by Aldous Huxley, contemporary English prose writer. Huxley expounds these views in his book. “Tomorrow and Tomorrow anti caused the enrollment drop in' Tomorrow from which Dr. the evening divisions.'* said the Janet Bolton, assistant professor registrar. Registration in night speech at SC will read an essay entitled ‘Usually Destro>- Registrar Howard Patmore pointed out that the decrease occurred in the freshman class and evening divisions only. He reported that total University Park enrollment increased by more than 500 students. Tuition Caused Drop Explaining the decreased registration for the freshman class, Patmore said. "There were 25 per cent more applications for admission than last year, but the number of students actually accepted was less because of the stricter admissions standards established this year.” Total enrollment in the 1958 freshman class reachcd 1059 students as compared to 1210 for the 1957 class. "Raised tuition undoubtedly classes totaled 4118, but this figure is 1245 under the 1957 count. Graduate Students ed” at today's noon reading. ‘Great Writer’ The readings are a series of C ivic Center classes had an weekly programs conducted by enrollment of 530 students, and the English department at 12:30 p.m. in 129 FH. Theme of this Professors Over Rise Have Verbal Conflict in Nuclear Fallout By JOE SALTZMAN amount can hurt you genetical-Chemist Arthur Adamson and 11>-Biochemist Paul Saltman. both j “The accumulation of all radi- of SC, held their own private nuclear war this week with a barrage of verbal fallout over the record-high reading of ra- sons for his success in American dioactivity occurring last Thurs-schools and universities is that day. he makes thinking people realize The radiation level was 30% that to be a Christian you need higher than normal (a normal not give up your intellect." ; .02 milliroentgons per hour as For 10 months of the year compared to a peak of .03 mr/-Canon Bryan ads as official i hr) and it reached a peak of 100 in the last 25 years by the health officials.” Dr. Saltman repeatedly em-ation makes the probability of phasized ,he fact that lhese a,.e mutation far greater; that is to say that the probability of muta- UC registered a total of 3588. Patmore observed that the higher tuition fee had no adverse effect on University Park registration and reported that Indians realized that they were rjav ciasses above the freshman the brunt of his joke. ievel were not touched by tne This time “Mr. Big Hoax's” humor may earn S1000 for another Indian tribe. If representatives from “Truth or Consequences” are successful in persuading him to appear on the show and show his apparatus, he will collect the money for “solv-l ing” the mystery. In turn, he j would probably agree to donate enrollment drop. “For the most part.’’ he said, “a registration of 593 graduate semester’s readings is “Men and Events.” Dr. Bolton stated that she selected Huxley's essay for the penetrating things he writes about civilization and man’s inability to communicate with each other. Dr. Bolton, who received her ! M.A. at North Western and students accounts for the Uni- ph D in speech from SC. says versity Park increase.” More than 5300 students entered SC for graduate work during the fall semester. .Most in LAS Enrollment statistics sho w tion increases with the amount only man-made figures and the simple truth is that “we do not of radiation which falls,” he said. ; know how much radiation man “A little at a time,” he con-; can consume without feeling the 50% at 8 a.m. Thursday but Dr. Adamson pointed out that “this chaplain of the city of Birmingham and is rector of the city’s largest church. He writes for English newspapers and has regular radio and television shows. Canon Green is a graduate of the University of London and was for some years a chaplain “the problem is that there is no of the University of Oxford. safe level of radiation since any tinued. “still affects the individual genetically and since Dr. Adamson is not a biologist nor a geneticist, his facts are based purely on physical science statistics.” Dr. Adamson, chalk in hand was only an increase of 1/3 of 1 a,ld busily explaining equations percent of a year's accumulated on Ihe blackboard, said that “the dosage.” I !over anxious statements made Dr. Saltman agreed with this by various individuals around fact but he quickly said that ! campus are made without being Conservation Expert Cites U Man s Race With Famine Civilization is running a race with lamine and the outcome is still in doubl. it was reported yesterday bv Dr. Walter C. Lowdermilk. former assistant director of the U.S. Soil Conservation Service. This race is not so much due to the hm.tation of Ihe earth's resources, alt hough they have been badly depleted in many places, bui rather to the iag in the acceptance of science, technology and progressive agriculture by 70 percent of the world’s population, he told a conferencc on management of natural resources paving tribute to the late President Theodore Koosc-\elt. Koosevclt first alerted this na-tion and the world to the need to conserve resources 50 years ago. ' If Roosevelt's foresight was needed a half century ago. it is certainly needed now." he said. “Man's conservation of the earth has been more of a failure than a success. “Tht Uniied States is still under-populated, however, and it wt had the same number of l^ople prv square mile of cultivated land as France, we could have a population of 330 million. he said. Another speaker. Dr. Stanley Cain of th< University of Michigan, said, "There are no inde- ! pt-nd.-m or piovincal conseiva-tion nroblems. Yhev at'e worldwide and complicated by ihe fact that a-- p >pulation increases. informed of the problem.” “Their ideas stem from their political committments on the ¡atom bomb controversy and ihey are not totally familiar with the ‘subject,” he added. When asked if Dr. Saltman was a part of this group, he said I that he most certainlv was. “I know that the radiation i was small,” Dr. Saltman an-duction with which we are so swered, “but it is still bad. for this increase in radiation is tamiliar. This is a problem that harmful to man.” we are psychologically unpre- . He saM hat a , boMs down pared to cope with because it to a set of values. “Dr. Teller is not compatible with our con- Isays that the radiactive damage I ventional wisdom to attack the ; ta man is only 1/100 of 1 per- ; cent negligible yet Dr. Pauling j says that this sum is 35,000 i lives,” he continued, the death rate.” j “Our values must dictate as The paramount problem is not 1 to what emphasis we place on,.T , _ . , , . Nuclear Test had decreased by j 70 percent during the weekend and that a decreasing 30 percent amount of radiation over the 1 of the maximum allowable birth rate with the same sense and vigor that we have attacked radioactive fallout effects.” Dr. Adamson maintained that the question of testing is simply if disarmanent can be obtained by the lack of testing, quit testing and if disarmanent can be obtained with testing, go on testing. Dr. Saltman, however, claimed that people should sit down and devote their entire energy to constructive means and not destructive means. “It is our duty to find answers to our problem, not create additional problems,” he said. ) Dr. Adamson, slide rule in hand, pointed out that the argu-; ment of health problems is like a man rubbing his eye w’hen a ; beam of light hits him; the use of atomic weapons is the de-terming and NOT the health problem. To this Dr. Saltman said that we must do the most possible good for the most possible people and we cannot do this by exposing man to radiation. Mean while the City Health : Department of Los Angeles saio that the record level of radioac-j tive fallout from the Nevada I the money to an Indian hospital that 536 Trojans are classified i project in the Eureka area, as special students. Patmore ex- j Waterman said. I The hospital project of the ! Hoopah Indians came to light j when the tribe wrote to a local i newspaper that “Mr. Big Foot” j was a very sick Indian who was I looking for a hospital but couldn't find it because it did not exist. Acting as a judge and anthropology consultant to the that, although she does not endorse Huxley's viewpoints, she thinks of him as a great writer of satirism. pacifism and cynicism. I Only Worthwhile Thins* Huxley's essay. “Usually De- plained that if a student takes storyed. describes modern Jeru- less than 10 units of class work he is ineligible for full-time standing. LAS received the largest number of students with 2903 registrants. The School of Commerce was second in line with a total enrollment of 2566. Smallest registrations were in the Schools of Librarv Science and Public television program. Waterman Administration came across several other theories pertaining to “Mr. Big Foot.” None proved to be conclusive, he said. One person suggested that the prints were made by a rheumatic bear that was forced to walk on his hind legs because his front legs were paralyzed by a bear trap, he reported. In another letter Waterman read that “Mr. Big Foot” was Paul Bunyon’s son. Other proposed that the footprints were made by a giant member of the Civilian Conservation Corps, who ran away into j year. NATO s Film Maker Joins SC s Staff The job of directing NATO films for Turkey in 1951 was one of the many tasks undertaken by Professor Robert Wagner before he became head of SC's department of cinema this salem through the sightseeing eyes of a man walking along the streets. As he stops to admire the monuments built by ancient kings, he thinks back to the bloody history of mankind. He relates it to the present time of constant destructiong and rebuilding. Huxley writes that the only worthwhile things to come out of all the confusion created by mankind are the six items he lists—they are man’s only means of perpetuating himself. Dr. Bolton states that since Huxley comes from a line of great educators and scientists he could hardly miss being great. Some of his more humorous essays are satires on Hollywood, billboards and Pershing Square. the woods to escape the constant ridicule of fellow workers. Beside “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow,” Huxley's books include “After Many a Summer Dies a Swan,” “Brave New World,” “Ape and Essence" “Point Counterpoint.” “Chrome Yellow.” and Hav.” While in Turkey he shot army training films for Turkish military forces and wrote scripts for a ‘Health and Basic Economics” movie series which was designed to help them to understand self-government better. Professor W'agner did most of DR. JOHN HICKS . . . talks on Teddy raise their standard of 1 iv- cne of food, a third speaker said, but of the intelligent adjustment between numbers and space, wisely planned and allocated. "Although conservation of human resources is the ultimate aim. we often attack the problem of unemployment at the wrong end, said Dr. Paul B. Sears of Yale. “History would suggest that unemployment is the result of overpopulation. One of the most 35,000 lives or 1/100 of lr the population,” he said. Dr. Adamson said that the normal amount was equal to a two minute htndling of a radioactive package received daily through the mail pt the univer-sitv raidologv headquarters. “Mind you." he said, “onlv two minutes of handling a radioactive package through the U. S. mails, is w?hnt this overdoes of radiation was from ihe fallout over the SC campus.” Dr. Saltman said 1hat “if it amount over an extended period j remained and would, in time. I “decay.” But back on the SC campus, the verbal fallout was just be-gining to fall and the outlook for a decrease in the argumentative radioactivity was exceedingly worst — and w-as expected to rise this week. He said there will l>e four billion 2:’0 million people in the world by 1980. Thai would be an increase of 71 per cent in 31 \ears Bv ISS'i A: ta and Africa will have a population considerably larger than that of the entire world today. “The population increases,” he pointed out. "produce more mouths that are increasingly more difficult to feed. Here is dangerous fallacies of our time should have rained during this is the idea that without contin- oeriod of high radiation, it could have cause considerable dam-i age.” ' “If is vvierd that over television and in the newspapers. name was connected ous increase in numbers tnere can be no prosperity. So long as population stays within reasonable bounds, there is more man enough work for all hands. Forced labor pyramids and useless public works, the creation of great standing armies, and easie systsms (whatever we call them i that insist on unnecessarily high specialization of only my with an official objection” he said, “for there are an awful lot of people who feel the same way as I do.” “It has become an unfashionable position 1o be against atim-ie testing and this is unfortunate labor, are all expressions of too for the actual maximum of per a problem thaï can t he solved many people for the work to be missable doesage of radiation has more people want more things j alone by the techniques of pro- done,” he concluded. I b e e n decreased by a factor of, Official Notice CLASSES CANCELLED All campus classes will be dismissed at 10 a.m. Tuesday in order that faculty and student» may attend a lecture by Canon Bryan Green from England in Bovard Auditorium on “Religion in the Modern Mind.” A. S. Raubenheimer Educational Vice President El Rod Lists Group Photos The following organizations are scheduled to have their pictures taken for El Rodeo, the university yearbook, this week: Amazons, Spurs. Kappa Alpha Theta. Chimes, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta and Kappa Delta. For El Rodeo pictures, fraternities and sororities should make appointments at least a week in advance at the photo office. Men should wear white shirts with black or very dark V-neck sweaters. Women should wear white or very light pastel round-neck. plain sweaters. Clotiling will not be provided at the photo office. Bring $2 with you when the picture is taken. If you do not have your picture taken when your organization is scheduled, or you miss your appointment or you are late for your appointment, it will cost $3 tor the picture. Antic ; his work in Anatolia and Istan- bul. “The Turkish people were suppressed for so long that they were eager to learn the wavs of democracy,” he said. In addition to his NATO work, done under the auspices of the State department. Professor Wagner was a writer and director of films for the Office of War Information during World War II, and furnished movies for the Office of Co-ordinator i for Inter-American Affairs In ! 1943. After the war, Professor Wagner taught at Ohto State University, where he previously received his BA and MA degrees. During the summers of 1950 and 1953. he instructed at SC's department of cinema, and in Sept., 1958. he took on a per- manent position as head of the department. ‘Our department of cinema is the oldest and best known in the U.S., w ith a reputation for turning out graduates who have a well-rounded and thorough understanding of cinema as a medium of communication,” Professor Wagner said. Goblins Frolic at Trick-Treat Hop As the clock struck twelve on Friday night, the goblins and ghosts of Kappa Alpha Psi. were already cavorting with their annual bag of tricks. Scene of the dual trick or treat dance, between Beta Omega chapter of SC and Upsilon chapter of UCLA, w as the Los Angeles Breakfast club. Highlight of the occasion was the presentation of the fraternity’s Dream Girl, actress-singer. Dia-han Carroll. Miss Carroll was chosen at the beginning of the “It is our job,” he said, "to j school year as the girl any fra- see t'%‘H these high standards ternity man would like to spe~d j are maintained.” i the last days of vacation with. Dr. Hicks to Discuss TR Dr. John D. Hicks will discuss “Theodore Roosevelt: A Man of His Time.” today at 2:15 in 133 FH. Dr. Hicks is an emeritus professor of history at UC f Berkeley) and is distinguished in his record at that university and at several eastern schools. He has served as chairman of the his-torv department at Berkeley, as well as dean of the graduate school there. Dr. Flicks will speak here on three occasions, today, tomorrow and Wednesday. Wednesday’s lecture will cover the teaching of history as a profession. and will be given at 4:15 in 210 FH. Evangelist To Visit Campus Englishman Wiil Debate Religion With Professors |
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