DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 113, April 24, 1959 |
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Russia and France Battle on Tibet In Extraordinary Debate Session
Southern
California
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. L
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959
LAS VECAS TRIP
Miss SC To DT
Special
Grace
Edition
By JOE JARES Daily Trojan Managing Editor
The archives have been explored, the photo shop’s files have been combed and the minds of SC oldtimers have been culled, all to result in the History of Troy Edition of the Daily Trojan, scheduled to appear in 16-page form on Wednesday, May 13.
Opera tine on the theorv that
you can't tell a bock by its cover. but that you can SELL a book by its cover, the winner of the Miss University of Southern California Contest will have her lovely picture splashed on the first page. Her picture on 1he edition's front page will be the first and official announcement of the contest's winner.
Las Vegas Prize In addition to having her picture adorn the History of Troy Edition's paee one. Miss SC will land the big prize, a fantastic four-dav stay at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas.
Contest Chairman Sandy Q'iinn announced that the queen v i!] f>lco be hostess for Alumni Day May 16 and hostess for Snngfest that night.
Any SC girl currently reigning as thp sweetheart or queen of anything, other lhan the Homecoming Queen, is eligible to compete for the Miss SC title, so that the winner will be a queen of queens.
Panel Eliminates The first elimination will be made by a panel of judges taken from the alumni, administration and faculty. The second e’imination, the ono which will select the queen, will be held at Ihe Los Angeles Ad Club's mepting at the Stat'er-Hillon Hotel on Tuesday n;ght. May 5. Members of the Ad Club will do the voting for the winner.
The winner's name will then b» keot a secret until the spp-ca] eition hits tne stands, at 25 cents per copy, on May 13.
The edition is the project of the Daily Troian and Sigma Delia Chi, professional journalism fraternity which is footing the bill.
Feature« von Ktein Smld Tt will feature the story of Chancellor Rufus P. von Klein-Smid. thp Howard Jones era and a history of SC's publications.
The edit ion will a'so explore the changing face of SC and its physical development for the future.
Such 1 hings as SC's fraternises. honor group« end annual hompconvng will be. written up. a’onsr with picture stories on some of SC's famous alumni.
In addition, thp men who built SC: its presidents, dean*. ! nrolessors and benefactors will be discussed alone with the evolution of SC's curriculum as a w hole.
SC Minister ToTalkSunday On God s Love
Dr. Wilfred M. Buth, campus pastor for SC's Lutheran students. will consider the many areas of thought through which we attempt to understand God's grace and love in his sermon, "Too Little for too Many” at the worship service in Bovard Auditorium Sunday at 11 a.m.
•‘Our understanding ard appreciation of the revelation of God's divine power are narrowed considerably and dulled by our insistence that God make His appeal to our ability to undo-stand in certain ways.
These Ways
Some of these ways, instead of casting reflections on the truth of Goc's love for us. actually reflect t he degree to which our spiritual vision has been enlarged; or. on the other hand, the extent to which it has been narrowed/’ says Dr. But i.
“Our concept of what is impossible sometimes closes the door to the revelation of God's truth to us in our time. ’ he believes.
Huge Meal
In his discussion. Dr Buth will deal with an exposition of the f xperience of Jesus Christ in the feeding of the five thousand as j it is recorded in the beginning
MUN Delegates Charge Threats To World Peace
By JUDY ASHKENAZY
Bitter blows arising out of a debate over the Tibet crisis were exchanged between Russian and French delegates last night in an Extraordinary Session of the MUN General Assembly.
The assembly, called to determine whether a UN com-
' mission should
Social Workers To Be Guests Ât Career Day
FIERY FRENCHMAN—The French delegate pounds the table in emphasizing his country's stand against the USSR's interference of a motion made by the U.S. to investigate the Tibet situation. The motion was blocked by Ihe Russian delegate on two counts. He argued, "Since there is no such
Daily Trojan Photo by Mike Robinson country as Tibet, how can the UN intervene? Since this place that dees not exist can have no representative here,
I suggest that the UN invite a representative of the area in question, Red China."
International Court of Justice Holds Decision on Debated Apartheid Issue
Students representing 12 Southern California colleges will be guests of SC's School of Social Work today at the annual Social Work Career Day for undergraduate students.
Guests will meet at the YVV-CA at 1:45 p.m. where the School of Social Work program will be described. Information about admission requirements I and procedures, scholarships and fellowships available to students and the various areas of interest for social work practice will be given.
Day’s Program At 2 p.m. students from the School of Social Work will take the guests on a tour of the campus.
A program, which will include the showing of the dramatic j documentary film ‘The Deep Well,” will be held at the YW-CA at 3 p.m. John Milner, associate professor of social work, will discuss the film w’hich portrays some of the current practices in dealing with children who need foster care.
Work Plans
I investigate the
conflict between Communist China and Tibet, turned into a fire of controversy when Russia charged that French action in Algeria is endangering the peace of the world and she should therefore be expelled from membership in the UN.
Requests Censure France countered the charge by declaring in an amendment that the General Assembly should censure the People's Republic of China for the “internal interference with and aggression in. Tibet, and order the People's Republic of China to cease such internal intereference and aggression.”
“France is not a peace-loving nation. She should be condemned for her actions in Algeria,” the Russian delegate declared.
Emotions Ignored France answered saying, “We are not playing the emotions. We are adhering to the critical situation of Tibet. The question of Algeria has nothing to do with Tibet.”
The proposal to send an In-vestigating team into the troubled area was approved by the assembly after being presented by Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, the United Kingdom and the United States.
They contended that the armed conflict which occurred in Tibet constitutes a threat to international peace and security. They suggested that the investigating commission be composed of Argentina. Canada, Ceylon.
! Ghana, Lebanon. Poland and Sweden and that this team study
The Model United Nation's international court of justice yesterday debated the segregation issue in the Union of South Africa but the court of 14 judges withheld, for later publication, their decision on whether to condemn apartheid.
The international court is part
Croup to Hear Visiting Minister
'Thousands of young men and the conditions and report as soon
of the MUN being held here segregation and urged the court have submitted to the jurisdic- women are choosing social work ' as adequate information it as-
through Saturday. More than 1000 student delegates representing 82 United Nations countries are participating in the event.
High school students from the Los Angeles School System attended the court session yesterday.
Arabs Make Charge
A charge was made by the
to compel the Union to “live up tion of the court.
to” the Doctrine.
The mock dispute today was modeled after the actual court which convenes at the Hague in the Netherlands. The moot
court considers only those disputes which have not been considered by the real court. Jurisdiction of the moot court is
United Arab Republic that the limited to considering content-
of the sixth chapter of St. John’s of the San Marino Community
Union of South Africa refused to recognize the General Assem*
Dr. Frederick Cropp, pastor iy’s right to investigate the pol-
Gospel.
Dr. Ruth has been at SC since 1056. He was pastor of the Lake-view American Lutheran Church in Madison, Wis.. and campus pastor to Lutheran students and executive director of the Luther Foundation at Ohio State University.
Today s Weather
SC will continue Sts warm weather today with a predicted high of 78 degrees scheduler! for this afternoon.
The low last night was .53 degrees.
Church, will speak at the Presbyterian center on Campus Sunday at 7 p.m. on “What Is the Bible?”
“Dr. Cropp expects to meet many SC students and visit with his own San Marino people at the meeting.” said John Greene, president of the Presbyterian group and a member of Dr. Cropp's church.
This meeting will be the last chance to make reservations for the Southern California area Annual Spring Banquet on May 2 in Riverside. The theme for
icy of racial segregation in South Africa.
The court discussed whether or not segregation had ever been a subject of consideration or interpretation as far as the United Nation’s Human Rights Bill was concerned. Both sides disagreed on this fundamental issue.
CAR Tells Doctrine The UAR declared that the Doctrine of Human Rights “must be lived up to” and that the Union of South Africa was wrong in maintaining that segregation was solelv in its jurisdiction and not subject to inter-
ious disputes or giving advisory opinions, and both nations must
the banquet will deal with Re- pretation hv the General Assem-bellion. Fragments, Reformation hly. The UAR insisted that the and Integration.
Archy and Co/ To Hit Boards Of SC Theater
The West Coast premiere of the back-alley jazz opera “Archy a.id Mehitabel” will be presented in Stop Gap Theater May 1 at 8:30 p.m.
The jazz opera will also be given May 2 at 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. and on May 3 at a matinee
Cases heard in the court are selected from briefs drawn up by the various “nations” and submitted to tl^e registrar. The associate justices do research into the problems and the cases that come up for hearing. Each party nation, through an agent aided counsel, orally argues its case. The court's opinions are then published Other cases considered before the MUN's court this year include Iran vs. USSR to determine whether Iran can abrogate the Treaty of 1921 made with Russia and which Russia claims is still binding; and the United Arab Republic challenge of France on the issue of incorp-o.-ting the area of the former French mandate of Syria into the territory of Turkey.
General Assembl yMeetinShrineHall To End MUN Conference Tomorrow
The ninth Model United Nations will climax a four-day annual conference tomorrow' with the major General Assembly in Ihe Shrine Exposition Hall, pressed over bv Sir Leslie Munro. iy5i piesader.T of the UN General Assembly.
After ibis morning’s conferences 800 delegates repie:-enting 80 t’N members will enjoy a “free time” vacation Unlay lrom their international duties to visit Disneyland. Knotts Berry Farm and movie studios.
They will ihcn return to business tomorrow when they attend the full-dav General Assembly.
Sir Leslie. New Zealand permanent delera’e to the UN and ambassador to the U.S.. will deliver a key address to the delegates representing colleges and universities of nine western states.
The final address to the MUN delegations wiil be given by Indian Ambassador Mahomed Ali Ourrin Chagla at a banquet for represent at iv es Exposition Hall p.m.
General Assembly should rule on performance and at 8:30 in the
evening. Reservations for the program, co-sponsored by the ! National Collegiate Players and Phi Mu Alpha, music fraternity, are now available in the drama office for $2 and $2.50.
Two Parts The evening’s entertainment, a study in modern jazz, is divided into two parts. The first section points out the various as- i pects of jazz that lead to opera, j
dedicated to “giving students a Th* s^o"d portion of the pro-j , . . I gram will b the opera “Archy l
background m solving the prob- Mehitabel;,
lems of world politics. The opus is based on Don
; delegates will end the ninth ses sion of a conference which
is
Bavetta Receives Nutrition License
Dr. Lucien A. Bavetta, head of | the department of biochemistry ; and nutrition in the SC School of Dentistry, has been certified by the American-Board of ^Nu-j trition as a specialist in human 1 nutrition.
A graduate of New York Uni- j versity, Dr. Bavetta holds two j degrees from SC and has been j on the faculty here since 1940. He is a former visiting research i scientist at the National Institute of Hclth in Bethesda. Md.
because it offers rewards that j certained. f e w other professions can Representatives Speak
match. The social worker can The assembly voted to allow choose his career in many areas both Tibet and Communist Chi-of interest such as work with na representatives* to speak on individual families, arranging | the subject. Neither countries for adoptions and foster homes.” i are LN members, said Dean Malcolm Stinson of Communist China gained the the School of Social Work. floor after the Russian delegate “He can do work with psy- argued that Tibet is part of the chiatrists in hospitals and clin- People s Republic of China and ics, correctional and rehabilita- should therefore voice an opin-tive work in probation and pa- ion.
role settings or work with civic France begged the delegates leaders and organizations on loc- to show the world that the
United Nations does not condone the “atrocities in Tibet.” Chinese Atrocities “We know who is commitmg these atrocities. We believe that you know, too. It is the People's Republic of China. Can you live with yourself and condone these atrocities?” the French representative asked the delegates.
The Tibet representative agreed with France.
“We have given the People's Republic of China the right to conduct our external affairs because we are not interested in them. But our internal affairs are our own. We ask you to condemn their actions and check aggression,” he pleaded.
The vote in favor of sending the commission was 57 to 10-Twelve nations abstained.
El Salvador was conspicuously missing during the vote taking because the delegates had
walked out earlier in the session after being refused the floor. They had asked to read a resolution which did not apply to the Tibet question, declared Mohinder Bedi, General Assembly president.
al problems.” he said.
Band Concert Set for Bovard
The annual spring concert of the SC Symphonic Band will be held tonight in Bovard Auditorium at
8:30.
William A. Schaefer, associate .professor of wind instruments, will direct the performance. Price of the concert is 50 cents for students and SI for adults.
The program will include compositions by Fill-more, Borodin, Frescobal-di, Holst, Piston, Berlioz, Prokoffieff, Williams, Crestón, Wagner, Schostako-vich and Smith.
Schaefer has arranged two of the pieces that will be presented.
Actual Speech
Secretary General George
Marquis's “Lives and Times of
Archy and Mehitabel.” The mus-
Young, from SC, said that Sir ic was written by George Klein-
Leslie would give the address to the delegation as he has before the actual UN representatives.
Sir Leslie has edited the influential Auckland morning paper, the New Zealand Herald and
singer and the words by Joe Darion.
Cast Credits
The program will be directed by Joan Tewksbury and Dennis Warren. It features Miss Tewk-
SIR LESLIE MUNRO
. . . key speaker
As Indian ambassador to the U.S. and Cuba, Chagla will conclude the four-da v ceremonies in which the delegates interpretin thp Shrine ed and then duplicated foreign tomorrow' at 8 policy of the country which they ! represented.
ALI CURRIN CHAGLA
. . . final address
Most of the UN agencies are In the MUN program and delegates are given the opportunity of serving on one or more councils and agencies.
With the final General Assembly of the conference, the MUN j tion to the UN.
represented his country in the esbury in the role of Mehitabel Security Council from 1954 to and Dave Ackles and Dick An-1955. derson as Archy and Ihe Light-
Hungary Probe ning Bug. Also in the cast are
Recently he has headed the Dick Burroughs and Ed Mastin Hungarian Investigation Com- as the narrator and Bill, mission which probed Russian The Dancing Cats include Kit-intervention in the Hungarian tv Farren, Ellen Elliott, Sheri revolution of 1956. Langer, Barbara Snyder, Charles
Chagla, giving the final Potkey. Bob Bihiller, and Dolor-speech, has held his present post | as Castillo.
since last November, and since | Singing Cats are Pat. Remick, India’s independence he has j Marilyn Kates, Miss Langer,
Graduates Will Find Jobs Plentiful
Starting Pay Better--Mrs. Watts
been Chief Justice of tiie High Court of Bombay.
In 1945, he visited the U.S. as a member of the Indian delega-
Barbara Corradini, and Ann de Rubertis.
Other vocalists and the instrumentalists will he from Ihe drama and music departments.
College seniors wiII find jobs from electronics to jet-age and plentiful after graduation in power fields.”
June says the director of SCs Vocational Placement Bureau.
Mrs. Florence B. Watt believes that starting pay will be better than last year and graduates will have a wide selection of positions to choose from.
“Students with technical or professional training can expect to start at $500 per month.
Others with general backgrounds should earn from $425 to $500.” she says.
‘Glamorous’ Jobs “Skilled mathematicians and accountants are especially in demand because of the increasing use of computing devices. Engineers and scientists will have little trouble finding good positions in a wide selection varying
to try it.”
A study has shown that 75 Mrs. Watt finds that many per cent of June's graduates expeople have set their sights on j press their choice of careers and
government positions. The fields that sound most glamorous are those connected with the space-age. These jobs provide careers with security, promotion, fringe benefits and opportunities to work with prominent scientists.
Good News Good news for the long downtrodden liberal arts major is also expressed by Mrs. Watt who says “He is being sought by big business for his general background and will become a better sales manager than the technician who may have been trained in narrow fields. Also, he is better equipped to go into business for himself if he cares
that four out of ten finally settle down and become occupationally adjusted in their choice. On the average it takes three job shifts before they become adjusted, however.
Dpgree. Rank Mrs. Watt points out that ‘more than SOO representatives from national and eastern corporations come to the campus to recruit material during the year. Among their first considerations today is the college degree and its rank.”
“Not since 1957 has the June graduate been >o fortunate in his prospects for the future,” she says.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 113, April 24, 1959 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 113, April 24, 1959. |
| Full text | Russia and France Battle on Tibet In Extraordinary Debate Session Southern California DAI LY TROJAN VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959 LAS VECAS TRIP Miss SC To DT Special Grace Edition By JOE JARES Daily Trojan Managing Editor The archives have been explored, the photo shop’s files have been combed and the minds of SC oldtimers have been culled, all to result in the History of Troy Edition of the Daily Trojan, scheduled to appear in 16-page form on Wednesday, May 13. Opera tine on the theorv that you can't tell a bock by its cover. but that you can SELL a book by its cover, the winner of the Miss University of Southern California Contest will have her lovely picture splashed on the first page. Her picture on 1he edition's front page will be the first and official announcement of the contest's winner. Las Vegas Prize In addition to having her picture adorn the History of Troy Edition's paee one. Miss SC will land the big prize, a fantastic four-dav stay at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Contest Chairman Sandy Q'iinn announced that the queen v i!] f>lco be hostess for Alumni Day May 16 and hostess for Snngfest that night. Any SC girl currently reigning as thp sweetheart or queen of anything, other lhan the Homecoming Queen, is eligible to compete for the Miss SC title, so that the winner will be a queen of queens. Panel Eliminates The first elimination will be made by a panel of judges taken from the alumni, administration and faculty. The second e’imination, the ono which will select the queen, will be held at Ihe Los Angeles Ad Club's mepting at the Stat'er-Hillon Hotel on Tuesday n;ght. May 5. Members of the Ad Club will do the voting for the winner. The winner's name will then b» keot a secret until the spp-ca] eition hits tne stands, at 25 cents per copy, on May 13. The edition is the project of the Daily Troian and Sigma Delia Chi, professional journalism fraternity which is footing the bill. Feature« von Ktein Smld Tt will feature the story of Chancellor Rufus P. von Klein-Smid. thp Howard Jones era and a history of SC's publications. The edit ion will a'so explore the changing face of SC and its physical development for the future. Such 1 hings as SC's fraternises. honor group« end annual hompconvng will be. written up. a’onsr with picture stories on some of SC's famous alumni. In addition, thp men who built SC: its presidents, dean*. ! nrolessors and benefactors will be discussed alone with the evolution of SC's curriculum as a w hole. SC Minister ToTalkSunday On God s Love Dr. Wilfred M. Buth, campus pastor for SC's Lutheran students. will consider the many areas of thought through which we attempt to understand God's grace and love in his sermon, "Too Little for too Many” at the worship service in Bovard Auditorium Sunday at 11 a.m. •‘Our understanding ard appreciation of the revelation of God's divine power are narrowed considerably and dulled by our insistence that God make His appeal to our ability to undo-stand in certain ways. These Ways Some of these ways, instead of casting reflections on the truth of Goc's love for us. actually reflect t he degree to which our spiritual vision has been enlarged; or. on the other hand, the extent to which it has been narrowed/’ says Dr. But i. “Our concept of what is impossible sometimes closes the door to the revelation of God's truth to us in our time. ’ he believes. Huge Meal In his discussion. Dr Buth will deal with an exposition of the f xperience of Jesus Christ in the feeding of the five thousand as j it is recorded in the beginning MUN Delegates Charge Threats To World Peace By JUDY ASHKENAZY Bitter blows arising out of a debate over the Tibet crisis were exchanged between Russian and French delegates last night in an Extraordinary Session of the MUN General Assembly. The assembly, called to determine whether a UN com- ' mission should Social Workers To Be Guests Ât Career Day FIERY FRENCHMAN—The French delegate pounds the table in emphasizing his country's stand against the USSR's interference of a motion made by the U.S. to investigate the Tibet situation. The motion was blocked by Ihe Russian delegate on two counts. He argued, "Since there is no such Daily Trojan Photo by Mike Robinson country as Tibet, how can the UN intervene? Since this place that dees not exist can have no representative here, I suggest that the UN invite a representative of the area in question, Red China." International Court of Justice Holds Decision on Debated Apartheid Issue Students representing 12 Southern California colleges will be guests of SC's School of Social Work today at the annual Social Work Career Day for undergraduate students. Guests will meet at the YVV-CA at 1:45 p.m. where the School of Social Work program will be described. Information about admission requirements I and procedures, scholarships and fellowships available to students and the various areas of interest for social work practice will be given. Day’s Program At 2 p.m. students from the School of Social Work will take the guests on a tour of the campus. A program, which will include the showing of the dramatic j documentary film ‘The Deep Well,” will be held at the YW-CA at 3 p.m. John Milner, associate professor of social work, will discuss the film w’hich portrays some of the current practices in dealing with children who need foster care. Work Plans I investigate the conflict between Communist China and Tibet, turned into a fire of controversy when Russia charged that French action in Algeria is endangering the peace of the world and she should therefore be expelled from membership in the UN. Requests Censure France countered the charge by declaring in an amendment that the General Assembly should censure the People's Republic of China for the “internal interference with and aggression in. Tibet, and order the People's Republic of China to cease such internal intereference and aggression.” “France is not a peace-loving nation. She should be condemned for her actions in Algeria,” the Russian delegate declared. Emotions Ignored France answered saying, “We are not playing the emotions. We are adhering to the critical situation of Tibet. The question of Algeria has nothing to do with Tibet.” The proposal to send an In-vestigating team into the troubled area was approved by the assembly after being presented by Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, the Philippines, the United Kingdom and the United States. They contended that the armed conflict which occurred in Tibet constitutes a threat to international peace and security. They suggested that the investigating commission be composed of Argentina. Canada, Ceylon. ! Ghana, Lebanon. Poland and Sweden and that this team study The Model United Nation's international court of justice yesterday debated the segregation issue in the Union of South Africa but the court of 14 judges withheld, for later publication, their decision on whether to condemn apartheid. The international court is part Croup to Hear Visiting Minister 'Thousands of young men and the conditions and report as soon of the MUN being held here segregation and urged the court have submitted to the jurisdic- women are choosing social work ' as adequate information it as- through Saturday. More than 1000 student delegates representing 82 United Nations countries are participating in the event. High school students from the Los Angeles School System attended the court session yesterday. Arabs Make Charge A charge was made by the to compel the Union to “live up tion of the court. to” the Doctrine. The mock dispute today was modeled after the actual court which convenes at the Hague in the Netherlands. The moot court considers only those disputes which have not been considered by the real court. Jurisdiction of the moot court is United Arab Republic that the limited to considering content- of the sixth chapter of St. John’s of the San Marino Community Union of South Africa refused to recognize the General Assem* Dr. Frederick Cropp, pastor iy’s right to investigate the pol- Gospel. Dr. Ruth has been at SC since 1056. He was pastor of the Lake-view American Lutheran Church in Madison, Wis.. and campus pastor to Lutheran students and executive director of the Luther Foundation at Ohio State University. Today s Weather SC will continue Sts warm weather today with a predicted high of 78 degrees scheduler! for this afternoon. The low last night was .53 degrees. Church, will speak at the Presbyterian center on Campus Sunday at 7 p.m. on “What Is the Bible?” “Dr. Cropp expects to meet many SC students and visit with his own San Marino people at the meeting.” said John Greene, president of the Presbyterian group and a member of Dr. Cropp's church. This meeting will be the last chance to make reservations for the Southern California area Annual Spring Banquet on May 2 in Riverside. The theme for icy of racial segregation in South Africa. The court discussed whether or not segregation had ever been a subject of consideration or interpretation as far as the United Nation’s Human Rights Bill was concerned. Both sides disagreed on this fundamental issue. CAR Tells Doctrine The UAR declared that the Doctrine of Human Rights “must be lived up to” and that the Union of South Africa was wrong in maintaining that segregation was solelv in its jurisdiction and not subject to inter- ious disputes or giving advisory opinions, and both nations must the banquet will deal with Re- pretation hv the General Assem-bellion. Fragments, Reformation hly. The UAR insisted that the and Integration. Archy and Co/ To Hit Boards Of SC Theater The West Coast premiere of the back-alley jazz opera “Archy a.id Mehitabel” will be presented in Stop Gap Theater May 1 at 8:30 p.m. The jazz opera will also be given May 2 at 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. and on May 3 at a matinee Cases heard in the court are selected from briefs drawn up by the various “nations” and submitted to tl^e registrar. The associate justices do research into the problems and the cases that come up for hearing. Each party nation, through an agent aided counsel, orally argues its case. The court's opinions are then published Other cases considered before the MUN's court this year include Iran vs. USSR to determine whether Iran can abrogate the Treaty of 1921 made with Russia and which Russia claims is still binding; and the United Arab Republic challenge of France on the issue of incorp-o.-ting the area of the former French mandate of Syria into the territory of Turkey. General Assembl yMeetinShrineHall To End MUN Conference Tomorrow The ninth Model United Nations will climax a four-day annual conference tomorrow' with the major General Assembly in Ihe Shrine Exposition Hall, pressed over bv Sir Leslie Munro. iy5i piesader.T of the UN General Assembly. After ibis morning’s conferences 800 delegates repie:-enting 80 t’N members will enjoy a “free time” vacation Unlay lrom their international duties to visit Disneyland. Knotts Berry Farm and movie studios. They will ihcn return to business tomorrow when they attend the full-dav General Assembly. Sir Leslie. New Zealand permanent delera’e to the UN and ambassador to the U.S.. will deliver a key address to the delegates representing colleges and universities of nine western states. The final address to the MUN delegations wiil be given by Indian Ambassador Mahomed Ali Ourrin Chagla at a banquet for represent at iv es Exposition Hall p.m. General Assembly should rule on performance and at 8:30 in the evening. Reservations for the program, co-sponsored by the ! National Collegiate Players and Phi Mu Alpha, music fraternity, are now available in the drama office for $2 and $2.50. Two Parts The evening’s entertainment, a study in modern jazz, is divided into two parts. The first section points out the various as- i pects of jazz that lead to opera, j dedicated to “giving students a Th* s^o"d portion of the pro-j , . . I gram will b the opera “Archy l background m solving the prob- Mehitabel;, lems of world politics. The opus is based on Don ; delegates will end the ninth ses sion of a conference which is Bavetta Receives Nutrition License Dr. Lucien A. Bavetta, head of the department of biochemistry ; and nutrition in the SC School of Dentistry, has been certified by the American-Board of ^Nu-j trition as a specialist in human 1 nutrition. A graduate of New York Uni- j versity, Dr. Bavetta holds two j degrees from SC and has been j on the faculty here since 1940. He is a former visiting research i scientist at the National Institute of Hclth in Bethesda. Md. because it offers rewards that j certained. f e w other professions can Representatives Speak match. The social worker can The assembly voted to allow choose his career in many areas both Tibet and Communist Chi-of interest such as work with na representatives* to speak on individual families, arranging the subject. Neither countries for adoptions and foster homes.” i are LN members, said Dean Malcolm Stinson of Communist China gained the the School of Social Work. floor after the Russian delegate “He can do work with psy- argued that Tibet is part of the chiatrists in hospitals and clin- People s Republic of China and ics, correctional and rehabilita- should therefore voice an opin-tive work in probation and pa- ion. role settings or work with civic France begged the delegates leaders and organizations on loc- to show the world that the United Nations does not condone the “atrocities in Tibet.” Chinese Atrocities “We know who is commitmg these atrocities. We believe that you know, too. It is the People's Republic of China. Can you live with yourself and condone these atrocities?” the French representative asked the delegates. The Tibet representative agreed with France. “We have given the People's Republic of China the right to conduct our external affairs because we are not interested in them. But our internal affairs are our own. We ask you to condemn their actions and check aggression,” he pleaded. The vote in favor of sending the commission was 57 to 10-Twelve nations abstained. El Salvador was conspicuously missing during the vote taking because the delegates had walked out earlier in the session after being refused the floor. They had asked to read a resolution which did not apply to the Tibet question, declared Mohinder Bedi, General Assembly president. al problems.” he said. Band Concert Set for Bovard The annual spring concert of the SC Symphonic Band will be held tonight in Bovard Auditorium at 8:30. William A. Schaefer, associate .professor of wind instruments, will direct the performance. Price of the concert is 50 cents for students and SI for adults. The program will include compositions by Fill-more, Borodin, Frescobal-di, Holst, Piston, Berlioz, Prokoffieff, Williams, Crestón, Wagner, Schostako-vich and Smith. Schaefer has arranged two of the pieces that will be presented. Actual Speech Secretary General George Marquis's “Lives and Times of Archy and Mehitabel.” The mus- Young, from SC, said that Sir ic was written by George Klein- Leslie would give the address to the delegation as he has before the actual UN representatives. Sir Leslie has edited the influential Auckland morning paper, the New Zealand Herald and singer and the words by Joe Darion. Cast Credits The program will be directed by Joan Tewksbury and Dennis Warren. It features Miss Tewk- SIR LESLIE MUNRO . . . key speaker As Indian ambassador to the U.S. and Cuba, Chagla will conclude the four-da v ceremonies in which the delegates interpretin thp Shrine ed and then duplicated foreign tomorrow' at 8 policy of the country which they ! represented. ALI CURRIN CHAGLA . . . final address Most of the UN agencies are In the MUN program and delegates are given the opportunity of serving on one or more councils and agencies. With the final General Assembly of the conference, the MUN j tion to the UN. represented his country in the esbury in the role of Mehitabel Security Council from 1954 to and Dave Ackles and Dick An-1955. derson as Archy and Ihe Light- Hungary Probe ning Bug. Also in the cast are Recently he has headed the Dick Burroughs and Ed Mastin Hungarian Investigation Com- as the narrator and Bill, mission which probed Russian The Dancing Cats include Kit-intervention in the Hungarian tv Farren, Ellen Elliott, Sheri revolution of 1956. Langer, Barbara Snyder, Charles Chagla, giving the final Potkey. Bob Bihiller, and Dolor-speech, has held his present post as Castillo. since last November, and since Singing Cats are Pat. Remick, India’s independence he has j Marilyn Kates, Miss Langer, Graduates Will Find Jobs Plentiful Starting Pay Better--Mrs. Watts been Chief Justice of tiie High Court of Bombay. In 1945, he visited the U.S. as a member of the Indian delega- Barbara Corradini, and Ann de Rubertis. Other vocalists and the instrumentalists will he from Ihe drama and music departments. College seniors wiII find jobs from electronics to jet-age and plentiful after graduation in power fields.” June says the director of SCs Vocational Placement Bureau. Mrs. Florence B. Watt believes that starting pay will be better than last year and graduates will have a wide selection of positions to choose from. “Students with technical or professional training can expect to start at $500 per month. Others with general backgrounds should earn from $425 to $500.” she says. ‘Glamorous’ Jobs “Skilled mathematicians and accountants are especially in demand because of the increasing use of computing devices. Engineers and scientists will have little trouble finding good positions in a wide selection varying to try it.” A study has shown that 75 Mrs. Watt finds that many per cent of June's graduates expeople have set their sights on j press their choice of careers and government positions. The fields that sound most glamorous are those connected with the space-age. These jobs provide careers with security, promotion, fringe benefits and opportunities to work with prominent scientists. Good News Good news for the long downtrodden liberal arts major is also expressed by Mrs. Watt who says “He is being sought by big business for his general background and will become a better sales manager than the technician who may have been trained in narrow fields. Also, he is better equipped to go into business for himself if he cares that four out of ten finally settle down and become occupationally adjusted in their choice. On the average it takes three job shifts before they become adjusted, however. Dpgree. Rank Mrs. Watt points out that ‘more than SOO representatives from national and eastern corporations come to the campus to recruit material during the year. Among their first considerations today is the college degree and its rank.” “Not since 1957 has the June graduate been >o fortunate in his prospects for the future,” she says. |
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