DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 85, March 09, 1959 |
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page two Southern
Mony Companies Hold
Job Interviews
DAILY
Câli-Fomiâ
trojan
PAGE THREE Student ‘Wedding Bells’ On Upward Trend '
VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 9, >959
NO. 35
Karabian, Thomson In Top Race
Edwards Captures Trojanality Sweepstakes
Competition Nets
$1385,ChestEnds With $4300 Total
By JUDY ASHKENAZY
A victorious Bob Edwards reigns today as Mr. Trojanality after a total of 8000 votes easily swept him into the Troy Chest honor on Friday.
Mr. Trojanality’s votes, worth $400.33, amounted to more than one third of the S1385.10 collected in the con-lest which officially ended the '
Troy Chest Drivp.
Following behind Varsity football center Eduards were Max Winer. Larry Lichty, Steve Kemp. Mike Chumo. Bill Sleig-erwalt. the McKeever twins. Don Buford. Mark Mandala and Wallv Karabian.
Prizes Listed
Edwards, a Sigma Chi. was sponsored by Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
As victor. Edwards will re-
proximately $4300. $700 short of the S3000 goal.
Pie Throw The pie-throwing contest, in which chocolate cream pies were auctioned off. and thrown in the faces of campus personalities, netted over §200 for the Chest.
Targets for the pie-throwing were Denny Kouri. Trojan Chest chairman: Jim Bylin. Daily Tro-
15 Trojans Open Battle for ASSC Senatorial Spots
Wally Karabian or Mike Thomson will be the next
ASSC president. This was the story as the deadline for
student body election petitions passed Friday with only
these two names being submitted.
Karabian is now serving as junior class president and
is a former Squire. Knight and ----------------------------
chairman of the Greater Uni- There are tvvo hopefuls for the
activities. Mrs. Flaherty will be versity committee. i D°n
. vvallerstein and Ron Goodgame
Thomson has been a member . , „ K1 . - . ,, ___
~ , . r ... . h«ve tiled tor the positions,
of Squires, chairman of High
Films of Movie Artist Flaherty To Be Shown
“The World of Robert Flaherty” will he discussed in a lec-I ture by Frances Flaherty, his j widow and former co-worker, in 229 FH tonight at 8 o'clock.
The program about the former Hollywood producer is sponsored by the department of cinema as a part of its 13th year
rene two $10 gift eemficates. jan ecjjtor. Scott Fitz Randolph, one from Silverwoods and one
from Phelps Terkel; a trophy from the Southern California Trophy Company; two tickets to ihe SC-UCLA game, donated by the SC Alumni Association: two dinners at Julies and a wallet from the Sigma Chi Alumni Association For their support, the women of Gamma Phi Beta will also receive a trophy.
Short of Goal In addition to Gamma Phi Beta, the sororities that supported the men in the contest included Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Delta Pi. Delta Gamma, Pi Beta Phi. Delta Gamma. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Alpha Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta. Alpha Chi
ASSC president; and senators-at-large Larrv Lichty, Barbara Myers and Trish Dwyer.
Buttons Sold
The gold immunization buttons sold at the beginning of the two-week drive, brought $1000 into the chest fund. Ending Wednesday, the classroom collections netted S1470. 8700 more than last year's collection.
Up to date, the faculty has pledged $100 toward a $2000 goal.
Income Sources
The classroom collections, fac-ultv and administration dona-
MR. TROJANALITY TROPHIES - Sharon Kelly, left, contest chairman, presents the awards to the triumphant winner. Bob Edwards, andJennese Thompson, president
Daily Trojan Phot'o by Carl Schneider of Gamma Phi Beta Sorority. The Gamma Phi's supported him in the contest. Edwards was an easy winner with a total vote of 8000 votes for the honor.
Civil Liberties Official To Lead Academic Freedoms Discussion
introduced by the department head. Professor Robert W. Wagner.
Show Films She will show portions of his
greatest films which include. “Moana,” "Louisiana S t or y,” “Nanook of the North,” and “Man of Aran.”
Often called “the father of documentary films,” Robert Flaherty began as an explorer of the far north and discovered the fascination of film when he carried a camera along on a trip w'ith the Eskimos. His sympathetic study of their ways of life made "Nanook” so famous that the Eskimo's death by starvation. two years later, made headline news all over the world.
Studied Tattoos
School - College Relations Day and is currently chairman of the Beer Investigation committee.
Candidates for ASSC vice president are Trish Dwyer and Lynn Husted. Miss Dwyer is currently a senator-at-large and is a former Spur and Amazon.
Miss Husted is vice president of the junior class and was the 1957 Homecoming queen.
Two Way Race A two wav race is also in the offing for ASSC secretary with
Independent Hopefuls
Independent men s representative will be chosen from among three candidates. Tony Mendez. Allen Well and Harold Fong will be fighting it out for the office.
The names of Cherylee Worden and Suzanne Blank have been submitted for independent womens representative.
In the race for school presidents. School of Engineering will have Bill von KleinSmid and Allen Widiss vieing for the top
Stevie Adams and Linda Thistle position. LAS has only one can-
opposing each other.
There will be 15 candidates running for the 9 open senatorial positions. Listed among the entrants are Gene Brooks, Marianne Arrington. Don Kelly. Earl
Later Flaherty studied tattoo Kelly. Harold Fong, Judy Fergu-
Academic freedom and student responsibility will be dis-Omega. Kappa Alpha Theta. and tions. the sale of immunization cussed today as the national exbuttons and the Mr. Trojanality ecutive director of the American contest represent the source of Civil Liberties Union reports on
the state of civil liberties in American universities at 2:30 p.m., 133 FH.
Delta Delta Delta. College Hall aso entered a candidate.
With the addition of Mr. Trojanality contributions, Troy Chest ended the drive wiih ap-
Faculty Wins Salary Raise
Outstanding research and leaching by members of the SC êustomarv" tolonâVhaffof’the a group whose prime form of ac-
income for the Trojan Chest fund drive.
The fund helps support the Red Cross. YWCA World University Service. Community Chest, the annual Christmas Show and the Living War Memorial Scholarship.
Unlike previous years, the Troy Chest fund will not give aid to Trov Camp. It had been
In order to present its views directly to the congressional and executive branches of the government, the ACLU maintains a full-time office in Washington. D.C. In California, the organization helps to support a lobbyist working in Sacramento
Patrick M. Malin will present under the direction of the
an analysis of the current campus scene as it affects student-teacher freedoms. He is being sponsored by ASSC Forum Committee.
Civil Libertarian
The civil libertarian is head of
faculty will be rewarded by an immediate merit salary increase, retrotctive to Mar^h 1.
President Dr. Norman H. Topping made the announcement 1o the faculty at the end of his first six months as SC's administration head.
A faculty club building also is being planned and construction will begin as soon as the site is ¡selected. Members of the Board of Trustees have given $175.000 toward the construction of the club which will be on campus. The grant was given for out-sianding service of the faculty.
Starting in Sept., children of faculty members will also get free tuition at SC and at more than 200 other private colleges and universities in the United States which belong to a tuition exchange plan Previously, children of fulltime SC professors have paid half-tu’tion at SC and full-tuition elsewhere.
fund to the camp.
Dean Lockley Gets$340,955
Dr. Lawrence C. Lockley, dean of the School of Commerce, has inherited S340,-955 from the estate of his father, Fred Lockley, who died last October at the age of 87.
Dr. Lockley’s father was a columnist for the Oregon Journal. A Portland probate court appraised the estate.
Dr. Lockley rccentlv re-sincd as dean of the School of Commerce after heading the schoc.' since 1951.
tion is to work for civil liberties in the courts. As a non-partisan group, the ACLU provides legal aid to any person or group whose liberties are being threatened.
In support of educational freedom. the ACLU defended the right of teachers to refuse to sing loyalty oaths.
Defends Rights The ACLU was organized in 1930 to defend the rights of free speech, press, assemblage and other civil rights, and to “take
Friends Committee on Legislation.
Public Education
Education of the general public and community leaders in civil liberties is carried out by Malin and the ACLU through the Open Forum and other publications, public meetings and institutes for specialized groups, including lawyers and teachers.
rituals in Samoa and the hard life of isolated fishermen on the Irish island of Aran. “Louisiana Story” examined the installation and operation of an oil derrick i with the camera, as seen through of all citizens and non-citizens 'be eyes of a Cajun boy in a residing in the United States. Louisiana bayou.
ACLU members work through Film historians say Flaherty their chapters by visiting their was the first great factual film-representatives, letter lobbying maker and he stands with two and mobilizing community sup- other American innovators, D. port around civil liberty issues. W. Griffith and Walt Disney, in Malin has been head executer the importance of his worldwide of ihe ACLU s:nce 1950. He influence, holds a BS degree in economics Santa Barbara Seminar
from the University of Penn- From August 8-16 the Flaher-
sylvania and an M.S. in economics from Columbia University.
Cadets, Debaters To Clash at Troy
ty Foundation Seminar will be held for the first time on the West Coast, at the University of California at Santa Barbara.
son. Ron Goodgame, Mark Millard, Joe Nida, Kay Stelten-kamp. Kent Richards. Don Wal-lerstein, Mardi Wulfestiet, Larry Young and Steve Young.
Class Presidents
The race for class president^ will be tight with 10 candidates running for three open positions. For sophomore class president Richard Martin, Hugh Helm and Mack Kerr will be vieing for the office.
Up for junior class president will be Kent Richards. Bill Stei-gerwalt and Larry Young.
Senior class president has four men running for the office. Included in the group are Dayle Barnes. Earl Kelly, Gordon Ors-born and Wayne Warga.
Dave Gaon. Sue Hartford and
At that time Mrs. Flaherty an^i Judy Cushner will be battling
lor sophomore class vice president.
One Candidate
There is only one candidate
group of invited filmmakers will studv the present state of
the non-fiction cinema with the
As part of their barnstorm- I collaboration of any film enthus-_ , , ing tour in which they visit j iasts or students who wish to
Southern California col- j enroll.________________________________
leges this week, three West >-> .....■—
Point Cadets will debate with! CTACC hAFPTQ
two SC speakers at 7 p.m. to- ^ * /\f"r fV\EE I O
morrow night in 129 FH. ......—■
The question “What principles There will be a mandatory j Jane Keil.
of European higher education meeting of the Daily Trojan AMS president has only one
could be profitably adopted in staff at noon today in the city candidate with Mike Loshin run-
made to administrators to correct civil liberties problems within their jurisdiction. If the administrators are successful, the necessity of legal action is eliminated.
Liberties Threatened
for junior class vice president as it s’tands now and that is Bobbie Furbass.
The same office in the senior class will he contested by Ann Cattern. Judy Ferguson and
Policies of the organization ¡ American colleges and universi- i room.
ning for the top spot while Ted
are against those indiscriminate ties?” will be the topic discussed All editors, reporters and Schmitt. Norm Brenner and
all legitimate action in futher- federal, state and local measures by the Cadets and SC’s debators. copyreaders are required to at- Bruce Norton will vie for the
ance of such purposes.” which threaten the civil liberties 1 Ted Jones and Jerri Corbin. 1 tend. vice presidency.
Malin stands behind a group that strives to provide an effective civil rights program for j the law of the land. It opposes both governmental and private censorship of movies, plays, books, newspapers, magazines, radio and television. It promotes fair procedures in court trials, congressional and administrative hearings.
Young Journalists See SC
Noted Physiologist To Give Annual Memorial Lectures
Dr Maurice B Visscher. head of the physiology department at the University of Minnesota since 1936, will deliver the annual Nathanson memorial lectures for SC's School of Medicine this week.
Dr. Visscher will speak on •‘The Genesis of Pulmonary Edema ’ tonight at R p.m. in thelxis Angeles County Medical Association Auditoruim. 1925 Wilshire Blvd.
Hr will leclute tomorrow at it a.m. in the main auditorium of the Los Angeles County General Hospital on “Action of Drugs on the Pulmonary Circulation.”
Final Lectures
His final lectures will be on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in 129 FH on “The Control of Small Veins," and’Friday on “Mechanisms in Lndoioxic Shock.'"
The Nathanson memorial lecture series w?s established in the SC School of Medicine several
MAURICE B. VISSCHER
... to deliver lectures
Dr. Morris Henry Nathanson, a
the SC Medical School for many years. He contributed greatly to knowledge of the effect of drugs 1 upon the heart and circulation.
Former Trojan Dr. Visscher was head of physiology and pharmacology at SC in 1929-31. lie was head of the physiology department at the | University of Illinois five years before joining the faculty at Minnesota. He is a graduate of Hope College and the University of Minnesota.
He is a former president of the American Physiological Society and the Council of International Organizations of Medical Sciences, a former vice president of the National Society for Medical Research and the American Heart Association and has been secretary general of the International Union of Physiological Sciences since 1953.
Dr. Visscher is a Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences and a member of the National
years ago bv friends of the late , member of the clinical faculty of j Academy of Sciences.
Junior Hi
Lauded For Work
Twenty-eight «ludents from Oildale Junior High School. Oil-dale, California, visited the Daily Tro.ian Friday afternoon as part of their reward for being the first junior high to publish a weekly community paper in the U.S.
The “Oildale News,” the town’s weekly newspaper was laken over completely by the seventh and eighth grade journalism students and resulled in complete student publication of its Feb. 18 issue.
The students started this pro*» ject last year and received the George H. Gallup Achievement Award from Quill and Scroll, the honorary journalism society, for journalism service beyond what is expected of students.
Accompanying the group was their advisor, C. R. Shuler, formel' president of the Nalional Association of Journalism Directors. Ile taught journalism at Oildale for 7 years and previously was at Bakersfield College. This year he is the official photo-(Continued on Page Z)
didate for each of its top positions. Sharon Milliam is running unopposed for president and Walt Judson is in the same spot for vice president.
* Commerce Rare
Bruce Stuart and Jock Karp will be in the race for Commerce president with Virginia Perry and JoAnne NootEair running for vice president.
Pharmacy presidency will go to Paul Applebaum w ho is running unopposed. For the \ic? president, both Carl Vitalie and Aubrey Swartz have both filed petitions for the positions.
In music. Mike Fink is the only candidate and International Relations has no one running for the president's post. But Jane Tunberg is running unopposed tor the vice presidency.
PA Nominees
The School of Public Administration has one candidate each for the two open positions. Don Bagnall has placed a petition for president and Cliff Lightfoot has done the same for vice president.
There have been no petitions submitted for president and vice president for the Schools of Education or International Relation. The offices of foreign students representative, graduate s t u -dents representative and veterans representative also have no candidates.
Petitions for these, offices will be available all of next week, with the deadline scheduled for next Friday.
The ballot deadline w ill be Tuesdav noon. All candidates who have submitted petitions for more than one voting senate seat must contact the election commissioner on or before Tuesday roon, by means of a letter signed by the candidate and given fr> the Student Activities Advisor. This letter must state the one office for which the candidate wishes his name to appear nn the ballot. Failure to contact th* election commissioner in this manner shall result in the candidates name being removed from the ballots.
AWARD WINNERS—A group of young journalists from Oildale Junior High School visited SC Friday as part of a reward for winning the George H. Gallup Achievement Award which is presented by Quill
and Scroll, honorary journalism society. Trie students are the first junior high school students in the nation to publish a weekly community paper without the help of professional journalists.
SC Instructor To Analyze ! Dickens Work
Charles Dicken s “A Tale of Two Cities” will be the featured work at today's noon reading when Dr. Burton Kurfh. assistant professor of English, speaks ; in 129 FH at 12:30.
First published in 1859. this j now-classic novel describes the : revolutionary days of 18th cen-' tury France. Adventure, romance, heroism and history all have their place among its pages as the tale of Paris and London unfolds about the three central characters.
In today's lecture. Dr. Kurth will review the story as he also , highlights the author's style and philosophy.
Charles Dickens, named by | “Encyclopedia Brittaniea” as the “most popular and greatest'' of | English novelists, was born in 1812 in the small English com-I munity of Landport.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 85, March 09, 1959 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 50, No. 85, March 09, 1959. |
| Full text | page two Southern Mony Companies Hold Job Interviews DAILY Câli-Fomiâ trojan PAGE THREE Student ‘Wedding Bells’ On Upward Trend ' VOL. L LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 9, >959 NO. 35 Karabian, Thomson In Top Race Edwards Captures Trojanality Sweepstakes Competition Nets $1385,ChestEnds With $4300 Total By JUDY ASHKENAZY A victorious Bob Edwards reigns today as Mr. Trojanality after a total of 8000 votes easily swept him into the Troy Chest honor on Friday. Mr. Trojanality’s votes, worth $400.33, amounted to more than one third of the S1385.10 collected in the con-lest which officially ended the ' Troy Chest Drivp. Following behind Varsity football center Eduards were Max Winer. Larry Lichty, Steve Kemp. Mike Chumo. Bill Sleig-erwalt. the McKeever twins. Don Buford. Mark Mandala and Wallv Karabian. Prizes Listed Edwards, a Sigma Chi. was sponsored by Gamma Phi Beta sorority. As victor. Edwards will re- proximately $4300. $700 short of the S3000 goal. Pie Throw The pie-throwing contest, in which chocolate cream pies were auctioned off. and thrown in the faces of campus personalities, netted over §200 for the Chest. Targets for the pie-throwing were Denny Kouri. Trojan Chest chairman: Jim Bylin. Daily Tro- 15 Trojans Open Battle for ASSC Senatorial Spots Wally Karabian or Mike Thomson will be the next ASSC president. This was the story as the deadline for student body election petitions passed Friday with only these two names being submitted. Karabian is now serving as junior class president and is a former Squire. Knight and ---------------------------- chairman of the Greater Uni- There are tvvo hopefuls for the activities. Mrs. Flaherty will be versity committee. i D°n . vvallerstein and Ron Goodgame Thomson has been a member . , „ K1 . - . ,, ___ ~ , . r ... . h«ve tiled tor the positions, of Squires, chairman of High Films of Movie Artist Flaherty To Be Shown “The World of Robert Flaherty” will he discussed in a lec-I ture by Frances Flaherty, his j widow and former co-worker, in 229 FH tonight at 8 o'clock. The program about the former Hollywood producer is sponsored by the department of cinema as a part of its 13th year rene two $10 gift eemficates. jan ecjjtor. Scott Fitz Randolph, one from Silverwoods and one from Phelps Terkel; a trophy from the Southern California Trophy Company; two tickets to ihe SC-UCLA game, donated by the SC Alumni Association: two dinners at Julies and a wallet from the Sigma Chi Alumni Association For their support, the women of Gamma Phi Beta will also receive a trophy. Short of Goal In addition to Gamma Phi Beta, the sororities that supported the men in the contest included Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Delta Pi. Delta Gamma, Pi Beta Phi. Delta Gamma. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Alpha Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta. Alpha Chi ASSC president; and senators-at-large Larrv Lichty, Barbara Myers and Trish Dwyer. Buttons Sold The gold immunization buttons sold at the beginning of the two-week drive, brought $1000 into the chest fund. Ending Wednesday, the classroom collections netted S1470. 8700 more than last year's collection. Up to date, the faculty has pledged $100 toward a $2000 goal. Income Sources The classroom collections, fac-ultv and administration dona- MR. TROJANALITY TROPHIES - Sharon Kelly, left, contest chairman, presents the awards to the triumphant winner. Bob Edwards, andJennese Thompson, president Daily Trojan Phot'o by Carl Schneider of Gamma Phi Beta Sorority. The Gamma Phi's supported him in the contest. Edwards was an easy winner with a total vote of 8000 votes for the honor. Civil Liberties Official To Lead Academic Freedoms Discussion introduced by the department head. Professor Robert W. Wagner. Show Films She will show portions of his greatest films which include. “Moana,” "Louisiana S t or y,” “Nanook of the North,” and “Man of Aran.” Often called “the father of documentary films,” Robert Flaherty began as an explorer of the far north and discovered the fascination of film when he carried a camera along on a trip w'ith the Eskimos. His sympathetic study of their ways of life made "Nanook” so famous that the Eskimo's death by starvation. two years later, made headline news all over the world. Studied Tattoos School - College Relations Day and is currently chairman of the Beer Investigation committee. Candidates for ASSC vice president are Trish Dwyer and Lynn Husted. Miss Dwyer is currently a senator-at-large and is a former Spur and Amazon. Miss Husted is vice president of the junior class and was the 1957 Homecoming queen. Two Way Race A two wav race is also in the offing for ASSC secretary with Independent Hopefuls Independent men s representative will be chosen from among three candidates. Tony Mendez. Allen Well and Harold Fong will be fighting it out for the office. The names of Cherylee Worden and Suzanne Blank have been submitted for independent womens representative. In the race for school presidents. School of Engineering will have Bill von KleinSmid and Allen Widiss vieing for the top Stevie Adams and Linda Thistle position. LAS has only one can- opposing each other. There will be 15 candidates running for the 9 open senatorial positions. Listed among the entrants are Gene Brooks, Marianne Arrington. Don Kelly. Earl Later Flaherty studied tattoo Kelly. Harold Fong, Judy Fergu- Academic freedom and student responsibility will be dis-Omega. Kappa Alpha Theta. and tions. the sale of immunization cussed today as the national exbuttons and the Mr. Trojanality ecutive director of the American contest represent the source of Civil Liberties Union reports on the state of civil liberties in American universities at 2:30 p.m., 133 FH. Delta Delta Delta. College Hall aso entered a candidate. With the addition of Mr. Trojanality contributions, Troy Chest ended the drive wiih ap- Faculty Wins Salary Raise Outstanding research and leaching by members of the SC êustomarv" tolonâVhaffof’the a group whose prime form of ac- income for the Trojan Chest fund drive. The fund helps support the Red Cross. YWCA World University Service. Community Chest, the annual Christmas Show and the Living War Memorial Scholarship. Unlike previous years, the Troy Chest fund will not give aid to Trov Camp. It had been In order to present its views directly to the congressional and executive branches of the government, the ACLU maintains a full-time office in Washington. D.C. In California, the organization helps to support a lobbyist working in Sacramento Patrick M. Malin will present under the direction of the an analysis of the current campus scene as it affects student-teacher freedoms. He is being sponsored by ASSC Forum Committee. Civil Libertarian The civil libertarian is head of faculty will be rewarded by an immediate merit salary increase, retrotctive to Mar^h 1. President Dr. Norman H. Topping made the announcement 1o the faculty at the end of his first six months as SC's administration head. A faculty club building also is being planned and construction will begin as soon as the site is ¡selected. Members of the Board of Trustees have given $175.000 toward the construction of the club which will be on campus. The grant was given for out-sianding service of the faculty. Starting in Sept., children of faculty members will also get free tuition at SC and at more than 200 other private colleges and universities in the United States which belong to a tuition exchange plan Previously, children of fulltime SC professors have paid half-tu’tion at SC and full-tuition elsewhere. fund to the camp. Dean Lockley Gets$340,955 Dr. Lawrence C. Lockley, dean of the School of Commerce, has inherited S340,-955 from the estate of his father, Fred Lockley, who died last October at the age of 87. Dr. Lockley’s father was a columnist for the Oregon Journal. A Portland probate court appraised the estate. Dr. Lockley rccentlv re-sincd as dean of the School of Commerce after heading the schoc.' since 1951. tion is to work for civil liberties in the courts. As a non-partisan group, the ACLU provides legal aid to any person or group whose liberties are being threatened. In support of educational freedom. the ACLU defended the right of teachers to refuse to sing loyalty oaths. Defends Rights The ACLU was organized in 1930 to defend the rights of free speech, press, assemblage and other civil rights, and to “take Friends Committee on Legislation. Public Education Education of the general public and community leaders in civil liberties is carried out by Malin and the ACLU through the Open Forum and other publications, public meetings and institutes for specialized groups, including lawyers and teachers. rituals in Samoa and the hard life of isolated fishermen on the Irish island of Aran. “Louisiana Story” examined the installation and operation of an oil derrick i with the camera, as seen through of all citizens and non-citizens 'be eyes of a Cajun boy in a residing in the United States. Louisiana bayou. ACLU members work through Film historians say Flaherty their chapters by visiting their was the first great factual film-representatives, letter lobbying maker and he stands with two and mobilizing community sup- other American innovators, D. port around civil liberty issues. W. Griffith and Walt Disney, in Malin has been head executer the importance of his worldwide of ihe ACLU s:nce 1950. He influence, holds a BS degree in economics Santa Barbara Seminar from the University of Penn- From August 8-16 the Flaher- sylvania and an M.S. in economics from Columbia University. Cadets, Debaters To Clash at Troy ty Foundation Seminar will be held for the first time on the West Coast, at the University of California at Santa Barbara. son. Ron Goodgame, Mark Millard, Joe Nida, Kay Stelten-kamp. Kent Richards. Don Wal-lerstein, Mardi Wulfestiet, Larry Young and Steve Young. Class Presidents The race for class president^ will be tight with 10 candidates running for three open positions. For sophomore class president Richard Martin, Hugh Helm and Mack Kerr will be vieing for the office. Up for junior class president will be Kent Richards. Bill Stei-gerwalt and Larry Young. Senior class president has four men running for the office. Included in the group are Dayle Barnes. Earl Kelly, Gordon Ors-born and Wayne Warga. Dave Gaon. Sue Hartford and At that time Mrs. Flaherty an^i Judy Cushner will be battling lor sophomore class vice president. One Candidate There is only one candidate group of invited filmmakers will studv the present state of the non-fiction cinema with the As part of their barnstorm- I collaboration of any film enthus-_ , , ing tour in which they visit j iasts or students who wish to Southern California col- j enroll.________________________________ leges this week, three West >-> .....■— Point Cadets will debate with! CTACC hAFPTQ two SC speakers at 7 p.m. to- ^ * /\f"r fV\EE I O morrow night in 129 FH. ......—■ The question “What principles There will be a mandatory j Jane Keil. of European higher education meeting of the Daily Trojan AMS president has only one could be profitably adopted in staff at noon today in the city candidate with Mike Loshin run- made to administrators to correct civil liberties problems within their jurisdiction. If the administrators are successful, the necessity of legal action is eliminated. Liberties Threatened for junior class vice president as it s’tands now and that is Bobbie Furbass. The same office in the senior class will he contested by Ann Cattern. Judy Ferguson and Policies of the organization ¡ American colleges and universi- i room. ning for the top spot while Ted are against those indiscriminate ties?” will be the topic discussed All editors, reporters and Schmitt. Norm Brenner and all legitimate action in futher- federal, state and local measures by the Cadets and SC’s debators. copyreaders are required to at- Bruce Norton will vie for the ance of such purposes.” which threaten the civil liberties 1 Ted Jones and Jerri Corbin. 1 tend. vice presidency. Malin stands behind a group that strives to provide an effective civil rights program for j the law of the land. It opposes both governmental and private censorship of movies, plays, books, newspapers, magazines, radio and television. It promotes fair procedures in court trials, congressional and administrative hearings. Young Journalists See SC Noted Physiologist To Give Annual Memorial Lectures Dr Maurice B Visscher. head of the physiology department at the University of Minnesota since 1936, will deliver the annual Nathanson memorial lectures for SC's School of Medicine this week. Dr. Visscher will speak on •‘The Genesis of Pulmonary Edema ’ tonight at R p.m. in thelxis Angeles County Medical Association Auditoruim. 1925 Wilshire Blvd. Hr will leclute tomorrow at it a.m. in the main auditorium of the Los Angeles County General Hospital on “Action of Drugs on the Pulmonary Circulation.” Final Lectures His final lectures will be on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in 129 FH on “The Control of Small Veins" and’Friday on “Mechanisms in Lndoioxic Shock.'" The Nathanson memorial lecture series w?s established in the SC School of Medicine several MAURICE B. VISSCHER ... to deliver lectures Dr. Morris Henry Nathanson, a the SC Medical School for many years. He contributed greatly to knowledge of the effect of drugs 1 upon the heart and circulation. Former Trojan Dr. Visscher was head of physiology and pharmacology at SC in 1929-31. lie was head of the physiology department at the University of Illinois five years before joining the faculty at Minnesota. He is a graduate of Hope College and the University of Minnesota. He is a former president of the American Physiological Society and the Council of International Organizations of Medical Sciences, a former vice president of the National Society for Medical Research and the American Heart Association and has been secretary general of the International Union of Physiological Sciences since 1953. Dr. Visscher is a Fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences and a member of the National years ago bv friends of the late , member of the clinical faculty of j Academy of Sciences. Junior Hi Lauded For Work Twenty-eight «ludents from Oildale Junior High School. Oil-dale, California, visited the Daily Tro.ian Friday afternoon as part of their reward for being the first junior high to publish a weekly community paper in the U.S. The “Oildale News,” the town’s weekly newspaper was laken over completely by the seventh and eighth grade journalism students and resulled in complete student publication of its Feb. 18 issue. The students started this pro*» ject last year and received the George H. Gallup Achievement Award from Quill and Scroll, the honorary journalism society, for journalism service beyond what is expected of students. Accompanying the group was their advisor, C. R. Shuler, formel' president of the Nalional Association of Journalism Directors. Ile taught journalism at Oildale for 7 years and previously was at Bakersfield College. This year he is the official photo-(Continued on Page Z) didate for each of its top positions. Sharon Milliam is running unopposed for president and Walt Judson is in the same spot for vice president. * Commerce Rare Bruce Stuart and Jock Karp will be in the race for Commerce president with Virginia Perry and JoAnne NootEair running for vice president. Pharmacy presidency will go to Paul Applebaum w ho is running unopposed. For the \ic? president, both Carl Vitalie and Aubrey Swartz have both filed petitions for the positions. In music. Mike Fink is the only candidate and International Relations has no one running for the president's post. But Jane Tunberg is running unopposed tor the vice presidency. PA Nominees The School of Public Administration has one candidate each for the two open positions. Don Bagnall has placed a petition for president and Cliff Lightfoot has done the same for vice president. There have been no petitions submitted for president and vice president for the Schools of Education or International Relation. The offices of foreign students representative, graduate s t u -dents representative and veterans representative also have no candidates. Petitions for these, offices will be available all of next week, with the deadline scheduled for next Friday. The ballot deadline w ill be Tuesdav noon. All candidates who have submitted petitions for more than one voting senate seat must contact the election commissioner on or before Tuesday roon, by means of a letter signed by the candidate and given fr> the Student Activities Advisor. This letter must state the one office for which the candidate wishes his name to appear nn the ballot. Failure to contact th* election commissioner in this manner shall result in the candidates name being removed from the ballots. AWARD WINNERS—A group of young journalists from Oildale Junior High School visited SC Friday as part of a reward for winning the George H. Gallup Achievement Award which is presented by Quill and Scroll, honorary journalism society. Trie students are the first junior high school students in the nation to publish a weekly community paper without the help of professional journalists. SC Instructor To Analyze ! Dickens Work Charles Dicken s “A Tale of Two Cities” will be the featured work at today's noon reading when Dr. Burton Kurfh. assistant professor of English, speaks ; in 129 FH at 12:30. First published in 1859. this j now-classic novel describes the : revolutionary days of 18th cen-' tury France. Adventure, romance, heroism and history all have their place among its pages as the tale of Paris and London unfolds about the three central characters. In today's lecture. Dr. Kurth will review the story as he also , highlights the author's style and philosophy. Charles Dickens, named by “Encyclopedia Brittaniea” as the “most popular and greatest'' of English novelists, was born in 1812 in the small English com-I munity of Landport. |
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