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PAGE THREE:
Student Probes Disappearance of Love
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
PAGE FOUR:
Trojan Cagers Need Replacement for Young
Vol. XVI
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1965
No. 79
AMS Cites
Dr. Brown I
(Editor’s Note: This is another in a series of articles written by members of the Associated Men Students to help establish more of a rapport between students and faculty.)
By KEITH BROWN Students who have taken organic chemistry from Dr. Ronald F. Brown will remember the difficult quizzes he gave. Few people realize, however, that he possesses an extensive list of credits.
Dr. Brown studied and graduated from the Uni-versity of Maryland, receiv-
Building May De!ay Car Traffic
ing a B. S. in 1932.
He then worked for four years while attending George Washington University at night. In 1936. he entered How’ard University and completed his graduate work, re-ceiving his Ph. D. in 1939.
From the fall of 1940 to January of 1942, he was an instructor at Purdue University.
Caltech Leave
In February, 1942. he came to USC as an assistant professor. Except for a one-year sabbatical leave to Caltech, Dr. Brown has been teaching here since then.
When asked about these
Construction on Exposition Boulevard at Vermont Boule-( vard will restrict intersection j traffic to one lane in each di-' rection beginning today. Con-i struction will last about 60 days.
Traffic Rerouted
The work will not directly I affect LSC parking because past 93 years. Dr. Brown says entrances to student lots will js most impressed by the remain open, but it may delay jchanges in the USC student, students entering the campus He fee]s the typical USC stu-from the west. dent today is better prepared
A Board of Public Works for university instruction spokesman said traffic in than was the typical student both directions would be re- 0f 20 vears ago. routed in the west side of He also believes that the Vermont at Exposition. curriculum demands more of
Students are now delayed today’s student. Therefore, because of construction on they have to have Exposition Boulevard in the secondary education, vicinity of USC. Dr. Brown still feels that
The board spokesman also the average student of today said action at the Vermont- j is having just as hard a time E x p 0 s i t i on intersection is as the war years’ students necessary to expedite con- had.
World War II
He says students of six to seven years ago feel the samel
Open Forum Guest
Lauds Doheny Staf
f
Library
Facilities
Attacked
WOMAN UNASHAMED—Dr. Paul Engle, who spoke on poetry yesterday, holds copy of his collection, inspired by an acquaintance with a Japanese woman.
Deans Discover Pressures Crow
Pressures on university administrators are sharp-a better! ening as older institutions seek to upgrade their quality, Dr. John Goul, associate professor of management, told the 20th National Conference on Higher Education yesterday.
DR.TZE CHEN
. . . Biology Professor
Will Edit
3 Volumes
struction on the Exposition project.
Improve Street
It costs about $700,000, and as pre-World War II students, is being carried out by the The same feelings of hope-city, to improve the street lessness, indecision and fear from Figueroa to Gramercy concerning the A- and H-Place. bombs inherent in college stu-
The construction will widen dents today were also present and refinish the street and 25 years ago when students
New Species Of Fish Discovered
Speaking in Chicago, he indicated knowledge is accumulating more rapidly in more fields and in greater volume than ever before.
Conventional concepts and organizations also concern faculty members, deans and department heads, he said.
He suggested that these pressures are complicated by a root of discontent among
Fish never before seen by
man are now being studied
, . 1 , and classified by the Depart- fomltv and students
raise the railroad tracks that worried about the impending ment Qf Biol ical Sciences.
now run down Exposition. 1 world war.
They don’t know the stand-
Classical Greek Plays
Most of the new marine ar(js they are to use in evalu-jspecimens. collected aboard ating a professor’s perform-the ship Eltanin, were taken ance he said.
I from the four-mile-deep Peru- Sma„ Sch()ols
T Cl L D "T8 J ShlIe T™Ch u A6 He noted that in new,
To Start Run Thursday-
“Oedipus Rex” and “Lysis- liam C White, production co- ^/^^ wa^^t|than the dePartment chair’
trata, two classical Greek ordinator, said. __, f .. jmen.
, „ rru j the warm currents of the sub-; , , ,
plays, will open Thursday at He described Aristophanes' tropical regions ! Thus' there 1S less help
8:30 p.m. in Bovard Auditor- “Lysistrata” as a satiric pro- c, " . for new faculty members, as
r \ ow SnnPiPC .. _ . .
I they go from young lecturers
Iowa Writer Tells Of Recent Poetry
Poetry can find a place in modern society, Paul Engle said yesterday in an English Department lecture.
Engle, director of the University of Iowa’s program in creative writing, spoke on “Poetry and People.’”
“One might argue that poe- .
try belonged in the reign of in£’ anc* out f dialogue
Queen Elizabeth I,” he said, comes the poem, he ex-“But does it have a place in plained.
the reign of Queen Elizabeth Beatniks call a poet the tj 9»» man who puts spontaneity on
Fnele said there are eerjPaPer- However’ this sPonta-. -J ! tU u f < f neity is good only under con-
tain truths about poetry tha ■ ot|,«nvise it is onl an
are evident to the poet, but where j( h
not to the philosopher. |
“Poetry is more true than; He called poetrv a demand- A7\_ tnith. It must always try toj ing art> demanding of th ft//, / ZG L//C/7 find the intense truth and say pGet—not only his heart, but it in s u c h intense language ^jg whGle being and more, that it celebrates the delight Kngfle read selections from or the despair of life, he nevv collection of poems, said. “A Women Unashamed.”
Engle also described his They were inspired by an ac-view of writing poetry as a quaintance with a Japanese flight from personality, not woman.
an expression of it. Her limited English pro- . . ...
Thus, poetry cannot simply duced simple phrases that Pressor, is currently,editing be written from the emotions, took on tremendous symbolic a vo ume wor • 0 ozoa but must include labor, he significance. Engle said, said. “Wrhen she spoke, I could
“The left hand and the realize miles of dread in her ly published 13 papers and 54 unjVersity because it is th
drawings by Dr. Chen. After only part used by all stu_
reading the article Pergamon dents, was three per cent less Press in England selectedjthis year than iast.
him to help edit the book. j “And last year it was at The authority on protozo- the median point for all bud-ans will be working with sev- gets of college and university eral other professors from libraries in North America,” universities across the coun- he asserted, try. He said that an adequate
C’heno/oa Namesake library in 1932 is now no Dr. Chen had a protozoan good. The administration named after him. the Chen- seemingly fails to see that ozoa, after many years of re- 1 i b r a r y expansion plans search. should be paramount in any
He graduated from Fukien drive for educational excel-Christian University, Oberlin lenee.
College and the University of He stated that to have a sist of a resident honors pro- takes one other lower divi- Pennsylvania, and did re- library comparable to Harv-gram, Paul Hadley, dean of sion course and may earn search work at Yale Univer- ard University’s USC would the summer session, an- eight units of credit. sity and Johns Hopkins Uni- have to spend double what it
nounced yesterday. Live on Campus versity. does now for 10 years while
The resident honors pro- Because of the intensive na- After lecturing at UCLA harvard spent nothing, gram for high school seniors ture of the program, dormi- for six years he was selected “The current budget would permits students who have tory residence is required. by the Chinese government to have to be increased to mere-completed their junior year in High school students in the join its Academy of Sciences, ly rate the title of inade-high school to enter the uni- newspaper workshop will He instituted a program in bi- quate’,’ he said, versity. They will take a year study publication problems in ology and trained skilled tech- Wasted Space
Doheny Library was condemned. but its staff was defended at Counterpoint USC Sunday.
Mike Halleran. junior in history, called it a near miracle that the staff works as well as it does under present conditions, and suggest-:ed that it be pitied rather jthan censured.
Counterpoint USC is a ! weekly open forum for discussions, where students comment on the university, national or international scene. It is sponsored by five campus Protestant groups.
Halleran. speaking on “The Mausoleum on the Mall,” said the administration must take _ _ most of the blame for library
D/; Tze Tuan Ch^; “ology inadequacies.
Library Budget
D. , , 0 , „ “The budget for the
in Biological Research. ... _ , . , , ,, , ..
library, %’hich should be the
A German magazine recenj.- most important part of the
right hand are always argu- life.”
Five Workshops
Will Be Offered
Workshops in journalism, recommended to the director music, speech, telecommuni- of admissions for admission cations and humanities will to freshman standing in the be offered to high schol stu- College of Letters, Arts and dents this year as part of Sciences.
USC’s summer session pro- An honors symposium in gram. humanities is the core of the
The program will also con- program. The student also
„lrv, 1, , . , New Species
lum- test against war. , , ,,
They will run for two con- “Aristophanes mocked ev- , e re®farc ers c ° to responsible teachers
secutive weekends. ery aspect of life in Athens! 1 1S, msf s ° 0 ° .. ° scholars, he added.
. 1 • . .. j. „ T u t>i 1 1.500 miles from the contm-i
Tickets are now on sale in in his comedies , John Blank- ( A fear of mediocrity in
the Drama Office, 3708 Hoov- enchip, director for the plays, . : education is causing even the
er St. said. “He poked fun at war, ^ew species of lantern fish,j jea<jers 0f America's most re-
They cost S2 for weekdays politics and Athenian society Spoilt, smoothtongue smelt Spected institutions to con-
and
and $2.50 for weekends. Stu- in general.” ana sucKneaa nave mus Iarjsider more deeply the ques-
der.ts with activity books get Dick Pribor, former music *ieen identified by research- ^on qua.lity. Dr. Gould a SI discount. arranger for Marge and Gow-ers* 'said.
“Oedipus Rex" will be stag- er Champion, composed 16 John R. Paxton, 27-year-old Conclusion
ed in the classical style, using songs for “Lysistrata.” graduate in biology, is now ‘Although students have
an orchestra with the a tar in Kitty Farren, a Drama De- studying seven small speci- not qUjte reached the conclu-the center. partment graduate, adapted mens of a rare family of fish- i sjon that the facultv member
“Still the classical model the lyrics for the plays. es. He believes some of the; js more a servant than a sav-
for dramatic unity, Sophocles' Extensive research into au- specimens are new species. ;ant; they now no longer stand tragedy remains a p 0 e t i c thentic Greek hairdos, sandal- He identified the specimens jn awe him,” he said.
idea development, copyread- nicians. Commenting on wasted Ii-
ing, make-up and advertis-; Taught Biology brary space, Halleran said,
ing. One year later he returned ‘‘Doheny is a beautiful ex-
Students will also report to teach biology at Minnesota ample of monumental archi-for the “Summer Trojan,” state Teachers College. tecture totally inadequate for hear guest lecturers and take jn 1949 j)r> chen became its purpose.”
Nominations for participa- field trips. . an associate professor of bi- The waste of space is clear-
tion in the resident honors The class is limited to 20 ology at USC, and was made ly evident, and is made worse program must be made by the students and the workshop a fuji professor in 1951. at Doheny because the li-
of college studies including those necessary for the completion of requirements for graduation from their respective high schools.
Need Nominations
principal or a counselor of the student’s high school. They must also be approved by the superintendent of the school district. Direct applications from students cannot be accepted.
Nominated students will be interviewed by university of-
masterpiece in an era domin- making and costuming is be-jas belonging to the family of ated by the avant-garde and ing done to achieve historical the whale fish, characterized ‘Theatre of the Absurd,’ Wil- perfection. (Continued on Page 2)
The trend is toward a larg-(Continued on Page 2)
costs S75. Dr. Chen became a consul- brary must accommodate
The School of Journalism ^ant to the Atomic Energy more books than it was dewill also offer yearbookiCommission's Argonne Na- signed for. he said, workshop starting July 12. It tional Laboratory in 1955. Halleran reasoned that will cover all aspects of the He has also done research this lack of space, and repreparation and publication on paramecin. a liquid se- suiting over-stacking in the of school annuals through|creted by microscopic ani- stacks, accounts for many analysis of recent yearbooks. mais. a posible cure for “not on shelf” notices and the The School of Music will cancer. majority of long waits,
ficers and asked to undergo offer a junior symphony or- During 1962-63 he was a “Incidentally, I understand additional testing. Those sel- chestra to advanced instru- Fulbright grantee in Taiwan Judge Crater really isn’t mis-ected for the program will be (Continued on Page 2) where he lectured at many sing, he's just waiting in Do-
universities and continued his heny for his book to come
RECORDS RESPONSES
Teaching Machine Has Memory of Its Own
A teaching machine, which has a memory of its own, will have taught 1,200 eighth grade students by the end of the summer.
The machine, assembled by USC’s Cinema Research Division, records the responses of its students for computer analysis.
Audio-Visual Grant
The U.S. Office of Educa-| tion awarded a $175,000 grant, to USC last year to study the Various audio and visual modes of presenting pro-1 grammed information. The machine was made in July] to aid the “Programmed Instruction” project.
The project is a cooperative research effort between the U.S. Office of Education and the Cinema Research Division.
Visual modes for presenting j
)
information include printed matter, still pictures and motion pictures. Audio modes employ various types of sound. Using these in different combinations and with a variety of subject matter, 54 versions of the same lesson have been produced.
The machine is housed in a 50-foot trailer, which will be moved from school district to school district as the program progresses. It is equipped with six separate teaching stations, each teaching in a different manner.
The machine works as follows.
First, the student writes his name on a piece of paper in front of him. Then he reads the instructions on a screen. The questions are shown on a screen by one or more slide projectors or motion picture
projectors in the back of the trailer.
When he finishes reading the instructions, he pushes the “advance” button. This gives him the questions to answers.
Two forms of programming are incorporated into the machine. In the linear method the student is simply told the correct answer. In the branching method if the student chooses incorrectly he is told why he is wrong. The machine finds an appropriate sequence to show him the nature of his error.
Cinema Supervision
This project is under the supervision of Dr. William II. Allen, head of the Cinema Research Division and principal investigator for the project. Robert T. Filep is associate investigator.
research.
back,” he said.
TEACHING MACHINE—C inema Prof. which wil William Allen (at left) and research students engineer Art Phelps look over device computer
have taught 1,200 junior high by the end of summer. The has a m e m o ry of its own.
4
Religion Student Wins Fellowship
Gordon Donald Fee, Ph. D. for the “Journal of Biblical candidate in the Graduate Literature" and “Novum j School of Religion, has been Testamentum" on papyrus awarded the Rockefeller Doc- that was recently dug up in toral Fellowship in Religion. Egypt.
Fee, the first USC student These articles will form a I to receive the award, has been basis for his doctoral thesis given $3,400 to help him com- on a textual criticism of the plete his studies without in- New Testament, terruption. He plans to teach the New
“This award will enable my Testament at the underwife to stay home with our graduate level, four children and enable me Western Schools
’to go to school full-time,” he Only four Western institu-said. tions have received the
Fee graduated magna cum award. Harvard and Yale laude in 1956 from Seattle nominees have received most Pacific College where he also of the fellowships, received an M. A. degree. The selection committee
Seattle Parish consider doctoral candidates
He came to USC in Sep- who have completed at least tem her. 1962, after being a one school year of doctoral pastor in a parish in subur- study. They prefer students ban Seattle. whose dissertation topic is
Fee is studying the New fixed and whose mastery of Testament. the required languages is
He has written two articles satisfactory.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 79, March 09, 1965 |
| Full text |
PAGE THREE: Student Probes Disappearance of Love University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN PAGE FOUR: Trojan Cagers Need Replacement for Young Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1965 No. 79 AMS Cites Dr. Brown I (Editor’s Note: This is another in a series of articles written by members of the Associated Men Students to help establish more of a rapport between students and faculty.) By KEITH BROWN Students who have taken organic chemistry from Dr. Ronald F. Brown will remember the difficult quizzes he gave. Few people realize, however, that he possesses an extensive list of credits. Dr. Brown studied and graduated from the Uni-versity of Maryland, receiv- Building May De!ay Car Traffic ing a B. S. in 1932. He then worked for four years while attending George Washington University at night. In 1936. he entered How’ard University and completed his graduate work, re-ceiving his Ph. D. in 1939. From the fall of 1940 to January of 1942, he was an instructor at Purdue University. Caltech Leave In February, 1942. he came to USC as an assistant professor. Except for a one-year sabbatical leave to Caltech, Dr. Brown has been teaching here since then. When asked about these Construction on Exposition Boulevard at Vermont Boule-( vard will restrict intersection j traffic to one lane in each di-' rection beginning today. Con-i struction will last about 60 days. Traffic Rerouted The work will not directly I affect LSC parking because past 93 years. Dr. Brown says entrances to student lots will js most impressed by the remain open, but it may delay jchanges in the USC student, students entering the campus He fee]s the typical USC stu-from the west. dent today is better prepared A Board of Public Works for university instruction spokesman said traffic in than was the typical student both directions would be re- 0f 20 vears ago. routed in the west side of He also believes that the Vermont at Exposition. curriculum demands more of Students are now delayed today’s student. Therefore, because of construction on they have to have Exposition Boulevard in the secondary education, vicinity of USC. Dr. Brown still feels that The board spokesman also the average student of today said action at the Vermont- j is having just as hard a time E x p 0 s i t i on intersection is as the war years’ students necessary to expedite con- had. World War II He says students of six to seven years ago feel the samel Open Forum Guest Lauds Doheny Staf f Library Facilities Attacked WOMAN UNASHAMED—Dr. Paul Engle, who spoke on poetry yesterday, holds copy of his collection, inspired by an acquaintance with a Japanese woman. Deans Discover Pressures Crow Pressures on university administrators are sharp-a better! ening as older institutions seek to upgrade their quality, Dr. John Goul, associate professor of management, told the 20th National Conference on Higher Education yesterday. DR.TZE CHEN . . . Biology Professor Will Edit 3 Volumes struction on the Exposition project. Improve Street It costs about $700,000, and as pre-World War II students, is being carried out by the The same feelings of hope-city, to improve the street lessness, indecision and fear from Figueroa to Gramercy concerning the A- and H-Place. bombs inherent in college stu- The construction will widen dents today were also present and refinish the street and 25 years ago when students New Species Of Fish Discovered Speaking in Chicago, he indicated knowledge is accumulating more rapidly in more fields and in greater volume than ever before. Conventional concepts and organizations also concern faculty members, deans and department heads, he said. He suggested that these pressures are complicated by a root of discontent among Fish never before seen by man are now being studied , . 1 , and classified by the Depart- fomltv and students raise the railroad tracks that worried about the impending ment Qf Biol ical Sciences. now run down Exposition. 1 world war. They don’t know the stand- Classical Greek Plays Most of the new marine ar(js they are to use in evalu-jspecimens. collected aboard ating a professor’s perform-the ship Eltanin, were taken ance he said. I from the four-mile-deep Peru- Sma„ Sch()ols T Cl L D "T8 J ShlIe T™Ch u A6 He noted that in new, To Start Run Thursday- “Oedipus Rex” and “Lysis- liam C White, production co- ^/^^ wa^^t than the dePartment chair’ trata, two classical Greek ordinator, said. __, f .. jmen. , „ rru j the warm currents of the sub-; , , , plays, will open Thursday at He described Aristophanes' tropical regions ! Thus' there 1S less help 8:30 p.m. in Bovard Auditor- “Lysistrata” as a satiric pro- c, " . for new faculty members, as r \ ow SnnPiPC .. _ . . I they go from young lecturers Iowa Writer Tells Of Recent Poetry Poetry can find a place in modern society, Paul Engle said yesterday in an English Department lecture. Engle, director of the University of Iowa’s program in creative writing, spoke on “Poetry and People.’” “One might argue that poe- . try belonged in the reign of in£’ anc* out f dialogue Queen Elizabeth I,” he said, comes the poem, he ex-“But does it have a place in plained. the reign of Queen Elizabeth Beatniks call a poet the tj 9»» man who puts spontaneity on Fnele said there are eerjPaPer- However’ this sPonta-. -J ! tU u f < f neity is good only under con- tain truths about poetry tha ■ ot ,«nvise it is onl an are evident to the poet, but where j( h not to the philosopher. “Poetry is more true than; He called poetrv a demand- A7\_ tnith. It must always try toj ing art> demanding of th ft//, / ZG L//C/7 find the intense truth and say pGet—not only his heart, but it in s u c h intense language ^jg whGle being and more, that it celebrates the delight Kngfle read selections from or the despair of life, he nevv collection of poems, said. “A Women Unashamed.” Engle also described his They were inspired by an ac-view of writing poetry as a quaintance with a Japanese flight from personality, not woman. an expression of it. Her limited English pro- . . ... Thus, poetry cannot simply duced simple phrases that Pressor, is currently,editing be written from the emotions, took on tremendous symbolic a vo ume wor • 0 ozoa but must include labor, he significance. Engle said, said. “Wrhen she spoke, I could “The left hand and the realize miles of dread in her ly published 13 papers and 54 unjVersity because it is th drawings by Dr. Chen. After only part used by all stu_ reading the article Pergamon dents, was three per cent less Press in England selectedjthis year than iast. him to help edit the book. j “And last year it was at The authority on protozo- the median point for all bud-ans will be working with sev- gets of college and university eral other professors from libraries in North America,” universities across the coun- he asserted, try. He said that an adequate C’heno/oa Namesake library in 1932 is now no Dr. Chen had a protozoan good. The administration named after him. the Chen- seemingly fails to see that ozoa, after many years of re- 1 i b r a r y expansion plans search. should be paramount in any He graduated from Fukien drive for educational excel-Christian University, Oberlin lenee. College and the University of He stated that to have a sist of a resident honors pro- takes one other lower divi- Pennsylvania, and did re- library comparable to Harv-gram, Paul Hadley, dean of sion course and may earn search work at Yale Univer- ard University’s USC would the summer session, an- eight units of credit. sity and Johns Hopkins Uni- have to spend double what it nounced yesterday. Live on Campus versity. does now for 10 years while The resident honors pro- Because of the intensive na- After lecturing at UCLA harvard spent nothing, gram for high school seniors ture of the program, dormi- for six years he was selected “The current budget would permits students who have tory residence is required. by the Chinese government to have to be increased to mere-completed their junior year in High school students in the join its Academy of Sciences, ly rate the title of inade-high school to enter the uni- newspaper workshop will He instituted a program in bi- quate’,’ he said, versity. They will take a year study publication problems in ology and trained skilled tech- Wasted Space Doheny Library was condemned. but its staff was defended at Counterpoint USC Sunday. Mike Halleran. junior in history, called it a near miracle that the staff works as well as it does under present conditions, and suggest-:ed that it be pitied rather jthan censured. Counterpoint USC is a ! weekly open forum for discussions, where students comment on the university, national or international scene. It is sponsored by five campus Protestant groups. Halleran. speaking on “The Mausoleum on the Mall,” said the administration must take _ _ most of the blame for library D/; Tze Tuan Ch^; “ology inadequacies. Library Budget D. , , 0 , „ “The budget for the in Biological Research. ... _ , . , , ,, , .. library, %’hich should be the A German magazine recenj.- most important part of the right hand are always argu- life.” Five Workshops Will Be Offered Workshops in journalism, recommended to the director music, speech, telecommuni- of admissions for admission cations and humanities will to freshman standing in the be offered to high schol stu- College of Letters, Arts and dents this year as part of Sciences. USC’s summer session pro- An honors symposium in gram. humanities is the core of the The program will also con- program. The student also „lrv, 1, , . , New Species lum- test against war. , , ,, They will run for two con- “Aristophanes mocked ev- , e re®farc ers c ° to responsible teachers secutive weekends. ery aspect of life in Athens! 1 1S, msf s ° 0 ° .. ° scholars, he added. . 1 • . .. j. „ T u t>i 1 1.500 miles from the contm-i Tickets are now on sale in in his comedies , John Blank- ( A fear of mediocrity in the Drama Office, 3708 Hoov- enchip, director for the plays, . : education is causing even the er St. said. “He poked fun at war, ^ew species of lantern fish,j jea |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1422/uschist-dt-1965-03-09~001.tif |
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