Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 63, February 15, 1965 |
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PAGE THREE- University of Southern California 'Publish or Perish' Claims PAGE FOUR: Full Run-Down Another Victim 1 # r\ I I / I I 1%. \ /. 1 1 \ 1 On Troy's Washington Tour Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1965 No. 63 Frame, Spencer Chosen As Greek Queen, King GRAPHIC ART EXHIBIT—Arlene Bradshaw, a senior majoring in sociology, views graphic arts exhibit currently be- HARRIS HALL DISPLAY ing displayed at Fisher Art Gallery in Harris Hall. The works will be shown through Friday free of admission charge. Fisher Gallery Exhibit Presents Graphic Art The work of three success- India, where she was working of Brownjohn, ful graphic artists is current- with the Indian Government a°d Geismar. ly on exhibit at the Fi s h e r on an exhibition on the life of I He instructed Mob Action Discussed By Faculty By EDWARD SAKAMOTO Can you visualize American students storming the nation's capital, demanding the overthrow of the government? Yet, student mob action in Latin American and Asian countries is not uncommon. Political unrest in foreign countries is evident all the time. As early as 1918 the stud-| ents of the University of ■ Cordoba in Argentina proclaimed the duty of students I to take part in social reform j outside the campus as well I as educational reform in I schools. Student Movements Such student movements spread throughout the Latin American and other contin-, ents. The actions of these! students caused a number of j dictators to close down uni-i versities and arrest student! leaders. Chermayeff The American student as : compared to his foreign coun advertising terpart seems rather tame. MEDICAL EXPERIMENT — Dr. Orville Miller, pharmacy professor, holds the horn of Gerald, the rhinoceros who died last month in Fresno. Dr. Miller plans to determine the truth of ancient claims, that the horn has medicinal use. ! APHRODISIAC? design at Brooklyn College in Ig there a reason behind this? ;1957 and at the School of Vis-j Gallery in Harris Hall. • I Nehru. Ivan Chermayeff. Deborah lvan Chermayeff attained !, ^an of Students Paul Bio Sussman and Fredrick Usher his bachelor of~fine arts de- ua- ArtS fr°m 1959-t0 19.63’iland sees the foreign student their work in graphic design. School of Design and then be- y8Robert G Anderson, assist-Usher, a visiting critic in &an w°rk as an assistant to are exhibiting samples of from Yale University’srh 6 r e he iS teaching this and the American student as being entirely different. “The students in Latin ant professor to the School of America are primarily pro- I Architecture, stated that the j fessional students,” Bloland. _________ He became assistant art di-,e x h i b i t is open Monday{“men jn their late twen- rhinoceros rector at Columbia Records through Friday from 1 p.m.!tieg gnd dirties and in 1957 formed the office;to 5 p.m. until March 4. ' | „As a group in ^ietyjPark Zoo. has been bequeath- the school of Architecture..Alvin Lustig. has been in the Los Angeles area for over twenty years. •'World’s Fair Design Heoegan as a designer with Alvin Lustig in 1947 and started his own office in 1957. He is now president of Usher-Follis, Inc. Usher's office recently designed the United States Government Pavilion at the New York World's Fair and the Junior Laboratory of Science, United States Science Exhibit, at the Century 21 Exposition in Seattle. Fulbright Scholar Miss Sussman studied at Cranbrook, Michigan, after Rhinoceros' Horn Could Reveal Medical Secrets The horn of Gerald, a white that died last month at Fresno’s Roeding Alumnus' Contributions Endow Doheny Annually For Irwin David Perry, 95, memories of the small Methodist college (USC) will never be forgotten. A Trojan from 1896 to 1899, Perry's interest in books and libraries has kept him a their opinion is very import- ed to a USC pharmacy profes-ant because oftentimes they sor for study of its possible represent the difference be- use for medicinal purposes, tween victory and defeat to a Gerald's lungs collapsed af-political party.” ter he caught his horn be- Political Awareness tween his cage bars, trying American students, he said, to reach his mate, as undergraduates, do not The professor. Dr. Orville have the right to vote. “By H. Miller, hopes Gerald’s horn steady donor to Doheny Li- ding anniversaries, attending Chicago's Institute brary for more than 20 years. Perry was head of the Eng-of Design. His contributions have ranged lish department at Los An- She spent three years at from $50 to S200 annually, eeles High School wiiere he the New Bauhaus in Germany vvhich he virtually draws tau£ht 37 \ears before retir-as a Fulbright scholar and from his pension as a retired in^ *n 1939 has worked in the office of school teacher. Charles Earr.es since 1952. print educational magazines; called “The Outlook.” he transferred t-Oi^g ^me they gej- ^at right,; will serve as the key to un-Stanford University an they are about ready to leave lock the secrets of folklore graduated there in 1903. Dur- the universjty gQ jt would medicine which have grown ing this time he married, and b& unfajr to compare them around rhinoceros horns, he and his wife, Emma 86, tQ foreign students,” he ex- “The horn may be found to have since celebrated 6o wcd-s piajne(j_ have health-giving qualities,” Dr. William Caldwell, re-; Miller explained, search associate for the In-j “Some of the exotic foods stitute on Communist Stra-,made from this and other tegy and Propaganda, be- strange ingredients enable lieves that the American stu- the consumer to work long dent is becoming more aware hours and eat less,” he added, of his political responsibili-j He said he has reason to ties. He does not feel this believe the validity of claims Although now described by his wife as “up and about,” She recently returned from tions jnclude books and maga. zines and are always earmarked for the use of undergraduates in religion. At one time he gave the library 7® volumes of assorted books and a series of out-of- Besides money, his dona- Perry has intermittently suf-*will get out of hand as in made concerning the rhino’ 4 Juniors To Spread Troy Image Members of the Junior Class Council will visit three local high schools in the next few weeks as part of their high school relations program,! according to Carol Rollo,: class vice president. Class members will visit Alhambra High School this Wednesday, and South High in Torrance and Granada; Hills High School in the next two weeks. This program, designed to promote interest, in USC and college life as a whole, includes slides of the campus and four brief speeches given by the council members. Topics of the speeches will be university structure and scholarship, campus activities. traditions at USC, and the social and cultural aspects of the university. “This program gives the high school students a personal insight into USC life from the student's point of view. This personal contact by university students complements the high school relations program,” said Rir'^: Takagaki, junior class president. „ 1 fered illness the past several foreign countries. horn, but the severe depopu years. The last time he was “Students here seem to belation of the African rhino wrell enough to visit the USC cioser to their families and because of the great demand library was in April, 1959. more responsible in their ac- for their horns has slowed The Perrys have a son,'tions,” he said. his progress. Douglas, who also graduated An .expert on Communist; “There is much in folklore from Stanford in 1939. i (Continued on Page 2) and literature concerning the ; strange beliefs which sur- Bali Fetes Royal Duo Diane Frame, Pi Beta Phi, and Gary Spencer. Beta Theta Pi. were crowned queen and king of Greek Week at the Grecian Ball held at the International Hotel last Friday. Diane was sponsored by Beta Theta Pi and Spencer was nominated by Gamma Phi Beta. Runners-up for queen were Paulette Lollar, Chris Dilday, Candy Wells, and Betty Bliss Members of the knig court were Chris Everett, Alan Gains. Frank Lopez and Tom Lund. The announcement of the king and queen was met with enthusiastic applause by a crowd of 400 rowites. Following the coronation, Miss Frame and Spencer led a dance and the court joined in. This is the first year king candidates have been nominated and the innovation was popularly received. Les Brown and hi3 band provided the music for the ball, which was organized by Dick Dotts, Greek Week chairman, and Rene Pappas, last year's Greek Week queen. Voting for the king and queen took place at the ball. As each guest entered the door, they were given a ballot. Pictures of the contestants were placed near the en-tra nee. The ball ended a full week supported by the research of erties, but “I am inclined to others, that there is a chemi- believe from earlier experi-1 cal contained in animals’ ments of my own that they of activitieg- gponsored by horns and hooves which pro- are.” Panhellenic and the Inter- motes healing, he added. To prove his belief. Miller fraternity Council. Included “Other research has indi- intends to grind the rhino’s jn the Greek W e e k events cated that the horns and horn into a pow-der and test were fraternity and sororitv hooves of reindeer possess rats in tissue building experi- re]ays and a street dance, properties of tissue regenera- ments. The newly crowned king tion,” he said. He also plans to travel to and queen were each present- Miller is not yet sure of the Mexico to experiment with ed with a trophy by Dotts and truth of these reported prop- his theory next week. Miss Pappas. Campus Organizations to Hear Roosevelt; Goldberg Tomorrow A U.S. Congressman and a Hillel Foundation and the He listed mass transit and Supreme Court Associate, Cultural Events Committee, air pollution as the probable Justice will both speak on His major appearance will to£i£s to be discussed, campus tomorrow. be at a religious convocation Goldberg’s visit is in con- Congressman James R,oose- in Bovard Auditorium at 2' junction with the series of velt, candidate for mayor of p.m. religious speakers scheduled Los Angeles, and Associate He is also scheduled to ap- to appear at the university Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, pear at the YWCA at 11 a.m. .. . H t_ former Secretary of Labor, for an informal discussion of j“ish faith P will appear separately at the Peace Corps and at noon various university functions, at the Faculty Club luncheon Both men are closely iden-Roosevelt’s appearance is at the Faculty Center. tified with the Democratic sponsored by the Trojan Roosevelt is expected to Party. Roosevelt, son of Democratic Club (TDC) and comment on various aspects * ran^lin D. Roosevelt, is cur-round the rhinocerous horn,” is scheduled for tomorrow' at of his race to unseat incum- rcntl> representing the -6th he said. noon in 133 FH. bent Mayor Sam Yorty. Congressional district in “For instance, the African Goldberg will speak in TDC President Glen Mow- Washington, D.C. natives believe that when three separate addresses. His rer called Roosevelt “one of Goldberg was appointed ground into powder and taken orally, the rhino horn makes the eater more amorous,” he continued. “I have a theory, partially appearance is jointly sponsored by University Chaplain’s office, the Arthur S. Wolpe B’nai B’rith Hillel Memorial Fund, the B'nai B'rith the most brilliant and arti- Secretary of Labor by Presi-culate spokesmen for the lib- dent Kennedy and was as-eral cause in America today” signed his present Supreme and revealed his club’s sup- Court position on Aug. 29. port of Roosevelt's election. 1962. WILD WEST FILMS Movie Classics to Run Hl&ii LCi OOL ViSSTS— Members of the Junior Class Council embark for local high schools to present a program about USC's academic and campus life. From left are Barb Arnold, Carol Rollo, Kathy Young and Rick Takagaki* Western film classics, some dating to the era of William S. Hart, will be presented weekly in a five-performance series beginning Wednesday. The series, each showing of which will be on a Wednesday night at 8. will be offered by the Film Classics Society, a function of Delta Kappa Alpha, national honorary Cinema society. Dedicated to “Bill” Hart, greatest Western star of the silent days, the first program will be presented in 133 FH. Feature showing at that time will be “Tumbleweeds,” produced in 1925 and Hart’s last film. Dealing as it did with the Cherokee Strip land rush, the film served as a basis for the later production of “Cimarron.” On the same program, the Film Classics Society will also present Hart’s spoken introduction to the 1939 re-issue of the film. Virtually a film of a man “delivering his own obituary,” the recording is of the most moving speeches ever put on sound film.” Excerpts from various other Hart pictures will complete the program. ^ Other offerings in the series will be seen in the Hancock Auditorium on the USC campus. They are: • Feb. 24: “Hands Up!” (1926). starring Raymond Griffith, and “His Bitter Pill,” a Mack Sen-nett comedy with Mack Swain. • March 3: “The Wind.” (1927). Directed by Sweden’s Victor Seastrom, it stars Lillian Gish, Lars Hanson and Montague Love. • March 10: “Duel in the Sun,’’ (1947). Directed by King Vidor, the cast includes Gregory Peck, Jennifer Jones, Walter Huston, Joseph Cotton, Lillian Gish and Herbert Marshall. • March 17: “Cowboy,” (1958), directed by Delmar Daves. “Cowboy” stars Jack Lemmon, Glenn Ford, Anna Kashfi and Brian Donlevy and is in Technicolor. A rarely seen short, D. W. Griffith's “Battle at Elderbush Gulch,” said to have served Griffith in part as a model for “The Birth of a Nation,” will also be presented at this concluding program in the series.
Object Description
Description
Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 63, February 15, 1965 |
Full text | PAGE THREE- University of Southern California 'Publish or Perish' Claims PAGE FOUR: Full Run-Down Another Victim 1 # r\ I I / I I 1%. \ /. 1 1 \ 1 On Troy's Washington Tour Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1965 No. 63 Frame, Spencer Chosen As Greek Queen, King GRAPHIC ART EXHIBIT—Arlene Bradshaw, a senior majoring in sociology, views graphic arts exhibit currently be- HARRIS HALL DISPLAY ing displayed at Fisher Art Gallery in Harris Hall. The works will be shown through Friday free of admission charge. Fisher Gallery Exhibit Presents Graphic Art The work of three success- India, where she was working of Brownjohn, ful graphic artists is current- with the Indian Government a°d Geismar. ly on exhibit at the Fi s h e r on an exhibition on the life of I He instructed Mob Action Discussed By Faculty By EDWARD SAKAMOTO Can you visualize American students storming the nation's capital, demanding the overthrow of the government? Yet, student mob action in Latin American and Asian countries is not uncommon. Political unrest in foreign countries is evident all the time. As early as 1918 the stud-| ents of the University of ■ Cordoba in Argentina proclaimed the duty of students I to take part in social reform j outside the campus as well I as educational reform in I schools. Student Movements Such student movements spread throughout the Latin American and other contin-, ents. The actions of these! students caused a number of j dictators to close down uni-i versities and arrest student! leaders. Chermayeff The American student as : compared to his foreign coun advertising terpart seems rather tame. MEDICAL EXPERIMENT — Dr. Orville Miller, pharmacy professor, holds the horn of Gerald, the rhinoceros who died last month in Fresno. Dr. Miller plans to determine the truth of ancient claims, that the horn has medicinal use. ! APHRODISIAC? design at Brooklyn College in Ig there a reason behind this? ;1957 and at the School of Vis-j Gallery in Harris Hall. • I Nehru. Ivan Chermayeff. Deborah lvan Chermayeff attained !, ^an of Students Paul Bio Sussman and Fredrick Usher his bachelor of~fine arts de- ua- ArtS fr°m 1959-t0 19.63’iland sees the foreign student their work in graphic design. School of Design and then be- y8Robert G Anderson, assist-Usher, a visiting critic in &an w°rk as an assistant to are exhibiting samples of from Yale University’srh 6 r e he iS teaching this and the American student as being entirely different. “The students in Latin ant professor to the School of America are primarily pro- I Architecture, stated that the j fessional students,” Bloland. _________ He became assistant art di-,e x h i b i t is open Monday{“men jn their late twen- rhinoceros rector at Columbia Records through Friday from 1 p.m.!tieg gnd dirties and in 1957 formed the office;to 5 p.m. until March 4. ' | „As a group in ^ietyjPark Zoo. has been bequeath- the school of Architecture..Alvin Lustig. has been in the Los Angeles area for over twenty years. •'World’s Fair Design Heoegan as a designer with Alvin Lustig in 1947 and started his own office in 1957. He is now president of Usher-Follis, Inc. Usher's office recently designed the United States Government Pavilion at the New York World's Fair and the Junior Laboratory of Science, United States Science Exhibit, at the Century 21 Exposition in Seattle. Fulbright Scholar Miss Sussman studied at Cranbrook, Michigan, after Rhinoceros' Horn Could Reveal Medical Secrets The horn of Gerald, a white that died last month at Fresno’s Roeding Alumnus' Contributions Endow Doheny Annually For Irwin David Perry, 95, memories of the small Methodist college (USC) will never be forgotten. A Trojan from 1896 to 1899, Perry's interest in books and libraries has kept him a their opinion is very import- ed to a USC pharmacy profes-ant because oftentimes they sor for study of its possible represent the difference be- use for medicinal purposes, tween victory and defeat to a Gerald's lungs collapsed af-political party.” ter he caught his horn be- Political Awareness tween his cage bars, trying American students, he said, to reach his mate, as undergraduates, do not The professor. Dr. Orville have the right to vote. “By H. Miller, hopes Gerald’s horn steady donor to Doheny Li- ding anniversaries, attending Chicago's Institute brary for more than 20 years. Perry was head of the Eng-of Design. His contributions have ranged lish department at Los An- She spent three years at from $50 to S200 annually, eeles High School wiiere he the New Bauhaus in Germany vvhich he virtually draws tau£ht 37 \ears before retir-as a Fulbright scholar and from his pension as a retired in^ *n 1939 has worked in the office of school teacher. Charles Earr.es since 1952. print educational magazines; called “The Outlook.” he transferred t-Oi^g ^me they gej- ^at right,; will serve as the key to un-Stanford University an they are about ready to leave lock the secrets of folklore graduated there in 1903. Dur- the universjty gQ jt would medicine which have grown ing this time he married, and b& unfajr to compare them around rhinoceros horns, he and his wife, Emma 86, tQ foreign students,” he ex- “The horn may be found to have since celebrated 6o wcd-s piajne(j_ have health-giving qualities,” Dr. William Caldwell, re-; Miller explained, search associate for the In-j “Some of the exotic foods stitute on Communist Stra-,made from this and other tegy and Propaganda, be- strange ingredients enable lieves that the American stu- the consumer to work long dent is becoming more aware hours and eat less,” he added, of his political responsibili-j He said he has reason to ties. He does not feel this believe the validity of claims Although now described by his wife as “up and about,” She recently returned from tions jnclude books and maga. zines and are always earmarked for the use of undergraduates in religion. At one time he gave the library 7® volumes of assorted books and a series of out-of- Besides money, his dona- Perry has intermittently suf-*will get out of hand as in made concerning the rhino’ 4 Juniors To Spread Troy Image Members of the Junior Class Council will visit three local high schools in the next few weeks as part of their high school relations program,! according to Carol Rollo,: class vice president. Class members will visit Alhambra High School this Wednesday, and South High in Torrance and Granada; Hills High School in the next two weeks. This program, designed to promote interest, in USC and college life as a whole, includes slides of the campus and four brief speeches given by the council members. Topics of the speeches will be university structure and scholarship, campus activities. traditions at USC, and the social and cultural aspects of the university. “This program gives the high school students a personal insight into USC life from the student's point of view. This personal contact by university students complements the high school relations program,” said Rir'^: Takagaki, junior class president. „ 1 fered illness the past several foreign countries. horn, but the severe depopu years. The last time he was “Students here seem to belation of the African rhino wrell enough to visit the USC cioser to their families and because of the great demand library was in April, 1959. more responsible in their ac- for their horns has slowed The Perrys have a son,'tions,” he said. his progress. Douglas, who also graduated An .expert on Communist; “There is much in folklore from Stanford in 1939. i (Continued on Page 2) and literature concerning the ; strange beliefs which sur- Bali Fetes Royal Duo Diane Frame, Pi Beta Phi, and Gary Spencer. Beta Theta Pi. were crowned queen and king of Greek Week at the Grecian Ball held at the International Hotel last Friday. Diane was sponsored by Beta Theta Pi and Spencer was nominated by Gamma Phi Beta. Runners-up for queen were Paulette Lollar, Chris Dilday, Candy Wells, and Betty Bliss Members of the knig court were Chris Everett, Alan Gains. Frank Lopez and Tom Lund. The announcement of the king and queen was met with enthusiastic applause by a crowd of 400 rowites. Following the coronation, Miss Frame and Spencer led a dance and the court joined in. This is the first year king candidates have been nominated and the innovation was popularly received. Les Brown and hi3 band provided the music for the ball, which was organized by Dick Dotts, Greek Week chairman, and Rene Pappas, last year's Greek Week queen. Voting for the king and queen took place at the ball. As each guest entered the door, they were given a ballot. Pictures of the contestants were placed near the en-tra nee. The ball ended a full week supported by the research of erties, but “I am inclined to others, that there is a chemi- believe from earlier experi-1 cal contained in animals’ ments of my own that they of activitieg- gponsored by horns and hooves which pro- are.” Panhellenic and the Inter- motes healing, he added. To prove his belief. Miller fraternity Council. Included “Other research has indi- intends to grind the rhino’s jn the Greek W e e k events cated that the horns and horn into a pow-der and test were fraternity and sororitv hooves of reindeer possess rats in tissue building experi- re]ays and a street dance, properties of tissue regenera- ments. The newly crowned king tion,” he said. He also plans to travel to and queen were each present- Miller is not yet sure of the Mexico to experiment with ed with a trophy by Dotts and truth of these reported prop- his theory next week. Miss Pappas. Campus Organizations to Hear Roosevelt; Goldberg Tomorrow A U.S. Congressman and a Hillel Foundation and the He listed mass transit and Supreme Court Associate, Cultural Events Committee, air pollution as the probable Justice will both speak on His major appearance will to£i£s to be discussed, campus tomorrow. be at a religious convocation Goldberg’s visit is in con- Congressman James R,oose- in Bovard Auditorium at 2' junction with the series of velt, candidate for mayor of p.m. religious speakers scheduled Los Angeles, and Associate He is also scheduled to ap- to appear at the university Justice Arthur J. Goldberg, pear at the YWCA at 11 a.m. .. . H t_ former Secretary of Labor, for an informal discussion of j“ish faith P will appear separately at the Peace Corps and at noon various university functions, at the Faculty Club luncheon Both men are closely iden-Roosevelt’s appearance is at the Faculty Center. tified with the Democratic sponsored by the Trojan Roosevelt is expected to Party. Roosevelt, son of Democratic Club (TDC) and comment on various aspects * ran^lin D. Roosevelt, is cur-round the rhinocerous horn,” is scheduled for tomorrow' at of his race to unseat incum- rcntl> representing the -6th he said. noon in 133 FH. bent Mayor Sam Yorty. Congressional district in “For instance, the African Goldberg will speak in TDC President Glen Mow- Washington, D.C. natives believe that when three separate addresses. His rer called Roosevelt “one of Goldberg was appointed ground into powder and taken orally, the rhino horn makes the eater more amorous,” he continued. “I have a theory, partially appearance is jointly sponsored by University Chaplain’s office, the Arthur S. Wolpe B’nai B’rith Hillel Memorial Fund, the B'nai B'rith the most brilliant and arti- Secretary of Labor by Presi-culate spokesmen for the lib- dent Kennedy and was as-eral cause in America today” signed his present Supreme and revealed his club’s sup- Court position on Aug. 29. port of Roosevelt's election. 1962. WILD WEST FILMS Movie Classics to Run Hl&ii LCi OOL ViSSTS— Members of the Junior Class Council embark for local high schools to present a program about USC's academic and campus life. From left are Barb Arnold, Carol Rollo, Kathy Young and Rick Takagaki* Western film classics, some dating to the era of William S. Hart, will be presented weekly in a five-performance series beginning Wednesday. The series, each showing of which will be on a Wednesday night at 8. will be offered by the Film Classics Society, a function of Delta Kappa Alpha, national honorary Cinema society. Dedicated to “Bill” Hart, greatest Western star of the silent days, the first program will be presented in 133 FH. Feature showing at that time will be “Tumbleweeds,” produced in 1925 and Hart’s last film. Dealing as it did with the Cherokee Strip land rush, the film served as a basis for the later production of “Cimarron.” On the same program, the Film Classics Society will also present Hart’s spoken introduction to the 1939 re-issue of the film. Virtually a film of a man “delivering his own obituary,” the recording is of the most moving speeches ever put on sound film.” Excerpts from various other Hart pictures will complete the program. ^ Other offerings in the series will be seen in the Hancock Auditorium on the USC campus. They are: • Feb. 24: “Hands Up!” (1926). starring Raymond Griffith, and “His Bitter Pill,” a Mack Sen-nett comedy with Mack Swain. • March 3: “The Wind.” (1927). Directed by Sweden’s Victor Seastrom, it stars Lillian Gish, Lars Hanson and Montague Love. • March 10: “Duel in the Sun,’’ (1947). Directed by King Vidor, the cast includes Gregory Peck, Jennifer Jones, Walter Huston, Joseph Cotton, Lillian Gish and Herbert Marshall. • March 17: “Cowboy,” (1958), directed by Delmar Daves. “Cowboy” stars Jack Lemmon, Glenn Ford, Anna Kashfi and Brian Donlevy and is in Technicolor. A rarely seen short, D. W. Griffith's “Battle at Elderbush Gulch,” said to have served Griffith in part as a model for “The Birth of a Nation,” will also be presented at this concluding program in the series. |
Filename | uschist-dt-1965-02-15~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1422/uschist-dt-1965-02-15~001.tif |