Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 53, December 10, 1964 |
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PAGE THREE:
Music Center Opens New Cultural Lite
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
PAGE FOUR:
Cool One On Draft
Vol. XVI
72
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1964
No. 53
Eight 'Helens of Troy' Chosen
HUAC Foe
To Address Meeting
Dale Gronmeier, administrative assistant on the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Acti-vities Committee (HUAC), will speak today at noon in 229 FH.
Sponsored by the Human Relations Committee, Gronmeier is expected to tell his audience that HUAC “serves as an instrument of segregation” and “is inconsonant with the ideals of the First Amendment” to the United States Constitution.
Mississippi Project Gronmeier and 140 other members of the Mississippi Summer Project have called for the abolition of HUAC in a petition to Congress charging that “HUAC denies what we went to Mississippi for.” The House Un - American Activities Committee
ROY H. COPPERUD
. . . veteran journalist
Newsman
Publishes
’Dictionary'
U.S. Official Sees Hungary Change
A change for the better is not only possible in the communistic world, but it is actually taking place in Hungary, Turner B. Shelton of the U.S. State Department told delegates of USC’s 41st annual Institute of World affairs Tuesday evening.
Shelton recently returned,
Educator
To Discuss Student Life
I uiiciwu recently returned Jfrom two years as consul in the U.S. Embassy in Buda-! pest.
He indicated that conditions in Hungary are much better since the 1956 revolt, “so much so that most Hungarians feel that they won a (victory from the Soviets in the revolution.”
Dr. Harold Taylor, educator and politico, will discuss
n , “The World of the American
Communist State
“Please don’t misunder- j Student at the LAS Con-Istand me,” Shelton told the^003^011 tomorrow at 1:30 delegates, and continued “To- P-m. m Hancock Auditorium, day's Hungary is a com-! Classes will not be can-munistic state, ruled by an|cele(l.
Rnv H Cnnremd ?ssi«tantiauthoritarian reSime' but the Dr. Taylor, appointed presi-professcr of jouraal^n has tone, atmosphere and char- dent of Sarah Lawrence brought acclaim to himself acter of the exercise of power College at the age of 30 in and the university in his first *s s0. completely altered tiiat 1945, was the youngest col-year at USC by publishing internal situation bears, lege president in the country. w a s his new book.' “Dictionary of a very slight resemblance to jn ,g0
formed », a temporary Con. Usage and style.- ' what existed before. | He [nm Ms J
gressionnl commute* m 1.38 The rc.fcrcncc g u i d <■ [0r Shelton offered examples ljon jn 1959 t0 travel in Asia
n'. wCrrl,son a no, j a r in writers, editors, teachers and such as the hotels crowded and Russia on a special Ford ics 01 iexas ana Became a gtudents was the October se- with tourists and the western Foundation Grant, permanent House committee ,ection of the Kiplinger Book newspapers such as the New
Service and is recommended1York Times
Times appearing on the
The petition submitted to December issue of the newsstands in Hungary as
newly elected members of the j Book of the Month CIub News. j proof of the change.
House of Representatives fol-j „ ... , ,.
.... , ! Book Introduction
lows an earlier petition by , , . . , , ,. , .. , ... , , ...
... ,. , f ,, In his introduction to the mficant changes, which 100 constitutional law author-1 1 °
ities.
He is vice chairman and
“These are highly
co-founder of the National Committee for the Support of the Public Schools.,
He is also chairman of the
ibook. J. R. Wiggins, editor ofjbelieve we should welcomeI National Research Council on
I the Washington Post, stated, because they permit the fresh) ®aX5®. ^ ^ ej^’ a SrouP ° It charges that HI AC s “This book will not be of any| air of freedom to circulate in scientists and scholars active
sig-I
Senior Women Recognized for Superior Work
Eight outstanding senior women have been selected as 1965 Helens of Troy, the editorial staff of the El i Rodeo announced yesterday.
The women, who will be given special recognition in the yearbook, are Joyce Bowman, Ruth Caldwell, | Kristine Frieburg, Sharilyn [Hanson, Betty Hutton. Sandra
and
pression which they feel "is;others who reajIy wish to irreconcilable with a system write in a way that can be
Linsey, Joan Pederson Judith Webster.
The Helens were selected i by members of the deans’
[staff, faculty advisers, heads of departments and schools and other members of the [administration.
ASSC Vice President Joyce [Bowman is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and 'Amazons. She has been active as IFC Hostess, Sophomore Class Vice President, El [Rodeo secretary, and as a member of Junior Class Coun-’cil and Spurs.
1963 Princess Maintaining a 3.575 average, Miss Bowman was i chosen as 1963 Homecoming;
Princess. A business educa-j tion major, she will teach next year.
Miss Caldwell, a French! major, is president of Mortar Board and way elected intoi Phi Beta Kappa last spring! for maintaining a 4.0 grade | point average during her! undergraduate years.
She is also active in Delta will be held next Tuesday and [Delta Delta, Alpha Mu Wednesday night at 8 p.m. in I Gamma, language honorary; Bovard Auditorium.
I Pi Delta Phi, French honor-; Performances by the Cham-iary; and Alpha Lambda her Singers under the direc-Delta, women’s freshman and:tjon 0f Dr. Charles C. Hirt, By JOE TETHEROW amendment, the word presi- sophomore scholastic honor-;and ^e University Concert A typographical error in dent was omitted, leaving the ary. jChoir, directed by Dr. James
I ASSC President John Betinis’fvoter to believe that repre- a member of the Dean's H. Vail, will highlight the . . ■ , , - .. Stresses Program amendment may postpone to- sentatives to the envisioned Ljst every semester, she has program.
1 V.'or or ^ rojan. o ion o communis l -phis foundation stresses day’s election to decide the Consitutional Convention alst) been active in Chimes, Dr- John Cantelon, univcr-
^fter moie than -0 years! eory, u e e s a pr0grams and projects de- fate of the ASSC Senate. would be selected by the stu- j junior women's service group; sity chaplain, will present the
pnmnnrp* more signed to further human A hearing of the matter by [dent body rather than the'Spurs. sophomore women's [traditional “Message.
rights. the Board of Inquiry is student body president. ,service group; and Amazons ■ Among the dozen readers
jurisdiction is limited to in- use persons who do not [the dank, musty places that [in Peace quiring into ideas, opinions, wjsh to write well; but toihave housed fear, terror and armament. speech and other forms of ex-professjonaj writers and repression,” Shelton said. [ Dr. Taylor
research and dis-
Communism Violates
serving as a
is currently special con-
, , . . , . , - __________—cn-in rnmmmiiem sultant to Adlai Stevenson,
of free expression in t h 1 s understood, it will prove an all the Drincinles we cherish ” iambassador to the Unitedj
eountr\. :—i.._ui----:*>- ■ P P > | N’ations. and as chairman of
the Eleanor Roosevelt Memo-j we rial Foundation.
BALLOT CAST—Rodger Gerouard voted in the election that was to decide the fate of the Betinis and Herbert amendments, but it has been postponed indefinitely.
Printing Mistake Puts Off Voting
DR. CHARLES C. HIRT
. . . choral director
Christmas
Convocation
Scheduled
The Christmas Convocation
iinvaluable guide.
Gronmeier and follow civil Currently, Copperud is a
he said.
technical adviser for the I Shelton feels that
Washington Post and faculty should never cease our op-
rights workers believe that “the false accusations and irresponsible smears of HUAC” have made “a volatile Mississippi even more dangerous.” icf experience as a newspaper-1
Libel-Free Centers man from coast to coast, he Hungary “HUAC and similar legisla- has learned to make himself favorably to Western policy
brand of Communism
than the “holy writs” laid One of the foundation’s [ scheduled for 10 a.m.
Other discrepancies
tive investigating committees understood.
have been libel - free centers Trial and Error out by Moscow and Peking. initial projects was begun on The decision was made late prompted the suspension
for false accusations,” Gron- This is a result of his “trial[ “The mo&t important single'Dr- Taylor s recommendation, yesterday afternoon by the were the posting of Betinis' charged. and error experience" in writ-,tut t+ ,-rJElection Commission
“The mos't important singl
meier cnarged. and error experience in writ-jf^ that we must remember [ It is a pilot program in . . .
The concluding statement,ing, while holding such posi-is that Communism is daily which selected Peace Corps the error was discovered in their
of the anti - HL AC petition tions as rewrite man for the demonstrating ltself to be a veterans and other qualified the mimeographed ‘B booths and the absence of
Baltimore Evening Sun and most unworkable social, po-individuals are awarded in- amendment, posted in a voting aci l les a
after and Herbert’s name above amendments in the
Having v\ it lie ssed the chief editorial writer and edi- jjtical and economic system,” ternships for training in the voting booths, workings of a closed society tonal editor for the Pasadena Shelton illdicated. [field of intergroup relations. | In Article I of the proposed
—where the First Amendment Star-News and Independent, is not operative, where white “I strive to impart prac-as well as Negro is labeled tical techniques and profes-‘subversive’ if he dissents —[tional training to my stu-we feel more deeply the need dents, by looking at what to oppose threats to free they have done, correcting it speech and free association in and letting them attempt it the rest of the country. a-rain. he said.
KUSC Gets New Program Director
Jerry Mohr, a senior Inter-1row at 7:30 p.m., along with national Relations major, has an interview with Dr. Walter been selected as the new pro-1 Ducloux, director and con-gram director of KUSC-FM. [ductor of the performance.
He succeeds Steve Berry. A weekly folk music show, program director of KUSC | initiated last Friday, will be since January. Both he and offered at 8 p.m. Friday.
Mohr have received the “Tela- The KUSC-FM staff is stu-ward’ from Alpha Epsilon dent-run except for general Rho, national honoray tele- [manager Dr. Kenneth A. Har-communications fraternity. iwood, who is head of the tele-
The job of the program di- communications department, rector is to coordinate the en- and chief engineer Dennis tire operation of KUSC-FM. Nielsen.
The shift in personnel also Mohr said any student in Involves Wallace S m i t h, jterested in telecommunica-graduate student in telecom- tions is welcome to work for munications and Dennis De- KUSC-FM” one hour or 20
medical school.
who will participate will be actor Robert Vaughn ("The Man from U.N.C.L.E.”). who is studying at USC for his PhD in communications.
A new work by writer Ray Bradbury, “In This Time of Christmas,” will have its pre-
wenter, chief announcer for KUSC-FM.
Smith will be director of music and Dewenter will head the traffic department.
Mohr said the change will not affect basic station policy.
“Programs are a result of|
hours a week.”
“We will train him and try to give him the opportunity to do the sort of activities he desires," Mohr said.
Mohr produced the program dealing with international relations, “Perspective,” which a staff effort rather than in- ran weekly from the fall of dividual planning.” j 1902 to the summer of 1963.
Two new programs, one a Berry has worked with special and one to be aired i KUSC-FM since the summer weekly, will be on KUSC-FM of 1962, when he began as an this week. “Das Rheingold”[engineer. He has served as will be broadcast uninterrupt- production coordinator and ed and in its entirety tomor- student chief engineer.
thatiseru°r women’s honorary.
Council President She was also president of [^
Fres'hman Women’s Council.
After graduation, she will teach English and French on the secondary level.
An international relations mjere reading during the pro-
Co-election commissioners Miss Jreib,u^ hf gram.
Andy Economou and Mary'also maintained a 4-0 grade A carillon in Bovard tower Gumbinger agreed such ac- poin|-average and has been will provide Christmas season
tion should be taken because!?0 the Dean s Llst since her music during the days of the
ifres'hman year. convocation and preceding
She is also active in Mortar and following each perfor-Board and is a member ofimance.
of the discrepancies.
AMS President Adam Herbert, whose amendment “A” _ , . , , e ' . d ^ere aPPa Alpha Theta. Phi Tuesday night the perfor-
Alpha Theta, history honor- mance will be sponsored by
, , ., ary; Sigma Gamma Sigma, the Alumni Coordinatin
the election, because
opposes Betinis. s a was no ground for postponing
election, because the ar^’ [amendment was printed correctly in yesterday’s Daily ] Trojan.
The posting of names above the amendments was agreed to by Betinis, Herbert and Dean of Students Paul
international relations honor- Council for alumni of the ary; and Alpha Lambda university and will be follow-Delta, freshman and sopho- ed by reception in Town and more women's scholastic Gown Foyer, honorary. | Admission to both perfor-
She has also served on the mances will be by compli-International Relations mentary ticket.
Speakers’ Program and in Bloland, but not by the Sen- Amazons. Upon graduating, ate. ' (Continued on Page 2)
Requests may be made through the Special Eveats Office. Ext. 4S2. 230 SU.
EXPLORE THEORIES
English Expert to Attend National Rhetoric Forum
Dr. Francis Christensen seminar is to explore and been discussing the old
NEW SCHEDULE — Michael Alexander and Carol Schulkof are rehearsing for one of the new programs that will be
aired on KUSC-FM. The changes that have been made are accompanied by changes in the radio station's personnel.
professor of English, will be one of eight participants in a Seminar in Rhetoric to be held tomorrow and Saturday in Denver.
The seminar is being sponsored by the Conference on College Composition and Communication, a branch of the National Council of Teachers of English.
Dr. Christensen and the other participants have been recognized as being those persons who have made the I most significant contributions [to rhetorical theory in recent j yea rs.
I “The purpose of the
define rhetoric,” said Dr. Christensen. “We will be attempting to find what ideas, theories and concepts of rhetoric are useful."
His contributions to the field include articles published in College English and the Journal of the Conference on College Composition and Communication.
Dr. Christensen also wrote two courses of study last summer for the Nebraska Curriculum Development Center and is working on a rhetoric for college freshmen English classes.
“A good many people have 1 November.
rhetoric and the new rhetoric and we are going to attempt to find what rhetoric actually is coming to mean in these modern times we are in today,” Dr. Christensen said.
The two-day ccftference will be held at the Denver Hilton. The chairman of the seminar is Dr. Robert Gorrell, professor of English at the University of Nevada.
A member of the NCTE's Commission on the English Language. Dr. Christensen attended the commission’s recent meeting in Cleveland l^st
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 53, December 10, 1964 |
| Full text | PAGE THREE: Music Center Opens New Cultural Lite University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN PAGE FOUR: Cool One On Draft Vol. XVI 72 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1964 No. 53 Eight 'Helens of Troy' Chosen HUAC Foe To Address Meeting Dale Gronmeier, administrative assistant on the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Acti-vities Committee (HUAC), will speak today at noon in 229 FH. Sponsored by the Human Relations Committee, Gronmeier is expected to tell his audience that HUAC “serves as an instrument of segregation” and “is inconsonant with the ideals of the First Amendment” to the United States Constitution. Mississippi Project Gronmeier and 140 other members of the Mississippi Summer Project have called for the abolition of HUAC in a petition to Congress charging that “HUAC denies what we went to Mississippi for.” The House Un - American Activities Committee ROY H. COPPERUD . . . veteran journalist Newsman Publishes ’Dictionary' U.S. Official Sees Hungary Change A change for the better is not only possible in the communistic world, but it is actually taking place in Hungary, Turner B. Shelton of the U.S. State Department told delegates of USC’s 41st annual Institute of World affairs Tuesday evening. Shelton recently returned, Educator To Discuss Student Life I uiiciwu recently returned Jfrom two years as consul in the U.S. Embassy in Buda-! pest. He indicated that conditions in Hungary are much better since the 1956 revolt, “so much so that most Hungarians feel that they won a (victory from the Soviets in the revolution.” Dr. Harold Taylor, educator and politico, will discuss n , “The World of the American Communist State “Please don’t misunder- j Student at the LAS Con-Istand me,” Shelton told the^003^011 tomorrow at 1:30 delegates, and continued “To- P-m. m Hancock Auditorium, day's Hungary is a com-! Classes will not be can-munistic state, ruled by an cele(l. Rnv H Cnnremd ?ssi«tantiauthoritarian reSime' but the Dr. Taylor, appointed presi-professcr of jouraal^n has tone, atmosphere and char- dent of Sarah Lawrence brought acclaim to himself acter of the exercise of power College at the age of 30 in and the university in his first *s s0. completely altered tiiat 1945, was the youngest col-year at USC by publishing internal situation bears, lege president in the country. w a s his new book.' “Dictionary of a very slight resemblance to jn ,g0 formed », a temporary Con. Usage and style.- ' what existed before. He [nm Ms J gressionnl commute* m 1.38 The rc.fcrcncc g u i d <■ [0r Shelton offered examples ljon jn 1959 t0 travel in Asia n'. wCrrl,son a no, j a r in writers, editors, teachers and such as the hotels crowded and Russia on a special Ford ics 01 iexas ana Became a gtudents was the October se- with tourists and the western Foundation Grant, permanent House committee ,ection of the Kiplinger Book newspapers such as the New Service and is recommended1York Times Times appearing on the The petition submitted to December issue of the newsstands in Hungary as newly elected members of the j Book of the Month CIub News. j proof of the change. House of Representatives fol-j „ ... , ,. .... , ! Book Introduction lows an earlier petition by , , . . , , ,. , .. , ... , , ... ... ,. , f ,, In his introduction to the mficant changes, which 100 constitutional law author-1 1 ° ities. He is vice chairman and “These are highly co-founder of the National Committee for the Support of the Public Schools., He is also chairman of the ibook. J. R. Wiggins, editor ofjbelieve we should welcomeI National Research Council on I the Washington Post, stated, because they permit the fresh) ®aX5®. ^ ^ ej^’ a SrouP ° It charges that HI AC s “This book will not be of any air of freedom to circulate in scientists and scholars active sig-I Senior Women Recognized for Superior Work Eight outstanding senior women have been selected as 1965 Helens of Troy, the editorial staff of the El i Rodeo announced yesterday. The women, who will be given special recognition in the yearbook, are Joyce Bowman, Ruth Caldwell, Kristine Frieburg, Sharilyn [Hanson, Betty Hutton. Sandra and pression which they feel "is;others who reajIy wish to irreconcilable with a system write in a way that can be Linsey, Joan Pederson Judith Webster. The Helens were selected i by members of the deans’ [staff, faculty advisers, heads of departments and schools and other members of the [administration. ASSC Vice President Joyce [Bowman is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and 'Amazons. She has been active as IFC Hostess, Sophomore Class Vice President, El [Rodeo secretary, and as a member of Junior Class Coun-’cil and Spurs. 1963 Princess Maintaining a 3.575 average, Miss Bowman was i chosen as 1963 Homecoming; Princess. A business educa-j tion major, she will teach next year. Miss Caldwell, a French! major, is president of Mortar Board and way elected intoi Phi Beta Kappa last spring! for maintaining a 4.0 grade point average during her! undergraduate years. She is also active in Delta will be held next Tuesday and [Delta Delta, Alpha Mu Wednesday night at 8 p.m. in I Gamma, language honorary; Bovard Auditorium. I Pi Delta Phi, French honor-; Performances by the Cham-iary; and Alpha Lambda her Singers under the direc-Delta, women’s freshman and:tjon 0f Dr. Charles C. Hirt, By JOE TETHEROW amendment, the word presi- sophomore scholastic honor-;and ^e University Concert A typographical error in dent was omitted, leaving the ary. jChoir, directed by Dr. James I ASSC President John Betinis’fvoter to believe that repre- a member of the Dean's H. Vail, will highlight the . . ■ , , - .. Stresses Program amendment may postpone to- sentatives to the envisioned Ljst every semester, she has program. 1 V.'or or ^ rojan. o ion o communis l -phis foundation stresses day’s election to decide the Consitutional Convention alst) been active in Chimes, Dr- John Cantelon, univcr- ^fter moie than -0 years! eory, u e e s a pr0grams and projects de- fate of the ASSC Senate. would be selected by the stu- j junior women's service group; sity chaplain, will present the pnmnnrp* more signed to further human A hearing of the matter by [dent body rather than the'Spurs. sophomore women's [traditional “Message. rights. the Board of Inquiry is student body president. ,service group; and Amazons ■ Among the dozen readers jurisdiction is limited to in- use persons who do not [the dank, musty places that [in Peace quiring into ideas, opinions, wjsh to write well; but toihave housed fear, terror and armament. speech and other forms of ex-professjonaj writers and repression,” Shelton said. [ Dr. Taylor research and dis- Communism Violates serving as a is currently special con- , , . . , . , - __________—cn-in rnmmmiiem sultant to Adlai Stevenson, of free expression in t h 1 s understood, it will prove an all the Drincinles we cherish ” iambassador to the Unitedj eountr\. :—i.._ui----:*>- ■ P P > N’ations. and as chairman of the Eleanor Roosevelt Memo-j we rial Foundation. BALLOT CAST—Rodger Gerouard voted in the election that was to decide the fate of the Betinis and Herbert amendments, but it has been postponed indefinitely. Printing Mistake Puts Off Voting DR. CHARLES C. HIRT . . . choral director Christmas Convocation Scheduled The Christmas Convocation iinvaluable guide. Gronmeier and follow civil Currently, Copperud is a he said. technical adviser for the I Shelton feels that Washington Post and faculty should never cease our op- rights workers believe that “the false accusations and irresponsible smears of HUAC” have made “a volatile Mississippi even more dangerous.” icf experience as a newspaper-1 Libel-Free Centers man from coast to coast, he Hungary “HUAC and similar legisla- has learned to make himself favorably to Western policy brand of Communism than the “holy writs” laid One of the foundation’s [ scheduled for 10 a.m. Other discrepancies tive investigating committees understood. have been libel - free centers Trial and Error out by Moscow and Peking. initial projects was begun on The decision was made late prompted the suspension for false accusations,” Gron- This is a result of his “trial[ “The mo&t important single'Dr- Taylor s recommendation, yesterday afternoon by the were the posting of Betinis' charged. and error experience" in writ-,tut t+ ,-rJElection Commission “The mos't important singl meier cnarged. and error experience in writ-jf^ that we must remember [ It is a pilot program in . . . The concluding statement,ing, while holding such posi-is that Communism is daily which selected Peace Corps the error was discovered in their of the anti - HL AC petition tions as rewrite man for the demonstrating ltself to be a veterans and other qualified the mimeographed ‘B booths and the absence of Baltimore Evening Sun and most unworkable social, po-individuals are awarded in- amendment, posted in a voting aci l les a after and Herbert’s name above amendments in the Having v\ it lie ssed the chief editorial writer and edi- jjtical and economic system,” ternships for training in the voting booths, workings of a closed society tonal editor for the Pasadena Shelton illdicated. [field of intergroup relations. In Article I of the proposed —where the First Amendment Star-News and Independent, is not operative, where white “I strive to impart prac-as well as Negro is labeled tical techniques and profes-‘subversive’ if he dissents —[tional training to my stu-we feel more deeply the need dents, by looking at what to oppose threats to free they have done, correcting it speech and free association in and letting them attempt it the rest of the country. a-rain. he said. KUSC Gets New Program Director Jerry Mohr, a senior Inter-1row at 7:30 p.m., along with national Relations major, has an interview with Dr. Walter been selected as the new pro-1 Ducloux, director and con-gram director of KUSC-FM. [ductor of the performance. He succeeds Steve Berry. A weekly folk music show, program director of KUSC initiated last Friday, will be since January. Both he and offered at 8 p.m. Friday. Mohr have received the “Tela- The KUSC-FM staff is stu-ward’ from Alpha Epsilon dent-run except for general Rho, national honoray tele- [manager Dr. Kenneth A. Har-communications fraternity. iwood, who is head of the tele- The job of the program di- communications department, rector is to coordinate the en- and chief engineer Dennis tire operation of KUSC-FM. Nielsen. The shift in personnel also Mohr said any student in Involves Wallace S m i t h, jterested in telecommunica-graduate student in telecom- tions is welcome to work for munications and Dennis De- KUSC-FM” one hour or 20 medical school. who will participate will be actor Robert Vaughn ("The Man from U.N.C.L.E.”). who is studying at USC for his PhD in communications. A new work by writer Ray Bradbury, “In This Time of Christmas,” will have its pre- wenter, chief announcer for KUSC-FM. Smith will be director of music and Dewenter will head the traffic department. Mohr said the change will not affect basic station policy. “Programs are a result of hours a week.” “We will train him and try to give him the opportunity to do the sort of activities he desires" Mohr said. Mohr produced the program dealing with international relations, “Perspective,” which a staff effort rather than in- ran weekly from the fall of dividual planning.” j 1902 to the summer of 1963. Two new programs, one a Berry has worked with special and one to be aired i KUSC-FM since the summer weekly, will be on KUSC-FM of 1962, when he began as an this week. “Das Rheingold”[engineer. He has served as will be broadcast uninterrupt- production coordinator and ed and in its entirety tomor- student chief engineer. thatiseru°r women’s honorary. Council President She was also president of [^ Fres'hman Women’s Council. After graduation, she will teach English and French on the secondary level. An international relations mjere reading during the pro- Co-election commissioners Miss Jreib,u^ hf gram. Andy Economou and Mary'also maintained a 4-0 grade A carillon in Bovard tower Gumbinger agreed such ac- poin -average and has been will provide Christmas season tion should be taken because!?0 the Dean s Llst since her music during the days of the ifres'hman year. convocation and preceding She is also active in Mortar and following each perfor-Board and is a member ofimance. of the discrepancies. AMS President Adam Herbert, whose amendment “A” _ , . , , e ' . d ^ere aPPa Alpha Theta. Phi Tuesday night the perfor- Alpha Theta, history honor- mance will be sponsored by , , ., ary; Sigma Gamma Sigma, the Alumni Coordinatin the election, because opposes Betinis. s a was no ground for postponing election, because the ar^’ [amendment was printed correctly in yesterday’s Daily ] Trojan. The posting of names above the amendments was agreed to by Betinis, Herbert and Dean of Students Paul international relations honor- Council for alumni of the ary; and Alpha Lambda university and will be follow-Delta, freshman and sopho- ed by reception in Town and more women's scholastic Gown Foyer, honorary. Admission to both perfor- She has also served on the mances will be by compli-International Relations mentary ticket. Speakers’ Program and in Bloland, but not by the Sen- Amazons. Upon graduating, ate. ' (Continued on Page 2) Requests may be made through the Special Eveats Office. Ext. 4S2. 230 SU. EXPLORE THEORIES English Expert to Attend National Rhetoric Forum Dr. Francis Christensen seminar is to explore and been discussing the old NEW SCHEDULE — Michael Alexander and Carol Schulkof are rehearsing for one of the new programs that will be aired on KUSC-FM. The changes that have been made are accompanied by changes in the radio station's personnel. professor of English, will be one of eight participants in a Seminar in Rhetoric to be held tomorrow and Saturday in Denver. The seminar is being sponsored by the Conference on College Composition and Communication, a branch of the National Council of Teachers of English. Dr. Christensen and the other participants have been recognized as being those persons who have made the I most significant contributions [to rhetorical theory in recent j yea rs. I “The purpose of the define rhetoric,” said Dr. Christensen. “We will be attempting to find what ideas, theories and concepts of rhetoric are useful." His contributions to the field include articles published in College English and the Journal of the Conference on College Composition and Communication. Dr. Christensen also wrote two courses of study last summer for the Nebraska Curriculum Development Center and is working on a rhetoric for college freshmen English classes. “A good many people have 1 November. rhetoric and the new rhetoric and we are going to attempt to find what rhetoric actually is coming to mean in these modern times we are in today,” Dr. Christensen said. The two-day ccftference will be held at the Denver Hilton. The chairman of the seminar is Dr. Robert Gorrell, professor of English at the University of Nevada. A member of the NCTE's Commission on the English Language. Dr. Christensen attended the commission’s recent meeting in Cleveland l^st |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1422/uschist-dt-1964-12-10~001.tif |
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