Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 107, April 29, 1965 |
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PAGE THREE:
Lemmon Film Doesn't Go Sour
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
PAGE FOUR:
Dedeaux Diamond:
A Challenge for Astrodome?,
Vol. XVI
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 29,1965
No. 107
2 SHOWS ADDED
Rivals Tickets Going Rapidly
Program To Feature 15 Writers
Tickets for the remaining three performances of “The Rivals.” an 18th century comedy of manners, arej going fast. The three showings on May 3-5 have been sold out since Friday.
Because of the ticket demand the Drama Department has scheduled two additional performances for Sun-' j day. May 9. a matinee at 2:30 p.m. and an evening performance at 8:30 p.m.
Featured in the comedy will i be four women whose costumes will be characteristic of the personalities they portray. All the women will have tightly cinched waists and Fifteen writers from the bodices in the Tom Jones era fields of journalism, radio- style. Their tiny heels and TV. motion pictures and crea- white stockings are quite tive writing will be on cam- similar to modern styles, pus Saturday to participate wigs Outdated
in a spring writer’s confer- Powered wigs were already ence. out of date and women wore I
The event, sponsored by their own hair highly teased
Theta Sigma Phi. national a°d often dyed.
... , Mrs. Malaprop, played by
journal,sm honorary f ° r, Au^on wil| dressed
women, will include a morn- brocades ancj taffeta,
ing general session, lunch juija Melville, the prim and and afternoon workshop ses- proper young ,ady wiU
sions. played by Suzanne Benoit.1
Reservations may be made active in USC’s Street Thea-bv calling the Daily Trojan ter.
city editor. RI 8-2311, ext. The best way to express 574, or by picking up reser- her strait-laced personality vation blanks from one of through costuming, drama the posters on campus. instructor William White j
James Warner Bellah will said, is with a costume held moderate the conference. He so tightly at the waist by is the author of 17 novels stays that it is literally im-and has written scripts for several John Wayne motion pictures. Bellah’s articles have appeared in over 100 issues of Saturday Evening
Voter Participation
Down From 1964
3 Hopefuls Disagree Election With Betinis'Support
UNDER CANVAS—Troj an voters exercise voting right in booths set up in Alumni Park. Today is last chance to
vote in the current ASSC elections. Polling will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
1,576 students voted the first day.
"be LIBRARY HONORS NAME
Doheny Family’s Wealth Bred Scandal, Charity
(Editor’s Note: This is the came to California and be- USC, was a member of the posible for her to bend at first of a two-part series deal- came the wealthy Dohenys of university’s Board of Trus-the waist. ing with the Doheny family history, while the -ney’s mov- tees and served as president
Costume Allows Movement —iits history and its connec- ed to Arizona.
Carol Schulhof, who plays tion with USC.) the maid Lucy, has the simpl- By HAL LANCASTER
Post. est costume because she is The Doheny family lore is
Other speakers on the pro- a very active character who one of poverty and wealth gram include Ed Delaney, requires freedom of move- national and European his-foreign correspondent andment. jtory, and USC tradition,
news analyst; Maxine Adams! Lydia Languish, a romantic j Beaches, streets and libra-Miller. author of “Bright j member of the idle rich class, jries have been named after Blue Beads ’; James Durbin spends all her time languor- ithem, and their contributions Jr.. lecturer in English at ously reading novels from the to the world and to USC have USC; and William Blatty, au-ilending library. Played bylmade a mark in history.
thor of the novel “John Gold- Marcv Lafferty, Lydia will i The Doheny ancestry ex-, _ o
farb. Please Come Home.” be dressed in soft pastel silks, tends back to Tipperary. walking by the La
1 ^ j Tar Pits and saw some men
of the General Alumni Asso-
The story of E. L. Doheny ciation.
Sr. is good enough for fic-: He was shot in 1929 bv a tion. personal secretary, who then
Gold Prospecting killed himself.
He was a college graduate, 1932, the remaining Do-yet paradoxically chose a henys* financed mainly by rather unacademic vocation—k. Sr., built the library, gold prospecting. gave it to the school and dedi-
T, . . , .. cated it to E. L. Jr.
It was he who began the
Presidential candidates Glenn Brown. Darrell Johnson and Rick Takagaki disagreed yesterday with the content of ASSC President John Betinis’ statement supporting John Sullivan.
Betinis labeled these three candidates as “pretty-boy, do-nothing, say-nothing jacks-of-no-trade” and characterized them as “insipidly mouthing their own credentials and exhibiting themselves as proof of creeping metaballism.”
Brown commented that Betinis’ pronouncement does not sound like the well-thought-out statement “that should come from a man of such maturity as he claims to be.”
“I really don’t see how he can claim that no other candidate has real and imaginative ideas unless he concludes that something as highly idealistic and unworkable as Sullivan’s idea of community government is a prime example of an imaginative platform.”
Brown and Reality Brown said he has consistently proposed projects that he knows to be feasible. He feels that his experience in making the Cheshire Cat Coffee House a successful reality has proven his capacity to put through “not only imaginative ideas but ideas that can work.” Johnson believes Betinis is either misinformed or uninformed.
“It’s a shame to use what influence he has to support a candidate when he knows very little or nothing about the other candidates.
“And besides. Eisenhower supported Nixon.” Compare AH Platforms Takagaki agrees with Johnson that Betinis has not been fully exposed to the platforms of the other candidates.
“I would only ask that the mature student compare all the platforms for himself.
“John Sullivan’s platform may be impressive in form let us first judge it by its content.”
Takagaki regards it as ironic that a candidate like Betinis, who ran a “joke-type” campaign, is now claiming that Sullivan has the most mature platform.
Doheny fortune, quite by accident.
In the autumn of 1892. he
Storyteller Describes Traditions of Folklore
Doheny Sr. Dies
In 1935, E. L. Doheny Sr. died.
After his death, his wifel Estelle devoted most of her! time to philanthrophy.
Difficulties Face Foreign Students
Faculty Center members; be designed with specifically
were warned yesterday to be foreign students in mind.
aware of the difficulties fac- Pa*r sa^ that Pro*
gram, costing $3.5 billion,
t-o larMiit
° romps l
American - oriented
Cultural heritage in form of folklore can be kept alive if it is guised as recreation, Richard Chase told a Founders Hall audience yesterday.
The American folklorist and storyteller explained that too many schools, knowing that cultural heritage is necessary, smother folklore by making it mandatory.
“Folklore is the traditional beliefs, tales, songs, dances and sayings preserved orally and unreflectively among a people or group,” Chase said.
Kindergarten Stage
The kindergarten of these
Country Cork, Ireland. --------_ ...n.c <
(family name was O’Dohenyjia" mg r away o a ag . She was responsible for St. then. i Recognizing this as a sign £ ^
, i- i iof petroleum, he. along with ... ’
I In the old European days, 1 C] , C f.,d donated a library to St.
!the family boasted one;^ , . , thrrp1Johns Seminary in her hus-
famous relative, William the] ^ 192#. Doh ownedh,ands ?“>* h,elp'd ing foreign 6tudents laking comes nnder the jurisdiction
Conqueror, who entered the,mQst of gigna] and the finance the building of St., American-oriented courses o£ the us state Department
family tree by rather de\iousmost productive od strjke in "c<‘n^s ^SP '- by two representatives from In addition to supplying cap-
the these, one still sings and means' the history of Mexico. '' e * ' 0 ,: n'> the Agency for International itol grants and loans to for-
, , . „ j Butlers and Maids 1 . of the family history was end- b J .,
dances but it is called conn- no oM js Ue Teapot Dome Scandal ■ Remnants still remain of Development. eign nations the agency
try dancing sKms had some„ At the height of this the fami, pos5essions. which: s akin jn lace of Ro. for the training of
An old Etobethan name to do with thc butlers penod he Teapot Domo;once total|ed a oth,: P | P foreign students in Amen-
country dancmg, is different and majds scandal struck. tw a beach s|x ranches/bert w- Kitchen, director of oan n„,versities and colleges.
in most parts of the United Nevertheless. Tipperrry is It was touched off in 1922tw0 hollses and „ne of the!the 0ffice of International including USC.
States In general, dancers stiU the famiiy home< and by Secretary of the Interior world-s iargest collections of Training for the agency, At the completion of these respond to on-the-spot SOme Dohenys Still liVe thore. Albert B. Fall, wrho leased rare books and objects of Eloise Doyle, director of the trainin& programs many of
However, five brothers be-the Teapot Dome Naval oil art. • ^ f Community Reia- * en™'
gan another segment of the^reserves to a private concern,| Mansion Still Stands L:___ a.________matlcal*y ^iired high level
rections from the caller English Inception
Country dancing was orig- cjan's history in the early,and the Elks Hill Naval oil Doheny Beach was donated Mrs Ruth Adamst head of ^°bS within their own dipl°
inally performed I in England. 19th centUry, when theyj reserves to Doheny. to the state. The mansion.|th rf>unseline division ex-
and spread to all the courts |came to America. The lease was illegal, and Graystone, still stands at 501 Dlained the agencv’s program
of Europe. It was based on Qnly two (William and out of it came charges of bri-lDohenv Road on part of the t professors
beauty and eye appeal. Pat) survived the rigorous j bery against Doheny and ac-|450-acre Doheny holdings in
Chase concluded his talk jjfe they led in the Unitedicepting a bribe against Fall. Beverly Hills. The book and with some examples of folk- gtates. j Fall was convicted, but;art collection is part of the
lore and a song. “Jack and Name Americanized after seven years of court! library at St. John’s Semi-the Bean Tree” was the first They were uneducated, and j battles, Doheny was acquit- ; nary, songs and dances is children s tale. It is similar to the famil- by accident in Americanizing ted. • The period ended with Es-
singing games. “Farmer in iar “Jack and the Bean their name, the two brothers! E. L. Doheny Jr. was theitelle Doheny’s death in 1958. the Dell” and “Go In and Out Stalk” with a change in the came up with two different man for wdiom USC’s library; It was a period replete the Windows” are examples, things Jack took from the spellings. was named. jwith wealth and scandal, and
These songs reflect some giant. They both dropped the “0,”j He was the first of manyithe University of Southern
feeling like death and love,j “Old Roney,” his second but one ended the name Dohenys to graduate from I California was part of it. he said. They are like little selection, told of an old pack “ny,” while the other came
operas. mare that grew wool when up with an “ney” spelling.
The next step in folklore his master mistakenly put a The -ny branch, in the is the play party games. In sheep's hide on him. |person of E. L. Doheny Sr.
SPECIALISTS REPORT
Soviet Dogma Menaced By Economic Reforms
The Soviet-type economic system has outlived its usefulness aiid is now in the throes© of reforms which threaten the whole fabric of Soviet dogma, reports an article in the new issue of Communist Affairs, bimonthly publication of USC's Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda.
Reforms introduced by such Eastern bloc nations as Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia all but scrap the sacred Communist policy of central planning and control, stales Alan Brown and Yi-Chang Yin in their article titled “Soviet Economics: Reform vs. Orthodoxy.”
Assistant professors of eco-
nomics at USC and research associates in the Research Institute, both Brown and Yin are specialists in Soviet and Chinese Communist economic practices.
Red China, idealogical diehard of Communist states, continues (o hold obstinately against change. Brown and Yin note. However, crop failures, unproductivity and lack of consumer necessities are growing problems which will force necessary reforms, they say.
The same issue of Communist Affairs carries a summary of the U.S. State Department’s white paper on Vietnam, a timely briefing on the Sino-Indonesian “Axis,” land the second of three arti-
cles presenting a biographical study of Alexei Kosygin, “The Resilient Bureaucrat,” by Charles Malamuth.
Malamuth, senior research associate for USC’s Research Institute and coeditor of Communist Affairs, reveals that Kosygin was earmarked for a Stalin-style purging in the dictator’s last years.
That Kosygin managed to survive in the jungle of the Soviet power struggle and emerge 12 years later in the “copilot’s seat” can be attributed, says Malamuth, as much to Kosygin’s “natural gift for self-effacing grayness when the hue and cry was on,” as to his demonstrated, if colorless, administrative abilities.
'matic corps.
Agency Is New The agency is relatively new, it began with the recom-Students at Disadvantage mendations of then Attorney Foreign students are will- General Robert F. Kennedy ing to compete with American jn 196i. it faces constant students, but in many cases, unique problems, one of lack of adequate background the latest being the refusal puts them at a great disad- 0f 10 Vietnamese students to vantage. One such noted field return home, is political science. Because of such setbacks.
It was suggested that a Mrs. Adams explains that her new course in such subjects division of counseling was
started only five and one-half ; months ago, but has met with I great success in its short his-‘tory.
Attracts
1576
More than 1.500 votes have been cast as the 1965 election enters its second and final day.
The polls will remain open from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park. The Election Commission, under Commissioner Mary Ann Gumbinger. will continue to carefully check identification cards to prevent voting frauds.
Yesterday's tally of 1.576 votes is below last year’s record 2.100 cast in the first day of voting in the Betinis-Ros-endahl-Strachan contest.
30 Med Votes
Thirty of yesterday's votes were cast on the me d i c a I campus. Because ASSC President John Betinis failed to notify most of his fellow medical students when and where voting would taka place, few people voted, but a larger turnout is expected today.
Announcement of election results is scheduled for 7 tonight in the Student Lounge on the third floor of the Student Union.
However, if the IBM machines cannot handle the ballots properly, as was the case with last year's miscalculation in ballot printing, the votes will be counted by hand.
ASSC Results First
Final results will be reported as they are tallied, with ASSC offices armoured first.
Miss Gumbinger reminded all candidates who do not make the runoffs that they must submit a statement of their expenditures to her by Friday at 5 p.m.
Interest centers op I he presidential contest where Glenn Brown, Adam Herbert, Darrell Johnson. John Sullivan and Rick Takagaki are vying for the top spot.
Elective Offices
In other elective (^fices, either Carol Rollo or Marilou Pierson will cop the ASSC vice-presidency today.
Barbara Arnold or Judy Austin will have to brush up on shorthand, depending on who is elected ASSC secretary.
The contest for senior class president revolves around Chuck Arrobio. Ted Gilliland and Nick Toghia.
3 Vie for Jr. Prexy
Don Spyrison and Phil Kazanjian are vying for the junior class presidency, with Taylor Hackford aiming for a write-in win.
Running for sophomore president are Steve Newman and Mike Silverstein.
Robert Harmon is running unopposed for AMS president.
10 Years Accumulation Of Poetry Published
A book of poetry that is now at a period where we can the accumulation of 10 years no longer avoid them. We of writing has just been pub- must be vitally concerned lished by Dr. Arthur Lerner, with the quality of our lives.” lecturer in education at USC Speaking of the scientific and associate professor of| age with the same compas-philosophy and psychology at sion he shows when describ-L.A. City College. ing the beauties of nature.
Dr. Lerner, who earned his Dr. Lerner presents a collec-doctor of philosophy degree tion which reflects the inner from USC in educational psy- thoughts and emotions of chology, counseling and guid- modern man, his critics have ance, titled his first book, said.
“Rhymed and Unrhymed.”j Dr. Lerner dedicated the The book is being distribut- collection of poetry to Mrs. ed nationally. Nina Willis Walter, professor
The volume concerns itself primarily with man in the atomic age. Reviewers have said that behind the technical excellence of the poetry is a passionate and sober involvement with life.
of English at L.A. City College.
The author is still taking graduate courses at USC in English literature and comparative literature.
Dr. Lerner attended North-
POET'S FIRST—Dr. Arthur Lerner, education lecturer, (at left) receives congratulations on new book, "Rhymed and
and Unrhymed," by Mrs. Nina Walter, English professor and John Lombardi, Los Angeles City College president.
The poet says: “The prob- western University in Evan-lems we face today have al- ston. 111. and Roosevelt Uni-ways been with us, but we are, versity in Chicago.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 107, April 29, 1965 |
| Full text | PAGE THREE: Lemmon Film Doesn't Go Sour University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN PAGE FOUR: Dedeaux Diamond: A Challenge for Astrodome?, Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 29,1965 No. 107 2 SHOWS ADDED Rivals Tickets Going Rapidly Program To Feature 15 Writers Tickets for the remaining three performances of “The Rivals.” an 18th century comedy of manners, arej going fast. The three showings on May 3-5 have been sold out since Friday. Because of the ticket demand the Drama Department has scheduled two additional performances for Sun-' j day. May 9. a matinee at 2:30 p.m. and an evening performance at 8:30 p.m. Featured in the comedy will i be four women whose costumes will be characteristic of the personalities they portray. All the women will have tightly cinched waists and Fifteen writers from the bodices in the Tom Jones era fields of journalism, radio- style. Their tiny heels and TV. motion pictures and crea- white stockings are quite tive writing will be on cam- similar to modern styles, pus Saturday to participate wigs Outdated in a spring writer’s confer- Powered wigs were already ence. out of date and women wore I The event, sponsored by their own hair highly teased Theta Sigma Phi. national a°d often dyed. ... , Mrs. Malaprop, played by journal,sm honorary f ° r, Au^on wil dressed women, will include a morn- brocades ancj taffeta, ing general session, lunch juija Melville, the prim and and afternoon workshop ses- proper young ,ady wiU sions. played by Suzanne Benoit.1 Reservations may be made active in USC’s Street Thea-bv calling the Daily Trojan ter. city editor. RI 8-2311, ext. The best way to express 574, or by picking up reser- her strait-laced personality vation blanks from one of through costuming, drama the posters on campus. instructor William White j James Warner Bellah will said, is with a costume held moderate the conference. He so tightly at the waist by is the author of 17 novels stays that it is literally im-and has written scripts for several John Wayne motion pictures. Bellah’s articles have appeared in over 100 issues of Saturday Evening Voter Participation Down From 1964 3 Hopefuls Disagree Election With Betinis'Support UNDER CANVAS—Troj an voters exercise voting right in booths set up in Alumni Park. Today is last chance to vote in the current ASSC elections. Polling will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1,576 students voted the first day. "be LIBRARY HONORS NAME Doheny Family’s Wealth Bred Scandal, Charity (Editor’s Note: This is the came to California and be- USC, was a member of the posible for her to bend at first of a two-part series deal- came the wealthy Dohenys of university’s Board of Trus-the waist. ing with the Doheny family history, while the -ney’s mov- tees and served as president Costume Allows Movement —iits history and its connec- ed to Arizona. Carol Schulhof, who plays tion with USC.) the maid Lucy, has the simpl- By HAL LANCASTER Post. est costume because she is The Doheny family lore is Other speakers on the pro- a very active character who one of poverty and wealth gram include Ed Delaney, requires freedom of move- national and European his-foreign correspondent andment. jtory, and USC tradition, news analyst; Maxine Adams! Lydia Languish, a romantic j Beaches, streets and libra-Miller. author of “Bright j member of the idle rich class, jries have been named after Blue Beads ’; James Durbin spends all her time languor- ithem, and their contributions Jr.. lecturer in English at ously reading novels from the to the world and to USC have USC; and William Blatty, au-ilending library. Played bylmade a mark in history. thor of the novel “John Gold- Marcv Lafferty, Lydia will i The Doheny ancestry ex-, _ o farb. Please Come Home.” be dressed in soft pastel silks, tends back to Tipperary. walking by the La 1 ^ j Tar Pits and saw some men of the General Alumni Asso- The story of E. L. Doheny ciation. Sr. is good enough for fic-: He was shot in 1929 bv a tion. personal secretary, who then Gold Prospecting killed himself. He was a college graduate, 1932, the remaining Do-yet paradoxically chose a henys* financed mainly by rather unacademic vocation—k. Sr., built the library, gold prospecting. gave it to the school and dedi- T, . . , .. cated it to E. L. Jr. It was he who began the Presidential candidates Glenn Brown. Darrell Johnson and Rick Takagaki disagreed yesterday with the content of ASSC President John Betinis’ statement supporting John Sullivan. Betinis labeled these three candidates as “pretty-boy, do-nothing, say-nothing jacks-of-no-trade” and characterized them as “insipidly mouthing their own credentials and exhibiting themselves as proof of creeping metaballism.” Brown commented that Betinis’ pronouncement does not sound like the well-thought-out statement “that should come from a man of such maturity as he claims to be.” “I really don’t see how he can claim that no other candidate has real and imaginative ideas unless he concludes that something as highly idealistic and unworkable as Sullivan’s idea of community government is a prime example of an imaginative platform.” Brown and Reality Brown said he has consistently proposed projects that he knows to be feasible. He feels that his experience in making the Cheshire Cat Coffee House a successful reality has proven his capacity to put through “not only imaginative ideas but ideas that can work.” Johnson believes Betinis is either misinformed or uninformed. “It’s a shame to use what influence he has to support a candidate when he knows very little or nothing about the other candidates. “And besides. Eisenhower supported Nixon.” Compare AH Platforms Takagaki agrees with Johnson that Betinis has not been fully exposed to the platforms of the other candidates. “I would only ask that the mature student compare all the platforms for himself. “John Sullivan’s platform may be impressive in form let us first judge it by its content.” Takagaki regards it as ironic that a candidate like Betinis, who ran a “joke-type” campaign, is now claiming that Sullivan has the most mature platform. Doheny fortune, quite by accident. In the autumn of 1892. he Storyteller Describes Traditions of Folklore Doheny Sr. Dies In 1935, E. L. Doheny Sr. died. After his death, his wifel Estelle devoted most of her! time to philanthrophy. Difficulties Face Foreign Students Faculty Center members; be designed with specifically were warned yesterday to be foreign students in mind. aware of the difficulties fac- Pa*r sa^ that Pro* gram, costing $3.5 billion, t-o larMiit ° romps l American - oriented Cultural heritage in form of folklore can be kept alive if it is guised as recreation, Richard Chase told a Founders Hall audience yesterday. The American folklorist and storyteller explained that too many schools, knowing that cultural heritage is necessary, smother folklore by making it mandatory. “Folklore is the traditional beliefs, tales, songs, dances and sayings preserved orally and unreflectively among a people or group,” Chase said. Kindergarten Stage The kindergarten of these Country Cork, Ireland. --------_ ...n.c < (family name was O’Dohenyjia" mg r away o a ag . She was responsible for St. then. i Recognizing this as a sign £ ^ , i- i iof petroleum, he. along with ... ’ I In the old European days, 1 C] , C f.,d donated a library to St. !the family boasted one;^ , . , thrrp1Johns Seminary in her hus- famous relative, William the] ^ 192#. Doh ownedh,ands ?“>* h,elp'd ing foreign 6tudents laking comes nnder the jurisdiction Conqueror, who entered the,mQst of gigna] and the finance the building of St., American-oriented courses o£ the us state Department family tree by rather de\iousmost productive od strjke in "c<‘n^s ^SP '- by two representatives from In addition to supplying cap- the these, one still sings and means' the history of Mexico. '' e * ' 0 ,: n'> the Agency for International itol grants and loans to for- , , . „ j Butlers and Maids 1 . of the family history was end- b J ., dances but it is called conn- no oM js Ue Teapot Dome Scandal ■ Remnants still remain of Development. eign nations the agency try dancing sKms had some„ At the height of this the fami, pos5essions. which: s akin jn lace of Ro. for the training of An old Etobethan name to do with thc butlers penod he Teapot Domo;once total ed a oth,: P P foreign students in Amen- country dancmg, is different and majds scandal struck. tw a beach s x ranches/bert w- Kitchen, director of oan n„,versities and colleges. in most parts of the United Nevertheless. Tipperrry is It was touched off in 1922tw0 hollses and „ne of the!the 0ffice of International including USC. States In general, dancers stiU the famiiy home< and by Secretary of the Interior world-s iargest collections of Training for the agency, At the completion of these respond to on-the-spot SOme Dohenys Still liVe thore. Albert B. Fall, wrho leased rare books and objects of Eloise Doyle, director of the trainin& programs many of However, five brothers be-the Teapot Dome Naval oil art. • ^ f Community Reia- * en™' gan another segment of the^reserves to a private concern, Mansion Still Stands L:___ a.________matlcal*y ^iired high level rections from the caller English Inception Country dancing was orig- cjan's history in the early,and the Elks Hill Naval oil Doheny Beach was donated Mrs Ruth Adamst head of ^°bS within their own dipl° inally performed I in England. 19th centUry, when theyj reserves to Doheny. to the state. The mansion. th rf>unseline division ex- and spread to all the courts came to America. The lease was illegal, and Graystone, still stands at 501 Dlained the agencv’s program of Europe. It was based on Qnly two (William and out of it came charges of bri-lDohenv Road on part of the t professors beauty and eye appeal. Pat) survived the rigorous j bery against Doheny and ac- 450-acre Doheny holdings in Chase concluded his talk jjfe they led in the Unitedicepting a bribe against Fall. Beverly Hills. The book and with some examples of folk- gtates. j Fall was convicted, but;art collection is part of the lore and a song. “Jack and Name Americanized after seven years of court! library at St. John’s Semi-the Bean Tree” was the first They were uneducated, and j battles, Doheny was acquit- ; nary, songs and dances is children s tale. It is similar to the famil- by accident in Americanizing ted. • The period ended with Es- singing games. “Farmer in iar “Jack and the Bean their name, the two brothers! E. L. Doheny Jr. was theitelle Doheny’s death in 1958. the Dell” and “Go In and Out Stalk” with a change in the came up with two different man for wdiom USC’s library; It was a period replete the Windows” are examples, things Jack took from the spellings. was named. jwith wealth and scandal, and These songs reflect some giant. They both dropped the “0,”j He was the first of manyithe University of Southern feeling like death and love,j “Old Roney,” his second but one ended the name Dohenys to graduate from I California was part of it. he said. They are like little selection, told of an old pack “ny,” while the other came operas. mare that grew wool when up with an “ney” spelling. The next step in folklore his master mistakenly put a The -ny branch, in the is the play party games. In sheep's hide on him. person of E. L. Doheny Sr. SPECIALISTS REPORT Soviet Dogma Menaced By Economic Reforms The Soviet-type economic system has outlived its usefulness aiid is now in the throes© of reforms which threaten the whole fabric of Soviet dogma, reports an article in the new issue of Communist Affairs, bimonthly publication of USC's Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda. Reforms introduced by such Eastern bloc nations as Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia all but scrap the sacred Communist policy of central planning and control, stales Alan Brown and Yi-Chang Yin in their article titled “Soviet Economics: Reform vs. Orthodoxy.” Assistant professors of eco- nomics at USC and research associates in the Research Institute, both Brown and Yin are specialists in Soviet and Chinese Communist economic practices. Red China, idealogical diehard of Communist states, continues (o hold obstinately against change. Brown and Yin note. However, crop failures, unproductivity and lack of consumer necessities are growing problems which will force necessary reforms, they say. The same issue of Communist Affairs carries a summary of the U.S. State Department’s white paper on Vietnam, a timely briefing on the Sino-Indonesian “Axis,” land the second of three arti- cles presenting a biographical study of Alexei Kosygin, “The Resilient Bureaucrat,” by Charles Malamuth. Malamuth, senior research associate for USC’s Research Institute and coeditor of Communist Affairs, reveals that Kosygin was earmarked for a Stalin-style purging in the dictator’s last years. That Kosygin managed to survive in the jungle of the Soviet power struggle and emerge 12 years later in the “copilot’s seat” can be attributed, says Malamuth, as much to Kosygin’s “natural gift for self-effacing grayness when the hue and cry was on,” as to his demonstrated, if colorless, administrative abilities. 'matic corps. Agency Is New The agency is relatively new, it began with the recom-Students at Disadvantage mendations of then Attorney Foreign students are will- General Robert F. Kennedy ing to compete with American jn 196i. it faces constant students, but in many cases, unique problems, one of lack of adequate background the latest being the refusal puts them at a great disad- 0f 10 Vietnamese students to vantage. One such noted field return home, is political science. Because of such setbacks. It was suggested that a Mrs. Adams explains that her new course in such subjects division of counseling was started only five and one-half ; months ago, but has met with I great success in its short his-‘tory. Attracts 1576 More than 1.500 votes have been cast as the 1965 election enters its second and final day. The polls will remain open from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park. The Election Commission, under Commissioner Mary Ann Gumbinger. will continue to carefully check identification cards to prevent voting frauds. Yesterday's tally of 1.576 votes is below last year’s record 2.100 cast in the first day of voting in the Betinis-Ros-endahl-Strachan contest. 30 Med Votes Thirty of yesterday's votes were cast on the me d i c a I campus. Because ASSC President John Betinis failed to notify most of his fellow medical students when and where voting would taka place, few people voted, but a larger turnout is expected today. Announcement of election results is scheduled for 7 tonight in the Student Lounge on the third floor of the Student Union. However, if the IBM machines cannot handle the ballots properly, as was the case with last year's miscalculation in ballot printing, the votes will be counted by hand. ASSC Results First Final results will be reported as they are tallied, with ASSC offices armoured first. Miss Gumbinger reminded all candidates who do not make the runoffs that they must submit a statement of their expenditures to her by Friday at 5 p.m. Interest centers op I he presidential contest where Glenn Brown, Adam Herbert, Darrell Johnson. John Sullivan and Rick Takagaki are vying for the top spot. Elective Offices In other elective (^fices, either Carol Rollo or Marilou Pierson will cop the ASSC vice-presidency today. Barbara Arnold or Judy Austin will have to brush up on shorthand, depending on who is elected ASSC secretary. The contest for senior class president revolves around Chuck Arrobio. Ted Gilliland and Nick Toghia. 3 Vie for Jr. Prexy Don Spyrison and Phil Kazanjian are vying for the junior class presidency, with Taylor Hackford aiming for a write-in win. Running for sophomore president are Steve Newman and Mike Silverstein. Robert Harmon is running unopposed for AMS president. 10 Years Accumulation Of Poetry Published A book of poetry that is now at a period where we can the accumulation of 10 years no longer avoid them. We of writing has just been pub- must be vitally concerned lished by Dr. Arthur Lerner, with the quality of our lives.” lecturer in education at USC Speaking of the scientific and associate professor of age with the same compas-philosophy and psychology at sion he shows when describ-L.A. City College. ing the beauties of nature. Dr. Lerner, who earned his Dr. Lerner presents a collec-doctor of philosophy degree tion which reflects the inner from USC in educational psy- thoughts and emotions of chology, counseling and guid- modern man, his critics have ance, titled his first book, said. “Rhymed and Unrhymed.”j Dr. Lerner dedicated the The book is being distribut- collection of poetry to Mrs. ed nationally. Nina Willis Walter, professor The volume concerns itself primarily with man in the atomic age. Reviewers have said that behind the technical excellence of the poetry is a passionate and sober involvement with life. of English at L.A. City College. The author is still taking graduate courses at USC in English literature and comparative literature. Dr. Lerner attended North- POET'S FIRST—Dr. Arthur Lerner, education lecturer, (at left) receives congratulations on new book, "Rhymed and and Unrhymed" by Mrs. Nina Walter, English professor and John Lombardi, Los Angeles City College president. The poet says: “The prob- western University in Evan-lems we face today have al- ston. 111. and Roosevelt Uni-ways been with us, but we are, versity in Chicago. |
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