Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 93, March 30, 1965 |
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University of Southern California
PAGE THREE:
Street Theater Moods
Portrayed in Pictures I W I I , I I \ j \ I "%! Face Pepperdine Today
PAGE FOUR: Baseballers Lose;
Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1965 No. 93
KUSC-TV
Will Quiz Takagaki
ASSC presidential candidate Rick Takagaki will be interviewed by a two-member panel Friday on KUSC-TV at 12:30 p.m. *
This will be the first in a series of programs entitled “ASSC Elections: ’65." designed to acquaint the student body with the presidential candidates.
One television set will be placed on the corner near Hancock Foundation, another will be in 231 Allan Hancock.
Friday Series
Alan Kaye, producer-direc tor of the series, said KUSC-TV’ plans to interview all the presidential candidates in the three Fridays before the election.
So far Takagaki is the only scheduled candidate, he said.
The objective of the program series is to get students interested in the future election. Kaye explained.
“There is a great deal of apathy about student government. and I’d like to see something done about it” Kaye said.
The panelists on Friday’s program will be Daily Trojan reporter Greg O'Brien and Scott Bice, former election commissioner, who will represent KUSC-FM news.
Robert Griffin, former Senate president, wall serve as moderator.
Predicts Topics
Kaye predicted that such topics as the constitution, the “abolish student government movement,” John Betinis and the Berkeley situation will be covered in the spontaneous question-answer session.
The crew for the programs include Wally Smith, floor manager; Bill Emerson, technical director: and Dale Osborne, audio director
Dr. Topping Rejects Eligibility Proposal
BEST OF ’64—Reh earsing at last year's Songfest preliminaries are 1964 sweepstakes winners, Pi Beta Phi and Beta
WILL NARROW FIELD
Theta Pi. They performed "Quality of Mercy," a satire on suicides, in the Songfest production number category.
MISS LAURA MARYE
. . . Retiring Bursar
Songfest Preliminaries
To Be Held April 7, 8
Preliminary judging will be ta Xi; Phi Kappa Tau and Delta; and Delta Delta Delta held April 7 and 8 in BovardjKappa Alpha Theta; Alpha and Sigma Alpha Mu. Auditorium to narrow the;Tau Omega; Delta Chi and Kappa Alpha; Birnkrant field of groups participating Gamma Phi Beta; and Tau Residence Hall; Pi Beta Phi in Songfest, 1965 on May 15. Kappa Epsilon are also in- aRd Phi Delta Theta, and Songfest Chairman Tom eluded in small group divi- Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Woolley said because prelims; sjon. !Tau Delta are also entered
are so close, groups need not' _ . , ,. in the novelty division,
be as polished as was neces-', Entenn|> production num- In mixed division are Theta sary in the past. |bers are Kappa Kappa Gam-cw and Alpha phi; Alpha
Groups had only four “J. “J* _Slgma /“i?1’ Gamma and Sigma Phi Epsi-
weeks to rehearse this year,?* and„r°wnand Gown Resi-;lon; and Phi Mu Alpha and as compared to eight weeks ^C<1 ’ Kappa Tau j Sigma Alpha Iota, last year. I 3? . ^ t. p' Participating in the men’s
Partly Prepared ^P^a Theta and Kappa djv—on are Ddta. Sigma Phi,
“However, all groups must 1£ma- Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Kappa
have a significant portion of Novelty number partici- Psi, and NROTC 1 their music and choreography pants include Lambda Chi The single entrant in wom-Icompletely prepared for pre- Alpha and Alpha Phi; Alpha en’s division is the University | lims,” Woolley added. Chi Omega and Phi Gammai Residence Hall.
The April 7 session will : last from 3 to 9 p.m. The April 8 prelims will last from [3:30-7 p.m.
Details of the exact pre- A • - p I •
Win Honors to group directors and Song- ^ ^ ^ ClIQ 01*1 Q 11S
fest representatives at the The Department of Econ- from a recent two-week visit Seven engineering seniors directors’ clinic tomorrow at omics will assist the govern- Quit0) the nation’s capital have been honored by the 3:30 p.m. in 129 Founders ment of Ecuador develop its American Society for Testing Hall. ! economy under a two-year 01
and Materials. 6 Copies of Music | contract financed by the "Banana exports have been
The students will receive Woolley reminded all pre- Agency for International De- expanding for the last ten membership in the society for lim participants that they are velopment of the U. S. De-one year, subscriptions to sel-j required to pass in six copies partment of State.
of their music at the time of starting in June, employees’explained, “but Ecuador is prelims. These copies will be Qf th Nationai Planning afraid that this cannot be returned the day after pre- , nf cannot oe
li—o .Board of Ecuador will come j projected much further.
, .. to the USC campus for grad-1 ‘This enables the prelim; uate study in statistics and
Engineering
Students
Economics Department
ected society publications, and full membership after graduation without application.
Outstanding Students
j years at a satisfactory rate of development,” the economist
“The fruit has been going
The awards are given to judges to evaluate the music. ;market analysis. to Japan and western Europe,
outstanding students with in- It is important in case groups ’ ^ but Japan is turning to Tai-
terest in the field of mater- cannot perform their whole Members of the USC facul- wan and the Philippines for ials. They are designed to en- numbers at prelims,” Woolley ty will also go to Ecuador as bananas, and the European courage student interest in said. technical consultants to the Common Market is orienting
the society. Edward G. Part- Any group that cannot board. Dr. Aurelius Morgner, jts nations to Africa, ridge, professor of chemicalmake prelims at the time chairman of the Department t
engineering, said. stated in the prelim an- of Economics and professor Ecuador s exports or coi-
Chemical engineering ma- nouncements should contact!of international relations, tee s u S a r h a v ^ been
Elections Set Today For AWS
AWS elections will be con-i ducted today and tomorrow in front of Doheny Library from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Running unopposed are Janet Rybicki. a junior, for president and Charla Hindley, j sophomore, for vice-president.!
Candidates for secretary include Susi Shubitz, sopho-; more, and Marcia Buckheim and Carol McClure, freshmen.
Vying for the treasurer’s position are Diane Ford, sophomore, and Susi Burrin, a freshman.
Current Officers The current AWS officers, are Sandi Lipsey, president;
Janet Rybicki, vice-president;!
Maggie McEntee, secretary;
and Ronnie Rennekamp. After 46 yean at USC, Mis» reasurer. Laura Marye, bursar for the
Marcia Buckheim and Di- jasj. 23 years, will retire to-ane Ford are serving as cabi- morrow
net representatives. _ , The business office will
In the past the AWS presi- honor Miss Marye tomorow dential candidates were in- at a tea from 2:30 to 4 p.m. eluded in the general ASSC jn the Faculty Center, elections. Miss Marye came to work
This year the rule was for USC in 1919, but said “I changed so that the new of- think I was born here.” ficers can be honored at the Bursar Since 1942
AWS recognition assembly. She began working as
Apnl 26. secretary in the business of-
Election Winners fices after her graduation
Winners of the AWS elec-!from Hollywood High School tion will be announced to- and held various positions in morrow night when the votes the business office until her will be tallied. appointment as bursar
In a recent report, the elec- 1942. tion commission listed the “After doing a job so long qualifications for candidate you usually get in a rut, but
Cites SCA Loss As One Reason
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH
Pres. Norman Topping will not sign the amend-jment concerning the grade point average of ASSC I executive candidates.
The amendment was passed by the student body two years ago and resubmitted to him by the ASSC Senate last week.
The proposal, ratified in a sumption being that the As-special referendum election sociated Students preferred on Feb. 28, 1963, stated that the present constitution, presidential candidates must which includes the require-; have a 2.5 grade point aver- ment of better than the all-jage, rather than an average university grade point aver-above the all-university age to be eligible to run for | mark. ASSC offices.”
The amendment was orig- Filing deadline for next
month's election is Friday. A list of eligible candidates will
j . du rso rinaiiy to un*‘
versity president after its ratification but remained un-
Will Retire Thursday
eligibility for AWS positions.
The candidate for president must have served on the AWS official
not around here. You have to run in circles just to keep up, the university is expanding
associate jso- ’ Miss MaiTe said, cabinet at least one year,! She remembers in 1919 tu-
have completed at least two ^on was 545 a semester and
the student body numbered
years at USC, and have a
3,000.
grade point average over the, _
all-university average of 2.7. '11,6 f mpuf was very smal1
1 then sh6 ScLiu
The vice-presidential can- <T’ve grown with the uni_
date should have completed versity and tried tQ k up
at least 60 units by the endjwith it;, she added<
of the election semester and _ . ... .
Trojan Worker
jors Christopher England and James R. Parris; civil engineering seniors Gary Hart, Roger Olack and Noel Park; and mechanical engineering majors Raymond Miller and
him as soon as possible. said.
Groups entered in the small Ecuador is faced with group division are Theta Chi problem of developing
small in comparison with ba-nanas, but perhaps these i crops can be increased and
Gordon Nicholson w o n! ta.
and Delta Gamma; Chi ports other than bananas, a Omega; and Alpha Chi crop around which the coun-Omega and Phi Gamma Del- try’s economy has been cen-
others found.’
for the secretarial candidate, at least 30.
30 Units
The requirements for the treasurer state that she will have completed 30 units by the end of the election semester.
Activities of the AWS cabinet include fall and spring orientation, AWS handbooks listing general rules and traditions and the recognition assembly.
This year the cabinet reviewed a report by Judicial Court on dress regulations and an overhaul of the “specials” system.
“You might say that I’ve worked like a Trojan.”
When Miss Marye came to work at USC, Merle McGinnis, now adjunct professor of food distribution, was student body president.
She also recalls that Dr. Paul Greeley, now medical director of the Student Health Center, was a bank messenger.
“Now so much is happening that it is hard to keep ahead of the students.” ahead of the students.
After retiring Miss Marye plans “to play as hard as I’ve worked in the past.”
be issued by Election Corn-signed. missioner Mary Ann Gum-
Objections Listed binger Monday at 4 p.m.
Listing his objection in a Elections are scheduled for statement to Dean of Stu- April 28 and 29. with run-offs dents Paul A. Bloland, Dr. set for May 5.
Topping explained: Present Requirements
“At the time the amend- Already in the race for ment was voted on, our rec- ASSC president are Junior ords indicated that only 287 Class President Rick Taka-students voted — 187 for and gaki and Glen Mowrer, Tro-100 against. jan Democratic Club presi-
“Undoubtedly many of dent, those who voted two years Carol Rollo, junior class ago are no longer students vice-president, is the only at USC,” Dr. Topping con- candidate to file for ASSC tinued. vice-president so far.
Referring to the defeated The resolution to resubmit Southern California Associ- the amendment to Dr. Top-ation Constitution, Dr. Top- ping was introduced at ping said: Thursday’s Senate meeting
“It was defeated, the as- by Sen. Dave Lippman.
Counterpoint Speaker Describes \New Left'
awards.
I tered for some time, Dr.
SIMILAR TO HARVARD
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; The- Morgner said on his return!
New Law Center Forum To Invite Noted Speakers
Mrs. Margaret Thorpe, sen- “How can we get rid of ior in history, asserted at i discrimination in jobs when Counterpoint USC Sunday-there aren't enough jobs to that marches, rallies and sit-:go around?” in protests have given birth to The recent Harlem rent the New Independent Left, j controversy shows the move-“It is a reaction against the ment’s desire for maximum feeling that people no longer [participation. Mrs. Thorpe have any control over the continued, type of government that gov- The residents of Harlem, erns them,” she said. fed-up with poor living con-
Mrs. Thorpe said the newjditions. began exerting indimovement is an alternative to vidual pressure on officials. Marxism, and to corporate] A particularly effective deliberalism. Corporate liberal- vice was initiated when May-ism is a result of the absorp- or Robert Wagner began re-tion of the old Socialists by ceiving dead rats in his mail, the new Democrats. “And don’t delude yourself
Defines New Left ;into thinking that a more in-Defining the New Independ- telligent person will react less ent Left, she said the main emotionally,” she warned, concept is a desire to return Mrs. Thorpe said the New to a truly democratic society. Independent Left doesn’t wart It also seeks to register an to form a new power struc-individual protest against a ture. athough that would be society in which all the deci- desirable as an eventual de-sions are made by a few key velopment. people, she said. One Way
“We differ from the radical The only way this could right in that we are willing to happen would be for the ma-pay for individual advance- jority of people to believe in ment,” she said. it.
The New Independent Left She said she hoped it would also relates the various prob-, not lose its present ideals and lems of society — war, pov- direction, erty, civil rights, industrial- “Maybe you'll call all this ization, and poverty. naive idealism and maybe in
“Negro problems cannot be 20 years I will to. But right solved unless we solve the now I don’t. I call it belief in economic trouble,” she said, la democratic society.”
The Law School is starting “The Law Center Forum,” to bring distinguished speakers to discuss social, moral and political subjects'.
“We plan to make this program of general interest to the whole student body,” Keith Johns, chairman of the committee sponsor ing the forum, announced yesterday.
“The forum will make the beginning of a tradition similar to the one at Harvard. At Harvard they have even set up a $1000 budget to bring major speakers like Martin Luther King to their campus,” John continued.
Allen Neiman, a Los Angeles lawyer, will speak at the first forum at 12:30 p.m. to-
morrow in 129 Founders Hall.
Neiman was one of 12 Los Angeles lawyers who volunteered to go to Mississippi to help prepare a lawsuit attacking the election of Mississippi Congressmen.
The suit has been filed because of discriminatory voter-registration procedure in the electio nof the delegates.
Neiman will explain the lawsuit and relate some of his experiences while he was in Mississippi.
In 1962, while Neiman was a lecturer in the USC Law School, he taught “Everyday Law” on the KNXT educational program.
This course was a series dealing with the legal rights
and responsobilities which flow from life in our society.
Neiman, who received a bachelor of science degree from UCLA, was a member of the USC Law Review, an academic honorary society.
He has written articles in the fields of arbitration, agency and criminal law, and has done research on the right of privacy.
Neiman also specializes in jthe areas of civil rights and individual liberties.
“We have designed the program of the forum to interest undergraduate students and we want to encourage them to attend.” Orrin B. Evans, dean of the Law School, said.
25 Students Volunteer For U.S. Peace Corps
Twenty-five USC students we don't want to discourage have signed up for the Peace students from finishing their Corps this year, Irv Ostrow- college education,” Joseph G. sky, Peace Corps volunteer. Co,man> deputy aa30ciatc, di_ announced yesterday. rector of the Peace Corpg for
Most of these are interest- pjannjng evaluation and reed in engineering, teaching, gearch said photography, geology,
nurs-i
ing, music and home economics.
An information center ati Tommy Trojan will
this week from 8 a.m. to 8 ., ,,__,
The Peace Corps staff Methotot Ctareh-
Applicants must take the Peace Corps application tests. They will be given at 10 a.m., 1 p.m., 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. in opera e ]ower lounge of the Uni-
PROSPECTIVE CORPSMEN — Bernie Rang, graduate student in Spanish, picks up literature on the Peace Corps at a
table in front of Tommy Trojan. Peace Corps application tests will be given from this Wednesda y to April 6.
p.m. March 31 - April 6.
will explain the purpose, r
programs and future plans of. The tests are used for
the corps and also accept ap- placement purposes only. No
plications from interested previous knowledge of a for-
juniors, seniors, and gradu- eign language is required, but
ate students. optional Spanish and French
“We prefer junior and sen- language achievement tests
ior college students because will be available.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 93, March 30, 1965 |
| Full text |
University of Southern California PAGE THREE: Street Theater Moods Portrayed in Pictures I W I I , I I \ j \ I "%! Face Pepperdine Today PAGE FOUR: Baseballers Lose; Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1965 No. 93 KUSC-TV Will Quiz Takagaki ASSC presidential candidate Rick Takagaki will be interviewed by a two-member panel Friday on KUSC-TV at 12:30 p.m. * This will be the first in a series of programs entitled “ASSC Elections: ’65." designed to acquaint the student body with the presidential candidates. One television set will be placed on the corner near Hancock Foundation, another will be in 231 Allan Hancock. Friday Series Alan Kaye, producer-direc tor of the series, said KUSC-TV’ plans to interview all the presidential candidates in the three Fridays before the election. So far Takagaki is the only scheduled candidate, he said. The objective of the program series is to get students interested in the future election. Kaye explained. “There is a great deal of apathy about student government. and I’d like to see something done about it” Kaye said. The panelists on Friday’s program will be Daily Trojan reporter Greg O'Brien and Scott Bice, former election commissioner, who will represent KUSC-FM news. Robert Griffin, former Senate president, wall serve as moderator. Predicts Topics Kaye predicted that such topics as the constitution, the “abolish student government movement,” John Betinis and the Berkeley situation will be covered in the spontaneous question-answer session. The crew for the programs include Wally Smith, floor manager; Bill Emerson, technical director: and Dale Osborne, audio director Dr. Topping Rejects Eligibility Proposal BEST OF ’64—Reh earsing at last year's Songfest preliminaries are 1964 sweepstakes winners, Pi Beta Phi and Beta WILL NARROW FIELD Theta Pi. They performed "Quality of Mercy" a satire on suicides, in the Songfest production number category. MISS LAURA MARYE . . . Retiring Bursar Songfest Preliminaries To Be Held April 7, 8 Preliminary judging will be ta Xi; Phi Kappa Tau and Delta; and Delta Delta Delta held April 7 and 8 in BovardjKappa Alpha Theta; Alpha and Sigma Alpha Mu. Auditorium to narrow the;Tau Omega; Delta Chi and Kappa Alpha; Birnkrant field of groups participating Gamma Phi Beta; and Tau Residence Hall; Pi Beta Phi in Songfest, 1965 on May 15. Kappa Epsilon are also in- aRd Phi Delta Theta, and Songfest Chairman Tom eluded in small group divi- Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Woolley said because prelims; sjon. !Tau Delta are also entered are so close, groups need not' _ . , ,. in the novelty division, be as polished as was neces-', Entenn > production num- In mixed division are Theta sary in the past. bers are Kappa Kappa Gam-cw and Alpha phi; Alpha Groups had only four “J. “J* _Slgma /“i?1’ Gamma and Sigma Phi Epsi- weeks to rehearse this year,?* and„r°wnand Gown Resi-;lon; and Phi Mu Alpha and as compared to eight weeks ^C<1 ’ Kappa Tau j Sigma Alpha Iota, last year. I 3? . ^ t. p' Participating in the men’s Partly Prepared ^P^a Theta and Kappa djv—on are Ddta. Sigma Phi, “However, all groups must 1£ma- Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Kappa have a significant portion of Novelty number partici- Psi, and NROTC 1 their music and choreography pants include Lambda Chi The single entrant in wom-Icompletely prepared for pre- Alpha and Alpha Phi; Alpha en’s division is the University lims,” Woolley added. Chi Omega and Phi Gammai Residence Hall. The April 7 session will : last from 3 to 9 p.m. The April 8 prelims will last from [3:30-7 p.m. Details of the exact pre- A • - p I • Win Honors to group directors and Song- ^ ^ ^ ClIQ 01*1 Q 11S fest representatives at the The Department of Econ- from a recent two-week visit Seven engineering seniors directors’ clinic tomorrow at omics will assist the govern- Quit0) the nation’s capital have been honored by the 3:30 p.m. in 129 Founders ment of Ecuador develop its American Society for Testing Hall. ! economy under a two-year 01 and Materials. 6 Copies of Music contract financed by the "Banana exports have been The students will receive Woolley reminded all pre- Agency for International De- expanding for the last ten membership in the society for lim participants that they are velopment of the U. S. De-one year, subscriptions to sel-j required to pass in six copies partment of State. of their music at the time of starting in June, employees’explained, “but Ecuador is prelims. These copies will be Qf th Nationai Planning afraid that this cannot be returned the day after pre- , nf cannot oe li—o .Board of Ecuador will come j projected much further. , .. to the USC campus for grad-1 ‘This enables the prelim; uate study in statistics and Engineering Students Economics Department ected society publications, and full membership after graduation without application. Outstanding Students j years at a satisfactory rate of development,” the economist “The fruit has been going The awards are given to judges to evaluate the music. ;market analysis. to Japan and western Europe, outstanding students with in- It is important in case groups ’ ^ but Japan is turning to Tai- terest in the field of mater- cannot perform their whole Members of the USC facul- wan and the Philippines for ials. They are designed to en- numbers at prelims,” Woolley ty will also go to Ecuador as bananas, and the European courage student interest in said. technical consultants to the Common Market is orienting the society. Edward G. Part- Any group that cannot board. Dr. Aurelius Morgner, jts nations to Africa, ridge, professor of chemicalmake prelims at the time chairman of the Department t engineering, said. stated in the prelim an- of Economics and professor Ecuador s exports or coi- Chemical engineering ma- nouncements should contact!of international relations, tee s u S a r h a v ^ been Elections Set Today For AWS AWS elections will be con-i ducted today and tomorrow in front of Doheny Library from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Running unopposed are Janet Rybicki. a junior, for president and Charla Hindley, j sophomore, for vice-president.! Candidates for secretary include Susi Shubitz, sopho-; more, and Marcia Buckheim and Carol McClure, freshmen. Vying for the treasurer’s position are Diane Ford, sophomore, and Susi Burrin, a freshman. Current Officers The current AWS officers, are Sandi Lipsey, president; Janet Rybicki, vice-president;! Maggie McEntee, secretary; and Ronnie Rennekamp. After 46 yean at USC, Mis» reasurer. Laura Marye, bursar for the Marcia Buckheim and Di- jasj. 23 years, will retire to-ane Ford are serving as cabi- morrow net representatives. _ , The business office will In the past the AWS presi- honor Miss Marye tomorow dential candidates were in- at a tea from 2:30 to 4 p.m. eluded in the general ASSC jn the Faculty Center, elections. Miss Marye came to work This year the rule was for USC in 1919, but said “I changed so that the new of- think I was born here.” ficers can be honored at the Bursar Since 1942 AWS recognition assembly. She began working as Apnl 26. secretary in the business of- Election Winners fices after her graduation Winners of the AWS elec-!from Hollywood High School tion will be announced to- and held various positions in morrow night when the votes the business office until her will be tallied. appointment as bursar In a recent report, the elec- 1942. tion commission listed the “After doing a job so long qualifications for candidate you usually get in a rut, but Cites SCA Loss As One Reason By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Pres. Norman Topping will not sign the amend-jment concerning the grade point average of ASSC I executive candidates. The amendment was passed by the student body two years ago and resubmitted to him by the ASSC Senate last week. The proposal, ratified in a sumption being that the As-special referendum election sociated Students preferred on Feb. 28, 1963, stated that the present constitution, presidential candidates must which includes the require-; have a 2.5 grade point aver- ment of better than the all-jage, rather than an average university grade point aver-above the all-university age to be eligible to run for mark. ASSC offices.” The amendment was orig- Filing deadline for next month's election is Friday. A list of eligible candidates will j . du rso rinaiiy to un*‘ versity president after its ratification but remained un- Will Retire Thursday eligibility for AWS positions. The candidate for president must have served on the AWS official not around here. You have to run in circles just to keep up, the university is expanding associate jso- ’ Miss MaiTe said, cabinet at least one year,! She remembers in 1919 tu- have completed at least two ^on was 545 a semester and the student body numbered years at USC, and have a 3,000. grade point average over the, _ all-university average of 2.7. '11,6 f mpuf was very smal1 1 then sh6 ScLiu The vice-presidential can- |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1423/uschist-dt-1965-03-30~001.tif |
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