Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 101, April 21, 1965 |
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68 Head Dean's List With 4.0
3.5 or Better Grade Point
Carried by 359
Sixty-eight straight-A students head the list of 359 honored in the 1964-65 fall Dean’s List released yesterday.
The 4.0 students top the list of those earning grade averages of 3.5 or better for last semester.
Vniir-Pnints J Gregory Bdrtlow, Michael Bassell, Al-
bert Bays, Bet*e Beaman, Suianne
Those receiving a 4.0 were: Becker, Paul Beckstead, Carl Bellone, tt I?Vini-f) f Suianne Benoit, Jack Berger, Richard
\ ynette AlmQuist, Richard gerf|(eni Robert Bobic, Jackie Bod-Anderson. Randall Arase, lander, Edwin Boggle, Ann Boyd, Joyce
, Brackenbury, Cathy Braun, David George Baker, Kenneth Brown, Lloyd Brown, Stephen Brown, pa_ Warner Brundage, Mary Bukove, Frank
] DA University of Southern California [LY ® TROJA N
Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1965 No. 101
Barnes. James Bartlett. J. tx- bu||oc|, Ellen Burg, Priscilla Burgesi tricia Bjorklund. Israel Bor- Catherine Burleigh, Marilyn Burrill.
enstein, Richard Bremer, Kathleen Calbeck, Cheryl Cashion Stuart Browers, Ruth Cald- Leroy Chase, Lai Chew, Randall Chris-
| tison, Gabnelle Cnung, Mary Clark,
well, Mary Carpenter, Bever- Betty Cohen, Claudia Coleman, Leslie
ly Carrington, David Chanai- c%S wa, Virginia Clark, Roberta Karen Ciamecki.
a p.-,,.Elisabeth David, Michael Davis, Sally
Collen, Anna Cowdrey, Jo- Dav;s Bi,| Dellanoussaye, Mary Dilday,
hanne Creveling. Jerry Crom- Lawrence Downs, Jack Easton, Peter
.. r-T J XT i Elliott, Maryle Emmett, Donald Engle,
well, Wilbur Curtis and Neal Trudy Epple, Samuel Erickson, Karen
Erlich, Liiabelle Evans, Craig Everts.
n-and-Out Sullivan In Again
Cutler.
Other Four-Points
David Dryer. Pat Foley, Bonnie Gadless. Judy Gelfand, Joseph Glazner, Paul Golding, Laura Halem, Terry Hamburg, Gregory Christian Hill. Deann Hoshide, Alice Ikeda, Darrell Johnson, Harriet Katz. Deborah Kellett, James Kloetzel, Suzanne Knudson. Roger Krauel, Tebb;
F-G
Dona Feldman, Freddie Fenster, Ralph Fertig, Lawrence Dennis Kent, David Kersey, Setsuko Kihara, James Kilbury, Rona King, Susan Kinkade, Kerry Kist-ler, Charles Kittleson, Sandra Klein, liana Kleiner, Judi Komaki, Jane Kook-er, Marian Korn, Jan Kramer.
L-M
Frances Lamanno, Daniel Lancaster, William Lande, Dennis Leburg, Mona Lehet, Paul Lehman, Joseph Lemro, Cheryl Lew, Laura Lindaren, John Link, Sandra Lipsey, Kathy Lockhart, Bruce Loessin, Pat Lombardo, Robert Lowman, Vicki Luboff, Maureen Lundy, Lennis Lyon.
Marilyn MacDonald, Martin Mandel, t~>• j 4. i Michael Mann, David Marshak, John
Kusserow, Richard Ruznet- Marshall, Judy Martin, Lynda Martinez, sky, Daniel Lang, Sandra McDonald.
Mason, Stephanie McCall, |le, Michael McBride, Carol McCluer, t-» itr r* j ait* Francis McHugh, Anne Menne, Myna
Barbara McCoard, JullC M.C“ Meshul, Marshall Metz, David Meyer, Farland, Jonnie Miller, Gary 8i!J Michielutte, Glenn Miller. Sandra ’ . J Miller, Chris Mmmck, Gay Moore,
Mills, Ann Morns. Linda Marilyn Moore, Phyllis Moore, Ronald
__j Morin, Sharon Moriwaki, John Morrow, ail Cl Canrne Unnnt f'.jrftll/T
Norris, Charles Piascik Rochelle Pick.
R-Y
j George Mount, Carolyn Mullinix, Alicia ! Mumford, Linda Murray.
N-R
j Edward Ncube, Douglas Neil, Chris-_ ~ •rt I *'ne Nelson, Richard Nelson, Vivian
Gail Reavely, Ronnie Ren— (Nelson, Bertram Newmark, Cherry
•nf>kamn Martha Rirkpt Wil- N°bl«. Linda Nordlinger, Philip Norton, neKamp, Martna iUCKet, Wil Ndncy Nuesse)er Mary Nyberg, James
liam Sarno, John Satterfield. O'Toole, Daniel Olson, Kathleen Ouchi.
_ Gerald Pacelli, Wendy Parker, Chris
Stanton | patferson, Betty Pelletier, Jane Pester-Marilvn field, Claire Pettegrew, Barry Pick,
I Mary Pierson, Steven Poole, Joyce Thorpe,1 Poulson, Mary Prouty, Mark Pultman, j Robert Quint, Wilbut Quon.
I uruer, Steven Rabens, Tristine Rainer, Eilene Stanlev I Rav. PdU* Rayton, Judy Rees, William Rhead, Steven Rhodes, Barbara Ridgley, Warner, Carl Willgerot, Har- James Roark, Joan Roberts, William
Robinson, Carol Rollo, Kathleen Ross,
Women Honored By Panhellenic
Five Panhellenic awards were presented Thursday evening, April 8, at the Panhellenic installation of officers in the Gamma Phi Beta house.
The awards, designed to recognize outstanding women students, were presented at the ceremony honoring old and new officers
0f Betty Huttn won the Kap- VolUntCCrS pa Kappa Gamma Robbie Car- _ -
roll Award. This trophy goes AAll/lnl1 K
to the graduating sorority JV/Wyill I wl woman having the highest » w .
grade average during her un- f Iff J
dergraduate years. ^
Miss Hutton, who has a 3.7 A representaUve from overall average, is outgoing ACCI0N (Americans for Panhellenic president. Community Cooperation in
Mortarboard Member .Other Nations) an intema-She is a member of Mor- tional community develop-tarboard and Alpha Delta Pi. ment organization, will be on Sciacca camPus f°r the rest of this
Sophomore Annis received the Delta Delta Delta
week recruiting volunteer
workers to go to South Amer-' ica this June.
Elizabeth Spencer, Stein, David Stevig. Tepper, Margaret Saul Trejo, Gayle Marsha Van Epps,
old Wulfsberg, James Wy-kowski and Robin Yeamans. Others Listed
Others orQthe Dean's List drea Aber,^Frances Abrahan
are: An-Richard
Ackerman, John Allard, Mary Auf-hauser, Nancy Bader, George Bailey, Raymond Baird, Ralph Balfour, James Ball, Jack Balias, William Barger,
Laura Ruby.
s-v
Barbara Samuelsen, Raymond Sarna, Sellmann Schulz, Annis Sciacca, Richard Seder, Julie Sheehan, Robert Silver, James Simmons, Gerald Skinner, Dorothy Snelling, Gary Spencer, Thomas Starrett, Roy Stephens, Virginia Stephens, Susan Stratton, Richard Strick,
(Continued on Page 2)
Hackford to Try Write-In Election
Taylor Hackford announced his write-in candidacy for junior class president yester- , ji’l
Hackford said ..e had been approved by the Election Commission, but his name "
was submitted too late to go
on the ballot. I
"My name won't be on the ballot, and the election com-mission said it has to be spell-
ed correctly.” Hackford ex- JjjjJm *
plained. %
Junior Class Politics 1111111
The candidate said he will concentrate on the problems ^
of junior class politics rather Mk' . X
than on student government t *
as a whole. ~ jk
One of the most important C
problems is strengthening the TAYLOR HACKFORD junior class council, he added. . . . I.R.-Economics major “One of my aims is to make;, , .
the junior class council truly fraternity house and has been
representative with a member a commu er-from each fraternity, soror- He also suggest establish-ity, dormitor>T and a propor- ing a speakers’ bureau to be tional number of commuters.’- run by the Junior Class. Con-Hackford said he was well sisting of faculty members, acquainted with the problems the bureau would help foster of the three groups because better student-teacher rela-he has lived in a dorm, a 1 tions, he said.
Scholarship Award.
This financial grant is pre- Peter Gaffney) area repre_ sented to an outstanding un- sent,ative. will speak to dergraduate woman to enable,ciasses and student groups her to complete her under-private, non-profit graduate work. organization. He will give the
Chi Omega cash and trophy slide lecture tomorrow from award went to Nancy Nues- 3 to 4 p.m. in 119 Founders seler. Hall.
The award is presented to a 5 Years Old
graduating woman who has! ACTION was started five
achieved outstanding recogni-1 years aS° California by Joe
tion in the social sciences. ' Blatchford and other Califor-
nia students who envisioned a Miss Nuesseler is a politi- youth idea 1Q monthg
cal science honors student as before the n s peace Co
well as a member of Mortar-1 wag established.'
board, Amazons and a former ( ACCI0N volunteers have
Town and Gown sponsor. been working in the urban
Highest Grade Average | slums of Latin America. To-
Delta Delta Delta won the day there are 30 Americans I
Intersorority Mothers Club and 30 Venezuelans working u- ““7* "T ZT\u ----- 1110
nianup fAr mnintaininsT thp • ok i - ^1s m^sical know-how to the he has composed music for plaque tor maintaining tne in 25 slums in Caracas, Mara-_____■ ,____, . .. T , T . ^ , ,
highest accumulative grade caibo and other cities already experienced panel of Al Jolson, Judy Garland,
for spring and fall \ew judges at Songfest, 1965 in Mary Martin, Jose Iturbi and
SONGFEST JUDGE—John Scott Trotter, musical composer and arranger, will join the panel of judges for the Songfest extravaganza at the Hollywood Bowl.
Another Music Expert Joins Songfest Judges
John Scott Trotter will add; In the course of his career
Inquiry Board Forgives GPA
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH
John Sullivan, the in again, out again, in again, out again ASSC presidential candidate, is in again.
Sullivan was reinstated by the Election Board of Inquiry yesterday following a series of reinstatements and disqualifications.
He decided to run for stu- ' d^t ^ on^
hundredth of a point above Sullivan's. Sullivan appealed' to the Board of Inquiry yes-
BARBARA ARNOLD
. . . junior coed
I.R. Major
Candidacy
Programs
summer, are being
the Hollywood Bowl May 15. j Kirsten Flagstad.
average tor spnng
1964. This summer, new pro-
Alpha Chi Omega received grams are being established Trotter joins Frank DeVol He also worked with Bing honorable mention with a in Argentina and Brazil. Gaff- anc* Frank Comstock as the Crosby on a number of tele 2.803 average, barely nosed ney is looking for volunteers third of the seven men who vision specials, out by the Tri Delt’s 2.808. who can solve practical prob- wili seIect the winners of this
Alpha Gamma Delta was also honored by intersorority mothers as the sorority with greatest scholastic improvement between spring and fall n°t essential but basic techni semesters, 1964 ca^ and mechanical skills are
Up in Standings helpful. The minimum age is
They received a plaque for moving from ninth to third, . „ __ 4 place in the sorority scholas- AU North Amencan Pacific standings.
lems and show a capacity for year's coveted Tommy awards _ leadership, initiative and im- at the 12th annual musicale. SqPIOT agination. A graduate of the Univer-
Ability to speak Spanish is sity of North Carolina, Trot-1q
ter began his musical career ■ ^ in the mid-1930’s. Since then,' he has gained fame in all areas of the entertainment media.
.20.
U. S. Orientation
Sport Shorts, Ties
terday and was reinstated.
Tom Thie, chief justice of Men’s Judicial Council and a member of the Board of Inquiry, explained the board did A
not feel that one-hundredth of MrlOlJriC.wS a grade point was sufficient to disqualify Sullivan.
Sullivan and his campaign; manager, Ray Sparling, went to work on the campaign im- Barbara Arnold, Shell and mediately following the Oar president and junior class board’s decision. publicity chairman, announc-
“I'm aware that I am start- ed her candidacy for ASSC ing my campaign two days secretary yesterday. She is later than my opponents, so running unopposed, we have a great deal to over- “ j believe student govem-come, Sullivan said. ment can be reconstructed
He said he was sorry to jnto an effective organ of stu-have caused the Election dent activity by cooperation Commission so much trouble. among student officers and “But now that everything coordination with the student is okay, I ve got to get to b0dy as a whole.” she said, work 99
The five ASSC presidential Mlss ArnoId also said ^
candidates are Brooke Gabriel- s<-udent government should be
son, Adam Herbert, Darrell characterized byO effective-Johnson, Sullivan and Rick ness-Takagaki. Student Involvement
Elections will be held April “The key to this effective-28 and 29, with run-offs set ness is a high level of pur-
pants receive a two-week ori- Trotter is no stranger to entation in the United States.! Son§^est audiences. He has
The trophy for the sorority They then begin ^ served as a judge several,
pledge class with the high- four m<mth in field training times and was guest conduc-
est grade average for 1965, went to Gamma Beta.
fall,
Phi
tor of the production in 1959.
program in Caracas, Vene
zuela. t j He is currently national
Former Peace Corps work- president of the Recording Gamma Phis won the Alpha ers or those from similar or- Academy and a national trus-Chi Omega Award with an ganizations may request a|tee of the Television Aca-average of 2.741. special short term contract demy. He is also a member
Ruth Mackey, Junior Gam- designed to lead to adminis- of the board of trustees of ma Beta, was installed as new, trative and supervisory posi- Composers and Lyricists Panhellenic president. i tions. Guild of America.
Skull and Dagger’s traditional informal initiation will take place in front of Tommy Trojan at noon today.
Initiates of the oldest campus men's honorary will be clad in bermuda shorts, black ties and tails and the “wildest" shoes and socks they can find. Skull and Dagger has held similar informal initiations for 50 years.
A breakfast in the Commons dining room at 9 a.m. Saturday will precede the formal initiation at 10 a.m. in Bovard Tower.
for May 5.
Battle Columns
Battle columns for Tuesday’s Daily Trojan must be submitted to the city editor in 432 Student Union by 4 p.m. tomorrow.
Candidates who do not have a snapshot for the newspaper may have their picture taken for a $2 fee by a Daily Trojan photographer no later than 4 p.m. tomorrow in 432 Student Union.
Election Commissioner Mary Ann Gumbinger said all candidates must turn a $25
poseful student involvement, a level which hasfjiot been attained recently.
“Like all USSC students. I have questioned the role of student government this year. But I feel it cannot be forgotten or overlooked.’’
Journalism Minor
Miss Arnold is a junior majoring in international relations and a member of Sigma Gamma Sigma international relations sorority.
As a journalism minor she has worked on the Daily Tro-
deposit in to the Student Ac- jan and El Rodeo staffs, and tivities Office and follow the has participated on the Song-
same rules as all other candidates.
fest and Card Stunt Committees.
NAVY RECRUITING OFFICERS—Navy Women are eligible for careers in the Counselors will be on campus to advise WAVES or Nurse Corps. A qualifica-those interested in officer programs. tiort test will be given later on campus.
18th Century Comedy
To Show at Stop Gap
ARTIFICIAL EARTHQUAKES
Tickets for Richard Sheridan’s 18th century comedy of manners. “The Rivals,’’ go on sale today in the Drama office, 3709 S. Hoover St.
Prices for the performances flt Stop Gap Theater are $2 on week nights and $2.50 on Weekends. There will be a 2:30 p.m. and an 8:30 p.m. performance on Sunday, May 9.
Because a bored audience Would think nothing of throwing food on the stage, it was important to keep an 18th century comedy moving fa«t,” Steve Bellon, director, said yesterday.
The play deals with a highly affected period of elegant manners and speech.
People of that period moved crisply, talked elegantly
and always sat or carried themselves in a stiff, formal manner.
“The affectation of the period was exaggerated even further on the stage. This requires the modern actor, in recreating this style, to walk and speak crisply and with great energy, which the contemporary theatrical style does not stress,” Bellon explained.
“Movement must be precise and well placed to punctuate the action and further convey the style of the period on the stage.”
The sets and lighting of the period were quite simple. The set usually consisted of a raked (sloped) stage and a series of wings to create a forced perspective.
Physicist's Experiments Tell Earth's Structure
Artificial earthquake waves have been created in a laboratory by a young USC geophysicist in an attempt to learn more about the earth’s structure.
The varying speeds at which seismic shocks travel through rocks should give scientists measurements with which the types of rocks underneath the earth’s surface may be predicted without actually having to drill for them, Dr. Nikolas I. Christensen. assistant professor of geology said.
Earthquake waves travel at different velocities in different directions through the same types of rocks due to the way minerals are arrang-
ed in the rocks. Speed also changes with pressures at different depths.
Dr. Christensen reported his findings yesterday at the 46th annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union at George Washington University in Washington, D. C.
He first began duplicating earthquake waves in the geophysical laboratory at Harvard, wher^-he did post-doctoral research before joining the USC faculty last fall.
He placed rocks 400 million years old from northwestern Connecticut and southern Vermont filled with kerosene in a metal container.
An air-driven piston was forced through the liquid to
duplicate the 150.000 pounds per square inch pressure to which rocks are subjected
Tiny wafer-shaped pieces of quartz or ceramic known as transducers, a device to transmit power from one sQurce to another, changed electrical energy into mechanical vibration to send artificial earthquake waves through the rock samples.
Dr. Christensen then measured the speeds at which the waves went through the rocks. He theorized that similar shocks sent into the ground would produce comparable results if the rocks under the surface were the same as those in the laboratory.
i
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 101, April 21, 1965 |
| Full text |
68 Head Dean's List With 4.0 3.5 or Better Grade Point Carried by 359 Sixty-eight straight-A students head the list of 359 honored in the 1964-65 fall Dean’s List released yesterday. The 4.0 students top the list of those earning grade averages of 3.5 or better for last semester. Vniir-Pnints J Gregory Bdrtlow, Michael Bassell, Al- bert Bays, Bet*e Beaman, Suianne Those receiving a 4.0 were: Becker, Paul Beckstead, Carl Bellone, tt I?Vini-f) f Suianne Benoit, Jack Berger, Richard \ ynette AlmQuist, Richard gerf (eni Robert Bobic, Jackie Bod-Anderson. Randall Arase, lander, Edwin Boggle, Ann Boyd, Joyce , Brackenbury, Cathy Braun, David George Baker, Kenneth Brown, Lloyd Brown, Stephen Brown, pa_ Warner Brundage, Mary Bukove, Frank ] DA University of Southern California [LY ® TROJA N Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1965 No. 101 Barnes. James Bartlett. J. tx- bu oc , Ellen Burg, Priscilla Burgesi tricia Bjorklund. Israel Bor- Catherine Burleigh, Marilyn Burrill. enstein, Richard Bremer, Kathleen Calbeck, Cheryl Cashion Stuart Browers, Ruth Cald- Leroy Chase, Lai Chew, Randall Chris- tison, Gabnelle Cnung, Mary Clark, well, Mary Carpenter, Bever- Betty Cohen, Claudia Coleman, Leslie ly Carrington, David Chanai- c%S wa, Virginia Clark, Roberta Karen Ciamecki. a p.-,,.Elisabeth David, Michael Davis, Sally Collen, Anna Cowdrey, Jo- Dav;s Bi, Dellanoussaye, Mary Dilday, hanne Creveling. Jerry Crom- Lawrence Downs, Jack Easton, Peter .. r-T J XT i Elliott, Maryle Emmett, Donald Engle, well, Wilbur Curtis and Neal Trudy Epple, Samuel Erickson, Karen Erlich, Liiabelle Evans, Craig Everts. n-and-Out Sullivan In Again Cutler. Other Four-Points David Dryer. Pat Foley, Bonnie Gadless. Judy Gelfand, Joseph Glazner, Paul Golding, Laura Halem, Terry Hamburg, Gregory Christian Hill. Deann Hoshide, Alice Ikeda, Darrell Johnson, Harriet Katz. Deborah Kellett, James Kloetzel, Suzanne Knudson. Roger Krauel, Tebb; F-G Dona Feldman, Freddie Fenster, Ralph Fertig, Lawrence Dennis Kent, David Kersey, Setsuko Kihara, James Kilbury, Rona King, Susan Kinkade, Kerry Kist-ler, Charles Kittleson, Sandra Klein, liana Kleiner, Judi Komaki, Jane Kook-er, Marian Korn, Jan Kramer. L-M Frances Lamanno, Daniel Lancaster, William Lande, Dennis Leburg, Mona Lehet, Paul Lehman, Joseph Lemro, Cheryl Lew, Laura Lindaren, John Link, Sandra Lipsey, Kathy Lockhart, Bruce Loessin, Pat Lombardo, Robert Lowman, Vicki Luboff, Maureen Lundy, Lennis Lyon. Marilyn MacDonald, Martin Mandel, t~>• j 4. i Michael Mann, David Marshak, John Kusserow, Richard Ruznet- Marshall, Judy Martin, Lynda Martinez, sky, Daniel Lang, Sandra McDonald. Mason, Stephanie McCall, le, Michael McBride, Carol McCluer, t-» itr r* j ait* Francis McHugh, Anne Menne, Myna Barbara McCoard, JullC M.C“ Meshul, Marshall Metz, David Meyer, Farland, Jonnie Miller, Gary 8i!J Michielutte, Glenn Miller. Sandra ’ . J Miller, Chris Mmmck, Gay Moore, Mills, Ann Morns. Linda Marilyn Moore, Phyllis Moore, Ronald __j Morin, Sharon Moriwaki, John Morrow, ail Cl Canrne Unnnt f'.jrftll/T Norris, Charles Piascik Rochelle Pick. R-Y j George Mount, Carolyn Mullinix, Alicia ! Mumford, Linda Murray. N-R j Edward Ncube, Douglas Neil, Chris-_ ~ •rt I *'ne Nelson, Richard Nelson, Vivian Gail Reavely, Ronnie Ren— (Nelson, Bertram Newmark, Cherry •nf>kamn Martha Rirkpt Wil- N°bl«. Linda Nordlinger, Philip Norton, neKamp, Martna iUCKet, Wil Ndncy Nuesse)er Mary Nyberg, James liam Sarno, John Satterfield. O'Toole, Daniel Olson, Kathleen Ouchi. _ Gerald Pacelli, Wendy Parker, Chris Stanton patferson, Betty Pelletier, Jane Pester-Marilvn field, Claire Pettegrew, Barry Pick, I Mary Pierson, Steven Poole, Joyce Thorpe,1 Poulson, Mary Prouty, Mark Pultman, j Robert Quint, Wilbut Quon. I uruer, Steven Rabens, Tristine Rainer, Eilene Stanlev I Rav. PdU* Rayton, Judy Rees, William Rhead, Steven Rhodes, Barbara Ridgley, Warner, Carl Willgerot, Har- James Roark, Joan Roberts, William Robinson, Carol Rollo, Kathleen Ross, Women Honored By Panhellenic Five Panhellenic awards were presented Thursday evening, April 8, at the Panhellenic installation of officers in the Gamma Phi Beta house. The awards, designed to recognize outstanding women students, were presented at the ceremony honoring old and new officers 0f Betty Huttn won the Kap- VolUntCCrS pa Kappa Gamma Robbie Car- _ - roll Award. This trophy goes AAll/lnl1 K to the graduating sorority JV/Wyill I wl woman having the highest » w . grade average during her un- f Iff J dergraduate years. ^ Miss Hutton, who has a 3.7 A representaUve from overall average, is outgoing ACCI0N (Americans for Panhellenic president. Community Cooperation in Mortarboard Member .Other Nations) an intema-She is a member of Mor- tional community develop-tarboard and Alpha Delta Pi. ment organization, will be on Sciacca camPus f°r the rest of this Sophomore Annis received the Delta Delta Delta week recruiting volunteer workers to go to South Amer-' ica this June. Elizabeth Spencer, Stein, David Stevig. Tepper, Margaret Saul Trejo, Gayle Marsha Van Epps, old Wulfsberg, James Wy-kowski and Robin Yeamans. Others Listed Others orQthe Dean's List drea Aber,^Frances Abrahan are: An-Richard Ackerman, John Allard, Mary Auf-hauser, Nancy Bader, George Bailey, Raymond Baird, Ralph Balfour, James Ball, Jack Balias, William Barger, Laura Ruby. s-v Barbara Samuelsen, Raymond Sarna, Sellmann Schulz, Annis Sciacca, Richard Seder, Julie Sheehan, Robert Silver, James Simmons, Gerald Skinner, Dorothy Snelling, Gary Spencer, Thomas Starrett, Roy Stephens, Virginia Stephens, Susan Stratton, Richard Strick, (Continued on Page 2) Hackford to Try Write-In Election Taylor Hackford announced his write-in candidacy for junior class president yester- , ji’l Hackford said ..e had been approved by the Election Commission, but his name " was submitted too late to go on the ballot. I "My name won't be on the ballot, and the election com-mission said it has to be spell- ed correctly.” Hackford ex- JjjjJm * plained. % Junior Class Politics 1111111 The candidate said he will concentrate on the problems ^ of junior class politics rather Mk' . X than on student government t * as a whole. ~ jk One of the most important C problems is strengthening the TAYLOR HACKFORD junior class council, he added. . . . I.R.-Economics major “One of my aims is to make;, , . the junior class council truly fraternity house and has been representative with a member a commu er-from each fraternity, soror- He also suggest establish-ity, dormitor>T and a propor- ing a speakers’ bureau to be tional number of commuters.’- run by the Junior Class. Con-Hackford said he was well sisting of faculty members, acquainted with the problems the bureau would help foster of the three groups because better student-teacher rela-he has lived in a dorm, a 1 tions, he said. Scholarship Award. This financial grant is pre- Peter Gaffney) area repre_ sented to an outstanding un- sent,ative. will speak to dergraduate woman to enable,ciasses and student groups her to complete her under-private, non-profit graduate work. organization. He will give the Chi Omega cash and trophy slide lecture tomorrow from award went to Nancy Nues- 3 to 4 p.m. in 119 Founders seler. Hall. The award is presented to a 5 Years Old graduating woman who has! ACTION was started five achieved outstanding recogni-1 years aS° California by Joe tion in the social sciences. ' Blatchford and other Califor- nia students who envisioned a Miss Nuesseler is a politi- youth idea 1Q monthg cal science honors student as before the n s peace Co well as a member of Mortar-1 wag established.' board, Amazons and a former ( ACCI0N volunteers have Town and Gown sponsor. been working in the urban Highest Grade Average slums of Latin America. To- Delta Delta Delta won the day there are 30 Americans I Intersorority Mothers Club and 30 Venezuelans working u- ““7* "T ZT\u ----- 1110 nianup fAr mnintaininsT thp • ok i - ^1s m^sical know-how to the he has composed music for plaque tor maintaining tne in 25 slums in Caracas, Mara-_____■ ,____, . .. T , T . ^ , , highest accumulative grade caibo and other cities already experienced panel of Al Jolson, Judy Garland, for spring and fall \ew judges at Songfest, 1965 in Mary Martin, Jose Iturbi and SONGFEST JUDGE—John Scott Trotter, musical composer and arranger, will join the panel of judges for the Songfest extravaganza at the Hollywood Bowl. Another Music Expert Joins Songfest Judges John Scott Trotter will add; In the course of his career Inquiry Board Forgives GPA By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH John Sullivan, the in again, out again, in again, out again ASSC presidential candidate, is in again. Sullivan was reinstated by the Election Board of Inquiry yesterday following a series of reinstatements and disqualifications. He decided to run for stu- ' d^t ^ on^ hundredth of a point above Sullivan's. Sullivan appealed' to the Board of Inquiry yes- BARBARA ARNOLD . . . junior coed I.R. Major Candidacy Programs summer, are being the Hollywood Bowl May 15. j Kirsten Flagstad. average tor spnng 1964. This summer, new pro- Alpha Chi Omega received grams are being established Trotter joins Frank DeVol He also worked with Bing honorable mention with a in Argentina and Brazil. Gaff- anc* Frank Comstock as the Crosby on a number of tele 2.803 average, barely nosed ney is looking for volunteers third of the seven men who vision specials, out by the Tri Delt’s 2.808. who can solve practical prob- wili seIect the winners of this Alpha Gamma Delta was also honored by intersorority mothers as the sorority with greatest scholastic improvement between spring and fall n°t essential but basic techni semesters, 1964 ca^ and mechanical skills are Up in Standings helpful. The minimum age is They received a plaque for moving from ninth to third, . „ __ 4 place in the sorority scholas- AU North Amencan Pacific standings. lems and show a capacity for year's coveted Tommy awards _ leadership, initiative and im- at the 12th annual musicale. SqPIOT agination. A graduate of the Univer- Ability to speak Spanish is sity of North Carolina, Trot-1q ter began his musical career ■ ^ in the mid-1930’s. Since then,' he has gained fame in all areas of the entertainment media. .20. U. S. Orientation Sport Shorts, Ties terday and was reinstated. Tom Thie, chief justice of Men’s Judicial Council and a member of the Board of Inquiry, explained the board did A not feel that one-hundredth of MrlOlJriC.wS a grade point was sufficient to disqualify Sullivan. Sullivan and his campaign; manager, Ray Sparling, went to work on the campaign im- Barbara Arnold, Shell and mediately following the Oar president and junior class board’s decision. publicity chairman, announc- “I'm aware that I am start- ed her candidacy for ASSC ing my campaign two days secretary yesterday. She is later than my opponents, so running unopposed, we have a great deal to over- “ j believe student govem-come, Sullivan said. ment can be reconstructed He said he was sorry to jnto an effective organ of stu-have caused the Election dent activity by cooperation Commission so much trouble. among student officers and “But now that everything coordination with the student is okay, I ve got to get to b0dy as a whole.” she said, work 99 The five ASSC presidential Mlss ArnoId also said ^ candidates are Brooke Gabriel- s<-udent government should be son, Adam Herbert, Darrell characterized byO effective-Johnson, Sullivan and Rick ness-Takagaki. Student Involvement Elections will be held April “The key to this effective-28 and 29, with run-offs set ness is a high level of pur- pants receive a two-week ori- Trotter is no stranger to entation in the United States.! Son§^est audiences. He has The trophy for the sorority They then begin ^ served as a judge several, pledge class with the high- four m |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1423/uschist-dt-1965-04-21~001.tif |
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