DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 5, September 27, 1963 |
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PAGE THREE Football Season Will Bring Weekend Celebrations
University of Southern California
DAILY ©TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Colorado’s Coach Analyzes Oklahoma’s Sooners
Vol. LV
LOS ANGLES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1963
NO. 5
Two Powerhouses Will Clash
HOOVER KEY STREET
Trustee Body City Council to Consider Will Ponder Limiting Campus Traffic Tax Measure
The first step to close off be rerouted down Figueroa school campus, whether a President Topping will take all street* within the USC Street and only delivery ve- university or an elementary the student Union "tax refer-campus limits will pass Delore hides will still be permitted school, there is an extreme enc}um to a meeting 0f the the Traffic Committee of the within the closed-off area. \hazard.
Los Angeles City Council Oct. Dr. Franklin said the “We now have 1,500 men 1. Dr. Carl Franklin, vice street s closing would elimi- and women students who have piesident of financial affairs, nate the dangerous hazard of to cross Hoover Boulevard to said j'esterday. having students cross the go from the dormitories to
If the proposal passes the busy boulevard, which does the main center of the unicouncil, Hoover Boulevard n°t have street lights at that versity,” Dr. Franklin said, will be closed to traffic be- point. The closing will not effect
tween Exposition Boulevard “Whenever a main thor- the parking situattion of the and 34th Street. Traffic will oughfare passes through a university, Dr. Frankln said.
The move to close Hoover
Red Peace a USC Institute
Peril
Says
The World Council of “the churches seem to have Peace is Moscow's chief weap- retained access to significant on for the exploitation of elements of Soviet society, man's universal and justified and in spite of restrictions longing for peace, the Insti- they seem to exercise an in
tute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda reported recently in its bi-monthly magazine.
fluence and authority rivaling that of the Communist
Boulevard began in March of 1963 when the university made a request to the city council to have the street closed. The request was referred to the Traffic and Planning Committees jointly.
Although the committees unanimously approved the proposal, certain legal questions arose that led to its being submitted to the city attorney, who made legal rec-Party in the minds and hearts ommendations. of many of the people. The proposal will now be
against.
Student and Alumni Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees today at noon and his advice on the measure may determine its fate.
The president will explain the new fee plan for a Student Union addition and remodeling to the committee and will make a recommendation according to his interpretation of a survey of student opinion on the measure conducted through mails and in registration lines.
Students Approve
Dr. Topping has said earlier j that if a great majority of those who voted were in favor i of the bill, he would recom- j mend the adoption of the measure by the board. Late tabulations of voting yesterday showed 3,315 students in I favor of the measure and 510
SERVICES EXPLAINED— Student Body President Ken Del Conte and Director of Special Events Bob Jani explain the services and functions of the Special Events Office to a mass meeting of student leaders yesterday.
A background article on Nosaka. policy planner of “The Communist Peace the Japanese Communist Par-Front” noted the debate on ty for 18 years, is described the nuclear test-ban agree- and his policies discussed in ment and the increased So- a biography by Dr. Rodger viet propaganda for peace, Swearingen, director of the suggesting that these devel- USC research institute, opments call for better Free ..Ant j c i p a t i n g Khrush- [?entSf necessary for closing
Wortd understanding of Com- chev’s flexible and disarming - eet‘_
munist concepts of peace. strategy, Nosaka formulated % a # I ■
“To them, peace is merely a new line for Communism yVdK0 NOt©S an interim period of the class in occupied Japan, " accord-struggle against capitalism inS to Swearingen. “It cen-
in which there is no massive jtered in the two revolution- * ™ ■ Cl I IS QIV11 or overt military action.”!ary concepts ‘peaceful revo- C. #A|. wrote Bernard Wilhelm, grad-lution’ and the ‘lovable Com- CvOlv©m©Ml uate student. munist party,’” he said.
Jani Says Office
The special events office is jcur outside the jurisdiction of
Modern maps of the earth’s Other Articles Recently, Swearingen con- surface contain elements de-
Other major articles in the eluded, Nosaka summarized veloped by civilization in the publication deal with religion hie strategy for the Japanese Fertile Crescent centuries be-in Soviet society and with party as follows: “Lnless we fore Christ, William Wake, Sanzo Nosaka, a Japanese fight two extremes — United assistant professor of geogra-Communist leader. States imperialism and Jap- phy, said recently.
submitted to the Traffic Com-
mittee and, if it passes, it will hearing Dr. Topping s
go to the city council itself. recommenda tions, the com-If the ordinance passes the;mittee will make a recommen-council, the Traffic Depart-! ^at*on at a re»ular. later ^ ^ \aki;i/>a
ment will have 210 days in! meeting of the Board of Trus-; J0 \ Q V I Q © O JUlVICw which to make the adjust-|^ees'
President Confident
ASSC President Ken Del Conte said he thought President Topping and the Alumni Affairs Committee would recommend the measure, as long as students had expressed their approval by balloting.
He explained that if an affirmative recommendation is made, work will begin on acquiring a loan from the Housing and Home Finance Agency and architects will step up designing procedures.
responsible for coordinating, supervising and advising special student activities, Special Events Director Bob Jani told a mass meeting of*student organization leaders yesterday.
Jani, speaking in a meeting in Hancock Auditorium over which he and ASSC President Ken Del Conte president, explained that his office is responsible for the planning and production of university events of importance that oc-
William Fletcher, a gradu- anese monopoly capitalism — Dr. Wake traced the his-! ate student recently returned * “ impossible to win inde- tory oft he geodetic sciences,
from Russia, reported that iPendence, democracy ------peace in Japan.
and
measuring the earth’s sur-
Debaters To Launch 84th Year
i faces, from ancient clay tab-Book Review lets to automated stereo and
Communist Affairs, the in- computer plotting at a meet-stitute's magazine, also con- ing of the American Society tains a book review on theof
ISH Will Welcome New Arab Students
individual organizations.
Jani explained that the special events office puts out the university master calendar. The calendar is a listing of all university events and major events in the Los Angeles area. It serves as a guide to avoid competition and conflict with events previously scheduled.
In order for the office to have the time to schedule an event, it should be listed on the calendar six weeks prior |to the event on forms provided by the office.
In addition, the office renders the service of advisement to the student body. It advises groups ranging from the' ASSC Senate to the groups
Troy, Sooners May Determine Nation's Leader
By ALLAN MALAMUD Assistant Sports Editor
In a home opener as attractive as any in USC’s 75-year football history, the questions of mid-season may be answered four games early tomorrow afternoon in the Coliseum broiler.
Oklahoma, no stranger to the winning habit, will try to do a bit of streak busting itself before a national television audience and a live crowd of perhaps 55,000.
Troy will put its 12-game winning skein on display at 1:30, a half hour after CBS radio KNX and TV (KNXT) begin their coverage.
It used to be that the first pan of the season was reserved for breathers, but on the second Saturday of the year the Trojans and Sooners may each be facing its toughest foe.
The result will be an excellent indicator of whether USC can make it to the Rose Bowl again and exactly how far the Oklahoma football renaissance has progressed.
After winning only eight games for the I960 and 1961 seasons combined, the Sooners are again ppaying Bud Wilkinson type football — the winning kind.
Oklahoma is rated so highly — No. 3 in the national rankings — that the nation’s No. 1 team will be favored by less than a touchdown on its home field.
For certain, the Sooners were the more impressive in last week’s openers.
In an energetic prep for its first game ever in the Coliseum. Oklahoma trounced Clemson. the Atlantic Coast Conference favorite, 31-14.
Meanwhile, John McKay’s Trojans were having trouble scoring touchdowns against medicore Colorado and settled for a 14-0 win in the slop.
Although the USC offense sputtered last week, it’s doubtful if such would occur on a dry field and ; that’s exactly how the Coliseum turf figures to be tomorrow.
As in any meeting between two powerhouses, each comes into the game with imposing credentials on both offense and defense.
Thus, it’s difficult to pinpoint tomorrow’s game as either an offensive or defensive struggle.
There is a difference in the teams’ tools of attack, though. .
McKay will try to balance his running and passing games, a method which produced almost equal yardage on the ground and in the air last year.
In Willie Brown. Mike Garrett and Ron Heller,
(Continued on Page 2)
TV Fans Will See New Half-time Stunts
Eighteen new color card
-- | New Arab students will be]president; Victoria Zado, re- planning homecoming. In this , , , f
Photgrammetry last week welcomed and honored at a cording secretary; Abdul capacity, the special events stunts have en prepar new edition of Prof. Merle at Wellesley, N.Y. reception at the Internation-Rahman Al Sadhan, treasur-aids in the planning of Troy tomorrows na ion y e e
£ainsods authoritative text. Modern maps did not aj Students House today at 4. er; and Margaret Patterson, Camp. Songfest, the Red vised ^_ween e„___
“How Russia Is Ruled,” and simply grow their present
The Trojan debate team is shorter items on the Moscow- forms and characteristics, but preparing to begin a new sea- Peking rift and Communist evolved over many centuries son witf! an eye toward bet- activities in such areas as in an always complex and tering last year's record of Latin America, Southeast inter - related context of 135 wins. Asia, Africa and Eastern Eu- changing philosophical values
“This record wras achieved ^P^* and orientation, scientific de
in competition w i t a the strongest opposition in the country through USC’s national program in forensics,” Dr. James H. McBath, director of forensics, explained yesterday.
Dr. John De Bross. a newly appointed faculty member in the speech department, is the newr Trojan debate team’s director. Dr. De Bross will assist Dr. McBath by directing and coaching the debate program.
The forensic squad this season will participate in 25 debate tournaments, which will include areas of oratory, oral interpreta tion. extemporaneous speaking and impromptu speaking.
Dr. De Bross said the team will travel to various parts of the country to compete in tournaments.
“The USC forensic program offers an exceptional opportunity for all w7ho are interested in speaking.” he said. “Its activities are open to undergraduates regardless of their major.”
Oratory and oral interpretation coach is Harry L. Murray. New to the department as impromptu and extemporaneous speaking coach is Richard Keil, former Los Angeles State College debater and Loyola University debate coach assistant.
The USC debate team was founded in 1880 and this season marks its 84th year.
A meeting v.ill be held Wednesday at 3:15 p.m. in Speech Building B for students interested in joining the debate team. |
“The major nature of Communist China’s anti-w h i t e propaganda campaign, ostens-(Continued on Page 2)
velopment, technological progress and the use and knowledge of the world,” Dr. Wake said.
The reception is sponsored corresponding secretary. Cross Blood Drive, the For- Jans and ® a om , by the Arab Students Assoc- The Arab Students Associ- eign Students Committee and ers a^,. e,U^’ mtmprn_ iation (ASA) and is being ation has been on the USC rally activities. 01 USC s Spec -.ven
held to welcome the new stu- campus for over a decade “to Yell leaders and the Tro- duction Commi ee annou dents to the USC campus and promote friendship and activ-jjan rooting section also come yesterday. acquaint them with ASA pur- ity between all Arab stu- under advisement of the of- The cards will be distrib-poses. dents.” It was founded and fice. uted in new protective ma-
Attending the invitation- organized with a working Jani said his office also nila envelopes imprinted with only event will be association constitution providing regu- serves in the recognition of stunt instructions. Dean of
wear white shirts or blouses. He asked men to “keep them on despite the possibility of uncomfortable temperatures. * To set the tempo of the Trojans first home game, the “Papa Oom Mow Mow” Riv-ingtons will sing some of their recordings during a pre-game show beginning at 12:30. Yell King Bob Bach urged students to arrive an early as possible.
Elaborate half-time activi-
officers Ghazi Al Quasaibi, lations regarding member- campus organizations. The of- Men Thomas Hull reminded^ feature 27 youth
Sizzler Kills L.A. Myth As Students Wilt in Heat
president; Nasr Salem, vice ship, bylaw’s, meetings, offi- fjce }s the only place W’here students that the cards and
cers and finances. an groups can be registered new envelopes will be used Services the ASA performs and ]iste(j jn a permanent throughout the season. He include meeting xiew students record. No organization is said the utmost care should when they arrive in Los An- recognized unless it has filed be taken to preserve them, geles. registration assistance. a form with the office. In Knight President Jack locating accommodations and many activities, only those Gleason asked students to general introduction to the ^ who have been listed;---
campus, the community and are eligible to ^ certain fa_ ^q DRAFT-DODGING other students
bands in addition to the Trojan Marching Band. The Trojan Glee Club and the bands will perform songs from the musical “Oklahoma’’ to welcome the Sooners to the West Coast.
cilities.
Chamber of Commerce
propaganda saying Los An-1 “Through cultural and so- Thg g ial Events Qffice
geles has a “temperate cli-cial activities the association has s ision of all mate_
mate was eternally destroy- promotes good will and builds iia]s submitted for tin on
ed yesterday. j stronger ties between Arab ,, T .
J J , , b, , ., . the campus. Jam explained
The temperature in the s u en s ,,e . menc^|1 that any group who wishes to
City of Angels reached 109 st"de”ts,?t USC Salem said. ad'vesrtisi materiaIs on degrees - second highest on Activities include dinner record exchanges, parties, lectures
and movies. Exchanges with other foreign students and American organizations are encouraged.
Salem said all students at USC are invited to participate in the association's planned events.
It was 110 degrees on Sept. 1, 1955.
Burns Foot
When the weatherman announced Wednesday thai it had been 107, people accepted the fact.
Men Pick Army Over Marriage
Film Series Will Start
There were even fears that a line of guards would have g! to be posted around Doheny Fountain to keep students out—a reversal of other days
^enter6^18 reluctant Lerner and Lowe's “Gigi,” The band is beginning its
starring Leslie Caron, Mau- second week of drills today
university premises must file rick MARKS married he would get married
for approval by filling out a Tf it came t0 the critical1 anyway.
form in the office. point in Trojan men s lives don’t see why anyone
of either serving Uncle Sam woujd just get married to be for two years or a wife for exempt from the draft.” he a lifetime, they would gener- gaid “The wiser thing would ally hitch up with their Uncle ^ to sign up you knew Sam. you were going to get your
During an informal Daily orders to report.
poll yesterday on Qn the whole, the students
Band Drills For Game
The Trojan Marching Band.;
1120 men strong, is larger Trojan than it has been since 1947, presjdent Kennedy's exemp- interviewed felt that leaping when women were allowed to ^on bjjj for married men. jnt0 marriage to become ex-participate, Ronald Broad- use males said they would empt from the draft would well, new director, said yes- nQt "jump” into marriage to'pro^bly lead to unhappiness terday. avoid the draft. and trouble in the long run.
City Panics
rice Chevalier and Louis Jour- to prepare for a brief appear-
Trojans and all college men. That, anyway, was how law r e temporarily deferred maj0r Tracy Sheffield saw it.
BAkcrOOT BOY— There's no real way to beat the heat, but Bill Baldwin, a sophomore in LAS, was giving it a try anyway yesterday by dunking his feet in the Alumni Memorial Fountain to fight the 109-degree day.
But most Trojans were toojdan.will kick off Delta Kappaiance during tomorrow* na.j Irom the service anyway. The 20-year-old junior said hot even to try, and when Alpha’s, national cinema hon- tionally televised Trojan- But asked the same ques- the uneducated individual Bill Baldwin, lophomore in 0rary, fall film festival to- Sooner tussle in the Coliseum, tion of marriage vs. service would use marital means LAS, burned his foot in the night at 8 in 133 FH. Its initial campus perform- after college, the general more(30 thsm the college man
water, the guard idea was Tickets for the Academy ance was during a rally for consensus was, “If I had a:simply because tne latter naa dropped. Awrard-winning film will be new students that highlighted steady girl friend and was u aji uca ion oun a
The majority of students sold at the door for 50 cents, last week’s Troy Days. The thinking of marriage anyway, on; an * y marnage no doubt admired Lawrence The bill of fare for the re- pep band also made an im- I might speed up my plans if 00 * a 1 of Arabia more than ever at mainder of the semester in- promptu appearance at Los the chances of being drafted For the student who plans this time. After all, Law'rence eludes “Ride the High Coun- Angeles International Airport were great. on going beyond just four
had to stand it pretty hot, try,” Oct. 4; “The Hustler,” last Saturday to greet USC’s Terry Bixler, 18-year-old years of college, and into too. But then there’s no smog Oct. 11; “Rififi,” Oct. 18; grid team who defeated Colo- electrical engineering major, graduate school, the problem in Arabia- iand others. jrado earlier in the day. .said if he were going to get (Continued on ftge 2)
I
»
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 5, September 27, 1963 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 5, September 27, 1963. |
| Full text | PAGE THREE Football Season Will Bring Weekend Celebrations University of Southern California DAILY ©TROJAN PAGE FOUR Colorado’s Coach Analyzes Oklahoma’s Sooners Vol. LV LOS ANGLES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 27, 1963 NO. 5 Two Powerhouses Will Clash HOOVER KEY STREET Trustee Body City Council to Consider Will Ponder Limiting Campus Traffic Tax Measure The first step to close off be rerouted down Figueroa school campus, whether a President Topping will take all street* within the USC Street and only delivery ve- university or an elementary the student Union "tax refer-campus limits will pass Delore hides will still be permitted school, there is an extreme enc}um to a meeting 0f the the Traffic Committee of the within the closed-off area. \hazard. Los Angeles City Council Oct. Dr. Franklin said the “We now have 1,500 men 1. Dr. Carl Franklin, vice street s closing would elimi- and women students who have piesident of financial affairs, nate the dangerous hazard of to cross Hoover Boulevard to said j'esterday. having students cross the go from the dormitories to If the proposal passes the busy boulevard, which does the main center of the unicouncil, Hoover Boulevard n°t have street lights at that versity,” Dr. Franklin said, will be closed to traffic be- point. The closing will not effect tween Exposition Boulevard “Whenever a main thor- the parking situattion of the and 34th Street. Traffic will oughfare passes through a university, Dr. Frankln said. The move to close Hoover Red Peace a USC Institute Peril Says The World Council of “the churches seem to have Peace is Moscow's chief weap- retained access to significant on for the exploitation of elements of Soviet society, man's universal and justified and in spite of restrictions longing for peace, the Insti- they seem to exercise an in tute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda reported recently in its bi-monthly magazine. fluence and authority rivaling that of the Communist Boulevard began in March of 1963 when the university made a request to the city council to have the street closed. The request was referred to the Traffic and Planning Committees jointly. Although the committees unanimously approved the proposal, certain legal questions arose that led to its being submitted to the city attorney, who made legal rec-Party in the minds and hearts ommendations. of many of the people. The proposal will now be against. Student and Alumni Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees today at noon and his advice on the measure may determine its fate. The president will explain the new fee plan for a Student Union addition and remodeling to the committee and will make a recommendation according to his interpretation of a survey of student opinion on the measure conducted through mails and in registration lines. Students Approve Dr. Topping has said earlier j that if a great majority of those who voted were in favor i of the bill, he would recom- j mend the adoption of the measure by the board. Late tabulations of voting yesterday showed 3,315 students in I favor of the measure and 510 SERVICES EXPLAINED— Student Body President Ken Del Conte and Director of Special Events Bob Jani explain the services and functions of the Special Events Office to a mass meeting of student leaders yesterday. A background article on Nosaka. policy planner of “The Communist Peace the Japanese Communist Par-Front” noted the debate on ty for 18 years, is described the nuclear test-ban agree- and his policies discussed in ment and the increased So- a biography by Dr. Rodger viet propaganda for peace, Swearingen, director of the suggesting that these devel- USC research institute, opments call for better Free ..Ant j c i p a t i n g Khrush- [?entSf necessary for closing Wortd understanding of Com- chev’s flexible and disarming - eet‘_ munist concepts of peace. strategy, Nosaka formulated % a # I ■ “To them, peace is merely a new line for Communism yVdK0 NOt©S an interim period of the class in occupied Japan, " accord-struggle against capitalism inS to Swearingen. “It cen- in which there is no massive jtered in the two revolution- * ™ ■ Cl I IS QIV11 or overt military action.”!ary concepts ‘peaceful revo- C. #A . wrote Bernard Wilhelm, grad-lution’ and the ‘lovable Com- CvOlv©m©Ml uate student. munist party,’” he said. Jani Says Office The special events office is jcur outside the jurisdiction of Modern maps of the earth’s Other Articles Recently, Swearingen con- surface contain elements de- Other major articles in the eluded, Nosaka summarized veloped by civilization in the publication deal with religion hie strategy for the Japanese Fertile Crescent centuries be-in Soviet society and with party as follows: “Lnless we fore Christ, William Wake, Sanzo Nosaka, a Japanese fight two extremes — United assistant professor of geogra-Communist leader. States imperialism and Jap- phy, said recently. submitted to the Traffic Com- mittee and, if it passes, it will hearing Dr. Topping s go to the city council itself. recommenda tions, the com-If the ordinance passes the;mittee will make a recommen-council, the Traffic Depart-! ^at*on at a re»ular. later ^ ^ \aki;i/>a ment will have 210 days in! meeting of the Board of Trus-; J0 \ Q V I Q © O JUlVICw which to make the adjust- ^ees' President Confident ASSC President Ken Del Conte said he thought President Topping and the Alumni Affairs Committee would recommend the measure, as long as students had expressed their approval by balloting. He explained that if an affirmative recommendation is made, work will begin on acquiring a loan from the Housing and Home Finance Agency and architects will step up designing procedures. responsible for coordinating, supervising and advising special student activities, Special Events Director Bob Jani told a mass meeting of*student organization leaders yesterday. Jani, speaking in a meeting in Hancock Auditorium over which he and ASSC President Ken Del Conte president, explained that his office is responsible for the planning and production of university events of importance that oc- William Fletcher, a gradu- anese monopoly capitalism — Dr. Wake traced the his-! ate student recently returned * “ impossible to win inde- tory oft he geodetic sciences, from Russia, reported that iPendence, democracy ------peace in Japan. and measuring the earth’s sur- Debaters To Launch 84th Year i faces, from ancient clay tab-Book Review lets to automated stereo and Communist Affairs, the in- computer plotting at a meet-stitute's magazine, also con- ing of the American Society tains a book review on theof ISH Will Welcome New Arab Students individual organizations. Jani explained that the special events office puts out the university master calendar. The calendar is a listing of all university events and major events in the Los Angeles area. It serves as a guide to avoid competition and conflict with events previously scheduled. In order for the office to have the time to schedule an event, it should be listed on the calendar six weeks prior to the event on forms provided by the office. In addition, the office renders the service of advisement to the student body. It advises groups ranging from the' ASSC Senate to the groups Troy, Sooners May Determine Nation's Leader By ALLAN MALAMUD Assistant Sports Editor In a home opener as attractive as any in USC’s 75-year football history, the questions of mid-season may be answered four games early tomorrow afternoon in the Coliseum broiler. Oklahoma, no stranger to the winning habit, will try to do a bit of streak busting itself before a national television audience and a live crowd of perhaps 55,000. Troy will put its 12-game winning skein on display at 1:30, a half hour after CBS radio KNX and TV (KNXT) begin their coverage. It used to be that the first pan of the season was reserved for breathers, but on the second Saturday of the year the Trojans and Sooners may each be facing its toughest foe. The result will be an excellent indicator of whether USC can make it to the Rose Bowl again and exactly how far the Oklahoma football renaissance has progressed. After winning only eight games for the I960 and 1961 seasons combined, the Sooners are again ppaying Bud Wilkinson type football — the winning kind. Oklahoma is rated so highly — No. 3 in the national rankings — that the nation’s No. 1 team will be favored by less than a touchdown on its home field. For certain, the Sooners were the more impressive in last week’s openers. In an energetic prep for its first game ever in the Coliseum. Oklahoma trounced Clemson. the Atlantic Coast Conference favorite, 31-14. Meanwhile, John McKay’s Trojans were having trouble scoring touchdowns against medicore Colorado and settled for a 14-0 win in the slop. Although the USC offense sputtered last week, it’s doubtful if such would occur on a dry field and ; that’s exactly how the Coliseum turf figures to be tomorrow. As in any meeting between two powerhouses, each comes into the game with imposing credentials on both offense and defense. Thus, it’s difficult to pinpoint tomorrow’s game as either an offensive or defensive struggle. There is a difference in the teams’ tools of attack, though. . McKay will try to balance his running and passing games, a method which produced almost equal yardage on the ground and in the air last year. In Willie Brown. Mike Garrett and Ron Heller, (Continued on Page 2) TV Fans Will See New Half-time Stunts Eighteen new color card -- New Arab students will be]president; Victoria Zado, re- planning homecoming. In this , , , f Photgrammetry last week welcomed and honored at a cording secretary; Abdul capacity, the special events stunts have en prepar new edition of Prof. Merle at Wellesley, N.Y. reception at the Internation-Rahman Al Sadhan, treasur-aids in the planning of Troy tomorrows na ion y e e £ainsods authoritative text. Modern maps did not aj Students House today at 4. er; and Margaret Patterson, Camp. Songfest, the Red vised ^_ween e„___ “How Russia Is Ruled,” and simply grow their present The Trojan debate team is shorter items on the Moscow- forms and characteristics, but preparing to begin a new sea- Peking rift and Communist evolved over many centuries son witf! an eye toward bet- activities in such areas as in an always complex and tering last year's record of Latin America, Southeast inter - related context of 135 wins. Asia, Africa and Eastern Eu- changing philosophical values “This record wras achieved ^P^* and orientation, scientific de in competition w i t a the strongest opposition in the country through USC’s national program in forensics,” Dr. James H. McBath, director of forensics, explained yesterday. Dr. John De Bross. a newly appointed faculty member in the speech department, is the newr Trojan debate team’s director. Dr. De Bross will assist Dr. McBath by directing and coaching the debate program. The forensic squad this season will participate in 25 debate tournaments, which will include areas of oratory, oral interpreta tion. extemporaneous speaking and impromptu speaking. Dr. De Bross said the team will travel to various parts of the country to compete in tournaments. “The USC forensic program offers an exceptional opportunity for all w7ho are interested in speaking.” he said. “Its activities are open to undergraduates regardless of their major.” Oratory and oral interpretation coach is Harry L. Murray. New to the department as impromptu and extemporaneous speaking coach is Richard Keil, former Los Angeles State College debater and Loyola University debate coach assistant. The USC debate team was founded in 1880 and this season marks its 84th year. A meeting v.ill be held Wednesday at 3:15 p.m. in Speech Building B for students interested in joining the debate team. “The major nature of Communist China’s anti-w h i t e propaganda campaign, ostens-(Continued on Page 2) velopment, technological progress and the use and knowledge of the world,” Dr. Wake said. The reception is sponsored corresponding secretary. Cross Blood Drive, the For- Jans and ® a om , by the Arab Students Assoc- The Arab Students Associ- eign Students Committee and ers a^,. e,U^’ mtmprn_ iation (ASA) and is being ation has been on the USC rally activities. 01 USC s Spec -.ven held to welcome the new stu- campus for over a decade “to Yell leaders and the Tro- duction Commi ee annou dents to the USC campus and promote friendship and activ-jjan rooting section also come yesterday. acquaint them with ASA pur- ity between all Arab stu- under advisement of the of- The cards will be distrib-poses. dents.” It was founded and fice. uted in new protective ma- Attending the invitation- organized with a working Jani said his office also nila envelopes imprinted with only event will be association constitution providing regu- serves in the recognition of stunt instructions. Dean of wear white shirts or blouses. He asked men to “keep them on despite the possibility of uncomfortable temperatures. * To set the tempo of the Trojans first home game, the “Papa Oom Mow Mow” Riv-ingtons will sing some of their recordings during a pre-game show beginning at 12:30. Yell King Bob Bach urged students to arrive an early as possible. Elaborate half-time activi- officers Ghazi Al Quasaibi, lations regarding member- campus organizations. The of- Men Thomas Hull reminded^ feature 27 youth Sizzler Kills L.A. Myth As Students Wilt in Heat president; Nasr Salem, vice ship, bylaw’s, meetings, offi- fjce }s the only place W’here students that the cards and cers and finances. an groups can be registered new envelopes will be used Services the ASA performs and ]iste(j jn a permanent throughout the season. He include meeting xiew students record. No organization is said the utmost care should when they arrive in Los An- recognized unless it has filed be taken to preserve them, geles. registration assistance. a form with the office. In Knight President Jack locating accommodations and many activities, only those Gleason asked students to general introduction to the ^ who have been listed;--- campus, the community and are eligible to ^ certain fa_ ^q DRAFT-DODGING other students bands in addition to the Trojan Marching Band. The Trojan Glee Club and the bands will perform songs from the musical “Oklahoma’’ to welcome the Sooners to the West Coast. cilities. Chamber of Commerce propaganda saying Los An-1 “Through cultural and so- Thg g ial Events Qffice geles has a “temperate cli-cial activities the association has s ision of all mate_ mate was eternally destroy- promotes good will and builds iia]s submitted for tin on ed yesterday. j stronger ties between Arab ,, T . J J , , b, , ., . the campus. Jam explained The temperature in the s u en s ,,e . menc^ 1 that any group who wishes to City of Angels reached 109 st"de”ts,?t USC Salem said. ad'vesrtisi materiaIs on degrees - second highest on Activities include dinner record exchanges, parties, lectures and movies. Exchanges with other foreign students and American organizations are encouraged. Salem said all students at USC are invited to participate in the association's planned events. It was 110 degrees on Sept. 1, 1955. Burns Foot When the weatherman announced Wednesday thai it had been 107, people accepted the fact. Men Pick Army Over Marriage Film Series Will Start There were even fears that a line of guards would have g! to be posted around Doheny Fountain to keep students out—a reversal of other days ^enter6^18 reluctant Lerner and Lowe's “Gigi,” The band is beginning its starring Leslie Caron, Mau- second week of drills today university premises must file rick MARKS married he would get married for approval by filling out a Tf it came t0 the critical1 anyway. form in the office. point in Trojan men s lives don’t see why anyone of either serving Uncle Sam woujd just get married to be for two years or a wife for exempt from the draft.” he a lifetime, they would gener- gaid “The wiser thing would ally hitch up with their Uncle ^ to sign up you knew Sam. you were going to get your During an informal Daily orders to report. poll yesterday on Qn the whole, the students Band Drills For Game The Trojan Marching Band.; 1120 men strong, is larger Trojan than it has been since 1947, presjdent Kennedy's exemp- interviewed felt that leaping when women were allowed to ^on bjjj for married men. jnt0 marriage to become ex-participate, Ronald Broad- use males said they would empt from the draft would well, new director, said yes- nQt "jump” into marriage to'pro^bly lead to unhappiness terday. avoid the draft. and trouble in the long run. City Panics rice Chevalier and Louis Jour- to prepare for a brief appear- Trojans and all college men. That, anyway, was how law r e temporarily deferred maj0r Tracy Sheffield saw it. BAkcrOOT BOY— There's no real way to beat the heat, but Bill Baldwin, a sophomore in LAS, was giving it a try anyway yesterday by dunking his feet in the Alumni Memorial Fountain to fight the 109-degree day. But most Trojans were toojdan.will kick off Delta Kappaiance during tomorrow* na.j Irom the service anyway. The 20-year-old junior said hot even to try, and when Alpha’s, national cinema hon- tionally televised Trojan- But asked the same ques- the uneducated individual Bill Baldwin, lophomore in 0rary, fall film festival to- Sooner tussle in the Coliseum, tion of marriage vs. service would use marital means LAS, burned his foot in the night at 8 in 133 FH. Its initial campus perform- after college, the general more(30 thsm the college man water, the guard idea was Tickets for the Academy ance was during a rally for consensus was, “If I had a:simply because tne latter naa dropped. Awrard-winning film will be new students that highlighted steady girl friend and was u aji uca ion oun a The majority of students sold at the door for 50 cents, last week’s Troy Days. The thinking of marriage anyway, on; an * y marnage no doubt admired Lawrence The bill of fare for the re- pep band also made an im- I might speed up my plans if 00 * a 1 of Arabia more than ever at mainder of the semester in- promptu appearance at Los the chances of being drafted For the student who plans this time. After all, Law'rence eludes “Ride the High Coun- Angeles International Airport were great. on going beyond just four had to stand it pretty hot, try,” Oct. 4; “The Hustler,” last Saturday to greet USC’s Terry Bixler, 18-year-old years of college, and into too. But then there’s no smog Oct. 11; “Rififi,” Oct. 18; grid team who defeated Colo- electrical engineering major, graduate school, the problem in Arabia- iand others. jrado earlier in the day. .said if he were going to get (Continued on ftge 2) I » |
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