DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 17, October 15, 1963 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
PAGE THREE
Coed Discusses Realities Of Discrimination
University of Southern California
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Twogie’s Basketball Squad Will Begin Practice
Vol. LV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15,1963
NO. 17
GOODWILL HELPS
Mohr Explains Effects of Fear
The status of women
“The classifying of human- “but if men of sound judg-ist and scientist as two sep- ment and goodwill would urate camps is brought about meet for this purpose there (ie“* J "wiii be
by fear of extinction. Dr. m.ght be good results. „e subjKt of a nationwWe
John Mohr, professor of to- He indicated that he felt confercnce tod jn ,h ne„,
ologv. said yesterday at the the men of literature, the ma- . , _.. „ n
iP ,tu 'ni. - u constructed Olin Hall of En-
Episcopal - Lutheran-Presby- jor humanist group, should .
terian Center. “This classifi- meet the scientist on his ter- Sineerm£-
cation is too restricted,” he ritory. Dr. Mohr suggested Scheduled as a day-long
emphasized. this because he feels the edu- session, the National Confer-
Dr. Mohr referred to -sev- cated scientist still has far- ence on Women in Engineer-
eral views of modern man ther to move to reach the ing will feature talks by lead-!
which trace its way back to men of letters than vice versa, ing authorities on specific as-
C. P. Snow's “The Two Cul- His speech was the first in pects of engineering. These
tures.” In variance to Snow, a series of “Science Round- experts will discuss both the
Women Engineers to Convene For Second National Assembly
Dr. Mohr expressed the belief that the general grouping of scientist and humanist is too limited and that among these groups are many types and varied beliefs.
He went on to say that the basis of the argument is essentially the fear of extinc-ethical implications of scien-1 t n w r Tnr race. itific discoveries,” Michael „ C0J,|tant theGUnited
table” discussions for gradu- difficulties and the rewards' ate students. The series is de- encountered by women who | signed to encourage human- enter the field, ists and scientists to discuss ^he assembly, second of its | issues with one another. kind to be held in the United “It will be a forum for the stateg) wiU keynote fourj presentation and discussion of k r) T h T I ^e social, _ intellectual and ^ ^feSor of chemistry
tion of the human race.
pey>
“This fear has caused an Hamilton, Episcopal Chaplain offirp of Fmpr?pnrv
abridgement that is difficult who is sponsoring the series. planni wmiam BalihauSj to mend,’ Dr. Mohr added, said recently.
Dean Indicates Need For Jobs in Future
A “total plan'’ by govern-! To reach these levels, he
ment and individual indus-continued, the government
tries to provide from 30 to 35 must pursue policies condu-
million new jobs by 1975 was!cive to private economic
called for yesterday by Dr.'growth. A total plan, he said,
Robert R. Dockson, dean of is needed to enable American
the Graduate School of Busi- industry to operate with the
ness Administration. maximum amount of freedom
Speaking before the Ameri- and a minimum amount of
can Gas Association at the centralism.
Biltmore Hotel, Dean Dock-i 4iT, . ,
. , . It should include such son said that American busi- , , , ,. ,
,, ,, , _, (steps as tax reduction and re-nessmen are on the threshold ■>
, . , , ,. Iform, greater encouragement
of tremendous!v expanding , ,
. ... .. ,, °ito those spending on research
opportunities. Whether they, , , f i i j a. r xi and development, incentives
take advantage of them will'
depend largely upon their
willingness to plan creatively
WILLIAM BALLHAUS
. . . Nortrop vice president
The Princeton scholar is a
Russian - speaking native of vice president. Northrop Cor- and th(, s(m of the
poration; and Dr. Catherine .
R.obbins. president of Pasa- ^t. ^ev- Leonty Turkevich, dena City College. !the Primate of the Russian
Dr. Turksvich, an acknowledged authority of the pres-
DR. CHARLES ROBBINS
. . . college president
another visit to the Soviet.
W. C. TORPEY
U. S. consultant
j President. Emergency plan-
j support women who are inclined toward engineering.
Other speakers at the conference are Dr. Alice Dement ;of San Jose State College, iDonald G. Malcolm, president !of Management Technology, Inc., and USC Dean Alfred C. Ingersoll of the School of Engineering.
Dr. Ingersoll will outline a possible college program for the engineering education of women and discuss their ability to contribute a “woman's touch” to engineering.
In addition, a panel of successful women engineers will offer their views on “'Factors of Success for Women Engineers.” Panel members will include Judith Siegel. Space Technology Laboratories, Re-Dr. Ballhaus, a director of dondo Beach; Olive Salem -
DR. JOHN TURKEVICH
. . Princeton professor
for the years ahead, he said.
“The nation’s capacity to produce is changing rapidly,” Dean Dockson said. “T h e
IR Rushees To Learn Of Speakers
to business to expand exports greatly, simplification of our anti-trust laws and the rules of regulatory agencies, the elimination of waste and duplication at all levels of gov-
, , . , , ernment and the introduction gross national product could c .
U ccon vii- 1, j °f important new programs
reach $620 billion by the end , . . .
- „ ir,™ f°r the training, retraining
of next vear. Bv 1970 our , , .. f „
,.... , J , 'and education of our people,
ability to produce will be ap- j
proaching $730 billion, and by Government and business 3975 about $925 billion.” are really on the same team,
-*-Dean Dockson said. Much of
the antagonism that exists between the two must be broken down if we are to remain a strong, dynamic and progressive country, he said.
In calling for planning by companies as well as by the
Delta Phi Epsilon, profes-1 government, Dr. Dockson said sional international reiations that many new Products- new and foreign trade fraternity. sources of ener^ and <new will host rushees at 3 p.m. ser™es will be made avail-
Wednesday in the Upstairs able ln the years ahead‘ Each Commons' where President ,ndustr>'’ he declared, needs Harvey Harris will outline the lo analyze its own situation to group's upcoming speaker see how 11 can best Partici-program. Some of the featur- Pa^e in the growth period. ed speakers wil be from the j ranks of the Los Angeles Consular Corps.
Both members and rushees. along with members of the faculty, gathered Sunday for a brunch honoring Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid as the ‘Spirit of Delta Phi Epsilon.”
Marking the 40th anniversary of the fraternity at USC, the Sunday-morning brunch under the joint chairmanship of President Harris and Jim Blanchard was held in the Grand Dining Room of the Los Angeles Athletic Club.
Dr. Norman R. Fertig, associate professor of international relations .and Dr. Karras. retired professor of business economics and international trade discussed the history of the fraternity. Delta Phi members Nelson Horne and Mike Paulin presented additional addresses.
ent state of Russian science,
Orthodox Church in the United States.
In addition. Dr. Turkevich
will provide a political side-; was science attache of the light to the conference in a United States Embassy in report on the use of women Moscow during the summers in Soviet science and technol- of 1960 and 1961, and has ogy. just recently returned from
Providing a more national ning is responsible for the Northrop Corporation, will bier, president, SPEC Pack-viewpoint on the position of mobilization of the nation's discuss the jobs available for aging Company. Phoenix, women in engineering will be manpower resources in crises, women in engineering and the Ariz.: Rebecca Sparling, Gen-
Dr. Torpey, a government* The consultant will empha- challenge facing the United consultant who will review size today’s shortage of prop- States in developing its wom-the progress which women erly trained engineers and anpower. have made in United States the expanding opportunities The president of Pasadena
engineering during the past two decades.
Dr. Torpey acts as an ad-
eral Dynamics. Pomona: and Virginia Tucker. Norair Division of Northrop, Hawthorne.
Invitations to attend the
for women who wish to enter City College, Dr. Robbins, will
the profession. offer an educator’s view of i conference have been issued
Drs. Ballhaus and Robbins engineering trends. She is to prominent personnel en-visor to the Office of Emer- will also report on aspects of scheduled to define the edu- gaged in science and industry gency Planning, a department j engineering which are related [cational programs now in throughout Southern Califor-of the executive office of the,to their professions. process to encourage andjnia.
USC to Participate Talk to Cover Head of Service Center
In Race Conference U.S. Mistakes Commends Mental Health
Over Vietnam
university as an institution in j | the community, the responsi-j bility of the students in the university and in American “Vietnam: An society. ’ Dilemma” will be
USC is one of 60 colleges in the United States that has been invited to send representatives to a Student Leadership Conference on Religion and Race in Washington, D.
C.. Nov. 17-20, Ben Cohen, director of the Hillel Foundation, announced yesterday.
Cohen said interested students may pick up applications! at the Chaplain’s Office, 212;ker will have a maximum of
SU, the University Methodist students and staff._
Church, the Newman Center #
at 3207 University Ave. and PoArl pll'fYl other religious centers on * wwVrf campus.
He ut'ged students with | some background in the civil rights controversy to apply.
The conference is sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, the National Newman Club Federation, the National Federation of Catholic College Students and the National Student Christian Federation.
The idea for the conference. by Dr Jason L pinkie, asso Cohen explained, grew out of j ciate professor of public ad-a meeting in January of the rninistrati0n. at the Faculty National Conference of Re- Center tomorrow at noon, ligion and Race in Chicago.
The conference in Novem- • ^’in-vle said that the
speech will cover the nature of guerrilla warfare, how the United States got involved in the war. and an account of this country's mistakes that led to the dilemma.
These mistakes are important because our errors in
By GREGG HILL Upon discovering his inclina- applicants, once accepted, are Today's college students; tion toward the field, she en- given a two-part “treatment.” American generally possess better men- couraged and interested him In the first part, graduate discussed tal health than other age in both the behavioral science students in clinical psychol-
Offers Cash
More than $31,000 in college scholarships and additional prizes will be given away during a “Cash for College Sweepstakes” launched by the Western Division of Libby, McNeil and Libby Co., according to Edward R. Brad-
groups, Dr. Perry London, and the classics. As a result, ogy diagnose the client’s be-new head of USC’s Psycho- Dr. London concentrated on havioral problem under care-logical Service Center, said psychology in graduate work, ful supervision of professors, yesterday. but majored in classical lan-! In the second part, under
“I strongly suspect most of Sua-es at Y™hiva College. even stricter guidance, the our college students are gen- As head of the Psychologic- graduates train the applicants erally pretty healthy,” Dr. al Service Center, the 32- to cope with their problems, London theorized, “and are year-old Nebraskan now su- which may range from simple quite likelv to survive their pervises what is in effect a anxiety to marriage difficul-personal problems rather well, training laboratory for grad- ties to mdecisiveness.
uate psychology students. Dr. London emphasized, I must admit, however, Thg center Dr London however, that the service cen-that I m rather prejudiced in said takeg applications for ter does not handle strait-
______ __ matter, he continued. I ^ from any person jn the jacket candidates.
Vietnam may hold some form ^e college students and iocai area> but limits service “Extreme cases.” he said.
of answer for similar cases, wouldn,t work in an7 Place
according to Dr. Finkle.
“President Kennedy’s moves have been of the highest aspirations, but they have been too late,” Dr. Finkle noted. “Vietnam was in trouble several years back, and the Vietnam populace was unrestful, but we did nothing
ley, director of the firm’s The emphasis of the con- marketing, ference, according to Cohen, “This Sweepstakes is a
will be in areas of “the inner complete departure from us-j\hTso‘re has life of the campus commun-jual food company contests. come a heacj ” ity; the responsibility of the All of the 348 prizes, topped
by two four-year college
other than a college.”
Dr. London, a clinical psychologist specializing in the study of personality, succeeds former service center chief Dr. Clarence L. Winder. A native of Omaha, Nebraska, Dr. London also doubles as an instructor for two courses in the psychology department.
His particular interest lies in scientific research on hyp-
to those who correspond to “are referred by our consult-the center’s training program ing psychiatrist to other for graduates. agencies better equipped to
The psychologist said that handle them.”
Mix-up in Parking Could Prove Costly
AUTOGRAPH SEEKERS
Junior Class Will Meet
The Junior Class will hold its monthly council meeting tonight at 6:30 at the Delta Gamma sorority house. However. its featured speaker. Chancellor Rufus B. v o n KleinSmid. will be unable to attend because of illness.
Officers of the Class of 1965 will announce committee assignments and will present the calendar of this year s activities. |
By JOYCE JAXOSKY in authorized areas where Confused about campus they do not fill auto parking
Dr. Finkle received his PhD
— — ----j--- -----o-i. , __ . iiu&is. . j-juiiuuu ictcivcu'* 7 ~ . . ' ",
scholarships, are aids to fur- ln Pohtlcal sc,ence at the Lnl' his MA degree in psychology students are. and confusion I ists are not charged for park-ther education,” Bradley ex- vers,‘>’ ot Michigan. Between from Co1umbia Teachers Col- can be tostl-v- according to mg space.
1959 and 1961 he was a mem- ]ege and hig phD frQm Co_ Victor E. Sargent, head of; Lots available to students of the first two b_er of the Michigan State iUmbia University. campus police. with permits are Lot D. oppo-
Only students with parking site 635 W. 35th St.; Lot B, permits are allowed to park * opposite 634 W. 34th St.: and their cars on campus—and H and I, on the south and only in specified Lots D, B. H. north sides of 37th Place be-I and sometimes J. Students tween Hoover and McClintock without permits are rele- Streets. Monday, Wednesday gated to the streets which and Friday mornings, Lot J Dr." London Taid this con- are Paroled by the Los An- may open at 9:30 a.m. when tradiction arose as the result §eles Police Department. the above lots are filled, of a conflict of interests in “One of our biggest prob- The two Menlo lots, locat-high school. lems. Sargent says, “is mo- ed on the south side of Ex-
When Dr. London was a torcycles. Cylists forget, on position Boulevard; just east Americans in foreign aid and high school sophomore, his occasion, that no motor-driv- of \ ermont Boulevard, are Dean Alfred C. Ingersoll of technical assistance, a Ford Latin instructor was also in- en vehicles are permitted on free lots open to anyone Mon-the School of Engineering will Foundation-sponsored re- terested in psychology as the campus proper. day through Frida} except on
plained. . . ____________
Each of the first two, er 0 * e Michigan State iumbia University, awards has a cash value 0f Universit7 advisory group in ! 86,692, the average cost of :^0ll^b Vietnam.
!four years at a state univer-1 Since then he has served as sity as reported recently by a consultant to several gov-the President’s Commission iernmental and private re-on Higher Education, he not- search organizations con-
Noon Music Will Begin
general n Viet-
cerned with the range of problems nam.
i At the present time he is engaged in a project related to the professional role of
During his undergraduate days at Yeshiva College in New York City, however, Dr. London did not major in his present field. At the Eastern school his field of study was classical languages.
SEEING DOUBLE — Actor Dean Jagger, left, and Dr. Frank Baxter, emeritus professor of English, exchange autographs. The two Icok-alikes are working together for the first time in MGM-TV's new "Mr. Novak" series.
open the first Music at Noon program of the semester with a lecture on the* engineer's view of music today at 12:15 in Hancock Auditorium.
The approach of Dean In-gersoll’s talk will be the mutually complementary place of both science and the humanities in people's lives today.
Dean Ingersoll holds a BA, master’s degree and PhD from the University of Wisconsin. He is a member of ithe American Society of Civil Engineers, the American So-jciety for Engineering Education and various scientific and engineering honoraries.
Other prizes include four SI,000 scholarships, 10 $500 scholarships. 32 sets of Compton 15-volume Pictured Encyclopedias, 100 Compton's Illustrated Science Dictionaries and 200 Repogle 12-inch World Globes.
search project.
.well as her course material. Motorcycles may be parkedidays of a Coliseum event.
Paulin Talks on Creeks
By RICK MARKS Assistant City Editor
Fraternities can provide a solid foundation for college life, but they need the help of the administration, not denunciations, Mike Paulin. fraternity affairs adviser explained yesterday in an interview with the Daily Trojan.
Paulin was asked to comment on University of California President Clark Kerr’s statements that fraternities are playing a decreasingly important role in college life.
Dr. Kerr said recently the decline of the Greek system was due to three reasons including the more serious and dedicated attitude of today's students, the growing use of residence halls, which cancels
one of a fraternity house's best selling points, and the racial discrimination clauses of most fraternities.
“In some cases Dr. Kerr's observations are pretty truthful. particularly in California colleges. But at USC we are not declining, at least not statistically.” Paulin said.
He explained that the state college in California poses an interesting exception to the general rule of the fraternity system as it exists in most colleges and universities throughout the nation.
“California has a very unusual situation.” Paulin explained. “We have a great college complex. Fraternities have never made great inroads into the state college, (
the reason being they were “Fraternities have taken a skeptical of the state college, survival attitude." he said, and they were not orientated “It is an attitude which be-to the philosophy of those in- gan hack in tn* 1890 s an* stitutions.” which concentrates on tomor-
The fraternity affairs ad- tow—survival! for the future.” viser said Dr. Kerr was not He emphasized that frater-attempting to upgrade the nities should begin to realize fraternity system as it exists some of their major objec-on the California campus, but tives and formulate them into rather to find its short- ideas for the present, comings. This very attitude. Returning to the original he explained, is what so many point of the declination of this college administration? ad- Greek system, Paulin con-here to — the tearing down eluded that fraternities do rather than conscientious have their admitted short-criticism of the fraternity comings, system. i “But it should be the ob-
Paulin turr^d to another jective of the administrations aspect of the problems con- of universities and colleges to fronting the overall frater- help guide the fraternities nity picture in the United which inhabit their campuses, States. in°t to explot them,” he said.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 17, October 15, 1963 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 17, October 15, 1963. |
| Full text |
PAGE THREE Coed Discusses Realities Of Discrimination University of Southern California DAILY TROJAN PAGE FOUR Twogie’s Basketball Squad Will Begin Practice Vol. LV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15,1963 NO. 17 GOODWILL HELPS Mohr Explains Effects of Fear The status of women “The classifying of human- “but if men of sound judg-ist and scientist as two sep- ment and goodwill would urate camps is brought about meet for this purpose there (ie“* J "wiii be by fear of extinction. Dr. m.ght be good results. „e subjKt of a nationwWe John Mohr, professor of to- He indicated that he felt confercnce tod jn ,h ne„, ologv. said yesterday at the the men of literature, the ma- . , _.. „ n iP ,tu 'ni. - u constructed Olin Hall of En- Episcopal - Lutheran-Presby- jor humanist group, should . terian Center. “This classifi- meet the scientist on his ter- Sineerm£- cation is too restricted,” he ritory. Dr. Mohr suggested Scheduled as a day-long emphasized. this because he feels the edu- session, the National Confer- Dr. Mohr referred to -sev- cated scientist still has far- ence on Women in Engineer- eral views of modern man ther to move to reach the ing will feature talks by lead-! which trace its way back to men of letters than vice versa, ing authorities on specific as- C. P. Snow's “The Two Cul- His speech was the first in pects of engineering. These tures.” In variance to Snow, a series of “Science Round- experts will discuss both the Women Engineers to Convene For Second National Assembly Dr. Mohr expressed the belief that the general grouping of scientist and humanist is too limited and that among these groups are many types and varied beliefs. He went on to say that the basis of the argument is essentially the fear of extinc-ethical implications of scien-1 t n w r Tnr race. itific discoveries,” Michael „ C0J, tant theGUnited table” discussions for gradu- difficulties and the rewards' ate students. The series is de- encountered by women who signed to encourage human- enter the field, ists and scientists to discuss ^he assembly, second of its issues with one another. kind to be held in the United “It will be a forum for the stateg) wiU keynote fourj presentation and discussion of k r) T h T I ^e social, _ intellectual and ^ ^feSor of chemistry tion of the human race. pey> “This fear has caused an Hamilton, Episcopal Chaplain offirp of Fmpr?pnrv abridgement that is difficult who is sponsoring the series. planni wmiam BalihauSj to mend,’ Dr. Mohr added, said recently. Dean Indicates Need For Jobs in Future A “total plan'’ by govern-! To reach these levels, he ment and individual indus-continued, the government tries to provide from 30 to 35 must pursue policies condu- million new jobs by 1975 was!cive to private economic called for yesterday by Dr.'growth. A total plan, he said, Robert R. Dockson, dean of is needed to enable American the Graduate School of Busi- industry to operate with the ness Administration. maximum amount of freedom Speaking before the Ameri- and a minimum amount of can Gas Association at the centralism. Biltmore Hotel, Dean Dock-i 4iT, . , . , . It should include such son said that American busi- , , , ,. , ,, ,, , _, (steps as tax reduction and re-nessmen are on the threshold ■> , . , , ,. Iform, greater encouragement of tremendous!v expanding , , . ... .. ,, °ito those spending on research opportunities. Whether they, , , f i i j a. r xi and development, incentives take advantage of them will' depend largely upon their willingness to plan creatively WILLIAM BALLHAUS . . . Nortrop vice president The Princeton scholar is a Russian - speaking native of vice president. Northrop Cor- and th(, s(m of the poration; and Dr. Catherine . R.obbins. president of Pasa- ^t. ^ev- Leonty Turkevich, dena City College. !the Primate of the Russian Dr. Turksvich, an acknowledged authority of the pres- DR. CHARLES ROBBINS . . . college president another visit to the Soviet. W. C. TORPEY U. S. consultant j President. Emergency plan- j support women who are inclined toward engineering. Other speakers at the conference are Dr. Alice Dement ;of San Jose State College, iDonald G. Malcolm, president !of Management Technology, Inc., and USC Dean Alfred C. Ingersoll of the School of Engineering. Dr. Ingersoll will outline a possible college program for the engineering education of women and discuss their ability to contribute a “woman's touch” to engineering. In addition, a panel of successful women engineers will offer their views on “'Factors of Success for Women Engineers.” Panel members will include Judith Siegel. Space Technology Laboratories, Re-Dr. Ballhaus, a director of dondo Beach; Olive Salem - DR. JOHN TURKEVICH . . Princeton professor for the years ahead, he said. “The nation’s capacity to produce is changing rapidly,” Dean Dockson said. “T h e IR Rushees To Learn Of Speakers to business to expand exports greatly, simplification of our anti-trust laws and the rules of regulatory agencies, the elimination of waste and duplication at all levels of gov- , , . , , ernment and the introduction gross national product could c . U ccon vii- 1, j °f important new programs reach $620 billion by the end , . . . - „ ir,™ f°r the training, retraining of next vear. Bv 1970 our , , .. f „ ,.... , J , 'and education of our people, ability to produce will be ap- j proaching $730 billion, and by Government and business 3975 about $925 billion.” are really on the same team, -*-Dean Dockson said. Much of the antagonism that exists between the two must be broken down if we are to remain a strong, dynamic and progressive country, he said. In calling for planning by companies as well as by the Delta Phi Epsilon, profes-1 government, Dr. Dockson said sional international reiations that many new Products- new and foreign trade fraternity. sources of ener^ and |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1427/uschist-dt-1963-10-15~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 17, October 15, 1963

