Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 45, November 24, 1964 |
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PAGE THREE- University of Southern California
PAGE FOUR:
Cal Riots Could Not H "X A TT "^7" r I ^ I 9 [ \ j Hl Troy's Next Rival
Happen at Troy | J j \ | | j | l||fr JL |\ \ />! XjLjL^I Boasts Spotless Record
Vol. XVI «*l^72 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1964 No. 45
Desert Woe Halts Talk
Bv CHUCK CONYERS
Mrs. Margaret Thqrpe, history senior in charge of the Trojan Democratic Club’s (TDC) presentation of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement (FSM) speakers, yesterday discovered that student agitators create riotous situations wherever they go The forum, which wras not
held because the FSM students’ car broke down in the Mojave Desert, will be held today at noon in 129 FH.
“Of the four scheduled speakers, Martin Royscher and Mario Savio flew down later in the day and I just missed Brian Shannon at thej
the block because he couldn’t find a place to park. So I went to the desk and asked; the man if there was a busi coming in from the north at; 11:40 a.m.
He said. “What d’ya meani ‘the north’?"
“I slid, “W ell, I don’t
bus station. I don’t know how know. Their car broke down many are still out there in somewhere between there and: the desert,” said Mrs. Thorpe, here and ... I just dont
’ know.
Coming by Bus
“I was told that their car had broken down and that one of the speakers was coming in on a bus at 11:40 a.m and needed somebody to pick him up." she said.
‘‘Needless to say. I im-mediatelv left the bookstore 'a*n anc* ^rs- Thorpe seareh-
“I asked several people standing around if they were from the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and they said ‘No’ and looked at me as if I were a nut."
Without success, the chap-
and called a friend of mine who sometimes has two cars available but he didn’t have any cars available yesterday.
‘‘Then I went to the chaplain’s office to see if his secretary had a car and could give me a ride," Mrs. Thorpe said. “She didn't.
ed the Continental Trailways depot.
No One Likely
“Finally, we tried the MTA depot. They have no way of paging anybody, so I looked around but didn’t find any likely looking people.
“So I went back outride to wait for the Chaplain. I
LAST Or SERIES—Leonra Ruffo will star in Frederico Fellini's "The Young and Passionate." This will be the last film of ASSC Foreign Film Festival to screen.
. had to wait for about 10 min- i ‘While she was trying to uteg j guegs ^ciuse he got
stuck in the traffic.
“While I was standing ( there, one of that kind ofl people who usually is stand-; ing at 5th and Main decided]
find somebody who could help me, the chaplain came in and said he would drive me to go look for them,’’ Mrs. Thorpe explained.
“In the meantime, nobody to make ‘friendly conversa-knew which depot the fellow was in. So we left for downtown 10 minutes before speaking time after I told Glen Mowrer. president of the TDC, to hold the audi-
Festival to Present Young; Passionate'
Dr. Caldwell Views Shift In Kremlin
The Red Chinese are heavily criticizing the Soviet’s relations with the West in their policy of coexistence, Dr. William S. Caldwell pointed out yesterday.
Dr. Caldwell spoke to a Town Hall civic gathering at the Biltmore Hotel on “The Impact of Changes in the Kremlin on the Communist World.”
Dr. Caldwell is a research associate of the Research In-stitute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda and an assistant professor of journalism.
Recent Changes
“‘Fallout’ from the Khru-| shchev ouster continues, but so far there have been no unfavorable developments in Soviet relations with the West,” Dr. Caldwell said.
He also observed that the; recent changes in the Soviet Communist Party hierarchy are an indication of the power struggle surrounding Khrushchev’s dismissal as premier and party first secretary.
Freberg Raps Mediocre Ads
*jj I tenants Alxei Adzhubei and
by Federico Fellini will!story in a sequel called wasn t from Berkeley, I shown tonight at 8 in 133 Bidone,” said Steve Lee, pub-!^as^y • P°bakoy.
j FH. licity director of the Foreign
A secret meeting of the j powerful party Central Com-I mittee on Nov. 16 resulted in the ousting of Frol Kozlov (from the Presidium and of
The Young and Passion-1works. He later picked up the]^wo °ther Khrushchev lieu-tion.’ So I told him that if heLte 1 -----" *’—* * J-t"
II
wasn’t looking for him. he went away.
“Then I came back to USC. ] Entitled II Vitelloni, the I hope the people who ap-! was directed by Fellini
peared today have not lost all and Written in collaboration holism in films. He tries not I “ ^
“We went to the Grey- confidence and will appear w^h Tullio Pinelli. only to tell a story, but a^EC i necte(j the RUSSian sec-
hound station first. The.Tuesday (today) at noon in Fellini, director of ‘1^ ['vcaJ the‘nn®f .wor^',ng;' ret police were promoted. Dr.
Dolce Vita" and -.g,of the characters. he added. ^ »
weaves a story about a group| This is the last in a series! .
of young men living in a re- of four films of the Foreign! e ormer ea ° . e
1 police, Alexander Shelepm,
Film Festival.
Soviet Turnover
Adzuhubei was the editor;
SATIRIST—Stan Freberg won SAM Comedy Award in recognition of his defense of the underdog businessman. Freberg spoke yesterday in Hancock Auditorium.
“Fellini is a leader of sym- of Izvestia and Polyakov was
a farm expert. At the same
chaplain was driving around i 120 FH.
Betinis Mystery Threatens Senate
mote section of Italy who Film Festival, sponsored by spend their time entertaining the ASSC Cultural Affairs themselves and refusing to Committee.
work- The other films were An-
A major part of the film tonioni’s “II Grido,” Renoir's concerns the life of their,“Grand Illusion” and Resnais
was named to the Presidium. Vladimir Semichastny, cur-
Saltman to Offer Paper in Prague
By GREG HILL City Editor
ASSC President John Betinis renovated the old mystery angle again yesterday by threatening the ASSC Senate with a post-Thanksgiving attack.
Betinis, who utilized the mystery angle last year Franco Fabrizzi
when he announced his candidacy for student bodv 0 . . ,
• j , j , , * Nino Rota, long associated
.president, vowed to put ai ... _ ... . ° ,
0 , , , I with Fellini, composed the kink in the Senate s works. . ^
1 music.
“The childishness exhibited: «This is one of thf mogl by several of the so-called| important of Fellini’s early
,student leaders in the Senate'-
must stop, and it is going to stop.” he promised, h T am going to make a!
LjECC 1 Is U £ fl major announcement of
Dr. Totton J. Anders0n. >°lic>' immediately fo,lowinS
Thanksgiving vacation.
Government Scene
The ASSC president failed to disclose what line of
I..
Scholars To View
leader, Fausto, and his affair “Last Year at Marienbad.” uuh a joung girl. commjttee also spon-
Starring in the film will be‘sored the Shakespearean Leonra Ruffo, Franco Inter- Film Festival earlier in the lenghi, Albert Sordi and semester.
Students with I.D.’s will be admitted for 50 cents. General admission will be $1. Host at the film showing
Dr. Paul D. Saltman. chair- assistant man of biochemistry depart-
Harold Helbock.
Nothing Is Too Wild —Satirist
Bv ELLIOT ZWEIBACH
Stan Freberg attacked advertising men as purveyors of dull, insipid, nauseating, irritating commercials which insult the intelligence of the American public in a speech before a capacity Hancock Auditorium audience yesterday.
Freberg discussed “The Business of Comedy" after accepting the Society for Advancement of Management (SAM) Comedy Award in recognition of his defense of I the “underdog” businessman.
The humorist-satirist explained that sponsors who use the hard-sell approach must break through the mediocrity barriers, “that enormous bulk of audio-visual !rubbish which spews forth Ifrom the mass media and ■ which somehow passes for creative advertising.”
Freberg. a staunch proponent of originality in radio and television advertising, cited Rosser Reeves, chairman of the board of the Ted Bates Company, as a shining example of the hard-sell advertiser.
Gastro-Intestinal Ads
“I have always known that my type of shenanigans were ! in exact opposition to the ’down to earth’ commercials.
, Reeves recommends, he be-!ing the Dean of the Gastrointestinal School of Advertising.” Freberg said.
Freberg compared some
rent head of the police was. ment, wrill be one of six Americans w'ho will deliver papers
named a full member of the Central Committee, explained Dr. Caldwell.
“Such appointments are significant,” Dr. Caldwell said, “and probably indicate the two men had an important role in keeping.the Soviet secret police and Red Army neutral during the recent power struggle.”
“This power struggle may will be the International continue for some time,” he Students House. added.
at a conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency being held this week in Prague, Czechoslovakia.
The agency is sponsored by the United Nations for the purpose of dealing with peaceful uses of atomic energy.
Conferences are held each four years in the form of invitational symposiums. This year’s conference will in-
of his own successful com-who is co-author of the pap- mercials for Chung King er. studied the effect of how Chow Mein. Kaiser Alumin-iron gets into the tissue using um- Coca Cola. Mars Candy
and Cheerios to those of Proc-
chelates. These are com- ,, , ,
, ... ,. tor and Gambles "splendidly pounds which will combineLvolting commercials" for
with metal to hold it in solu- Carter-s Litt|e Liver puis.
tion. Ice Blue Secret and Head and
Dr. Saltman states in his Shoulders Shampoo.
paper that both the rate of!
professor of political science and Dr. Carl Q. Christol, chairman of political science department, will analyze the ,
1964 election campaign at 2 actlon he contemplated, today in 154 Sc. c 1 olher fronts of the
t- . , fast-moving student govem-
Dr. Anderson vail discuss ment scen6i TDC president the future ot the Republican Glen Mowrer aIsQ had un_ par y an r. . r.^to is ex- ].jncj worcjs yesterday for the
oft-maligned Senate.
Mowrer, obviously not concerned with original criticism, Dr. Christol condemns the claimed that the Senate has emotional and the personal- “continually refused to justi-ized manner in which both the fy jts existence as anything presidential campaigns were more than a rather boring conducted. He also feels that social hour.” there was a lack of inter- TDC Petition
change on the main issues Mowrer plans to join the between the two candidates, horde of petition circulators
Nevertheless, he believes thls week by circulating a this past fummisTn mav TDC statement for the num-&trengthen
pected to show the 1034 elec tion as a model of a pcorly run campaign.
campaign may the two party ber of signatures required to
system in America.
Dr. Christol is aiso expected to note the fact that the right wing of the GOP, which previously claimed it had a more successful campaign strategy — than the moderates, must now move into the mainstream of Republican politics.
He will probably cite the landslide defeat of Sen. Barry Goldwater a™ evidence to the
place it on the special Dec 9 ballot.
The TDC petition calls for a commitment on the part of any forthcoming constitutional committee to create, among other things, a superior court an independent student budget and a proportionally representative legislature.
"There is no question that if a whole new concept of student government is not
conservatives that they must forthcoming, the Senate] support a more middle of the Mowrer plans to join the road ticket. :er regurgitated.
SPADE DUTY—USC President Norman Topping (left land Frank L. King, board of trustees chairman, are breaking the
ground for the new Religious Center west of the University Methodist Church. The new building will cost $425,000.
The advertisement for Career's Pills, produced by transport and the final place Reeveg exemplified the giori-
of deposition of the metal in|fjcation of “your golden liver various tissues and organs ibile.” are controlled by the^hem-l Carter's Little Pills jical nature of the chelate! am reminded of the
,, f ■ . ___1 compound. story of the man who took
vestigate the use of isotopes J , .
in animal physiology and nu- Supported by the John A. Carter s Little Liver Pills all triton Hartford Foundation, Inc.. of of his life and lived to be
New York, D*r. Saltman’s in- 110. Freberg said, vestigations are probing the; “Three weeks after he was results of both a lack of dead, they were still beating specific trace metals, as in his liver to death with a iron-deficiency anemia, and stick. " evidence of a process whichjthe excess of these elements.: The League Against Ob-regulates iron transport in vvj1jcj1 can potentially noxious TV Commercials was
biological systems. harmful to the liver, kidneys, formed to choose the "Terri-
Dr. Saltman and research j and spleen. (Continued on Page 2)
“Regulation and Control of Intestinal Iron Transport" will be the subject of Dr. Saltman's paper. It discusses
GROUNDBREAKING
Fulfillment of Man’s Education Predicted With Religious Center
social and cultural asset of j "In this center, the best the finest quality.” f life and thinking of church
Dr. Carl M. Franklin, vice and university may come to-Norman I President> financial affairs, j gether.” he said. He also ex-• ■ j of Pa*d "a special tribute to the presse(i hope that in the fu-
Topping said yesterday at ejfine cooperation of all those ture more organizations groundbreaking for the new involved.” wouid j0in.
$425,000 University Religious Frank King, chairman of;
By STAN METZLER
Without knowledge of religion, no man is fully .educated, President
Center.
Speaking on what he termed both a joyful and solemn occasion, he said the center will indeed be a cause for celebration.
“But this dedication also demonstrates once again USC’s deep concern for the religious dimension of man’s personal and communal life,” Dr. Topping said.
“The Religious Center will provide a forum , , , as a
theBoardof Trustees, called, 2on,s ulustration of the the dedication one more! milestone in our continuing effort to provide the physical facilities so vital to advanced education.
“It will be justified in constant services in decades to come,” he said.
Rev. Dr. John Cantelon,
He referred to Pope Gregory's
church, state and university fulfilling today the priest’s, prince's and prophetic roles traditionally ascribed to Christ.
“Without the university the other two fall into destruction and degeneration,”
university chaplain, closed; e saic* the ceremonies by predicting “It is our hope that the that the Religious Center center will add to the free-would be an example of ecu-idom, creativity and continua-menical movement in action.' tion of our civilization.”
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 45, November 24, 1964 |
| Full text | \ PAGE THREE- University of Southern California PAGE FOUR: Cal Riots Could Not H "X A TT "^7" r I ^ I 9 [ \ j Hl Troy's Next Rival Happen at Troy J j \ j l fr JL \ \ />! XjLjL^I Boasts Spotless Record Vol. XVI «*l^72 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1964 No. 45 Desert Woe Halts Talk Bv CHUCK CONYERS Mrs. Margaret Thqrpe, history senior in charge of the Trojan Democratic Club’s (TDC) presentation of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement (FSM) speakers, yesterday discovered that student agitators create riotous situations wherever they go The forum, which wras not held because the FSM students’ car broke down in the Mojave Desert, will be held today at noon in 129 FH. “Of the four scheduled speakers, Martin Royscher and Mario Savio flew down later in the day and I just missed Brian Shannon at thej the block because he couldn’t find a place to park. So I went to the desk and asked; the man if there was a busi coming in from the north at; 11:40 a.m. He said. “What d’ya meani ‘the north’?" “I slid, “W ell, I don’t bus station. I don’t know how know. Their car broke down many are still out there in somewhere between there and: the desert,” said Mrs. Thorpe, here and ... I just dont ’ know. Coming by Bus “I was told that their car had broken down and that one of the speakers was coming in on a bus at 11:40 a.m and needed somebody to pick him up." she said. ‘‘Needless to say. I im-mediatelv left the bookstore 'a*n anc* ^rs- Thorpe seareh- “I asked several people standing around if they were from the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and they said ‘No’ and looked at me as if I were a nut." Without success, the chap- and called a friend of mine who sometimes has two cars available but he didn’t have any cars available yesterday. ‘‘Then I went to the chaplain’s office to see if his secretary had a car and could give me a ride" Mrs. Thorpe said. “She didn't. ed the Continental Trailways depot. No One Likely “Finally, we tried the MTA depot. They have no way of paging anybody, so I looked around but didn’t find any likely looking people. “So I went back outride to wait for the Chaplain. I LAST Or SERIES—Leonra Ruffo will star in Frederico Fellini's "The Young and Passionate." This will be the last film of ASSC Foreign Film Festival to screen. . had to wait for about 10 min- i ‘While she was trying to uteg j guegs ^ciuse he got stuck in the traffic. “While I was standing ( there, one of that kind ofl people who usually is stand-; ing at 5th and Main decided] find somebody who could help me, the chaplain came in and said he would drive me to go look for them,’’ Mrs. Thorpe explained. “In the meantime, nobody to make ‘friendly conversa-knew which depot the fellow was in. So we left for downtown 10 minutes before speaking time after I told Glen Mowrer. president of the TDC, to hold the audi- Festival to Present Young; Passionate' Dr. Caldwell Views Shift In Kremlin The Red Chinese are heavily criticizing the Soviet’s relations with the West in their policy of coexistence, Dr. William S. Caldwell pointed out yesterday. Dr. Caldwell spoke to a Town Hall civic gathering at the Biltmore Hotel on “The Impact of Changes in the Kremlin on the Communist World.” Dr. Caldwell is a research associate of the Research In-stitute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda and an assistant professor of journalism. Recent Changes “‘Fallout’ from the Khru- shchev ouster continues, but so far there have been no unfavorable developments in Soviet relations with the West,” Dr. Caldwell said. He also observed that the; recent changes in the Soviet Communist Party hierarchy are an indication of the power struggle surrounding Khrushchev’s dismissal as premier and party first secretary. Freberg Raps Mediocre Ads *jj I tenants Alxei Adzhubei and by Federico Fellini will!story in a sequel called wasn t from Berkeley, I shown tonight at 8 in 133 Bidone,” said Steve Lee, pub-!^as^y • P°bakoy. j FH. licity director of the Foreign A secret meeting of the j powerful party Central Com-I mittee on Nov. 16 resulted in the ousting of Frol Kozlov (from the Presidium and of The Young and Passion-1works. He later picked up the]^wo °ther Khrushchev lieu-tion.’ So I told him that if heLte 1 -----" *’—* * J-t" II wasn’t looking for him. he went away. “Then I came back to USC. ] Entitled II Vitelloni, the I hope the people who ap-! was directed by Fellini peared today have not lost all and Written in collaboration holism in films. He tries not I “ ^ “We went to the Grey- confidence and will appear w^h Tullio Pinelli. only to tell a story, but a^EC i necte(j the RUSSian sec- hound station first. The.Tuesday (today) at noon in Fellini, director of ‘1^ ['vcaJ the‘nn®f .wor^',ng;' ret police were promoted. Dr. Dolce Vita" and -.g,of the characters. he added. ^ » weaves a story about a group This is the last in a series! . of young men living in a re- of four films of the Foreign! e ormer ea ° . e 1 police, Alexander Shelepm, Film Festival. Soviet Turnover Adzuhubei was the editor; SATIRIST—Stan Freberg won SAM Comedy Award in recognition of his defense of the underdog businessman. Freberg spoke yesterday in Hancock Auditorium. “Fellini is a leader of sym- of Izvestia and Polyakov was a farm expert. At the same chaplain was driving around i 120 FH. Betinis Mystery Threatens Senate mote section of Italy who Film Festival, sponsored by spend their time entertaining the ASSC Cultural Affairs themselves and refusing to Committee. work- The other films were An- A major part of the film tonioni’s “II Grido,” Renoir's concerns the life of their,“Grand Illusion” and Resnais was named to the Presidium. Vladimir Semichastny, cur- Saltman to Offer Paper in Prague By GREG HILL City Editor ASSC President John Betinis renovated the old mystery angle again yesterday by threatening the ASSC Senate with a post-Thanksgiving attack. Betinis, who utilized the mystery angle last year Franco Fabrizzi when he announced his candidacy for student bodv 0 . . , • j , j , , * Nino Rota, long associated .president, vowed to put ai ... _ ... . ° , 0 , , , I with Fellini, composed the kink in the Senate s works. . ^ 1 music. “The childishness exhibited: «This is one of thf mogl by several of the so-called important of Fellini’s early ,student leaders in the Senate'- must stop, and it is going to stop.” he promised, h T am going to make a! LjECC 1 Is U £ fl major announcement of Dr. Totton J. Anders0n. >°lic>' immediately fo,lowinS Thanksgiving vacation. Government Scene The ASSC president failed to disclose what line of I.. Scholars To View leader, Fausto, and his affair “Last Year at Marienbad.” uuh a joung girl. commjttee also spon- Starring in the film will be‘sored the Shakespearean Leonra Ruffo, Franco Inter- Film Festival earlier in the lenghi, Albert Sordi and semester. Students with I.D.’s will be admitted for 50 cents. General admission will be $1. Host at the film showing Dr. Paul D. Saltman. chair- assistant man of biochemistry depart- Harold Helbock. Nothing Is Too Wild —Satirist Bv ELLIOT ZWEIBACH Stan Freberg attacked advertising men as purveyors of dull, insipid, nauseating, irritating commercials which insult the intelligence of the American public in a speech before a capacity Hancock Auditorium audience yesterday. Freberg discussed “The Business of Comedy" after accepting the Society for Advancement of Management (SAM) Comedy Award in recognition of his defense of I the “underdog” businessman. The humorist-satirist explained that sponsors who use the hard-sell approach must break through the mediocrity barriers, “that enormous bulk of audio-visual !rubbish which spews forth Ifrom the mass media and ■ which somehow passes for creative advertising.” Freberg. a staunch proponent of originality in radio and television advertising, cited Rosser Reeves, chairman of the board of the Ted Bates Company, as a shining example of the hard-sell advertiser. Gastro-Intestinal Ads “I have always known that my type of shenanigans were ! in exact opposition to the ’down to earth’ commercials. , Reeves recommends, he be-!ing the Dean of the Gastrointestinal School of Advertising.” Freberg said. Freberg compared some rent head of the police was. ment, wrill be one of six Americans w'ho will deliver papers named a full member of the Central Committee, explained Dr. Caldwell. “Such appointments are significant,” Dr. Caldwell said, “and probably indicate the two men had an important role in keeping.the Soviet secret police and Red Army neutral during the recent power struggle.” “This power struggle may will be the International continue for some time,” he Students House. added. at a conference of the International Atomic Energy Agency being held this week in Prague, Czechoslovakia. The agency is sponsored by the United Nations for the purpose of dealing with peaceful uses of atomic energy. Conferences are held each four years in the form of invitational symposiums. This year’s conference will in- of his own successful com-who is co-author of the pap- mercials for Chung King er. studied the effect of how Chow Mein. Kaiser Alumin-iron gets into the tissue using um- Coca Cola. Mars Candy and Cheerios to those of Proc- chelates. These are com- ,, , , , ... ,. tor and Gambles "splendidly pounds which will combineLvolting commercials" for with metal to hold it in solu- Carter-s Litt e Liver puis. tion. Ice Blue Secret and Head and Dr. Saltman states in his Shoulders Shampoo. paper that both the rate of! professor of political science and Dr. Carl Q. Christol, chairman of political science department, will analyze the , 1964 election campaign at 2 actlon he contemplated, today in 154 Sc. c 1 olher fronts of the t- . , fast-moving student govem- Dr. Anderson vail discuss ment scen6i TDC president the future ot the Republican Glen Mowrer aIsQ had un_ par y an r. . r.^to is ex- ].jncj worcjs yesterday for the oft-maligned Senate. Mowrer, obviously not concerned with original criticism, Dr. Christol condemns the claimed that the Senate has emotional and the personal- “continually refused to justi-ized manner in which both the fy jts existence as anything presidential campaigns were more than a rather boring conducted. He also feels that social hour.” there was a lack of inter- TDC Petition change on the main issues Mowrer plans to join the between the two candidates, horde of petition circulators Nevertheless, he believes thls week by circulating a this past fummisTn mav TDC statement for the num-&trengthen pected to show the 1034 elec tion as a model of a pcorly run campaign. campaign may the two party ber of signatures required to system in America. Dr. Christol is aiso expected to note the fact that the right wing of the GOP, which previously claimed it had a more successful campaign strategy — than the moderates, must now move into the mainstream of Republican politics. He will probably cite the landslide defeat of Sen. Barry Goldwater a™ evidence to the place it on the special Dec 9 ballot. The TDC petition calls for a commitment on the part of any forthcoming constitutional committee to create, among other things, a superior court an independent student budget and a proportionally representative legislature. "There is no question that if a whole new concept of student government is not conservatives that they must forthcoming, the Senate] support a more middle of the Mowrer plans to join the road ticket. :er regurgitated. SPADE DUTY—USC President Norman Topping (left land Frank L. King, board of trustees chairman, are breaking the ground for the new Religious Center west of the University Methodist Church. The new building will cost $425,000. The advertisement for Career's Pills, produced by transport and the final place Reeveg exemplified the giori- of deposition of the metal in fjcation of “your golden liver various tissues and organs ibile.” are controlled by the^hem-l Carter's Little Pills jical nature of the chelate! am reminded of the ,, f ■ . ___1 compound. story of the man who took vestigate the use of isotopes J , . in animal physiology and nu- Supported by the John A. Carter s Little Liver Pills all triton Hartford Foundation, Inc.. of of his life and lived to be New York, D*r. Saltman’s in- 110. Freberg said, vestigations are probing the; “Three weeks after he was results of both a lack of dead, they were still beating specific trace metals, as in his liver to death with a iron-deficiency anemia, and stick. " evidence of a process whichjthe excess of these elements.: The League Against Ob-regulates iron transport in vvj1jcj1 can potentially noxious TV Commercials was biological systems. harmful to the liver, kidneys, formed to choose the "Terri- Dr. Saltman and research j and spleen. (Continued on Page 2) “Regulation and Control of Intestinal Iron Transport" will be the subject of Dr. Saltman's paper. It discusses GROUNDBREAKING Fulfillment of Man’s Education Predicted With Religious Center social and cultural asset of j "In this center, the best the finest quality.” f life and thinking of church Dr. Carl M. Franklin, vice and university may come to-Norman I President> financial affairs, j gether.” he said. He also ex-• ■ j of Pa*d "a special tribute to the presse(i hope that in the fu- Topping said yesterday at ejfine cooperation of all those ture more organizations groundbreaking for the new involved.” wouid j0in. $425,000 University Religious Frank King, chairman of; By STAN METZLER Without knowledge of religion, no man is fully .educated, President Center. Speaking on what he termed both a joyful and solemn occasion, he said the center will indeed be a cause for celebration. “But this dedication also demonstrates once again USC’s deep concern for the religious dimension of man’s personal and communal life,” Dr. Topping said. “The Religious Center will provide a forum , , , as a theBoardof Trustees, called, 2on,s ulustration of the the dedication one more! milestone in our continuing effort to provide the physical facilities so vital to advanced education. “It will be justified in constant services in decades to come,” he said. Rev. Dr. John Cantelon, He referred to Pope Gregory's church, state and university fulfilling today the priest’s, prince's and prophetic roles traditionally ascribed to Christ. “Without the university the other two fall into destruction and degeneration,” university chaplain, closed; e saic* the ceremonies by predicting “It is our hope that the that the Religious Center center will add to the free-would be an example of ecu-idom, creativity and continua-menical movement in action.' tion of our civilization.” |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1424/uschist-dt-1964-11-24~001.tif |
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