SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 14, No. 10, July 27, 1964 |
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Vol. XIV a LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA. MONDAY, JULY 27,1964 NO. 10.
SUMMER
TROJAN
CRIME STOPPER
DELINQUENCY GRANT - Arthur Morgan (far right), vice chairman of the Youth Opportunities Board of Greater Los Angeles, congratulates Dr. Lyle Hanna of L. A. State College &s Dr. Lamar Empey, dir&:tor of
USC's Youth Studies Center, and USC President Topping look on. Grants totaling $328,-943 were recently received by the three groups from the President's Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime.
WITH 'THE MAIDS'
Theater Workshop to Open Four-Night Run Tomorrow
Stop Gap patrons will have an opportunity to enjoy two complete evenings in the theater when the Experimental Theater Summer Workshop opens tomorrow night with Jean Genet’s. “The Maids,” and Murray Shis-gal’s “The Typists" and “The Tiger” Wednesday night.
“Jean Genet is a powerful
I writer who is able to document his point of view sharply, almost mercilessly in a fascinating poetic theatrical style,” says William C. White, production manager for the two showings.
The play will appear for two j nights only, with the second performance on Thursday.
According to director Ralph
Graduate School Seeking Fellowship Applications
The availability of six fellowships for the 1965-66 academic year has been announced by the Graduate School.
Available grants include the Louis De Beaumont Fellowships. which provide for tuition, fees and partial subsistence for graduate students in any discipline, and the Graduate Fellowships, which cover normal tuition charges offered in all fields in which degrees are granted under the jurisdiction of the Graduate Schools.
Also available are the Allan Hancock Graduate Fellowships, which provide $3,000 per year to students working toward advanced degrees in the marine sciences, biophysics and molecular biology, and the Herman Fellowships, which present $1,200 to $2,800 to graduate students in International Relations and Political Science.
The John Randolph and Dora Haynes Foundation Fellowship, for advanced graduate students in the social sciences, provides a stipend of $3,000.
The Oakley Fellowships provide $2,000 and $3,000 per year plus tuition and are tenable in any field in which a degree is granted under jurisdiction of the Graduate School.
In addition, approximately 200 teaching and laboratory assistantships are awarded each year to advanced graduate students who are selected on the basis of scholastic accomplishment, promise and competence for service in various departments of the University.
Applications for these appointments should be filed by February 15. Announcements of awards will be made by April 15.
Bowman, who has also designed the production, “The Maids” is often cited as one of the bitterest and most harrowing works of our times. “Genet reminds one of Tennessee Williams at times, for he writes of people with strange desires who feel compelled to perform violent and socially unapproved acts.”
The cast will include Glenda White, Sherrill Forbes, and Cathy Degan.
“The Typists.” which is partnered with “The Tiger” by Schisgal, enjoyed a long-run, off-Broadway production, and will have its West Coast Premiere in Stop Gap on Wednesdays and Friday nights.
“These brilliantly ironic plays earned Schisgal overnight recognition as an important voice in the American theater. It brought this young playwright the Vernon Rice award and the Outer Circle Awards for the excellence of his contribution,” White said.
“The Typists” witnesses a male and female office employe in a cycle of life complete with the humor, sadness, self-delusion and reconciliation which under-ly and infuse the human condition.
While the characters are both touching and funny their smalt talk outlines the dimensions of the tiny microcosm to which fate has consigned them.
The characters of Paul and Sylvia wiH be played by Jim (Continued on Page 2)
Dr. Roger O. Egeberg, noted medical administrator, was appointed Dean of the School of Medicine Friday by President Topping. Dr. Egeberg. who has been a USC professor of medicine since 1936. will succeed Dr. Clayton G. Loosli, medical dean since 1958. who announced last January that he would become medi-j cal director of the Hastings Foundation on August 31. „
The foundation affiliated with % flfjtjifly
USC in 1961 to support a re- j£gx9\
search program in respiratory
diseases, Dr. Loosli’s field of iSfeJS*
specialization.
The new dean of the West's ^ j[
oldest medical school has been ‘T*
medical director for the Los An-! - j|
geles County Department of Charities for the past six years.
Medical Director From 1956 to 1958, Dr. Ege-berg was medical director of Los Angeles County General Hospital where USC does its clinical teaching. From 1946 to 1956 he was chief of medical and professional services at the VA Hospital in Los Angeles.
Dr. Egeberg, a graduate of Cornell and Northwestern universities, ceceived his specialty training in internal medicine at the University of Michigan Hospital. He was also on the Michigan faculty and taught at Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine.
Prior to World War II, Dr.
Egeberg was in private practice in Cleveland for ten years. Early in the war he went overseas with the 4th General Hospital to Australia and was the base surgeon at Milne Bay, New Guinea, and in Melbourne.
Personal Physician He became the personal physician to the late General of the Army Douglas MacArthur, and then his aide-de-camp. He also was physician to general headquarters of the Southwest Pacific Area and consultant to the 9th Service Command.
Dr. Egeberg has done research on coccidioidomycosis, a lung infection resembling tuberculosis, produced by spore-like organ-(Continued on Page 3)
DR. ROGER EGEBERG
. . new Medicai Dean
Film Version Of Phaedra' Will Screen
The modern film adaptation of Seneca’s tragedy, “Phaedra, will be shown tomorrow at 7:15 p.m. in 226 FH.
The dialogue is in Spanish with English subtitles. There will be no admission charge.
“Phaedra” takes its local color from the Mediterranean shores of Spain, where it was filmed in Cadiz and Malaga. Emma Penella, winner of Spain’s best actress award, plays Estrella, who marries an older man so that she may seduce his son.
The actual Mediterranean fishermen’s families appear as extras.
10 Students To Receive Fulbrights
Ten USC students have been selected to receive Fulbright grants for the 1964-65 academic year, according to Donald Queller, associate dean of the Graduate School.
Dean Queller said the grants, which will be used for study abroad, “carried a rather generous stipend.”
Winners in the field of music included Tom Kirschbaum. conducting, Hochschule fur Musik in Munich, Germany; Richard Riffel, opera, Hochschule fur Musik in Stuttgart. Germany; and Elizabeth Matesky, violin, Royal College for Music in the United Kingdom.
Thomas Bang won a painting grant to the Hochschule fur bildende Kunste in Hamburg, Germany.
In the fields of German language and literature, winners were Barry Cotter, University of Tubingen, and William Scherer, University of Vienna. Patrick Griffin won a grant to the University of Marburg in German history while David Samuelson won a grant to the Free University of Berlin in comparative literature.
Additionally, combined NDEA Title VI-Fulbright grants have been made to Donald Meadows, Peruvian Literature, Peru, and Shauna Sorensen, Latin American Studies, Chile.
Dean Queller added that an orientation meeting for students interested in applying for 1965-66 Fulbright grants will be conducted on Thursday at 2:15 ia 110 FH.
Egeberg New Medical Dean
Object Description
Description
| Title | SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 14, No. 10, July 27, 1964 |
| Description | SUMMER TROJAN, Vol. 14, No. 10, July 27, 1964. |
| Full text | Vol. XIV a LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA. MONDAY, JULY 27,1964 NO. 10. SUMMER TROJAN CRIME STOPPER DELINQUENCY GRANT - Arthur Morgan (far right), vice chairman of the Youth Opportunities Board of Greater Los Angeles, congratulates Dr. Lyle Hanna of L. A. State College &s Dr. Lamar Empey, dir&:tor of USC's Youth Studies Center, and USC President Topping look on. Grants totaling $328,-943 were recently received by the three groups from the President's Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Crime. WITH 'THE MAIDS' Theater Workshop to Open Four-Night Run Tomorrow Stop Gap patrons will have an opportunity to enjoy two complete evenings in the theater when the Experimental Theater Summer Workshop opens tomorrow night with Jean Genet’s. “The Maids,” and Murray Shis-gal’s “The Typists" and “The Tiger” Wednesday night. “Jean Genet is a powerful I writer who is able to document his point of view sharply, almost mercilessly in a fascinating poetic theatrical style,” says William C. White, production manager for the two showings. The play will appear for two j nights only, with the second performance on Thursday. According to director Ralph Graduate School Seeking Fellowship Applications The availability of six fellowships for the 1965-66 academic year has been announced by the Graduate School. Available grants include the Louis De Beaumont Fellowships. which provide for tuition, fees and partial subsistence for graduate students in any discipline, and the Graduate Fellowships, which cover normal tuition charges offered in all fields in which degrees are granted under the jurisdiction of the Graduate Schools. Also available are the Allan Hancock Graduate Fellowships, which provide $3,000 per year to students working toward advanced degrees in the marine sciences, biophysics and molecular biology, and the Herman Fellowships, which present $1,200 to $2,800 to graduate students in International Relations and Political Science. The John Randolph and Dora Haynes Foundation Fellowship, for advanced graduate students in the social sciences, provides a stipend of $3,000. The Oakley Fellowships provide $2,000 and $3,000 per year plus tuition and are tenable in any field in which a degree is granted under jurisdiction of the Graduate School. In addition, approximately 200 teaching and laboratory assistantships are awarded each year to advanced graduate students who are selected on the basis of scholastic accomplishment, promise and competence for service in various departments of the University. Applications for these appointments should be filed by February 15. Announcements of awards will be made by April 15. Bowman, who has also designed the production, “The Maids” is often cited as one of the bitterest and most harrowing works of our times. “Genet reminds one of Tennessee Williams at times, for he writes of people with strange desires who feel compelled to perform violent and socially unapproved acts.” The cast will include Glenda White, Sherrill Forbes, and Cathy Degan. “The Typists.” which is partnered with “The Tiger” by Schisgal, enjoyed a long-run, off-Broadway production, and will have its West Coast Premiere in Stop Gap on Wednesdays and Friday nights. “These brilliantly ironic plays earned Schisgal overnight recognition as an important voice in the American theater. It brought this young playwright the Vernon Rice award and the Outer Circle Awards for the excellence of his contribution,” White said. “The Typists” witnesses a male and female office employe in a cycle of life complete with the humor, sadness, self-delusion and reconciliation which under-ly and infuse the human condition. While the characters are both touching and funny their smalt talk outlines the dimensions of the tiny microcosm to which fate has consigned them. The characters of Paul and Sylvia wiH be played by Jim (Continued on Page 2) Dr. Roger O. Egeberg, noted medical administrator, was appointed Dean of the School of Medicine Friday by President Topping. Dr. Egeberg. who has been a USC professor of medicine since 1936. will succeed Dr. Clayton G. Loosli, medical dean since 1958. who announced last January that he would become medi-j cal director of the Hastings Foundation on August 31. „ The foundation affiliated with % flfjtjifly USC in 1961 to support a re- j£gx9\ search program in respiratory diseases, Dr. Loosli’s field of iSfeJS* specialization. The new dean of the West's ^ j[ oldest medical school has been ‘T* medical director for the Los An-! - j geles County Department of Charities for the past six years. Medical Director From 1956 to 1958, Dr. Ege-berg was medical director of Los Angeles County General Hospital where USC does its clinical teaching. From 1946 to 1956 he was chief of medical and professional services at the VA Hospital in Los Angeles. Dr. Egeberg, a graduate of Cornell and Northwestern universities, ceceived his specialty training in internal medicine at the University of Michigan Hospital. He was also on the Michigan faculty and taught at Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine. Prior to World War II, Dr. Egeberg was in private practice in Cleveland for ten years. Early in the war he went overseas with the 4th General Hospital to Australia and was the base surgeon at Milne Bay, New Guinea, and in Melbourne. Personal Physician He became the personal physician to the late General of the Army Douglas MacArthur, and then his aide-de-camp. He also was physician to general headquarters of the Southwest Pacific Area and consultant to the 9th Service Command. Dr. Egeberg has done research on coccidioidomycosis, a lung infection resembling tuberculosis, produced by spore-like organ-(Continued on Page 3) DR. ROGER EGEBERG . . new Medicai Dean Film Version Of Phaedra' Will Screen The modern film adaptation of Seneca’s tragedy, “Phaedra, will be shown tomorrow at 7:15 p.m. in 226 FH. The dialogue is in Spanish with English subtitles. There will be no admission charge. “Phaedra” takes its local color from the Mediterranean shores of Spain, where it was filmed in Cadiz and Malaga. Emma Penella, winner of Spain’s best actress award, plays Estrella, who marries an older man so that she may seduce his son. The actual Mediterranean fishermen’s families appear as extras. 10 Students To Receive Fulbrights Ten USC students have been selected to receive Fulbright grants for the 1964-65 academic year, according to Donald Queller, associate dean of the Graduate School. Dean Queller said the grants, which will be used for study abroad, “carried a rather generous stipend.” Winners in the field of music included Tom Kirschbaum. conducting, Hochschule fur Musik in Munich, Germany; Richard Riffel, opera, Hochschule fur Musik in Stuttgart. Germany; and Elizabeth Matesky, violin, Royal College for Music in the United Kingdom. Thomas Bang won a painting grant to the Hochschule fur bildende Kunste in Hamburg, Germany. In the fields of German language and literature, winners were Barry Cotter, University of Tubingen, and William Scherer, University of Vienna. Patrick Griffin won a grant to the University of Marburg in German history while David Samuelson won a grant to the Free University of Berlin in comparative literature. Additionally, combined NDEA Title VI-Fulbright grants have been made to Donald Meadows, Peruvian Literature, Peru, and Shauna Sorensen, Latin American Studies, Chile. Dean Queller added that an orientation meeting for students interested in applying for 1965-66 Fulbright grants will be conducted on Thursday at 2:15 ia 110 FH. Egeberg New Medical Dean |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1424/uschist-dt-1964-07-27~001.tif |
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