DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 19, October 17, 1963 |
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PAGE THREE Goldcoast Singers Shatter Stiff Show Rules Umversity of Southern California DAILY ©TROJAN PAGE FOUR Only Two Starters Return To Basketball Team Vol. LV LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1963 NO. 1? COUNCIL NEXT Plan Okay Oil Well Request Establishment of an exploratory oil well on the ! L'SC campus received approval by the City Council’s Planning Committee Monday. The committee’s recommendation will be submitted to the City Council within three weeks. If it receives approval there, it ACC/* will be passed on to Mayor body Authorizes Tour Bureau Rogers Strikes Out Opponent in Freshman Class Elections Sara Yorty. who will have 10 days to either sis;n or veto the council’s request. The oil drilling application calls for the creation of an oil drilling district between Figueroa Street. Jefferson Boulevard and Hoover and The Executive Cabinet yes- 28th Streets, terday approved a Students' Traveling Bureau which will provide students with infor-, .. , A. . . ,, ■nation on tours for the “‘T ™ J 5' °"e " t) be located on the campus. If During the meeting — thc we" is successful the uni' USC agreed to the formation of the district with the United States and Europe. the meeting the student executives also discussed the selection of board members for the new Student Activities Center and the ASSC Senate's recent action on the Communist speaker referendum. versity will share in the profits. but if it fails, USC will lose nothing. A. C. Riedel, title supervisor of Standard Oil’s southern division, said the well will be rigged up around Feb. 1 The travel bureau, which nex*- year “if e°es as will be located in 324 SU, will exPected. aid students in obtaining in- Approximately two months fc rmation about the cost of will be required from the ten-tours and availability in the tative February date until summer. 'drilling is actually started. New Members Standard Oil has leased the The Executive Cabinet also proposed drilling area from decided that members of the USC for four years, board of directors of the newj In addition to the univer-Student Activities Center will sity well. Standard Oil applied be selected by the cabinet and was granted permission Expert Says U.N. Failing In Viet Nam The United States’ effort to maintain independence in South Viet Nam faces failure without the reorganization of the Viet Namese government, Dr. Jason L. Finkle, associate professor of public administration. believes. Dr Finkle told a Faculty Center audience yesterday that the American dilemma in Viet Nam has grown out of the fact that the internal struggle taking place against the Communist-led Viet Cong is a guerrila war. “A sustained guerrilla war cannot take place, nor can guerrilla forces be effective unless they have the cooperation of the population.” Dr. Finkle said. “In Viet Nam the small guerrilla forces which have defied an army more than 10 times its size, have been sheltered, concealed, fed, clothed and abetted in countless other ways by the rice-with the approval of W illiam by the City Planning Com- growing peasants of that H McGrath, dean of students, mission fhr two other oil country,’’ he explained, and Tom Hull, dean of men. wells that lie adjacent to the Xot Communists The board is expected to be campus. ‘‘These peasants who have chosen next spring. Last month the proposed helped Viet Cong are not to Discussing the communist oil wells passed over their in- he confused with Commu-speaker referendum that is itial hurdle when the city nists. They simply have presently in committee, but " ' scheduled to be discussed at the next Senate meeting. AS-1 the drilling areas. SC President Ken Del Conte i OLIN'S DYNAMIC DESIGN Osheim Captures Vice Presidency By ALAN BINE Daily Trojan City Editor Phi Gamma Delta Don Rogers nosed out John Andersen. 131 votes to 108 votes, yesterday in a runoff election for Freshman Class president. In an even closer race. Karen Osheim edged Diane Jewell for the class’s vice presidency and Cheri Knudsen defeated Trish Foley for™ j V I an AWS representative post. A Miss Osheim received 129 ® QIIICU llwl votes to Miss Jewell's 108 while Miss Knudsen obtained 90 votes to her opponent’s 63. Rogers said afterwards his class must work together if it is to recognize the prestige it can earn. . . .. _ , ^ . ,, "Freshman classes in the An exhlb,t th« Will Lecture, Open Exhibit , . c *, j , . . works of Josef Albers, paint-past have failed to work to- , , • er and educator, will open m Fisher Gallery tonight at planning examiner granted its found little reason to support permission for the creation of their own government and find Viet Cong the only alternative open to indicate their i opposition to the present Viet Nam government,” Dr. Fin-; kle asserted. Dr. Finkle explained that ■ the United States, in an ef-j DISTINCTIVE LINES - Olin Hall of Engineering rising above the walls of Troy at the southeast end of campus is the result of imaginative planning and dy- namic design by Williams. Pereira and Associates. The five story complex has open-air corridors. View looks out on general activity area of the first level. gether. consequently they have not accomplished much, if anvthing.” Rogers said. “I hope to see this chang- ^e opening will be preceded ed by a lecture by Albers on The new president has'‘The Interaction of CoIor” planned a fashion show. sup-i^ancoc^ Auditorium at 8 p.m. ported by Stan Hall's Men's i Albers, professor emeritus Shop, to raise funds for his of art at Yale University, exclass's coffers. plains that he bases his work “We are going to raffle off on the philosophy that in vis-men's and women's clothes ual perception, color is never and use monies received from seen as it actually exists, raffle tickets to get the ball “Experience has shown rolling for the Freshman that in visual perception Class." Rogers explained. there exists a marked discre-He said he also plans to pancy between the physical make reports to his class once , fact of color and the physi-a month so students will know Ical effect.” Albers said. what is going on and the part --jf one says ‘red’ and there they ma\ pla\ in activities. are ~q people listening, it can Candidates for freshman i be expected that there will offices and other students in- ‘reds’ in their minds said “USC is a private insti- A, tution and it is up to its ad- T TO II © 3 X ministration and student . body to do what they feel is ^L QVV/ best for the university and ^ wCIV*l I Y j community.^ i jmage Qf f_he empty- fort to assure the continued mc , .. c ‘headed shapelv feminine root-independence of South Viet Such actions, of course. , , .T i. • x , must be within the limits of er may move dm™ the road £“»; has given support to the law” he added 10 lmProvement when women President Diems government Del Conte also added thathave a chance to hear assist- and has sent more than 15,-he was pleased with the turn ant footba11 coach’ Dave A‘ 000 military “advisers” to aid out of the freshman elections Levy tel1 the ins and outs of the Viet Namesejirmy. but that there “was always the Same today at 12:20 at room for improvement.” ;the YWCA Hospitality House. - “All feminine football fans are invited to hear the assistant coach explain the unusual hard-to-understand plays and the usual plays, which areidefeat of the Viet Cong.” also hard - to - understand,”; “This defeat, however, can-Dianne Darnell, chairman of not be achieved in Viet Nam the luncheon, explained. until new political ideas, It will also be a good op-j ideals and leadership are in-Organizations interested in portunity for women to ask jtroduced,” Dr. Finkle admit-obtaining guest speakers may all the questions that haveited. contact the ASSC Speakers bothered them when the man A member of the Michigan Committee office in 321 SU. in the black and white stripes iS t a t e University Advisory perience in court procedures. Chad Schumacher, newly ap- starts waving his hands, she Group in South Viet Nam, Dr. All second year law stud-pointed committee chairman, added. i Finkle served as a consultant jents are required to partici- said yesterday. The activity, being spon-!to several governmental and j pate in the court as part of Schumacher said he or his sored by the YWCA Cabinet |private research organiza- Committee Will Offer Talker Aid Assumes Policy “Unfortunately,” he contin- j ued. “the United States has sity Avenue, a judge and jury settled on a policy that as- ^take their places in the court-sumes that political reform: room and the attorney pre-must necessarily await the pares his arguments. Students Face Daily Trial As Campus Court Meets By VIRGINIA BODIN i Actual judges are invited to tional moot court in New Assistant to the Editor sit on the bench to give the York. Last year USC students In the midst of football ral- j students the feeling of being won the regional finals and lies, elections and coffee!in an authentic courtroom competed in the New York breaks, court is in session on trial. court. the USC campus. ; in addition to the experi- Cases in the moot courts Above the bustle of Univer- ence acquired by participation are not real ones but are in the moot court, students °^ten based on current prob-vie to win the votes of the lems- For example, last year judges in order to continue in ^e group used as a case one consequent court battles. j which had previously been decided by the United States Supreme Court—the question of providing council for in- terested in class functions will form a council to direct the and one can be sure that these ‘reds' will be verv dif- The winner of a case is judged on the basis of presentation and his written brief. Moot court winners then go to the “Hale Court.” These in digent defendants. The court battles, which are Journalists Will Get Awards assistant, Steve Meyers, may and the Commuters Club, was i tions concerned with the gen-also be reached at RI 8-8705 held on a smaller scale last eral range of problems in that or RI 8-8290. year by Sophisticates. icountry. “In past years the main function of the Speakers chairman was to get prominent people to be guest speakers at USC. Normally, the speakers turned out to be ones the chairman himself was interested in.” Schumacher said. “We would like to change this procedure. If students have suggestions for possible speakers we would be glad to hear them, and try to get speakers they would enjoy.” “The Speakers office in the Student Union will be open to assist all school sponsored organizations,” Schumac her said. “The main purpose of our office," assistant Mevers explained. “is to help groups who wish to obtain speakers but have no idea of how to get them.” The Speakers office will aid organizations in getting university approval for their speakers, securing open dates for the speakers, and if needed even get speakers. Schumacher has already set up a tentative schedule of prominent speakers he hopes to get to cammis. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy, State A tt’*. n»n. niem Anderson Pn'’ N'>,v York Gov. Nelson Ro<-‘ are on his list as “possible" speakers. This is the scene in the School of Law’s “moot court,” a practice court for law students. The court is held on the third floor of the Law Build- tne Hale,.<T1°l\n' inese in staged in the Frank M. Por ing and is intended to give .ur" are . 1 ® to comPete ter Moot Courtroom are usu-future lawyers practical ex- in ne re»lona ^ ma s- ally held at 7 in the evenings This year USC law stud- during the spring. Visitors ents will compete against mav attend, their counterparts from Loy- The court is advised by law ola, UCLA, and the Univers- j faculty member Ellis Horan appellate arguments classjity of Washington in the re- vjtz. Programs are organized in the curriculum. The court gional rounds. hy court chairman William is a supplement to classroom The victors from this round Bennet and court clerk Wil-experience. . | will then be sent to the na-jliam Huss. Three of the nation’s top journalists will be honored at USC’s fourth annual Journalism Achievement Awards Dinner Tuesday at the Hollywood Paladium. Bernard Kilgore, Eric Sev-areid and Theodore H. White will be the recipients of the awards. New York Herald Tribune Washington columnist Art Buchwald. who will speak at an all-university convocation here Tuesday, will serve as the banquet's master of ceremonies. Kilgore, president of the Wall Street Journal, is recognized as an outstanding editor and principal architect of the Journal’s modern broad-appeal format. He has guided the Journal's development from strictly a financial news publication to its present status as a nationally read business newspaper featuring analytical economic roundups and authoritative comment. Sevarcid, CBS newsman, is considered by observers as tone of radio and television's T. H. WHITE . . . British author Most distinguished correspondents. He is also a syndicated newspaper columnist. Sevareid's analyses have won awards on two continents. The veteran CBS newsman has devoted much of his BERNARD KILGORE . . . Journal President time and talent to “CBS Reports” broadcasts and to spe- ER 1C SEVAREID . . . CBS Correspondent of readers as a magazine writer; novelist (Fire in the cial news series since return- Ashes, View from the 40th ing to the United States from Floor, The Once and Future London where he was a rov- King): playwright (Came-ing reporter until 196.1. i0t); and political analyst i White is known to millions!(The Making of a President). President Topping will make the 1963 award presentations. The winners of last years awards were Otis Chandler, publisher, Los Angeles Times; Norman Cousins, president, Saturday Review; and James C. Hagerty, then vice presi-jdent of the ABC television network. Other past winners include Ralph McGill, publisher of the Atlanta Constitution: Henry B. Luce, editor-in-chief of Time Magazine: and Walter Cronkite, CBS correspondent. Henry Shapiro. United Press International’s Moscow bureau chief; Herbert R. Mayes, president of McCalls Magazine; and Chet Huntley, NBC correspondent, have also won USC journalism awards. USC alumnus Buchwald is syndicated in 180 papers. 1 He made his name famous as a humorous writer in Paris where for 14 years he needled the world's VIP's. Buchwald moved to the na-ition's capital last year. j newcomers, according to: ferent. 1 President Rogers. „ .. „ «pa j i. • . , Sometimes referred to as a Students interested in be- . , , ... v r a i ; doctor of humane colors, coming members of the class ,,, . ... , , . . , Albers is widely regarded as council may contact me at! . .. \ ° t , t>t o n^-i y> -o . - one of the greatest teachers RI 8-9661, Rogers contin- - . . ° , of our time, according to Ue ‘ .. e Frank Getlien of the “New Following notification of .. ., his victory. Rogers thanked ',epu lc’ all his supporters, “especially More than any artist or those women who took the in- teacher, Josef Albers has ex-itiative to get out the vote for Plored and come to command me and even make their own analagous field of visual campaign ribbons.” paradox and has used that Rogers was graduated from *-° teach color. Getlien says. iKinkaid High School in Hou- Albers has published a ston, Texas, where he partici- number of books on the sub-pated in student government.1 jects of art and art eduea-drama and debate. tion. In conjunction with his He is a premedical student teaching he has written the majoring in English at USC. "Interaction of Color.” The After his four years as an un- book contains more than 200 dergraduate. he hopes to at-!sample studies explaining 'tend Cornell's Medical School.1 how to study and teach art. High Schools Gain Asian Studies Aid The department of Asian Russian language and Slavic and Slavic studies is expand- linguistics and S t a n 1 e i g h ing its program by sponsor- Jones, professor of Japanese ing a special schedule of Chi- literature, nese and Japanese classes in The other appointments high schools. Dr. Theodore are Sumako Kimisuka, pro-Chen, chairman of the de- fessor of Japanese language partment, announced yester- anci Chiang-lien Han, profes-day. sor of Chinese language. The pilot program of teach- The increase in the faculty ing Asian and Slavic lan- ^ make new dasspg in Rug_ guages at the high school sian language and literature level is being financed by a and other Agian and giavic grant of $180,000 from the studieg possibIe and will al_ Carnegie Foundation to the 1qw the department to offe>r department of Asian and Slavic studies. Elementary Chinese classes have already been started at John Muir High School. Bellflower High School and at several schools in Antelope Valley. Beginning Japanese classes are also being conducted in A Hillel Hootenanny Los Angeles at Dorsey High sponsored by the B'nai B rith School, Venice High School Hillel Foundation and the In-and James Monroe High ternational Student House School. will be held tonight at 7:30 The university selects and at the International Students trains the teachers, pays the House. 801 W. 28th St. salaries and provides the Entertainment will feature teaching materials for the ex- Al Glassman. sue Gross. Er-perimental classes. nie Siva. Noriko Yamamoto, The courses will provide Eddie Schindler. Art Grove-new job opportunities for man. Rickie Gonzales and I those who study Chinese and Amu Sarker. Chairman of the Japanese in college. Dr. Chen ‘hoot/ Elaine Margel, urged 3aid. all students that can play in- Dr. Chen announced fivels t ruments to bring them new faculty members of his along. department. The new mem- Refreshments will be serv-bers are James Bailey, pro- ed by the International Stu-fessor of Russian literature: dents Association. Admission | Rudolph Zrimc, professor of t is free. a graduate degree in Slavic studies. Hillel Plans Hootenanny
Object Description
Description
Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 55, No. 19, October 17, 1963 |
Full text |
PAGE THREE Goldcoast Singers Shatter Stiff Show Rules
Umversity of Southern California
DAILY ©TROJAN
PAGE FOUR Only Two Starters Return To Basketball Team
Vol. LV
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1963
NO. 1?
COUNCIL NEXT
Plan Okay Oil Well Request
Establishment of an exploratory oil well on the ! L'SC campus received approval by the City Council’s Planning Committee Monday.
The committee’s recommendation will be submitted to the City Council within three weeks. If it
receives approval there, it ACC/* will be passed on to Mayor
body Authorizes Tour Bureau
Rogers Strikes Out Opponent in Freshman Class Elections
Sara Yorty. who will have 10 days to either sis;n or veto the council’s request.
The oil drilling application calls for the creation of an oil drilling district between Figueroa Street. Jefferson Boulevard and Hoover and The Executive Cabinet yes- 28th Streets, terday approved a Students'
Traveling Bureau which will
provide students with infor-, .. , A. . . ,,
■nation on tours for the “‘T ™ J 5' °"e " t)
be located on the campus. If
During the meeting — thc we" is successful the uni'
USC agreed to the formation of the district with the
United States and Europe.
the meeting the student executives also discussed the selection of board members for the new Student Activities Center and the ASSC Senate's recent action on the Communist speaker referendum.
versity will share in the profits. but if it fails, USC will lose nothing.
A. C. Riedel, title supervisor of Standard Oil’s southern division, said the well will be rigged up around Feb. 1 The travel bureau, which nex*- year “if e°es as will be located in 324 SU, will exPected. aid students in obtaining in- Approximately two months fc rmation about the cost of will be required from the ten-tours and availability in the tative February date until summer. 'drilling is actually started.
New Members Standard Oil has leased the
The Executive Cabinet also proposed drilling area from decided that members of the USC for four years, board of directors of the newj In addition to the univer-Student Activities Center will sity well. Standard Oil applied be selected by the cabinet and was granted permission
Expert Says
U.N. Failing In Viet Nam
The United States’ effort to maintain independence in South Viet Nam faces failure without the reorganization of the Viet Namese government, Dr. Jason L. Finkle, associate professor of public administration. believes.
Dr Finkle told a Faculty Center audience yesterday that the American dilemma in Viet Nam has grown out of the fact that the internal struggle taking place against the Communist-led Viet Cong is a guerrila war.
“A sustained guerrilla war cannot take place, nor can guerrilla forces be effective unless they have the cooperation of the population.” Dr. Finkle said.
“In Viet Nam the small guerrilla forces which have defied an army more than 10 times its size, have been sheltered, concealed, fed, clothed and abetted in countless other ways by the rice-with the approval of W illiam by the City Planning Com- growing peasants of that H McGrath, dean of students, mission fhr two other oil country,’’ he explained, and Tom Hull, dean of men. wells that lie adjacent to the Xot Communists
The board is expected to be campus. ‘‘These peasants who have
chosen next spring. Last month the proposed helped Viet Cong are not to
Discussing the communist oil wells passed over their in- he confused with Commu-speaker referendum that is itial hurdle when the city nists. They simply have presently in committee, but " '
scheduled to be discussed at the next Senate meeting. AS-1 the drilling areas.
SC President Ken Del Conte i
OLIN'S DYNAMIC DESIGN
Osheim Captures Vice Presidency
By ALAN BINE Daily Trojan City Editor
Phi Gamma Delta Don Rogers nosed out John Andersen. 131 votes to 108 votes, yesterday in a runoff election for Freshman Class president.
In an even closer race. Karen Osheim edged Diane Jewell for the class’s vice presidency and Cheri Knudsen defeated Trish Foley for™ j V I an AWS representative post. A
Miss Osheim received 129 ® QIIICU llwl
votes to Miss Jewell's 108 while Miss Knudsen obtained 90 votes to her opponent’s 63.
Rogers said afterwards his class must work together if it is to recognize the prestige it
can earn. . . .. _ , ^ . ,,
"Freshman classes in the An exhlb,t th«
Will Lecture, Open Exhibit
, . c *, j , . . works of Josef Albers, paint-past have failed to work to- , , •
er and educator, will open m
Fisher Gallery tonight at
planning examiner granted its found little reason to support permission for the creation of their own government and
find Viet Cong the only alternative open to indicate their i opposition to the present Viet Nam government,” Dr. Fin-; kle asserted.
Dr. Finkle explained that ■ the United States, in an ef-j
DISTINCTIVE LINES - Olin Hall of Engineering rising above the walls of Troy at the southeast end of campus is the result of imaginative planning and dy-
namic design by Williams. Pereira and Associates. The five story complex has open-air corridors. View looks out on general activity area of the first level.
gether. consequently they have not accomplished much, if anvthing.” Rogers said.
“I hope to see this chang- ^e opening will be preceded ed by a lecture by Albers on
The new president has'‘The Interaction of CoIor” planned a fashion show. sup-i^ancoc^ Auditorium at 8 p.m. ported by Stan Hall's Men's i Albers, professor emeritus Shop, to raise funds for his of art at Yale University, exclass's coffers. plains that he bases his work “We are going to raffle off on the philosophy that in vis-men's and women's clothes ual perception, color is never and use monies received from seen as it actually exists, raffle tickets to get the ball “Experience has shown rolling for the Freshman that in visual perception Class." Rogers explained. there exists a marked discre-He said he also plans to pancy between the physical make reports to his class once , fact of color and the physi-a month so students will know Ical effect.” Albers said.
what is going on and the part --jf one says ‘red’ and there they ma\ pla\ in activities. are ~q people listening, it can Candidates for freshman i be expected that there will offices and other students in- ‘reds’ in their minds
said “USC is a private insti- A, tution and it is up to its ad- T TO II © 3 X ministration and student .
body to do what they feel is ^L QVV/ best for the university and ^ wCIV*l I Y j
community.^ i jmage Qf f_he empty- fort to assure the continued
mc , .. c ‘headed shapelv feminine root-independence of South Viet
Such actions, of course. , , .T i. • x ,
must be within the limits of er may move dm™ the road £“»; has given support to the law” he added 10 lmProvement when women President Diems government
Del Conte also added thathave a chance to hear assist- and has sent more than 15,-he was pleased with the turn ant footba11 coach’ Dave A‘ 000 military “advisers” to aid out of the freshman elections Levy tel1 the ins and outs of the Viet Namesejirmy. but that there “was always the Same today at 12:20 at room for improvement.” ;the YWCA Hospitality House.
- “All feminine football fans
are invited to hear the assistant coach explain the unusual hard-to-understand plays and
the usual plays, which areidefeat of the Viet Cong.” also hard - to - understand,”; “This defeat, however, can-Dianne Darnell, chairman of not be achieved in Viet Nam the luncheon, explained. until new political ideas,
It will also be a good op-j ideals and leadership are in-Organizations interested in portunity for women to ask jtroduced,” Dr. Finkle admit-obtaining guest speakers may all the questions that haveited.
contact the ASSC Speakers bothered them when the man A member of the Michigan
Committee office in 321 SU. in the black and white stripes iS t a t e University Advisory perience in court procedures. Chad Schumacher, newly ap- starts waving his hands, she Group in South Viet Nam, Dr. All second year law stud-pointed committee chairman, added. i Finkle served as a consultant jents are required to partici-
said yesterday. The activity, being spon-!to several governmental and j pate in the court as part of
Schumacher said he or his sored by the YWCA Cabinet |private research organiza-
Committee Will Offer Talker Aid
Assumes Policy
“Unfortunately,” he contin- j ued. “the United States has sity Avenue, a judge and jury settled on a policy that as- ^take their places in the court-sumes that political reform: room and the attorney pre-must necessarily await the pares his arguments.
Students Face Daily Trial As Campus Court Meets
By VIRGINIA BODIN i Actual judges are invited to tional moot court in New Assistant to the Editor sit on the bench to give the York. Last year USC students In the midst of football ral- j students the feeling of being won the regional finals and lies, elections and coffee!in an authentic courtroom competed in the New York breaks, court is in session on trial. court.
the USC campus. ; in addition to the experi- Cases in the moot courts
Above the bustle of Univer- ence acquired by participation are not real ones but are
in the moot court, students °^ten based on current prob-vie to win the votes of the lems- For example, last year judges in order to continue in ^e group used as a case one consequent court battles. j which had previously been decided by the United States Supreme Court—the question of providing council for in-
terested in class functions will form a council to direct the
and one can be sure that these ‘reds' will be verv dif-
The winner of a case is judged on the basis of presentation and his written brief.
Moot court winners then go to the “Hale Court.” These in
digent defendants.
The court battles, which are
Journalists Will Get Awards
assistant, Steve Meyers, may and the Commuters Club, was i tions concerned with the gen-also be reached at RI 8-8705 held on a smaller scale last eral range of problems in that or RI 8-8290. year by Sophisticates. icountry.
“In past years the main function of the Speakers chairman was to get prominent people to be guest speakers at USC. Normally, the speakers turned out to be ones the chairman himself was interested in.” Schumacher said.
“We would like to change this procedure. If students have suggestions for possible speakers we would be glad to hear them, and try to get speakers they would enjoy.”
“The Speakers office in the Student Union will be open to assist all school sponsored organizations,” Schumac her said.
“The main purpose of our office," assistant Mevers explained. “is to help groups who wish to obtain speakers but have no idea of how to get them.”
The Speakers office will aid organizations in getting university approval for their speakers, securing open dates for the speakers, and if needed even get speakers.
Schumacher has already set up a tentative schedule of prominent speakers he hopes to get to cammis.
Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy,
State A tt’*. n»n. niem Anderson Pn'’ N'>,v York Gov.
Nelson Ro<-‘ are on his
list as “possible" speakers.
This is the scene in the School of Law’s “moot court,” a practice court for law students.
The court is held on the third floor of the Law Build- tne Hale,. |
Filename | uschist-dt-1963-10-17~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1428/uschist-dt-1963-10-17~001.tif |