Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 115, May 11, 1965 |
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- University of Southern California
Songfest 1965: Preliminary Showing
PAGE FOUR:
Just Released The McKay Report
Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1965 No. 115
Judicial Postpones Decision On Charges Against Sullivan
Business School Names Scholars
A record 86 undergraduates from the School of Business were named to the Dean’s List Friday by Dean Robert R. Dockson.
“The School of Business is extremely proud of these students.” he said. “The entire curriculum is more rigorous than previously and such a fine showing among our student body
gratifying to all the professors and administrators associated with the school."
AWARD WINNER—This steel-frame home of Gerald Rosens in West Los Angeles was an award-winner for Craig Ellwood, lecturer in the School of Architecture.
USC Architect Invited On West German Tour
Civil Rights Project at
USC Begun
4.0 Students
I Eleven students received 4.0 grade-point averages.;
They are Martha Angell. Students who will spend Craig Armstrong, Richard their summer working for Bray, Jay Grodin, Robert civil rights in Southern coiin-, Hada, Thomas S. Loo, Wan- ties are now organizing a dell McCorvey, James R. USC chapter in association! I Muse, Sherry Lynn Roberts, with the Southern Christian Dean Suzuki and George Leadership conference.
Bow-
i Tyree.
Students who received a 3.5 or higher average are Craig Ellwood. visiting lecturer on tlie School of Allan Preusch, Salomon Architecture and Fine Arts faculty, has been invited Bempechat, John Blanchard, by the Bonn government to tour West Germany from Joseph Bogan, John ZVIay 31 to April 26.
The study tour, which includes three other Ameri can architects, is part of a cultural exchange between West Germany and America.
Ellwood said the tour will involve visits to schools of ^ I
architecture, meetings with | y QS0S
major German architects, visits to old and new structures and cocktail parties.
Other Architects Architects Philip Johnson'
Applications and informa-■ tion on USC's Summer Com-, munity Organization and Political Education (SCOPE) project are being distributed from a table in front of the! Student Union.
University
Art Works
The Human Relations Com-! mittee will disseminate infor-
Bv TKRRY CHKVILLAT
„ ^ ^ , , i Five works of art. recently
of New York, Paul Rudolph hased b the Fine Arts
of N'w Haven Conn and.D rtment wi|, be on dis.|Jam”s p Fish
Ldward Durell Stone of P^ew , ,, ,r 10 , T ix
v , -ii i 4 t * Play May 19. Gieszl, Carol J. Hagg,
York wall also take the tour. 1 66
j man, Jerome Clark, Claire J Dawson, Randolph Doll, Sepp Donahower.
HnwarH Herman Mark mation this week to help re-Klein, Thomas Link’, Richard cruit students for the pro-Mallory, Brian McKay, Mark Sram-Moehlman, Jeffrey Reimer. ■ Adopt County
Jefferson Romney, John USC’s SCOPE chapter will Rooney, Ronald Segal, Tully adopt a county in one of nine Stroud and George Webster. Southern states and raise the
Others Named money to Pa^ for room and
Other students on the list board durinS the Sllmmer-
are Brian Wald, Norman Burgher, John F. Evans,
The students intend to work with the Negro leader-
Yale L. ship of their county in order
Max
Stone is architect for the Jhe Prized Purchase is a Havlick. Jerry Holm, Robert KieinSmid Center for in_! 17th-century woodcut by Rich, David J. Stinson, Scott
von
ternational and Public fairs being constructed campus.
Af-
on
Peter Paul Reubens titled Bice.
FEATURED PIANIST—Marilyn Neeley, pianist, will perform with the Trojan String Quartet in Hancock Auditorium tonight at 8:30. She is a USC faculty member.
String Quartet Concert Will Spotlight Pianist
Marilyn Neeley, pianist, will perform with the Trojan String Quartet in a concert tonight at 8:30 in Hancock Auditoiium.
Miss Neeley, a member of the faculty of the School of Music, was a Los Angeles Times’ Woman of the Year in 1963.
to help with voter registration and education.
She won a prize in the Van p 11 i i * Cliburn International Piano |" OI K AA U S IC
“Suzanne and the Elders.”
“It is a very rare print and
Classes in basic politics, Competition and was the win-English and arithmetic, as ner of the Micheals Interna-
Arthur Ito, Robert Nos-,well as Negro heritage and;tional Piano Competition in
trand, John Alter. Donald registration, will be taught by
Ellwood, who studied struc- a very handsome one,” Dr. Bottoms, Brenda Broz, An-
tural engineering at UCLA Edward S. Peck, professor of and practiced locally since fine arts. said.
1948, teaches fifth-year arch- German expressionist Os-itecture classes at USC. kar Kokoshka is the artist of In 1953, Ellwood's design the second work, a litho-and planning of a four-unit graph called “Portrait of the apartment in Hollywood won Artist’s Mother.’’ first prize in the International An American artist, Arth-Exhibition of Architecture in ur B. Davies, did a hand-Sao Paulo, Brazil. colored lithograph, the third
Structural Concept of the purchases, in 1918. It Ellwood calls his buildings is titled “Summer Interlude.” structural in concept He be- These three works were lieves that structural forces purchased with funds pro-must shape a building’s form, vided by the Friends of Art, He describes architecture a society founded at USC one as continual refinement in the year ago to aid art collec-expression of structure. tions.
Much of today’s architec- The other two works were ture, he believes, is “a chao- paid for by the Fine Arts tic mess of newness and Department, novelty. The first of these is a pen-
“It is a Detroit-type of de- cil drawing by another Ger-sign, filled with cliches,” he man expressionist, Carl Ho-said. fer, called “Standing Worn-
Invited to Schools an.”
“Such architecture has no “Profile,” a lithograph by basis for survival; it can Nathan Oliveira, was shown
drea Haley, Sallie Jones, Alan Wittenberg, Donald F i k e, Gary Sawka, Robert Thoreli, Gaylen Bronson, Daniel Anderson, Roger Anderson.
P>-F
the student workers.
Work on community organization projects and tutorial programs is also planned.
Cost $150 Students will pay room and Cheryl Bailey, Chesi Barr, board to the Negro family
1962.
Philharmonic Soloist
Miss Neeley has been a so- ( loist with the Boston Pops, |
Set for June
Each year the Folk Music
the Chicago Symphony and Workshop at Idyllwild School
the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestras.
Featured in tonight’s performance will be the Haydn
of Music and the Arts, features unusual artists and teachers in specialized fields of the folk arts. This year,
Susan Jo Broz, Richard Burt, they live with during the Quartet, Op. 76, No. 4; De- from June 27 to July 11, Bes-Robert Burt, Martha Camp-summer. The total cost for bussy Quartet in G minor and sie Jones and the Georgia Sea
about I the Brahms Piano Quintet
The Trojan String Quartet Subsistence may be avail-is composed of four advanced able for a few workers (students who also serve as
... (section leaders in the Uni-The summer program will ., ^ . ,
, . . ... x T versity Symphony Orchestra,
begin m Atlanta on June 14, j j r j
Garwal, Arnold: with a four-day orientation in The ^roup has been to-
Carl Holm, James the history of the South and gether since September. They
bell, Gerald Cannon, Richard the summer will be Card, Michael Caretto, James $150 for each student. Cashion, Roger Darnell, Faye Davies, Denis De Dici, Leonard Demonte, Wayne Fiecht-ner.
Dale Hayes,
only be temporary.”
Ellwood has been invited to visit most of America’s architectural schools as a critic
here last Tamarind hibit.
The works
November in the Lithograph Ex-
will be shown
or lecturer. He has twice next week, coinciding with visited Yale and Syracuse, the annual Student Art Show.
Levy, Donald McCammack, Wilton Miller, Olin Newman, Stephen Newman, John Pod-gorney, Robert Rosenberg, Richard Spraker, John Sullivan, David Tedesco and Eleanor Zazueta.
Island Singers will join the faculty to give registrants an opportunity to sing and learn to produce rhythmic patterns in one of the most complex African style surviving in the United States.
A daily session has been
the Negro problem.
Orientation will continue in the individual counties from June 17 to June 19.
The students will then work in their counties from June 20 to Sept. 1.
won the Coleman Chamber planned in polyphonic singing
Music Auditions in April.
The quartet will perform in the Ojai Music Festival and in the Music Educators National Convention Beach.
IR Group to Elect Officers for Fall
Sigma Gamma Sigma, inter-] In addition, the group has national relations sorority, j hosted many speakers at their will hold its last meeting of j dinner meetings, the year at 6:30 p.m. tomor- Recent speakers have inrow at the YWCA. ! eluded a Latin American Election of officers for the'panel and representatives fall semester will be the main from Crossroads Africa, order of business. 45 Members
Three years old this spring, Not limited to IR majors, the sorority was established t the sorority has 45 members, at USC and is the only IR Eligibility is determined by
and polyrhythm, long considered a misunderstood aspect of Negro music.
They will also teach Negro Long folk-dancing as practiced in
_'the United States and the
various specialized steps from 'group dancing of the old iSouth.
Miss Jones, who has a large repertoire of singing games, will teach also some of these. In the group with Bossie Jones are John Davis, Peter Davis, Henry Morrison. Mable Hillary and Emma Ramsey.
Council to Hear More Witnesses
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH
Men’s Judicial Council will reconvene tomorrow to hear additional evidence and possibly reach its decision on the theft of approximately 3,000 Daily Trojans on Election Day last week.
Daily Trojan Editor Gregg Peterson accused newly elected ASSC President John Sullivan Thursday of ^
engineering the theft because
p.m. yesterday, but no verdict
Tom Thie explained. “There is a lot of evidence, and the pos-sible outcome of the council’s " decision is of such a nature that we want to be sure we re
to of
Tom Hull added, “we must !search every possible avenue j to ascertain innocence or | guilt.”
Other members of Men’s I Judicial are Dick Fenton.
; Larry Grosberg, Darrell Johnson, Homer Mason and Joel Rosenblatt.
No Comment The seventh member of the council. Daily Trojan Editorial Director Greg Hill, is “Extremist Labelling” will not sitting in judgment since be discussed today at noon by he and Peterson filed the ini- Mrs. Marion Miller in 129 tial charges. Founders Hall.
Sullivan did not comment Mr3. Miller, a former teach-on the day’s proceedings but er, is a Republican candidate he described the prolonged for the Los Angeles Board of hearings as a “marathon in- Education Office No. 2. quiry.” The speaking engagement,
Witnesses included several sponsored by the ^Trojan members of Sullivan’s frater- Young Republicans, is part of nity, Phi Kappa Tau. as well a new program under the di-as individuals testifying in rection of Dick Spencer, vicesupport of the Daily Trojan’s president of the organization, contentions. Education \ ital
New President “The education of our chil-
Sullivan was the victor in dren is the most important last week's runoff election consideration for all of us. with Adam Herbert. He de- Education must be free of feated the former AMS presi- labels or pressure from selfdent by 137 votes. serving power blocks,” Mrs.
On the same day, between Miller told a group of her 3.000 and 6.000 Daily Trojans i campaign workers recently, were stolen from the racks Mrs. Marion Miller graduat-before 9:30 that morning. ed cum laude from the Uni-Peterson and Hill said they veristy of Miami with a had gathered proof that Sulli- bachelor’s in education. She van and/or his campaign has been a teacher in the workers had pulled the theft Florida Public School system off to prevent the circulation i and has been active in the of an editorial charging the PTA. candidate with evasion of the FBI Agent
truth during the campaign. The housewife and mother Saw Editorial of three served from 1950 to
Sullivan admitted he had 1955 as an undercover agent seen the editorial the previ- for the FBI. She is also the ous night at the print shop author of a book “I Was A where the Daily Trojan is Spy.” composed.
The ASSC president denied the charges Thursday, saying he had checked with his fraternity brothers and campaign workers and had gotten no response on the theft.
“I realize how people could cast suspicion in my direction, but I just didn’t do it,” he declared.
MARION MILLER
. . . GOP Candidate
Republican
To Discuss Extremism
w 11 129
Mrs. Miller has received official commendation from Gov. Pat Brown, former President Dwight Eisenhower, Mayor Sam Yorty and others. @
Mrs. Miller is expected to answer charges of her opponent, the Rev. James Jones, that she is associated with the extreme right wing.
TYR Paper Announces Plans to Publis h Again
sorority in the nation.
Service (>roup
Sigma Gamma Sigma acts as a service group for the School of International Relations and informs its members of career opportunities.
a 2.5 grade-point requirement and interest in the School of International Relations.
Members are chosen by the sorority's executive council.
Current officers are Kathy Sandorf, president; Carol
Members have visited the Mathias, vice-president; Vicki Institute of World Affairs in White, corresponding secre-Pasadena and serve as hostes- tary; Carol Taniguchi, re-ses at banquets sponsored by cording secretary; and Candy the IR school. jRich, treasurer.
SORORITY SISTERS —Carol Taniguchi (at leftl and Kathy Sandorf discuss plans for tha Sigma Gamma Sigma din*
ner-meeting tomorrow night. The only international relations sorority in the nation, the group Has 45 members.
By VERA KITT
Were you one of the students who couldn't find a Daily Trojan yesterday?
Then you probably got a copy of True Frontier, a monthly newspaper put out by the Trojan Young Republicans (TYR).
Since the distribution schedule for the Daily Trojan got mixed up, the newspapers remained at the print shop yesterday.
So it was a perfect day for the True Frontier to announce its plans to renew publication in the fall.
“Last semester TYR had an inactive administration, but
Jim Stauffer, the new president, has already begun a plan for action and True Frontier was first on the list,”| Roger Grace, editor of the monthly paper, said.
The name of the newspaper was derived from a quotation by Richard Nixon in 1%3.
Grace asked Nixon what he meant when he mentioned “true frontier” on the Tom Duggan Show.
Nixon replied: “The 'true; frontier* is one that is based on the principles of self-reliance. individual responsibility, individual liberty and a maximum of opportunity ..
The newspaper will contain
four pages. The first page will include news about TYR and the Republican Party and an exclusive article by a senator or governor.
Students will express their opinions on current Republican issues on the editorial page.
The third page will contain interviews of various Republican leaders.
To broaden the scope of the newspaper, the last page will not be political. This page will cover topics such as entertainment, education, foreign affairs and other feature material.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 115, May 11, 1965 |
| Full text | PAGE THREE- University of Southern California Songfest 1965: Preliminary Showing PAGE FOUR: Just Released The McKay Report Vol. XVI LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1965 No. 115 Judicial Postpones Decision On Charges Against Sullivan Business School Names Scholars A record 86 undergraduates from the School of Business were named to the Dean’s List Friday by Dean Robert R. Dockson. “The School of Business is extremely proud of these students.” he said. “The entire curriculum is more rigorous than previously and such a fine showing among our student body gratifying to all the professors and administrators associated with the school." AWARD WINNER—This steel-frame home of Gerald Rosens in West Los Angeles was an award-winner for Craig Ellwood, lecturer in the School of Architecture. USC Architect Invited On West German Tour Civil Rights Project at USC Begun 4.0 Students I Eleven students received 4.0 grade-point averages.; They are Martha Angell. Students who will spend Craig Armstrong, Richard their summer working for Bray, Jay Grodin, Robert civil rights in Southern coiin-, Hada, Thomas S. Loo, Wan- ties are now organizing a dell McCorvey, James R. USC chapter in association! I Muse, Sherry Lynn Roberts, with the Southern Christian Dean Suzuki and George Leadership conference. Bow- i Tyree. Students who received a 3.5 or higher average are Craig Ellwood. visiting lecturer on tlie School of Allan Preusch, Salomon Architecture and Fine Arts faculty, has been invited Bempechat, John Blanchard, by the Bonn government to tour West Germany from Joseph Bogan, John ZVIay 31 to April 26. The study tour, which includes three other Ameri can architects, is part of a cultural exchange between West Germany and America. Ellwood said the tour will involve visits to schools of ^ I architecture, meetings with y QS0S major German architects, visits to old and new structures and cocktail parties. Other Architects Architects Philip Johnson' Applications and informa-■ tion on USC's Summer Com-, munity Organization and Political Education (SCOPE) project are being distributed from a table in front of the! Student Union. University Art Works The Human Relations Com-! mittee will disseminate infor- Bv TKRRY CHKVILLAT „ ^ ^ , , i Five works of art. recently of New York, Paul Rudolph hased b the Fine Arts of N'w Haven Conn and.D rtment wi , be on dis. Jam”s p Fish Ldward Durell Stone of P^ew , ,, ,r 10 , T ix v , -ii i 4 t * Play May 19. Gieszl, Carol J. Hagg, York wall also take the tour. 1 66 j man, Jerome Clark, Claire J Dawson, Randolph Doll, Sepp Donahower. HnwarH Herman Mark mation this week to help re-Klein, Thomas Link’, Richard cruit students for the pro-Mallory, Brian McKay, Mark Sram-Moehlman, Jeffrey Reimer. ■ Adopt County Jefferson Romney, John USC’s SCOPE chapter will Rooney, Ronald Segal, Tully adopt a county in one of nine Stroud and George Webster. Southern states and raise the Others Named money to Pa^ for room and Other students on the list board durinS the Sllmmer- are Brian Wald, Norman Burgher, John F. Evans, The students intend to work with the Negro leader- Yale L. ship of their county in order Max Stone is architect for the Jhe Prized Purchase is a Havlick. Jerry Holm, Robert KieinSmid Center for in_! 17th-century woodcut by Rich, David J. Stinson, Scott von ternational and Public fairs being constructed campus. Af- on Peter Paul Reubens titled Bice. FEATURED PIANIST—Marilyn Neeley, pianist, will perform with the Trojan String Quartet in Hancock Auditorium tonight at 8:30. She is a USC faculty member. String Quartet Concert Will Spotlight Pianist Marilyn Neeley, pianist, will perform with the Trojan String Quartet in a concert tonight at 8:30 in Hancock Auditoiium. Miss Neeley, a member of the faculty of the School of Music, was a Los Angeles Times’ Woman of the Year in 1963. to help with voter registration and education. She won a prize in the Van p 11 i i * Cliburn International Piano " OI K AA U S IC “Suzanne and the Elders.” “It is a very rare print and Classes in basic politics, Competition and was the win-English and arithmetic, as ner of the Micheals Interna- Arthur Ito, Robert Nos-,well as Negro heritage and;tional Piano Competition in trand, John Alter. Donald registration, will be taught by Ellwood, who studied struc- a very handsome one,” Dr. Bottoms, Brenda Broz, An- tural engineering at UCLA Edward S. Peck, professor of and practiced locally since fine arts. said. 1948, teaches fifth-year arch- German expressionist Os-itecture classes at USC. kar Kokoshka is the artist of In 1953, Ellwood's design the second work, a litho-and planning of a four-unit graph called “Portrait of the apartment in Hollywood won Artist’s Mother.’’ first prize in the International An American artist, Arth-Exhibition of Architecture in ur B. Davies, did a hand-Sao Paulo, Brazil. colored lithograph, the third Structural Concept of the purchases, in 1918. It Ellwood calls his buildings is titled “Summer Interlude.” structural in concept He be- These three works were lieves that structural forces purchased with funds pro-must shape a building’s form, vided by the Friends of Art, He describes architecture a society founded at USC one as continual refinement in the year ago to aid art collec-expression of structure. tions. Much of today’s architec- The other two works were ture, he believes, is “a chao- paid for by the Fine Arts tic mess of newness and Department, novelty. The first of these is a pen- “It is a Detroit-type of de- cil drawing by another Ger-sign, filled with cliches,” he man expressionist, Carl Ho-said. fer, called “Standing Worn- Invited to Schools an.” “Such architecture has no “Profile,” a lithograph by basis for survival; it can Nathan Oliveira, was shown drea Haley, Sallie Jones, Alan Wittenberg, Donald F i k e, Gary Sawka, Robert Thoreli, Gaylen Bronson, Daniel Anderson, Roger Anderson. P>-F the student workers. Work on community organization projects and tutorial programs is also planned. Cost $150 Students will pay room and Cheryl Bailey, Chesi Barr, board to the Negro family 1962. Philharmonic Soloist Miss Neeley has been a so- ( loist with the Boston Pops, Set for June Each year the Folk Music the Chicago Symphony and Workshop at Idyllwild School the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestras. Featured in tonight’s performance will be the Haydn of Music and the Arts, features unusual artists and teachers in specialized fields of the folk arts. This year, Susan Jo Broz, Richard Burt, they live with during the Quartet, Op. 76, No. 4; De- from June 27 to July 11, Bes-Robert Burt, Martha Camp-summer. The total cost for bussy Quartet in G minor and sie Jones and the Georgia Sea about I the Brahms Piano Quintet The Trojan String Quartet Subsistence may be avail-is composed of four advanced able for a few workers (students who also serve as ... (section leaders in the Uni-The summer program will ., ^ . , , . . ... x T versity Symphony Orchestra, begin m Atlanta on June 14, j j r j Garwal, Arnold: with a four-day orientation in The ^roup has been to- Carl Holm, James the history of the South and gether since September. They bell, Gerald Cannon, Richard the summer will be Card, Michael Caretto, James $150 for each student. Cashion, Roger Darnell, Faye Davies, Denis De Dici, Leonard Demonte, Wayne Fiecht-ner. Dale Hayes, only be temporary.” Ellwood has been invited to visit most of America’s architectural schools as a critic here last Tamarind hibit. The works November in the Lithograph Ex- will be shown or lecturer. He has twice next week, coinciding with visited Yale and Syracuse, the annual Student Art Show. Levy, Donald McCammack, Wilton Miller, Olin Newman, Stephen Newman, John Pod-gorney, Robert Rosenberg, Richard Spraker, John Sullivan, David Tedesco and Eleanor Zazueta. Island Singers will join the faculty to give registrants an opportunity to sing and learn to produce rhythmic patterns in one of the most complex African style surviving in the United States. A daily session has been the Negro problem. Orientation will continue in the individual counties from June 17 to June 19. The students will then work in their counties from June 20 to Sept. 1. won the Coleman Chamber planned in polyphonic singing Music Auditions in April. The quartet will perform in the Ojai Music Festival and in the Music Educators National Convention Beach. IR Group to Elect Officers for Fall Sigma Gamma Sigma, inter-] In addition, the group has national relations sorority, j hosted many speakers at their will hold its last meeting of j dinner meetings, the year at 6:30 p.m. tomor- Recent speakers have inrow at the YWCA. ! eluded a Latin American Election of officers for the'panel and representatives fall semester will be the main from Crossroads Africa, order of business. 45 Members Three years old this spring, Not limited to IR majors, the sorority was established t the sorority has 45 members, at USC and is the only IR Eligibility is determined by and polyrhythm, long considered a misunderstood aspect of Negro music. They will also teach Negro Long folk-dancing as practiced in _'the United States and the various specialized steps from 'group dancing of the old iSouth. Miss Jones, who has a large repertoire of singing games, will teach also some of these. In the group with Bossie Jones are John Davis, Peter Davis, Henry Morrison. Mable Hillary and Emma Ramsey. Council to Hear More Witnesses By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Men’s Judicial Council will reconvene tomorrow to hear additional evidence and possibly reach its decision on the theft of approximately 3,000 Daily Trojans on Election Day last week. Daily Trojan Editor Gregg Peterson accused newly elected ASSC President John Sullivan Thursday of ^ engineering the theft because p.m. yesterday, but no verdict Tom Thie explained. “There is a lot of evidence, and the pos-sible outcome of the council’s " decision is of such a nature that we want to be sure we re to of Tom Hull added, “we must !search every possible avenue j to ascertain innocence or guilt.” Other members of Men’s I Judicial are Dick Fenton. ; Larry Grosberg, Darrell Johnson, Homer Mason and Joel Rosenblatt. No Comment The seventh member of the council. Daily Trojan Editorial Director Greg Hill, is “Extremist Labelling” will not sitting in judgment since be discussed today at noon by he and Peterson filed the ini- Mrs. Marion Miller in 129 tial charges. Founders Hall. Sullivan did not comment Mr3. Miller, a former teach-on the day’s proceedings but er, is a Republican candidate he described the prolonged for the Los Angeles Board of hearings as a “marathon in- Education Office No. 2. quiry.” The speaking engagement, Witnesses included several sponsored by the ^Trojan members of Sullivan’s frater- Young Republicans, is part of nity, Phi Kappa Tau. as well a new program under the di-as individuals testifying in rection of Dick Spencer, vicesupport of the Daily Trojan’s president of the organization, contentions. Education \ ital New President “The education of our chil- Sullivan was the victor in dren is the most important last week's runoff election consideration for all of us. with Adam Herbert. He de- Education must be free of feated the former AMS presi- labels or pressure from selfdent by 137 votes. serving power blocks,” Mrs. On the same day, between Miller told a group of her 3.000 and 6.000 Daily Trojans i campaign workers recently, were stolen from the racks Mrs. Marion Miller graduat-before 9:30 that morning. ed cum laude from the Uni-Peterson and Hill said they veristy of Miami with a had gathered proof that Sulli- bachelor’s in education. She van and/or his campaign has been a teacher in the workers had pulled the theft Florida Public School system off to prevent the circulation i and has been active in the of an editorial charging the PTA. candidate with evasion of the FBI Agent truth during the campaign. The housewife and mother Saw Editorial of three served from 1950 to Sullivan admitted he had 1955 as an undercover agent seen the editorial the previ- for the FBI. She is also the ous night at the print shop author of a book “I Was A where the Daily Trojan is Spy.” composed. The ASSC president denied the charges Thursday, saying he had checked with his fraternity brothers and campaign workers and had gotten no response on the theft. “I realize how people could cast suspicion in my direction, but I just didn’t do it,” he declared. MARION MILLER . . . GOP Candidate Republican To Discuss Extremism w 11 129 Mrs. Miller has received official commendation from Gov. Pat Brown, former President Dwight Eisenhower, Mayor Sam Yorty and others. @ Mrs. Miller is expected to answer charges of her opponent, the Rev. James Jones, that she is associated with the extreme right wing. TYR Paper Announces Plans to Publis h Again sorority in the nation. Service (>roup Sigma Gamma Sigma acts as a service group for the School of International Relations and informs its members of career opportunities. a 2.5 grade-point requirement and interest in the School of International Relations. Members are chosen by the sorority's executive council. Current officers are Kathy Sandorf, president; Carol Members have visited the Mathias, vice-president; Vicki Institute of World Affairs in White, corresponding secre-Pasadena and serve as hostes- tary; Carol Taniguchi, re-ses at banquets sponsored by cording secretary; and Candy the IR school. jRich, treasurer. SORORITY SISTERS —Carol Taniguchi (at leftl and Kathy Sandorf discuss plans for tha Sigma Gamma Sigma din* ner-meeting tomorrow night. The only international relations sorority in the nation, the group Has 45 members. By VERA KITT Were you one of the students who couldn't find a Daily Trojan yesterday? Then you probably got a copy of True Frontier, a monthly newspaper put out by the Trojan Young Republicans (TYR). Since the distribution schedule for the Daily Trojan got mixed up, the newspapers remained at the print shop yesterday. So it was a perfect day for the True Frontier to announce its plans to renew publication in the fall. “Last semester TYR had an inactive administration, but Jim Stauffer, the new president, has already begun a plan for action and True Frontier was first on the list,” Roger Grace, editor of the monthly paper, said. The name of the newspaper was derived from a quotation by Richard Nixon in 1%3. Grace asked Nixon what he meant when he mentioned “true frontier” on the Tom Duggan Show. Nixon replied: “The 'true; frontier* is one that is based on the principles of self-reliance. individual responsibility, individual liberty and a maximum of opportunity .. The newspaper will contain four pages. The first page will include news about TYR and the Republican Party and an exclusive article by a senator or governor. Students will express their opinions on current Republican issues on the editorial page. The third page will contain interviews of various Republican leaders. To broaden the scope of the newspaper, the last page will not be political. This page will cover topics such as entertainment, education, foreign affairs and other feature material. |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1425/uschist-dt-1965-05-11~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for Daily Trojan, Vol. 56, No. 115, May 11, 1965

