Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 66, February 11, 1966 |
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University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
Vol. XVII
eC^scT3
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1966
No; 66
Anderson to Aid Professor In Area Voting Announces
JC Program
A program to provide the
Dr. Totton J. Anderson,'presentatives to the local an-
chairman of the Political Sci- ti-poverty board.
ence Department, is one of To elect representatives to
three Southland educators the board, it was necessary
appointed to consult with the;to divide Los Angeles City
Office of Economic Opportu- and Los Angeles County into expanding junior college sjs-
nity in its examination of voting districts of people tem with full-time teachers
plans for the March 1 elec- whose annual salary is less was announced yesterday by
tion of seven poverty area re- than $4000. Dr Leslie wilbur of the Edu_
However the people in the ,. ~ , ,
. j * * ui- i. cation Department. jOffice assigned to establish, r
voting districts did an ineffi- Dr. Wilbur said the pro-
cient job. Dr. Anderson said, gram is geared for graduate
Some districts were so students now working toward
their M.A.'s who want a
The program is designed to
large that they could have been divided into at least
three smaller ones. Districts junior collcge teaching cre-are allowed only a 15 per dential. cent discrepancy above or be low a norm.
. overcome the small number There were two problems
involved in selecting the re- °f courses in the junior col-prsentatives. Dr. Anderson lege teaching field available said. The representatives had to graduate students. It will
to receive less than $4000 a , ___„„„„ ,
, , , streamline the process by
year, and only those who . ,
earned that amount or less w^ich a student gets his doc-
were eligible to vote. torate and his teaching cre-
Three representatives were dential by combining both
to be elected from districts goals into one program.
established in Los Angeles ™ .
„ , , , . , Teaching Increases i
County, and four were to be
selected from Los Angeles Dr. Wilbur said the num-Citv. ber of teaching positions in,
Dan Luevano, regional di- the junior colleges is increas-j rector of the U.S. Office of ing tremendously.
Economic Opportunity, was 0ver fifteen thousand posi-j dissatisfied with the district- tions are now ' held in the ing and refused to allocate gtate of California aione and funds for the election until a thp new systems being insti. solution for the problem was tuded in other gtates wU1 also found.
former USC student president has been man of the Political Science
Lodge to Discuss Future of GOP
By GREG O BRIEN Asst. Managing Editor
John Davis Lodge, former governor of Conne< timi. will speak on "The Future of the Republican Party” in Bovard Auditorium Monday at 11 a.m.
Lodge, who was elected as the first four-year term governor of Connecticut in 1950. will he sponsored by the Great Issues Forum Com
mittee. tion in the 1948 Italian efec-
Lodge is the brother of ^ons-Henrv Cabot Lodge. U.S. A member of Phi Beta K= r Ambassador to South Viet- Pa- he graduated f™m Mid-nam.
He was a member of the House of Representatives from 1946 to 1950 He has served two terms as Chairman of the New England Governors’ Conference and two terms as a member of
dlesex School. Concord. sachusetts He received hb B A from Harvard and is LL B. from Harvard Law School
During World War II Lodge served with the U.S. Navy as a liaison officer between the
the Executive Committee of United states and P ren oh the National Governors' Conference.
Heads Unique Committee He was also chairman of a New England committee for
DR. TOTTON J. ANDERSON
. . . Poverty Consultant
GETTING READY—Linda Caldwell and Pete Janca prepare for tonight's season premiere of the Cheshire Cat. The USC
Daily Troian Photo by Scott Dubin
coffee house will sport a new interior centered around Lewis Carroll's fantasy, "Through the Looking Glass."
HURRY, BUNNY!
Past ASSC President Will Speak
Cheshire Cat to Open Tonight With a looking Glass' Motif
A former USC student Richard Lontracher chai, Proviue many new opening. By NICK SPANOS j odist Church, is operated sole-
body president has been man of the Political Science California has 500.000 jun- Entertainment Editor ly by students, named the speaker for the Department at UCLA. Pro- ior college students and thel If y™ h.aPPen to see a Slx*l The purpose of the Cat is Annual Brotherhood Week fessor Ivan Hinderacher. outlook is for more in the ^00t rabbit running around to provide a place for stu-observance of the Los An- chancellor of the University next few years, Dr. Wilber campus. don 1 be surpnsed-geles Breakfast Club Feb. 23. of California at Riverside, said.
Carl R. T e r z i a n , a 1957 and Dr. Anderson decided to Salary Increases
Trojan graduate, will speak elect three representatives at with the need for teachers to more than 500 business, large, community and professional
The Board of Eco„omic opening tonight, then
for junior college teachers1
dents to go on weeknights he's looking for the Cheshire and an outlet for creative ex-Cat. pression in an informal at-
And if you see him after mosphere, Mike Gordon, the the Cat's premiere spring se- Cat s director, commented
ing folk singing, comedy skits, drama and classical music, along with the screening of several student-made experimental films, are just part of the Cheshire Cat's plans for the semester. Tonight's opening, which will soon become part of the past
fleets and took part in the
Sicilian Operation and in the
landings at Salerno in South
ern France. He was awarded
the Croix de Guerre with
. Palm and tho rank nf Cheva-the peaceful uses of atomic ,• r. ... .
xu r- x r •. , • J l,er m the french Legion of energy, the first of its kind. j^onor
Lodge served as President Mondav’s address will be Eisenhower's special ambas- chaired by ASSC President sador on presidential missions j0hn Sullivan to Panama, Costa Rica and The Great Issues Forum Puerto Rico. He was appoint- Committee will be hosting ed Ambassador to Spain in Ambassador Braj Kumar 1955 where he served for six Nehru, of India, in an all-uni-\ears the longest term of versity convocation on March any U.S. ambassador to that i
country. In A p r i I the committee
During his tenure in Con- plans to hold talks on Pak-gress, Lodge gained national istan, California reapportion-k attention by speaking against ment. and God in today's soc-possible Communist interven- iety.
Educators Set Up Media Institutes
By KARIN WINNER
The School of Education is presently conducting a series of short-term communications media institutes for institute directors by request of the federal government
The Department of Instructional Technology has been contracted as part of the National Defense Education Act, called Title 11. The program
at USC. called the Special four groups of 15 professors.
Live entertainment, featur- tense, is another.
leaders on the subject. “Live Opportunity rejected this de- hag increased to more than yoU 11 knOW he WaS late for
it Willingly—But Live it!" eis,on however, because they 00Q teach.
Terzian was g r a d u a t e d were skeptical whether it was and workj £on.
magna cun, laude in political P“^“!i0jLn.len°U?..U“1?' ditions are extremely good.
science and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.
He was also named one of the ten most outstanding campus leaders in the United States.
Following his graduation he served as a State Depart-ment goodwill ambassador and a Congressional appointee to the Golden Anniversary White House Conference on
ia very important date
The Cat reopens tonight 'not only with a new interior decoration, but also with a
in mixed groups to get ade
quate representation from Any students interested in new management policy as Mexican Amercians. the program should contact'wejj The coffee house will
Representatives will be Dr. Wilbur in 351 Administra- Qpen Monday through Fri-(Continued on Page 2) tion for further information. dav nights and will be closed
on the weekend. Opening
Producer Arthur Mayer Joins Cinema Faculty
Office Is Opened
To Aid 1-A Men
Media Institute for Institute chosen at random on the basis Directors, is the first of its of regional distribution, to kind in this country. come to campus for a weekly
Under the direction of Dr session of instruction. Three Lester Beck, a former cinema of the four participating [professor, the institute will groups are English directors serve as a pilot training-pro- The other group will be diagram for a select number of rectors in all areas of study English professors, college li- as specified under Title 11. brarians, directors of reading A lab with specialized new institutes on college campuses media equipment has been and foreign language special- built in the Department of In-ists. structional Technology for
The training concentrates their use. The lab offers th** on the field of English. It in- latest in the form of films, not mean that they will be volves giving special instruc- slides, recordings, graphic
tion to directors in the use oi: aids and textbooks
By ANN SALISBURY
Because of the heavy in- drafted," McKinstry said, night it will be open from crease in male students being It is a way of forcing them new educational media The directors, who are re 8:30 to 12. reclassified 1-A, a Selective to appeal and putting the se- through contact with films, ceiving this week of training
The new interior decoration Service office is being set up lective processes on an indi- fiim strips and program in- at government expense, havp will highlight various scenes on campus to aid the woeful vidual basis. However, a stu- struction. periodic group sessions. Most
and characters from Lewis men. dent must appeal within 10 jn turn, this preparation is of the training, is directed to-
The producer who introduc- and graduate students, meets Carroll s novel, “Through the Children and Youth. He is a e(j Marlene Dietrich and Mae Thursdays and Fridays from Looking Glass.” Today is also former professor of govern- West to American audiences ,4:15 to 6 p.m. the 100th anniversary of the
ment and speech at Wood- recently joined the the Cinema Producers and directors of publication of the book.
bury College and is active in Department faculty, community affairs. Arthur Mayer, who has
Terzian has been commend- taught motion picture courses ed for his speeches on the at Dartmouth College and American way of life by the Columbia and Fordham Uni-US. House of Representa- versifies, is teaching a course lives, the California State As- on the economics of the film sembly, the Los Angeles business, based on his experi-County Board of Supervisors ences as a distributor, exhib-and the Los Angeles City itor, author and critic. Council. The class, open to seniors
noted pictures will screen Appearing at tonight’s their films and lecture about opening will be Chip and Jay. them on Fridays at 7 p.m. and a folk singing duo. Chip Saturdays at 9 a.m. Plomteaux and Jay Conte are
Mayer is co-author of “The members of Theta Chi frater-Movies,” which has sold more nity and have been singing than 50,000 copies. He was [together for the past four the first to import such Ital-'years.
ian films as “Open City,” and The Cheshire Cat, a coffee “The Bicycle Thief” to the house located on 34th Street United States. j in the basement of the Meth-
Mulvey White, vice-presi- days of his 1-A classification, intended to teach institute di- wards individual study dent for student and alumni “Sometimes students aren't rectots how to conduct sim- At the sessions dire^ tofS affairs, and John A. McKin- aware that they are being re- dar programs, instructing ele- compare notes, exchange stry, assistant dean of men,^classified. They are likely to mentary and secondary edu- ideas and discuss the new said in an announcement yes- think that their status of^last cation teachers, on their cam- media. The final day of interday “our object of ap- summer will be untouched,” Puses These sessions are to struction is reserved for the proach is to develop an of- White said. oe held in the summer. director-trainees to evaluate fice that is knowledgeable to ’ . ’ .... The institute has invited the program, students ” i during registration men ---—-—
m, ce- -n I. 4. 4. students were given a card The office will be tenta- ° , , ,
| requesting those who had
tively set up in McKinstry’s office and will be open every afternoon.
“The fact that our students are being reclassified does!
AIESEC ARRIVES
been reclassified from 2-S to 1-A to return it to the new office in 225 Student Union. McKinstry said that 75 have already been returned, but he is expecting another 400 or 500 to be coming in.
Five Unusual Guests Due Over Weekend
Overseas Traineeships Offered
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor
The Whispering Shadow, pear in “Parable" Sunday "Gigi.’’ The Phantom, “The night at the Lutheran Church Policies enforced in the ^ j-., ^jan” an(j an unnamed on Figueroa Street. The New Korean War will probably be mime wm vigit the usc cam_ York world's Fair movie pan-
resumed shortly, McKinstry
pus this weekend.
tomines the fate of a circus
noted. However, students The guests are not for real, clown, who bears a strong remaking normal progress though, since they are all semblance to Jesus Christ, (those who are^carrying^ Id part Qf fUm presentations to; Two other short films. “Re-
units or more and have a sat-grade point)
be screened either today, to claimecp and “Carpenter.-’
The Man from AIESEC is now on campus, and although!shouldn^t worry abo^it their ™Deita °Kaooa^Iph^will WUI be shown Wlth "Parable' his organization does not offer the opportunity to fight in-chances of getting a defer- . , , ... ..The -—---
ternational crime, it does promote international business mPnt •> - -too
F ment- , „ 'Whispering Shadow’ in 133 VZ7arretT ODeaKS
opportunity. “There have been very few v tr.nio.ht at 7 » w i r i
Jeffrey Peterson might be called Troys Man from AIE- students who have been draft- , 1Q " ' ° At YoU+H Confab
f°T?ythC USC ChaP'64 tr°m USC’1 kD°W 01 °n'y' Caron. Louis Jordan,
ter ox Ine worldwide ors^cHiizdtion. 'two ** White s3.id
AIESEC (pronounded eye-sec) is more properly called
the Association for the International Exchange of Students q . (~\L£
in Business and Economics. The initials stand for its French Seniors ^Jtterea
P. A. Internships
|Maurice Chevalier. Zsa Zsa Gabor and Hermione Gin-
gold star in the musical comedy.
The last chapter of the serial “The Whispering Sha-will also be shown. It
name. Association International des Etudiants en Sciences Economiques et Commerciales.
The organization will hold its first meeting Tuesday at Students who will receive 3 p.m. in 210 Bridge Hall. their B A.’s in June and who dow'
AIESEC arranges for the exchange of training assign- are interested in the govern- unveil the true identity ments in business between member nations, which now num- ment service may apply this of the mysterious villain, ber 40 countries on six continents. month for $3,200 public ad- Admission is 50 cents.
Students participating in AIESEC are enabled to go on ministration fellowships. The 4-D Man and the
traineeships in a foreign country for three months to a year The program consists of a f'rst chapter of another film on a reciprocal basis. three month internship with a serial, ‘‘The Phantom
If a potential participant can find a job for a European student in the United States and a European can find a job for an American in his country, the U.S. will pay for the student’s visa and passport. The individual must pay his own way to Europe, however.
Mike (iarrett addressed 8.000 delrcates yesterday at thc opening session <>f thp two* d ay (iovernor'a Conference on Youth h<= • ti in Long Beach.
The Heisman Trophy winner called for better relationships among people of different backgrounds. He said better attitude-, would have prevented the south central I.o** \rn*,Hes riots, hut added that after thev started even he was afraid to go into the area “for fear of getting shot."
government agency in Ala- Creeps, will be shown at the bama, Kentucky or Tennessee Hideaway Cafe, at 34th and graduate courses in public Street and McClintock Ave-
administration at the Univer- nue, tomorrow night at 9. About 60 per cent of sities of Alabama. Kentucky, Robert Lansing, of “Twelve those attending the conference on “Communication
Thus, AIESEC fulfills its aim of preparing business and or Tennessee. O’Clock High," stars in “The
economics students for the future by training them in busi- For information and appli- 4-D Man." He plays a scien-ness techniques of other nations and fostering a basis for in- cations, students should write t>st wh° learns how to walk ternational understanding among these future business lead- to Coleman B. Ransone, Jr.. through anything, ers. Educational Director, South- Bela Lugosi, plus a group
AIESEC was founded in 1948 by students of seven coun- ern Regional Training Pro- of assorted zombies and ro-
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY—Jeffrey Peterson goes over the agenda for the first meeting of AIESEC next Tuesday with
Dally Trojan Photo by Scott Dubin
his secretary, Peggy Hilton. AIESEC is an international business organization that arranges for jobs abroad.
tries and has since provided for nearly 35,000 traineeships; the American branch of AIESEC was established in 1958 at Columbia University
gram in Public Administra- bots, will also begin their mis-tion. Drawer I, University, adventures in the first chap-Alabama. The deadline for ter of “The Phantom Creeps"
Students may take advantage of AIESEC’s benefits submitting a pp 1 i c a t i o n tomorrow night, after completion of two years of college. J is March 1, 1966. i The unnamed mime will ap-,
with Youth — A Search for Understanding” were young people.
The conference is sponsored by the California Dp-linqunecy Prevention Commission and the Govertlor’s Advisory Committee on Children and Y'outh.
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 66, February 11, 1966 |
| Full text | University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN Vol. XVII eC^scT3 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1966 No; 66 Anderson to Aid Professor In Area Voting Announces JC Program A program to provide the Dr. Totton J. Anderson,'presentatives to the local an- chairman of the Political Sci- ti-poverty board. ence Department, is one of To elect representatives to three Southland educators the board, it was necessary appointed to consult with the;to divide Los Angeles City Office of Economic Opportu- and Los Angeles County into expanding junior college sjs- nity in its examination of voting districts of people tem with full-time teachers plans for the March 1 elec- whose annual salary is less was announced yesterday by tion of seven poverty area re- than $4000. Dr Leslie wilbur of the Edu_ However the people in the ,. ~ , , . j * * ui- i. cation Department. jOffice assigned to establish, r voting districts did an ineffi- Dr. Wilbur said the pro- cient job. Dr. Anderson said, gram is geared for graduate Some districts were so students now working toward their M.A.'s who want a The program is designed to large that they could have been divided into at least three smaller ones. Districts junior collcge teaching cre-are allowed only a 15 per dential. cent discrepancy above or be low a norm. . overcome the small number There were two problems involved in selecting the re- °f courses in the junior col-prsentatives. Dr. Anderson lege teaching field available said. The representatives had to graduate students. It will to receive less than $4000 a , ___„„„„ , , , , streamline the process by year, and only those who . , earned that amount or less w^ich a student gets his doc- were eligible to vote. torate and his teaching cre- Three representatives were dential by combining both to be elected from districts goals into one program. established in Los Angeles ™ . „ , , , . , Teaching Increases i County, and four were to be selected from Los Angeles Dr. Wilbur said the num-Citv. ber of teaching positions in, Dan Luevano, regional di- the junior colleges is increas-j rector of the U.S. Office of ing tremendously. Economic Opportunity, was 0ver fifteen thousand posi-j dissatisfied with the district- tions are now ' held in the ing and refused to allocate gtate of California aione and funds for the election until a thp new systems being insti. solution for the problem was tuded in other gtates wU1 also found. former USC student president has been man of the Political Science Lodge to Discuss Future of GOP By GREG O BRIEN Asst. Managing Editor John Davis Lodge, former governor of Conne< timi. will speak on "The Future of the Republican Party” in Bovard Auditorium Monday at 11 a.m. Lodge, who was elected as the first four-year term governor of Connecticut in 1950. will he sponsored by the Great Issues Forum Com mittee. tion in the 1948 Italian efec- Lodge is the brother of ^ons-Henrv Cabot Lodge. U.S. A member of Phi Beta K= r Ambassador to South Viet- Pa- he graduated f™m Mid-nam. He was a member of the House of Representatives from 1946 to 1950 He has served two terms as Chairman of the New England Governors’ Conference and two terms as a member of dlesex School. Concord. sachusetts He received hb B A from Harvard and is LL B. from Harvard Law School During World War II Lodge served with the U.S. Navy as a liaison officer between the the Executive Committee of United states and P ren oh the National Governors' Conference. Heads Unique Committee He was also chairman of a New England committee for DR. TOTTON J. ANDERSON . . . Poverty Consultant GETTING READY—Linda Caldwell and Pete Janca prepare for tonight's season premiere of the Cheshire Cat. The USC Daily Troian Photo by Scott Dubin coffee house will sport a new interior centered around Lewis Carroll's fantasy, "Through the Looking Glass." HURRY, BUNNY! Past ASSC President Will Speak Cheshire Cat to Open Tonight With a looking Glass' Motif A former USC student Richard Lontracher chai, Proviue many new opening. By NICK SPANOS j odist Church, is operated sole- body president has been man of the Political Science California has 500.000 jun- Entertainment Editor ly by students, named the speaker for the Department at UCLA. Pro- ior college students and thel If y™ h.aPPen to see a Slx*l The purpose of the Cat is Annual Brotherhood Week fessor Ivan Hinderacher. outlook is for more in the ^00t rabbit running around to provide a place for stu-observance of the Los An- chancellor of the University next few years, Dr. Wilber campus. don 1 be surpnsed-geles Breakfast Club Feb. 23. of California at Riverside, said. Carl R. T e r z i a n , a 1957 and Dr. Anderson decided to Salary Increases Trojan graduate, will speak elect three representatives at with the need for teachers to more than 500 business, large, community and professional The Board of Eco„omic opening tonight, then for junior college teachers1 dents to go on weeknights he's looking for the Cheshire and an outlet for creative ex-Cat. pression in an informal at- And if you see him after mosphere, Mike Gordon, the the Cat's premiere spring se- Cat s director, commented ing folk singing, comedy skits, drama and classical music, along with the screening of several student-made experimental films, are just part of the Cheshire Cat's plans for the semester. Tonight's opening, which will soon become part of the past fleets and took part in the Sicilian Operation and in the landings at Salerno in South ern France. He was awarded the Croix de Guerre with . Palm and tho rank nf Cheva-the peaceful uses of atomic ,• r. ... . xu r- x r •. , • J l,er m the french Legion of energy, the first of its kind. j^onor Lodge served as President Mondav’s address will be Eisenhower's special ambas- chaired by ASSC President sador on presidential missions j0hn Sullivan to Panama, Costa Rica and The Great Issues Forum Puerto Rico. He was appoint- Committee will be hosting ed Ambassador to Spain in Ambassador Braj Kumar 1955 where he served for six Nehru, of India, in an all-uni-\ears the longest term of versity convocation on March any U.S. ambassador to that i country. In A p r i I the committee During his tenure in Con- plans to hold talks on Pak-gress, Lodge gained national istan, California reapportion-k attention by speaking against ment. and God in today's soc-possible Communist interven- iety. Educators Set Up Media Institutes By KARIN WINNER The School of Education is presently conducting a series of short-term communications media institutes for institute directors by request of the federal government The Department of Instructional Technology has been contracted as part of the National Defense Education Act, called Title 11. The program at USC. called the Special four groups of 15 professors. Live entertainment, featur- tense, is another. leaders on the subject. “Live Opportunity rejected this de- hag increased to more than yoU 11 knOW he WaS late for it Willingly—But Live it!" eis,on however, because they 00Q teach. Terzian was g r a d u a t e d were skeptical whether it was and workj £on. magna cun, laude in political P“^“!i0jLn.len°U?..U“1?' ditions are extremely good. science and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He was also named one of the ten most outstanding campus leaders in the United States. Following his graduation he served as a State Depart-ment goodwill ambassador and a Congressional appointee to the Golden Anniversary White House Conference on ia very important date The Cat reopens tonight 'not only with a new interior decoration, but also with a in mixed groups to get ade quate representation from Any students interested in new management policy as Mexican Amercians. the program should contact'wejj The coffee house will Representatives will be Dr. Wilbur in 351 Administra- Qpen Monday through Fri-(Continued on Page 2) tion for further information. dav nights and will be closed on the weekend. Opening Producer Arthur Mayer Joins Cinema Faculty Office Is Opened To Aid 1-A Men Media Institute for Institute chosen at random on the basis Directors, is the first of its of regional distribution, to kind in this country. come to campus for a weekly Under the direction of Dr session of instruction. Three Lester Beck, a former cinema of the four participating [professor, the institute will groups are English directors serve as a pilot training-pro- The other group will be diagram for a select number of rectors in all areas of study English professors, college li- as specified under Title 11. brarians, directors of reading A lab with specialized new institutes on college campuses media equipment has been and foreign language special- built in the Department of In-ists. structional Technology for The training concentrates their use. The lab offers th** on the field of English. It in- latest in the form of films, not mean that they will be volves giving special instruc- slides, recordings, graphic tion to directors in the use oi: aids and textbooks By ANN SALISBURY Because of the heavy in- drafted" McKinstry said, night it will be open from crease in male students being It is a way of forcing them new educational media The directors, who are re 8:30 to 12. reclassified 1-A, a Selective to appeal and putting the se- through contact with films, ceiving this week of training The new interior decoration Service office is being set up lective processes on an indi- fiim strips and program in- at government expense, havp will highlight various scenes on campus to aid the woeful vidual basis. However, a stu- struction. periodic group sessions. Most and characters from Lewis men. dent must appeal within 10 jn turn, this preparation is of the training, is directed to- The producer who introduc- and graduate students, meets Carroll s novel, “Through the Children and Youth. He is a e(j Marlene Dietrich and Mae Thursdays and Fridays from Looking Glass.” Today is also former professor of govern- West to American audiences ,4:15 to 6 p.m. the 100th anniversary of the ment and speech at Wood- recently joined the the Cinema Producers and directors of publication of the book. bury College and is active in Department faculty, community affairs. Arthur Mayer, who has Terzian has been commend- taught motion picture courses ed for his speeches on the at Dartmouth College and American way of life by the Columbia and Fordham Uni-US. House of Representa- versifies, is teaching a course lives, the California State As- on the economics of the film sembly, the Los Angeles business, based on his experi-County Board of Supervisors ences as a distributor, exhib-and the Los Angeles City itor, author and critic. Council. The class, open to seniors noted pictures will screen Appearing at tonight’s their films and lecture about opening will be Chip and Jay. them on Fridays at 7 p.m. and a folk singing duo. Chip Saturdays at 9 a.m. Plomteaux and Jay Conte are Mayer is co-author of “The members of Theta Chi frater-Movies,” which has sold more nity and have been singing than 50,000 copies. He was [together for the past four the first to import such Ital-'years. ian films as “Open City,” and The Cheshire Cat, a coffee “The Bicycle Thief” to the house located on 34th Street United States. j in the basement of the Meth- Mulvey White, vice-presi- days of his 1-A classification, intended to teach institute di- wards individual study dent for student and alumni “Sometimes students aren't rectots how to conduct sim- At the sessions dire^ tofS affairs, and John A. McKin- aware that they are being re- dar programs, instructing ele- compare notes, exchange stry, assistant dean of men,^classified. They are likely to mentary and secondary edu- ideas and discuss the new said in an announcement yes- think that their status of^last cation teachers, on their cam- media. The final day of interday “our object of ap- summer will be untouched,” Puses These sessions are to struction is reserved for the proach is to develop an of- White said. oe held in the summer. director-trainees to evaluate fice that is knowledgeable to ’ . ’ .... The institute has invited the program, students ” i during registration men ---—-— m, ce- -n I. 4. 4. students were given a card The office will be tenta- ° , , , requesting those who had tively set up in McKinstry’s office and will be open every afternoon. “The fact that our students are being reclassified does! AIESEC ARRIVES been reclassified from 2-S to 1-A to return it to the new office in 225 Student Union. McKinstry said that 75 have already been returned, but he is expecting another 400 or 500 to be coming in. Five Unusual Guests Due Over Weekend Overseas Traineeships Offered By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor The Whispering Shadow, pear in “Parable" Sunday "Gigi.’’ The Phantom, “The night at the Lutheran Church Policies enforced in the ^ j-., ^jan” an(j an unnamed on Figueroa Street. The New Korean War will probably be mime wm vigit the usc cam_ York world's Fair movie pan- resumed shortly, McKinstry pus this weekend. tomines the fate of a circus noted. However, students The guests are not for real, clown, who bears a strong remaking normal progress though, since they are all semblance to Jesus Christ, (those who are^carrying^ Id part Qf fUm presentations to; Two other short films. “Re- units or more and have a sat-grade point) be screened either today, to claimecp and “Carpenter.-’ The Man from AIESEC is now on campus, and although!shouldn^t worry abo^it their ™Deita °Kaooa^Iph^will WUI be shown Wlth "Parable' his organization does not offer the opportunity to fight in-chances of getting a defer- . , , ... ..The -—--- ternational crime, it does promote international business mPnt •> - -too F ment- , „ 'Whispering Shadow’ in 133 VZ7arretT ODeaKS opportunity. “There have been very few v tr.nio.ht at 7 » w i r i Jeffrey Peterson might be called Troys Man from AIE- students who have been draft- , 1Q " ' ° At YoU+H Confab f°T?ythC USC ChaP'64 tr°m USC’1 kD°W 01 °n'y' Caron. Louis Jordan, ter ox Ine worldwide ors^cHiizdtion. 'two ** White s3.id AIESEC (pronounded eye-sec) is more properly called the Association for the International Exchange of Students q . (~\L£ in Business and Economics. The initials stand for its French Seniors ^Jtterea P. A. Internships Maurice Chevalier. Zsa Zsa Gabor and Hermione Gin- gold star in the musical comedy. The last chapter of the serial “The Whispering Sha-will also be shown. It name. Association International des Etudiants en Sciences Economiques et Commerciales. The organization will hold its first meeting Tuesday at Students who will receive 3 p.m. in 210 Bridge Hall. their B A.’s in June and who dow' AIESEC arranges for the exchange of training assign- are interested in the govern- unveil the true identity ments in business between member nations, which now num- ment service may apply this of the mysterious villain, ber 40 countries on six continents. month for $3,200 public ad- Admission is 50 cents. Students participating in AIESEC are enabled to go on ministration fellowships. The 4-D Man and the traineeships in a foreign country for three months to a year The program consists of a f'rst chapter of another film on a reciprocal basis. three month internship with a serial, ‘‘The Phantom If a potential participant can find a job for a European student in the United States and a European can find a job for an American in his country, the U.S. will pay for the student’s visa and passport. The individual must pay his own way to Europe, however. Mike (iarrett addressed 8.000 delrcates yesterday at thc opening session <>f thp two* d ay (iovernor'a Conference on Youth h<= • ti in Long Beach. The Heisman Trophy winner called for better relationships among people of different backgrounds. He said better attitude-, would have prevented the south central I.o** \rn*,Hes riots, hut added that after thev started even he was afraid to go into the area “for fear of getting shot." government agency in Ala- Creeps, will be shown at the bama, Kentucky or Tennessee Hideaway Cafe, at 34th and graduate courses in public Street and McClintock Ave- administration at the Univer- nue, tomorrow night at 9. About 60 per cent of sities of Alabama. Kentucky, Robert Lansing, of “Twelve those attending the conference on “Communication Thus, AIESEC fulfills its aim of preparing business and or Tennessee. O’Clock High" stars in “The economics students for the future by training them in busi- For information and appli- 4-D Man." He plays a scien-ness techniques of other nations and fostering a basis for in- cations, students should write t>st wh° learns how to walk ternational understanding among these future business lead- to Coleman B. Ransone, Jr.. through anything, ers. Educational Director, South- Bela Lugosi, plus a group AIESEC was founded in 1948 by students of seven coun- ern Regional Training Pro- of assorted zombies and ro- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY—Jeffrey Peterson goes over the agenda for the first meeting of AIESEC next Tuesday with Dally Trojan Photo by Scott Dubin his secretary, Peggy Hilton. AIESEC is an international business organization that arranges for jobs abroad. tries and has since provided for nearly 35,000 traineeships; the American branch of AIESEC was established in 1958 at Columbia University gram in Public Administra- bots, will also begin their mis-tion. Drawer I, University, adventures in the first chap-Alabama. The deadline for ter of “The Phantom Creeps" Students may take advantage of AIESEC’s benefits submitting a pp 1 i c a t i o n tomorrow night, after completion of two years of college. J is March 1, 1966. i The unnamed mime will ap-, with Youth — A Search for Understanding” were young people. The conference is sponsored by the California Dp-linqunecy Prevention Commission and the Govertlor’s Advisory Committee on Children and Y'outh. |
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