DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 101, April 07, 1967 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 6 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
DAILY
University of Southern California
TROJAN
VOL. Lvm
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1967
NO. 101
’SAN PEBBLES’ TOMORROW
Tickets for “Sand Pebbles,1' Troy Camp benefit, will be sold at the door tomorrow at the Fox Wilshire Theater.
The doors will be open at 8:30 a.m. where tickets will be available until 8:30 when the show starts. The theater is located at Wilshire and La Cienega. The tickets are priced at $1.75.
This is the fifth and last Troy Camp benefit screening of the 1966-67 season. “The Sand Pebbles” has been nominated for eight Academy Awards.
Berg Insists He is TIP
Secretary
Mayock No
RANDOM PRIZE FOR BLOOD DONOR
Kevin Strav/n, right, receives one of the prizes given to blood donors in the Knights sponsored Blood Drive from Morrie Notrica of the 32nd St. Market. The drive ends today with several groups competing for trophies.
Drive for Blood Will End Today
Got any spare blood? If so the Tro.ian Knights urge you to donate it to the Red Cross.
Today is the final day of the Red Cross blood drive sponsored by the Knights. Donations are to be made st the Bloodmobile in front of the University Chapel.
A trophy is being awarded to the organisation with the most donors. The following organizations are in competition. They are, in order of points: .
Beta Theta Pi: NROTC, Lambda Chi and Kappa Alpha (tied): Delta Chi: Tau Kappa Epsilon; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Chi; and Kappa Sigma (four way tie); Alpha Tau Omega: Phi Sigma Sigs and Phi Gamma Delta (tied); Phi Delta Theta end Phi Kappa Psi (tied): Chi Phi snd Tau Delta Phi (tied); Sigma Alpha Mu and Delta Tau Delta (tied).
Ane one of the above could win this or the percentage trophy with good showing today.
Persons rejected for medical or athletic reasons get a half-point per house.
Those vying for the percentage trophy are Delta Chi with 75%, Lambda Chi with 67%. Tau Delta Phi with 63^ and Beta Theta Pi w ith 60 rr.
The sororities competing for the
Pre Medical Group Plans Area Meeting
Alpha Epsilon Delta, pre-med honorary fraternity, is sponsoring a “Southwestern Pre-Medical Conference” tomorrow'. During the conference the deans of admissions of four local medical schools will discuss admission policies and procedures. An evaluation of medical school applicants will follow.
Guest speakers will be IJSC School of Medicine faculty members. Twenty-three colleges and universities in the Tx>s Angeles area have been invited.
The morning will feature speeches dealing with community medicine and public health, the physician and his practice, medical research and recent advances in medicine.
Drs. Robert E. Tranquada. professor of community medicine, John E. Helms professor of physiology, Boyd W. Harding, professor of mid-cine and biochemistry, Murray B. Gardner, professor of patheology. Larin L. Stevens, chairman of the committee of admissions of the USC School of Medicine and Paul Click, profoessor of psychiatry, will speak.
Following a luncheon, the deans of admissions from USC, UCLA and California College of Medicine, will discuss policies and procedures followed by reviewing of applicants by the admission committe. A question and answer period will follow, and the conference will end at 3 p.m.
Information may be obtained from the pre-med advisement office or by dialing 746-7213.
percentage trophy are Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Gamma (tied), Alpha Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta and Gamma Phi Beta (tied), Alpha Chi Omega and Delta Delta Delta (tied), and Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Delta Pi (tied). The sororities are close and anyone could win with a good turnout today.
Tn order, the percentage leaders in the men's dorms are:
First and second floor of Town and Gown, third floor South of Trojan Hall, third floor Marks Tower, third and fifth floors Marks Tower, sixth floor Marks Tower and third floor Town and Gown, and eighth floor Marks Tower.
By MARGIE BESTER
David Berg, vice-president of the ousted TYR board, insists that he is executive secretary of TIP contrary to the statement made by Mike Mayock, president of TIP, that he isn’t.
“I assert that the article in the April 3 edition of the True Trojan is true since. I wras the person interviewed,” Berg said.
Berg’s statement was made in a rebuttal to John Medford’s remark that the article was an obvious fraud. Medford was acting as a spokesman for Trojan Independent Party.
Berg said that the validity of the True Trojan article can be shown by the fact that “Medford admitted that he is president of USC’s chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on Tuesday,” which was stated in the True Trojan article.
Berg quoted Jim MacGowan as saying “As far as the True Trojan article concerns me, it is completely accurate and I am proud of it.”
“If Jim MacGowan is not the present chairman of TIP, then he was the immediate former chairman of the group,” Berg said. “I should point out though that he was never elected chairman. He was appointed either by Mike Mayock or Martin Sulmeyer.
Sulmeyer referred to himself last year as founder of Trojan Independent Party.
Berg said “The reason the article was written in the True Trojan about TIP was to open the administration’s eyes and those of over 10,000 commuters and dorm residents to exactly who was representing us.
“It’s my personal feeling that the administration should withdraw its recognition of TIP,” he continued.
Mike Mayock said yesterday, “As far as Berg being executive secretary goes, it was at one time suggested to him by Jim McGowan that he serve in this position. However, members of TIP did not select him.”
’“Berg never attended any meeting this year and never undertook any secretarial duties whatsoever,” Mayock stated. “Furthermore, I don’t
see how he can claim to be executive secretary since the position doesn’t exist.”
“There may be one member in the entire organization in SDS, but saying TIP is SDS controlled is a deliberate lie,” Mayock said.
Mayock doesn’t feel that Med-
Three Offices Contested In Todays Run-Off Vote
Round two of the annual spring marathon will be completed today as three offices are contested in the ASSC elections run-offs.
Balloting will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in front of Bovard Auditorium.
Those candidates running for office are:
• Sue Mansueto and Karol Wahlberg for AWS vice-president.
• Suzanne DeBall and Wendy Coffelt for junior representative.
• Ron Jacobson and Scottie Beven for sophomore representative.
Laury Scott, elections commissioner. emphasized that ballots must be marked with the special pencils provided, and that the squares must be completely filled in. or the ballots will be considered void.
It was because of such incorrect markings that the original election results were not announced until Wednesday afternoon.
In those results, Misa Mansueto led Miss Wahlberg 318 to 259; Miss DeBall led Miss Coffelt 165 to 151;
CAT HOSTS CIA -PARTY, THAT IS
“In contrast to the usual hodge-podge of banal bourgoise entertainment that adorns the Cheshire Cat stage, we are going to throw a CIA Party this Friday,” Mike Moore told the Daily Trojan yesterday.
Claiming to be in a state of psychedelic frenzy, Moore and Dave Schlesinger, party hosts, dubbed their evening a “Create-in-Anonymous.” “Its a cross between a soul orgy and an angry squid,” they attempted to explain.
Joe Lescoulie, Cat chairman, will throw out the first water balloon at 8:30 p.m.. and the events will progress to a continuous “do-it-yourself” collage, a live paper mache interment of selected board members, and “instant theater” improvisations.
Orator Leoma Wilson will read erotic poetry to the background of continuous inspirations by the Jazz Conservatives, Moore said.
Other events planned for the Create-In are a scavenger hunt and banana peel scrape, contests for Cat confectionary privileges and folk music as interpreted by whoever happens to be playing at the time.
“If anyone can think of other motivating or unjphibiting schemes or artifacts,” Schlesinger said, “the stage will be there’s.”
“If we don’t have it,” he explained, “bring it.”
ford’s admission to being president of ACLU proves anything since, “he never said he wasn’t”
Mayock said that the only thing Medford admitted was being a registered Republican.
Berg said, “Jim McGowan was chairman of TIP as the article states.
Whether he is at this time chairman of TIP, I don’t know.”
Mayock said that “McGowan resigned as chairman last fall and the position was discontinued. For a supposed executive secretary, Berg doesn’t know much about the organization.”
TYR, ASSC Executive Council Plan Weekend NSA Meetings
By STAN METZLER Assistant to the Editor
The Trojan Young Republicans and the ASSC Executive Council will both meet this weekend to begin implementing the recommendations and orders made in the Board of Inquiry’s NSA-Election decision.
That decision, printed in yester-
day’s Daily Trojan, called for a new election on NSA, to be held within 30 days and to be conducted on new Election Code procedures enacted within 10 days.
The decision also called for a review of TYR by the Student Activities Committee, a replacement of the club’s entire Executive Board and a
NAMES IN DISPUTE
Among those individuals directly involved in the NSA-TYR controversy are:
PLAINTIFF—AMS President Stu Benjamin.
DEFENDENT—TYR President Linda Dulgarian.
THE ASSC BOARD OF INQUIRY—Student Conrt Justices Dan Montrenes, Glen Cass, Melodie McLennan, Happy Trope, Mike Muench, Jeff Robinson, Neil Bardack and Tom Kristovich (voting members); Clive Grafton, Carl Emerich, Laury Scott, Janette Balhveg (nonvoting members).
THE TYR EXECUTIVE BOARD—President Linda Dulgarian, First Vice-President Bob Barnwell, Second Vice-President Dave Berg, Recording Secretary Pat Yoon, Corresponding Secretary Eilene Ray, Treasurer Roger Thompson (elected officers); Don McFelea, Dick Shirley, John Lindloff, Valerie Masset, Ron Jernigan. (also council to the defendent) and Darrel GallucQi.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE—Dr. Edward Barker, chairman (also TYR advisor); Dean of Students Paul Bloland; John DeBross, speech instructor; Dr. John Gerletti, public administration; Taylor Hackford, ASSC president (also counsel to the plaintiff); Dean of Men Tom Hull; Susan Kinkade; Dr. Robert Mannes, engineering; Dan Montrenes, Student Court chief justice; Dr. William Nerlich, associate dean of student affahs; Dr. Terry Polin, business; Dr. J. Wesley Robb, associate dean of humanities; Dean of Women Joan Schaefer: George Vick, philosophy instructor.
and Jacobson led Miss Beven 179 to 171.
Although the two-day campaigns have followed the same stands as the first election. Miss Beven did gamar the support of Wayne Johnson, who ran third in their contest with 111 votes.
After receiving Johnson’s endorsement, Miss Beven noted that the office of sophomore representative “involves many obligations.
“If elected to this position I would welcome these responsibilities and do my best to maintain the fine traditions of Troy,” she explained.
Jacobson, who was endorsed by the fourth original opponent, Randy the fourth original opponent, Randy hopes of using a “strengthened student government to provide better programs for the students.”
Jacobson advocated establishing more effective speaker and entertainment programs on campus, and also came out in favor of a. sophomore class council.
OUSTED DUO — The Board of Inquiry has called for the replacement of TYR's Executive Board, including President linda Dulgarian and Ron Jernigan, Board member. Jernigan is council of defense for Miss Dulgarian.
determination at the end of the campaign on their qualification for continued university recognition.
The TYR Executive Board will meet at noon today in the YWCA to plan their campaign on the NSA affiliation and to discuss the Inquiry Board’s decision and a possible appeal of that decision.
The executive board meetings are open to the general TYR membership unless declared closed by the board, and officers contacted were unsure as to whether this meeting would remain open or closed.
The ASSC Executive Council, meanwhile, has scheduled the adop-
In yesterday’s Daily Trojan, a typographical error resulted in the statement that Linda Dulgarian “admitted acceptance of YAF support in TYR’s effort to deceit the NSA question.”
The line should have read: “in TYR’s effort to defeat the NSA question.”
tion of new wording for the Election Code for its meeting Sunday night at 6:30 in the YWCA.
Tayior Hackford, ASSC president, said the council would also set the date Sunday for the new NSA election.
“I am stiil considering the possible dates.” he said. “But the election will probably be held near the end of April or the beginning of May."
Dan Montrenes, chairman of the Board of Inqui'-y, commented at the proceedings only Wednesday morning that the board's decisions placed a great deal of the responsibility upon the Executive Council.
This responsibility lies primarily in the field of rewriting the Election Code.
Hackford stressed that although Laury Scott, elections commissioner, will present his recommendations for revisions of the code to include noncandidates issues it is up to the council itself to enact the code's final wording.
“Hi3 recommendations will be considered but not necessarily adopted exactly by the Executive Council, he explained.
Hackford seemed particularly con cerned that the amount of funds available for U3e by one side in a campaign on referendum, initiative, recall and other such issues be kept to a minimum.
“I am sure the amount of funds allowed will not be more than the $200 that presidential candidates can spend,” he said.
“I would hope that the amount would be kept down to at least $150. and would personally like to see the allowable amount less than $100.”
READY FOR HOLLYWOOD
Songfest Finalists Announced
The 1967 Songfest program shifted into high gear last night with the announcement of finalist groups that will present their entries May 6 at the Hollywood Bowl.
In the production division, finalist groups were: Delta Delta Delta-Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon-Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Sigma-Pi Beta Phi, and Alpha Phi-Pi Kappa Alpha.
Finalists in the small group division were Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Phi Sigma, Phi Epsilon-Alpha Gamma Delta, and the Sports Car Club.
In the novelty division, Kappa Alpha Theta-Delta Tau Delta, Alpha Chi Omega-Lambda Chi Alpha, Alphp. Delta Pi-Phi Delta Theta, and Phi
Kappa Tau-Kappa Kappa Gamma were finalists.
Kappa Alpha was the only finalist in the choral division.
“The quality of the group was really high this year,” remarked Bob Tefft, 1967 Songfest chairman. “But what is more gratifying to me is the enthusiasm the entrants show.
“I think this kind of support given by the student body is the most vital ingredient that has made Songfest the tradition it is,” he continued, “and as long as it continues, Songfest will be a social highlight each year at USC.”
Of the six judges of the Songfest Preliminaries, Tim Elboine (1960), Noel Hanson (1963") and Sara Jane
Philippe (1966) were previous Songfest chairmen. Other judges were Harriet Stevens, Bill White, and Ronald Broadwill.
Randy Roberts, chairman of the Kappa. Alpha entry in the choral division, was “really happy to make finalist be cause we worked very hard, and the whole house wanted to go.” His fraternity's entries will be “San Francisco Bay Blues” and “He Was a Friend of Mine.”
“I think we’re putting in a lot of work and having a lot of fun,” said Bill Caldwell, director for the Kappa Sigma-Pi Beta Phi entry. ‘ The cooperation between the two houses in our entry has been very good, and I think we have a good chance of winning the whole thing.”
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 101, April 07, 1967 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 101, April 07, 1967. |
| Full text | DAILY University of Southern California TROJAN VOL. Lvm LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1967 NO. 101 ’SAN PEBBLES’ TOMORROW Tickets for “Sand Pebbles,1' Troy Camp benefit, will be sold at the door tomorrow at the Fox Wilshire Theater. The doors will be open at 8:30 a.m. where tickets will be available until 8:30 when the show starts. The theater is located at Wilshire and La Cienega. The tickets are priced at $1.75. This is the fifth and last Troy Camp benefit screening of the 1966-67 season. “The Sand Pebbles” has been nominated for eight Academy Awards. Berg Insists He is TIP Secretary Mayock No RANDOM PRIZE FOR BLOOD DONOR Kevin Strav/n, right, receives one of the prizes given to blood donors in the Knights sponsored Blood Drive from Morrie Notrica of the 32nd St. Market. The drive ends today with several groups competing for trophies. Drive for Blood Will End Today Got any spare blood? If so the Tro.ian Knights urge you to donate it to the Red Cross. Today is the final day of the Red Cross blood drive sponsored by the Knights. Donations are to be made st the Bloodmobile in front of the University Chapel. A trophy is being awarded to the organisation with the most donors. The following organizations are in competition. They are, in order of points: . Beta Theta Pi: NROTC, Lambda Chi and Kappa Alpha (tied): Delta Chi: Tau Kappa Epsilon; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Chi; and Kappa Sigma (four way tie); Alpha Tau Omega: Phi Sigma Sigs and Phi Gamma Delta (tied); Phi Delta Theta end Phi Kappa Psi (tied): Chi Phi snd Tau Delta Phi (tied); Sigma Alpha Mu and Delta Tau Delta (tied). Ane one of the above could win this or the percentage trophy with good showing today. Persons rejected for medical or athletic reasons get a half-point per house. Those vying for the percentage trophy are Delta Chi with 75%, Lambda Chi with 67%. Tau Delta Phi with 63^ and Beta Theta Pi w ith 60 rr. The sororities competing for the Pre Medical Group Plans Area Meeting Alpha Epsilon Delta, pre-med honorary fraternity, is sponsoring a “Southwestern Pre-Medical Conference” tomorrow'. During the conference the deans of admissions of four local medical schools will discuss admission policies and procedures. An evaluation of medical school applicants will follow. Guest speakers will be IJSC School of Medicine faculty members. Twenty-three colleges and universities in the Tx>s Angeles area have been invited. The morning will feature speeches dealing with community medicine and public health, the physician and his practice, medical research and recent advances in medicine. Drs. Robert E. Tranquada. professor of community medicine, John E. Helms professor of physiology, Boyd W. Harding, professor of mid-cine and biochemistry, Murray B. Gardner, professor of patheology. Larin L. Stevens, chairman of the committee of admissions of the USC School of Medicine and Paul Click, profoessor of psychiatry, will speak. Following a luncheon, the deans of admissions from USC, UCLA and California College of Medicine, will discuss policies and procedures followed by reviewing of applicants by the admission committe. A question and answer period will follow, and the conference will end at 3 p.m. Information may be obtained from the pre-med advisement office or by dialing 746-7213. percentage trophy are Kappa Alpha Theta and Delta Gamma (tied), Alpha Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta and Gamma Phi Beta (tied), Alpha Chi Omega and Delta Delta Delta (tied), and Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha Delta Pi (tied). The sororities are close and anyone could win with a good turnout today. Tn order, the percentage leaders in the men's dorms are: First and second floor of Town and Gown, third floor South of Trojan Hall, third floor Marks Tower, third and fifth floors Marks Tower, sixth floor Marks Tower and third floor Town and Gown, and eighth floor Marks Tower. By MARGIE BESTER David Berg, vice-president of the ousted TYR board, insists that he is executive secretary of TIP contrary to the statement made by Mike Mayock, president of TIP, that he isn’t. “I assert that the article in the April 3 edition of the True Trojan is true since. I wras the person interviewed,” Berg said. Berg’s statement was made in a rebuttal to John Medford’s remark that the article was an obvious fraud. Medford was acting as a spokesman for Trojan Independent Party. Berg said that the validity of the True Trojan article can be shown by the fact that “Medford admitted that he is president of USC’s chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union on Tuesday,” which was stated in the True Trojan article. Berg quoted Jim MacGowan as saying “As far as the True Trojan article concerns me, it is completely accurate and I am proud of it.” “If Jim MacGowan is not the present chairman of TIP, then he was the immediate former chairman of the group,” Berg said. “I should point out though that he was never elected chairman. He was appointed either by Mike Mayock or Martin Sulmeyer. Sulmeyer referred to himself last year as founder of Trojan Independent Party. Berg said “The reason the article was written in the True Trojan about TIP was to open the administration’s eyes and those of over 10,000 commuters and dorm residents to exactly who was representing us. “It’s my personal feeling that the administration should withdraw its recognition of TIP,” he continued. Mike Mayock said yesterday, “As far as Berg being executive secretary goes, it was at one time suggested to him by Jim McGowan that he serve in this position. However, members of TIP did not select him.” ’“Berg never attended any meeting this year and never undertook any secretarial duties whatsoever,” Mayock stated. “Furthermore, I don’t see how he can claim to be executive secretary since the position doesn’t exist.” “There may be one member in the entire organization in SDS, but saying TIP is SDS controlled is a deliberate lie,” Mayock said. Mayock doesn’t feel that Med- Three Offices Contested In Todays Run-Off Vote Round two of the annual spring marathon will be completed today as three offices are contested in the ASSC elections run-offs. Balloting will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in front of Bovard Auditorium. Those candidates running for office are: • Sue Mansueto and Karol Wahlberg for AWS vice-president. • Suzanne DeBall and Wendy Coffelt for junior representative. • Ron Jacobson and Scottie Beven for sophomore representative. Laury Scott, elections commissioner. emphasized that ballots must be marked with the special pencils provided, and that the squares must be completely filled in. or the ballots will be considered void. It was because of such incorrect markings that the original election results were not announced until Wednesday afternoon. In those results, Misa Mansueto led Miss Wahlberg 318 to 259; Miss DeBall led Miss Coffelt 165 to 151; CAT HOSTS CIA -PARTY, THAT IS “In contrast to the usual hodge-podge of banal bourgoise entertainment that adorns the Cheshire Cat stage, we are going to throw a CIA Party this Friday,” Mike Moore told the Daily Trojan yesterday. Claiming to be in a state of psychedelic frenzy, Moore and Dave Schlesinger, party hosts, dubbed their evening a “Create-in-Anonymous.” “Its a cross between a soul orgy and an angry squid,” they attempted to explain. Joe Lescoulie, Cat chairman, will throw out the first water balloon at 8:30 p.m.. and the events will progress to a continuous “do-it-yourself” collage, a live paper mache interment of selected board members, and “instant theater” improvisations. Orator Leoma Wilson will read erotic poetry to the background of continuous inspirations by the Jazz Conservatives, Moore said. Other events planned for the Create-In are a scavenger hunt and banana peel scrape, contests for Cat confectionary privileges and folk music as interpreted by whoever happens to be playing at the time. “If anyone can think of other motivating or unjphibiting schemes or artifacts,” Schlesinger said, “the stage will be there’s.” “If we don’t have it,” he explained, “bring it.” ford’s admission to being president of ACLU proves anything since, “he never said he wasn’t” Mayock said that the only thing Medford admitted was being a registered Republican. Berg said, “Jim McGowan was chairman of TIP as the article states. Whether he is at this time chairman of TIP, I don’t know.” Mayock said that “McGowan resigned as chairman last fall and the position was discontinued. For a supposed executive secretary, Berg doesn’t know much about the organization.” TYR, ASSC Executive Council Plan Weekend NSA Meetings By STAN METZLER Assistant to the Editor The Trojan Young Republicans and the ASSC Executive Council will both meet this weekend to begin implementing the recommendations and orders made in the Board of Inquiry’s NSA-Election decision. That decision, printed in yester- day’s Daily Trojan, called for a new election on NSA, to be held within 30 days and to be conducted on new Election Code procedures enacted within 10 days. The decision also called for a review of TYR by the Student Activities Committee, a replacement of the club’s entire Executive Board and a NAMES IN DISPUTE Among those individuals directly involved in the NSA-TYR controversy are: PLAINTIFF—AMS President Stu Benjamin. DEFENDENT—TYR President Linda Dulgarian. THE ASSC BOARD OF INQUIRY—Student Conrt Justices Dan Montrenes, Glen Cass, Melodie McLennan, Happy Trope, Mike Muench, Jeff Robinson, Neil Bardack and Tom Kristovich (voting members); Clive Grafton, Carl Emerich, Laury Scott, Janette Balhveg (nonvoting members). THE TYR EXECUTIVE BOARD—President Linda Dulgarian, First Vice-President Bob Barnwell, Second Vice-President Dave Berg, Recording Secretary Pat Yoon, Corresponding Secretary Eilene Ray, Treasurer Roger Thompson (elected officers); Don McFelea, Dick Shirley, John Lindloff, Valerie Masset, Ron Jernigan. (also council to the defendent) and Darrel GallucQi. STUDENT ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE—Dr. Edward Barker, chairman (also TYR advisor); Dean of Students Paul Bloland; John DeBross, speech instructor; Dr. John Gerletti, public administration; Taylor Hackford, ASSC president (also counsel to the plaintiff); Dean of Men Tom Hull; Susan Kinkade; Dr. Robert Mannes, engineering; Dan Montrenes, Student Court chief justice; Dr. William Nerlich, associate dean of student affahs; Dr. Terry Polin, business; Dr. J. Wesley Robb, associate dean of humanities; Dean of Women Joan Schaefer: George Vick, philosophy instructor. and Jacobson led Miss Beven 179 to 171. Although the two-day campaigns have followed the same stands as the first election. Miss Beven did gamar the support of Wayne Johnson, who ran third in their contest with 111 votes. After receiving Johnson’s endorsement, Miss Beven noted that the office of sophomore representative “involves many obligations. “If elected to this position I would welcome these responsibilities and do my best to maintain the fine traditions of Troy,” she explained. Jacobson, who was endorsed by the fourth original opponent, Randy the fourth original opponent, Randy hopes of using a “strengthened student government to provide better programs for the students.” Jacobson advocated establishing more effective speaker and entertainment programs on campus, and also came out in favor of a. sophomore class council. OUSTED DUO — The Board of Inquiry has called for the replacement of TYR's Executive Board, including President linda Dulgarian and Ron Jernigan, Board member. Jernigan is council of defense for Miss Dulgarian. determination at the end of the campaign on their qualification for continued university recognition. The TYR Executive Board will meet at noon today in the YWCA to plan their campaign on the NSA affiliation and to discuss the Inquiry Board’s decision and a possible appeal of that decision. The executive board meetings are open to the general TYR membership unless declared closed by the board, and officers contacted were unsure as to whether this meeting would remain open or closed. The ASSC Executive Council, meanwhile, has scheduled the adop- In yesterday’s Daily Trojan, a typographical error resulted in the statement that Linda Dulgarian “admitted acceptance of YAF support in TYR’s effort to deceit the NSA question.” The line should have read: “in TYR’s effort to defeat the NSA question.” tion of new wording for the Election Code for its meeting Sunday night at 6:30 in the YWCA. Tayior Hackford, ASSC president, said the council would also set the date Sunday for the new NSA election. “I am stiil considering the possible dates.” he said. “But the election will probably be held near the end of April or the beginning of May." Dan Montrenes, chairman of the Board of Inqui'-y, commented at the proceedings only Wednesday morning that the board's decisions placed a great deal of the responsibility upon the Executive Council. This responsibility lies primarily in the field of rewriting the Election Code. Hackford stressed that although Laury Scott, elections commissioner, will present his recommendations for revisions of the code to include noncandidates issues it is up to the council itself to enact the code's final wording. “Hi3 recommendations will be considered but not necessarily adopted exactly by the Executive Council, he explained. Hackford seemed particularly con cerned that the amount of funds available for U3e by one side in a campaign on referendum, initiative, recall and other such issues be kept to a minimum. “I am sure the amount of funds allowed will not be more than the $200 that presidential candidates can spend,” he said. “I would hope that the amount would be kept down to at least $150. and would personally like to see the allowable amount less than $100.” READY FOR HOLLYWOOD Songfest Finalists Announced The 1967 Songfest program shifted into high gear last night with the announcement of finalist groups that will present their entries May 6 at the Hollywood Bowl. In the production division, finalist groups were: Delta Delta Delta-Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon-Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Sigma-Pi Beta Phi, and Alpha Phi-Pi Kappa Alpha. Finalists in the small group division were Sigma Phi Epsilon, Alpha Phi Sigma, Phi Epsilon-Alpha Gamma Delta, and the Sports Car Club. In the novelty division, Kappa Alpha Theta-Delta Tau Delta, Alpha Chi Omega-Lambda Chi Alpha, Alphp. Delta Pi-Phi Delta Theta, and Phi Kappa Tau-Kappa Kappa Gamma were finalists. Kappa Alpha was the only finalist in the choral division. “The quality of the group was really high this year,” remarked Bob Tefft, 1967 Songfest chairman. “But what is more gratifying to me is the enthusiasm the entrants show. “I think this kind of support given by the student body is the most vital ingredient that has made Songfest the tradition it is,” he continued, “and as long as it continues, Songfest will be a social highlight each year at USC.” Of the six judges of the Songfest Preliminaries, Tim Elboine (1960), Noel Hanson (1963") and Sara Jane Philippe (1966) were previous Songfest chairmen. Other judges were Harriet Stevens, Bill White, and Ronald Broadwill. Randy Roberts, chairman of the Kappa. Alpha entry in the choral division, was “really happy to make finalist be cause we worked very hard, and the whole house wanted to go.” His fraternity's entries will be “San Francisco Bay Blues” and “He Was a Friend of Mine.” “I think we’re putting in a lot of work and having a lot of fun,” said Bill Caldwell, director for the Kappa Sigma-Pi Beta Phi entry. ‘ The cooperation between the two houses in our entry has been very good, and I think we have a good chance of winning the whole thing.” |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1432/uschist-dt-1967-04-07~001.tif |
Comments
Post a Comment for DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 101, April 07, 1967

