Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 97, March 30, 1966 |
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WEATHER
There will be low clouds and local fog this mornings with hazy sunshine. Temperatures will be 52 to 75.
1966 SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF
CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION
University of Southern California
DAILY # TROJAN
Vol. XVII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30,1966 No. 97
&£££££ fecial Election to Decide
Fate of ASSC Government
A second suit was filed Monday in an attempt to Hock the Hoover-USC Ur-Kin Redevelopment Project from becoming a reality.
The Hoover Area Improvement Association. Inc.. which filed a suit Friday against the city of Lop Angeles calling! for an election to determine whether the project shall be undertaken, this time is challenging the legality of the entire Hoover Renewal plan.
Halt Proceedings
The association asked that the plan be declared unconstitutional and unenforceable, and requested the court to halt any further proceedings ponding a judicial revew of the case.
The suit charged that the project would make public funds and land available to USC for its expansion .
According to the association's attorney. Floyd H. Norris. the state constitution prohibit? Calfornia or any subdivision to aid religious sects, churches or creeds to help support any school, college orj hospital which they control.
Methodist Trustees
USC was founded by the Methodist Church, and the association charged that the deed of trust provides that a majority of the university's trustees be of that faith.
WILLIAM PATRICK
. . . Gubernatorial Hopeful
Republican Candidate To Speak
William Penn Patrick, candidate for the Republican nomination for California governor, will discuss ‘The Role of the College Student in Politics” at noon today in 226 Founders Hall.
Patrick is seeking the gov-A release from the group ernorship on the belief that stated the suit was brought tlie electibility of a candied date for office on any ticket
must be
to his!
because of “capricious arbitrary action by the Los Angeles CitjT Council in not:integrity, to his talents and investigating the condition of willingness to go to the
subordinated his
Dentists Help Local Youngsters
Bv LUDY A. ONGKEKO
Busloads of school children swarm to USC almost I daily, not to see a zoo or a museum, but to go to the , dentist.
The School of Dentistry is called by many youngsters i from the Los Angeles County | School System their second I school.
At the Dental School, these children receive instruction on oral hygiene and dental care and see films.
I* or as little as $1.25. some receive dental treatment. Dr. John I. Ingle, dean of thej School of Dentistry, explained that the fee paid by the' school children is a token fee to cover medicine costs.
Free Treatment Only recently, “Operation! Headstart," a charitable! movement sponsored by thej school under the overall di-j rection of Dr. Gerald Kirsch- ' baum. concluded its free clini-j cal treatment to about a hundred indigent children be-1 tween the ages of 41 '■> to 51 years from the South Los An-geles-Bell Gardens-Montebello School Districts..
Students Will Vote On New Constitution
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor
The hopes of aproximatelv tf> constitutional convention delegates for an ASSC government without petty political bickering ride on the passage of the proposed ASSC Constitution, which students will vote on today.
Voting booths will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park in front of Doheny Library for one day only.
Ironically ASSC President John Sullivan, who has favored a change in the governmental structure for the past year, will not be able to vote in today's balloting.
Sullivan Away He is scheduled to leave at 9 this morning for Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he will be attending a confer-e n c e on cultural programming in foreign affairs.
Sullivan, chairman of the
Preliminary Tryouts Set For Songfest
Songfest preliminaries are set for today and tomorrow in Bovard Auditorium.
Groups scheduled to try out today include:
3:10 Pi Kappa Alpha.
3:20 Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Gamma Delta. 3:30 Alpha Tau Omega convention, which spent more and the USC Potters Guild.
the
FOOD FOR THOUGHT—This exhibit in front of Tommy Trojan yesterday was part of a world-wide campaign to feed
Daily Trojan Photos by Ed Stapleton
the hungry. (From left) Nancy Finn, Dawn Chatty, and Susan Helms represent a Trojan effort in the campaign.
than a month drafting proposed document mented yesterday:
‘The convention has work-
3:50 Kappa Alpha Theta com- and Beta Theta Pi.
Hillel Foundation
4 p.m. Bnai B'rith
blight when there were
people with principles,
charges of purposeful falsifi- platitudes.
ration of records by the Community Redevelopment Agency. in order to qualify the area for renewal.’’
ASSC Petitions Out After Easte
Petitions for all ASSC offices will be available day. April 11, Tuesday, April 12, and Wednesday, April 13 demnation of the only.
The petitions must be turned in by 4 pm. on April 13 to 324 Student Union.
Those who petition wall be
Principles Statement
“I believe that political integrity and a consequent ra- j tional approach toward issues is more important than contrived political controversy and name calling directed toward voting blocs and groups.” Patrick said in his Mon- i statement of principles.
Consistent with his con-dominant
electibility factor, Patrick's background is in business rather than politics.
TYR Sponsors
Patrick’s speech today is
Journalist To Analyze Red Policy
Chinese and Soviet foreign dental clinics, it was carried:policy will be discussed today out by members of the school! by Max Frankel, diplomatic
“Operation Headstart” was j not the School of Dentistry’s an-; swer to President Johnson's anti-poverty program. Aimed: at helping the underprivi-leged who could not afford to take their children to private
on Sundays.
correspondent for the New
| in the Town and Gown foyer. The
„ , , , ,, c- u i York Times Bureau, at 8 p.m Each weekday the School^ ,
of Dentistry's clinical treatments are open to the general public. This community serv-! speech ice performed by some 200 junior and senior dental students is an important phase of their training. Although
notified of eligibility verifi- sponsored by Trojan Young cation by 3 p.m. on April 15. Republicans, one of twro Re-There will be a mandatory publican groups on campus.
with the Founders speech, the USC Republican Club, will distribute campaign will literature on all Republican
candidates meeting at 4 p.m. j In connection that day in 133 Hall.
The election primary
be held April 26 and 27. The j candidates from 9 a.m. to 2
runoff will be conducted on Wednesday. May 4.
p.m. today through Friday in ! front of the Student Union.
they do not handle the unusual dental problems because of extraordinary work involved, they have received
topic of Frankel’s will be “The Communist World in Flux.” The talk is especially topical in view of the present meeting of Communists in Moscow’.
The speech is the first a series of free public lectures on Chinese and Soviet foreign policy being sponsored by the
commendations for their per- Research institute on Com-
formance.
As one dental student said, “it gave me an excellent opportunity to do dental work on my own with a minimum supervision of the professors.”
munist Strategy and Propaganda.
Frankel is a former Moscow bureau chief for the New York Times. This vantage point has given him the opportunity to observe Russia.
Trojans Join U.N. Food Campaign
ed diligently and conscienti- HilIeI Foundation.
ously to prepare the proposed ASSC Constitution. It is a
4:10 Tau Epsilon Phi.
4:20 Sigma Alpha Epsilon
document which fully realizes ancj pj geta p^j
that the quality of student government is dependent up-
on the effectiveness of its Delta Chi
4:30 Tau Kappa Epsilon. 4:40 Gamma Phi Beta and
participation in attaining the goals of the institution.
4:50 University Ha!I.
After a three-hour dinner
Perhaps as you wandered firms and voluntary organi-; Asked if he will be ahlp to u * t ,
, m rr 4. u u ne wlu De aDle lo break, prelims will resume at
past Tommy Trojan yester- zations sponsoring activities concentrate on the business 7-30 with Thera C ' t
day on your way to the Grill through which developing na- 'at hand during the first day Birnkrant
you noticed a bulletin board tions can meet their immedi- 0f the conference, knowing ' *
displaying pictures of ragged ate food needs and develop that the success or failure of
words methods of better crop pro- his
under- duction.
The foundation believes
children with the “Help-for-Self Help” neath.
administration is on the line today, Sullivan said:
“I feel like a Christian
The display was put up by that most rewarding results Scientist with appendicitis.
may be reached when nations We'll just have to wait and
the Collegiate Council for the United Nations as part of the Freedom From Hunger Campaign.
It was shown by members in'0f the USC delegation to the Model United Nations.
The Freedom From Hunger oundation supports a nationwide program of education and information in order to accomplish its objective of overcoming hunger in the world.
The foundation also gives assistance to private business
and people develop their own see what happens.”
7:40 Chi Phi and Gamma Phi Beta.
7:50 Architecture and Fine Arts group and College Hall. 8 p.m. Delta Sigma Phi.
Phi Delts. Kappas 8:10 Phi Delta Theta and
projects and establish to finance them.
It joins with similar organ izations in with the
Food and Agricultural
ways The proposed constitution Kappa Kappa Gamma.
ganization
campaign
1960.
guarantees representation to three segments of student 20 nations and life never before assured a United Nations voice in the ASSC: pendents, foreign
Or-
in the wiiich
8:20 Lillard (small group). All other groups will try out tomorrow from 3 p.m. the inde- until 4:50. Groups are limited students to 10 minutes a performance.
This time includes any ex-
world-wide and graduate students, began in In addition, the bicameral planations the directors may _' (Continued on Page 2) want to give the judges.
SPECIAL REPORT
AT NEW LOCATION
University In Student
Press Expose: Not Union Basement
Bv ANN SALISBURY would have had a press at all
Building, Shown in
Athletic Costs Annual Report
(This is the second of a shown in the annual report Of this total, the
___ - . largest
two-part special report on the is that athletic scholarships, single amount, $25 million, university budget.—The Edi- dormitory and payroll ex- was spent on instruction and
penditures, and on-campus research. This is due in part jobs for athletes come under to rising faculty salaries, paean entirely different heading ing national levels.
tors)
By GREG OBRIEN Assistant Managing Editor
There is a myth among stu- of student aid.
Many people have the mis- if one hadn’t been on the land g. conception that the univer- at the time, Shceewe said.
dent bodies that circulates generation after generation.
Profit Negated
When' that is subtracted
sity press prints the Daily Trojan, a.nd is located below
As soon as the land was purchased, the printing com-
is accepted without ques- from the original income fig-tion by those that hear it. for jure, the once tidy profit be-1 it seems logical, and as a comes negligible. Thus, the
the Student Union. I Pan> was *ja truism by the general pub- Standing alone, it wc
Actually, the Daily Trojan j ment of Student Union. Some ^ ^ profit to the univ
is printed at the Dixon Bell Press on Jefferson Boulevard across the street from Shrine Auditorium, and University Press has moved into a new home.
The University Press is a nonprofit department of USC located on Grand Avenue, which prints pamphlets, booklets, folders, calendars, tickets to sports events, invitations. stationary and programs
result is probably regarded as real money-maker is football
ould bring
profit
season sport, it just man-
The myth says that almost a still every university owes a good ages to cover the cost of the part of its financial life to rest of the athletic program athletic revenue. Expenditures for a large
Anyone who has ever seen private university, such as fans packed into the USC, pose a constant problem
The Master Plan building progFam is something else, however. Much of the money spent there comes under the heading of restricted funds meaning that the donor specifically gave the money for
the purpose of erecting a par-ersity. As Ucular 5uilding.
of the machines which were originally used when the print the!shop was bought are the! there, he said.
Down Under University Press remained beneath the Student Union SO,000
until this December when it Coliseum Mluvc-,aiLv uul
moved into the vacated Hoff- football game at an average and alumni who must see that, -
man rcwtronirs building of $2.50 a head could well they do not exceed the pro- ?ue,U- » _ . ....
for a
Scheewe said the press has be forgiven for believing the jected yearly income.
survived some difficult times, rumor. It “During World War II, many sense. But of the students employed byjdoesnt work out.
Athletics Cost
An example of this is the new Vivian Hall of Engineering. The building, now under construction, will cost a total of So million. However, this
USC-UCLA to~an Vrmv of Ttodnistratore ™oney f not bemg 3pent by
the university, nor conse-
~ ' ' an-
nual budget. The building is being paid for entirely by the Olin Foundation.
seems to make on paper it
The ballots which will be the company were sent overused to vote on the new) seas and the press was left
ASSC constitution were print- without a hand.”
PRECIOUS PRESS—Frank Shelly demonstrates the Original Heidelberg press, which was manufactured in Germany
Daily Trojan Photo by Ed Stapleton
and specially imported for use at the university. Printers who have used it call it the best press in the world.
ed by University Press.
Press Relocated
Robert J. Scheewe, head of the University Press, said that USC originally began the press when it acquired the land on which the von KleinSmid center is now located.
This purchase took place in 1925. At that time a post office, information center and Miller Printing Co. were located next to each other.
“I often wonder if we,
4
A reecnt addition press has been an printing department
to the offset Pre-
viously all printing wras done the income dollar, well over
from a letterpress..
“The new machinery
ables us to print from a metal,the
At USC the problems are just doubled due to extremely rapid growth of the physical plant as well as a concen-In yesterday’s article about trated effort underway for university income, it was the last five years to improve university is the new addition noted that revenue from ath- the academic worth of the to Doheney Library which is repre- university.
Confused Objectives The two at times seem incompatible to those w-ho are
dedicated lo the presj(jen£ 0f financial affairs improvement of ^ „____^____
letic events last year sented about three cents of
$1 million.
If
someone were to check primarily annual report of the immediate
Big Spenders
Other such money being spent for. but not by. the
being paid for by a grant under the Higher Education Act and the Ford Foundation.
Dr. Carl M. Franklin, vice-
plate. instead of directly from treasurer, he would also find one or the other
the type set up on the linotype machine,” Scheewe said.
Numerous Machines Among the fifteen machines used to produce printed material are a Heidelberg (Continued on Page 2\
that athletic expenditures came to about $700,000. The difference, they would conclude, would come to a tidy $500,000 — a rather nice profit.
However, what is
Last year the university budget called for expenditures totaling about $42 mil-, , . . , ...._
matched at- Plete? nearly S1S
told the faculty last December that the university, following the announcement of the Master Plan, had com-
lion. This was most to the dollar by income derived from sources noted in
worth of building by June 30, 1964. Since that time, thir-
not; yesterday's article. i
I (Continued ©n Page 2)
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 97, March 30, 1966 |
| Full text | WEATHER There will be low clouds and local fog this mornings with hazy sunshine. Temperatures will be 52 to 75. 1966 SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION University of Southern California DAILY # TROJAN Vol. XVII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30,1966 No. 97 &£££££ fecial Election to Decide Fate of ASSC Government A second suit was filed Monday in an attempt to Hock the Hoover-USC Ur-Kin Redevelopment Project from becoming a reality. The Hoover Area Improvement Association. Inc.. which filed a suit Friday against the city of Lop Angeles calling! for an election to determine whether the project shall be undertaken, this time is challenging the legality of the entire Hoover Renewal plan. Halt Proceedings The association asked that the plan be declared unconstitutional and unenforceable, and requested the court to halt any further proceedings ponding a judicial revew of the case. The suit charged that the project would make public funds and land available to USC for its expansion . According to the association's attorney. Floyd H. Norris. the state constitution prohibit? Calfornia or any subdivision to aid religious sects, churches or creeds to help support any school, college orj hospital which they control. Methodist Trustees USC was founded by the Methodist Church, and the association charged that the deed of trust provides that a majority of the university's trustees be of that faith. WILLIAM PATRICK . . . Gubernatorial Hopeful Republican Candidate To Speak William Penn Patrick, candidate for the Republican nomination for California governor, will discuss ‘The Role of the College Student in Politics” at noon today in 226 Founders Hall. Patrick is seeking the gov-A release from the group ernorship on the belief that stated the suit was brought tlie electibility of a candied date for office on any ticket must be to his! because of “capricious arbitrary action by the Los Angeles CitjT Council in not:integrity, to his talents and investigating the condition of willingness to go to the subordinated his Dentists Help Local Youngsters Bv LUDY A. ONGKEKO Busloads of school children swarm to USC almost I daily, not to see a zoo or a museum, but to go to the , dentist. The School of Dentistry is called by many youngsters i from the Los Angeles County School System their second I school. At the Dental School, these children receive instruction on oral hygiene and dental care and see films. I* or as little as $1.25. some receive dental treatment. Dr. John I. Ingle, dean of thej School of Dentistry, explained that the fee paid by the' school children is a token fee to cover medicine costs. Free Treatment Only recently, “Operation! Headstart" a charitable! movement sponsored by thej school under the overall di-j rection of Dr. Gerald Kirsch- ' baum. concluded its free clini-j cal treatment to about a hundred indigent children be-1 tween the ages of 41 '■> to 51 years from the South Los An-geles-Bell Gardens-Montebello School Districts.. Students Will Vote On New Constitution By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor The hopes of aproximatelv tf> constitutional convention delegates for an ASSC government without petty political bickering ride on the passage of the proposed ASSC Constitution, which students will vote on today. Voting booths will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park in front of Doheny Library for one day only. Ironically ASSC President John Sullivan, who has favored a change in the governmental structure for the past year, will not be able to vote in today's balloting. Sullivan Away He is scheduled to leave at 9 this morning for Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he will be attending a confer-e n c e on cultural programming in foreign affairs. Sullivan, chairman of the Preliminary Tryouts Set For Songfest Songfest preliminaries are set for today and tomorrow in Bovard Auditorium. Groups scheduled to try out today include: 3:10 Pi Kappa Alpha. 3:20 Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Gamma Delta. 3:30 Alpha Tau Omega convention, which spent more and the USC Potters Guild. the FOOD FOR THOUGHT—This exhibit in front of Tommy Trojan yesterday was part of a world-wide campaign to feed Daily Trojan Photos by Ed Stapleton the hungry. (From left) Nancy Finn, Dawn Chatty, and Susan Helms represent a Trojan effort in the campaign. than a month drafting proposed document mented yesterday: ‘The convention has work- 3:50 Kappa Alpha Theta com- and Beta Theta Pi. Hillel Foundation 4 p.m. Bnai B'rith blight when there were people with principles, charges of purposeful falsifi- platitudes. ration of records by the Community Redevelopment Agency. in order to qualify the area for renewal.’’ ASSC Petitions Out After Easte Petitions for all ASSC offices will be available day. April 11, Tuesday, April 12, and Wednesday, April 13 demnation of the only. The petitions must be turned in by 4 pm. on April 13 to 324 Student Union. Those who petition wall be Principles Statement “I believe that political integrity and a consequent ra- j tional approach toward issues is more important than contrived political controversy and name calling directed toward voting blocs and groups.” Patrick said in his Mon- i statement of principles. Consistent with his con-dominant electibility factor, Patrick's background is in business rather than politics. TYR Sponsors Patrick’s speech today is Journalist To Analyze Red Policy Chinese and Soviet foreign dental clinics, it was carried:policy will be discussed today out by members of the school! by Max Frankel, diplomatic “Operation Headstart” was j not the School of Dentistry’s an-; swer to President Johnson's anti-poverty program. Aimed: at helping the underprivi-leged who could not afford to take their children to private on Sundays. correspondent for the New in the Town and Gown foyer. The „ , , , ,, c- u i York Times Bureau, at 8 p.m Each weekday the School^ , of Dentistry's clinical treatments are open to the general public. This community serv-! speech ice performed by some 200 junior and senior dental students is an important phase of their training. Although notified of eligibility verifi- sponsored by Trojan Young cation by 3 p.m. on April 15. Republicans, one of twro Re-There will be a mandatory publican groups on campus. with the Founders speech, the USC Republican Club, will distribute campaign will literature on all Republican candidates meeting at 4 p.m. j In connection that day in 133 Hall. The election primary be held April 26 and 27. The j candidates from 9 a.m. to 2 runoff will be conducted on Wednesday. May 4. p.m. today through Friday in ! front of the Student Union. they do not handle the unusual dental problems because of extraordinary work involved, they have received topic of Frankel’s will be “The Communist World in Flux.” The talk is especially topical in view of the present meeting of Communists in Moscow’. The speech is the first a series of free public lectures on Chinese and Soviet foreign policy being sponsored by the commendations for their per- Research institute on Com- formance. As one dental student said, “it gave me an excellent opportunity to do dental work on my own with a minimum supervision of the professors.” munist Strategy and Propaganda. Frankel is a former Moscow bureau chief for the New York Times. This vantage point has given him the opportunity to observe Russia. Trojans Join U.N. Food Campaign ed diligently and conscienti- HilIeI Foundation. ously to prepare the proposed ASSC Constitution. It is a 4:10 Tau Epsilon Phi. 4:20 Sigma Alpha Epsilon document which fully realizes ancj pj geta p^j that the quality of student government is dependent up- on the effectiveness of its Delta Chi 4:30 Tau Kappa Epsilon. 4:40 Gamma Phi Beta and participation in attaining the goals of the institution. 4:50 University Ha!I. After a three-hour dinner Perhaps as you wandered firms and voluntary organi-; Asked if he will be ahlp to u * t , , m rr 4. u u ne wlu De aDle lo break, prelims will resume at past Tommy Trojan yester- zations sponsoring activities concentrate on the business 7-30 with Thera C ' t day on your way to the Grill through which developing na- 'at hand during the first day Birnkrant you noticed a bulletin board tions can meet their immedi- 0f the conference, knowing ' * displaying pictures of ragged ate food needs and develop that the success or failure of words methods of better crop pro- his under- duction. The foundation believes children with the “Help-for-Self Help” neath. administration is on the line today, Sullivan said: “I feel like a Christian The display was put up by that most rewarding results Scientist with appendicitis. may be reached when nations We'll just have to wait and the Collegiate Council for the United Nations as part of the Freedom From Hunger Campaign. It was shown by members in'0f the USC delegation to the Model United Nations. The Freedom From Hunger oundation supports a nationwide program of education and information in order to accomplish its objective of overcoming hunger in the world. The foundation also gives assistance to private business and people develop their own see what happens.” 7:40 Chi Phi and Gamma Phi Beta. 7:50 Architecture and Fine Arts group and College Hall. 8 p.m. Delta Sigma Phi. Phi Delts. Kappas 8:10 Phi Delta Theta and projects and establish to finance them. It joins with similar organ izations in with the Food and Agricultural ways The proposed constitution Kappa Kappa Gamma. ganization campaign 1960. guarantees representation to three segments of student 20 nations and life never before assured a United Nations voice in the ASSC: pendents, foreign Or- in the wiiich 8:20 Lillard (small group). All other groups will try out tomorrow from 3 p.m. the inde- until 4:50. Groups are limited students to 10 minutes a performance. This time includes any ex- world-wide and graduate students, began in In addition, the bicameral planations the directors may _' (Continued on Page 2) want to give the judges. SPECIAL REPORT AT NEW LOCATION University In Student Press Expose: Not Union Basement Bv ANN SALISBURY would have had a press at all Building, Shown in Athletic Costs Annual Report (This is the second of a shown in the annual report Of this total, the ___ - . largest two-part special report on the is that athletic scholarships, single amount, $25 million, university budget.—The Edi- dormitory and payroll ex- was spent on instruction and penditures, and on-campus research. This is due in part jobs for athletes come under to rising faculty salaries, paean entirely different heading ing national levels. tors) By GREG OBRIEN Assistant Managing Editor There is a myth among stu- of student aid. Many people have the mis- if one hadn’t been on the land g. conception that the univer- at the time, Shceewe said. dent bodies that circulates generation after generation. Profit Negated When' that is subtracted sity press prints the Daily Trojan, a.nd is located below As soon as the land was purchased, the printing com- is accepted without ques- from the original income fig-tion by those that hear it. for jure, the once tidy profit be-1 it seems logical, and as a comes negligible. Thus, the the Student Union. I Pan> was *ja truism by the general pub- Standing alone, it wc Actually, the Daily Trojan j ment of Student Union. Some ^ ^ profit to the univ is printed at the Dixon Bell Press on Jefferson Boulevard across the street from Shrine Auditorium, and University Press has moved into a new home. The University Press is a nonprofit department of USC located on Grand Avenue, which prints pamphlets, booklets, folders, calendars, tickets to sports events, invitations. stationary and programs result is probably regarded as real money-maker is football ould bring profit season sport, it just man- The myth says that almost a still every university owes a good ages to cover the cost of the part of its financial life to rest of the athletic program athletic revenue. Expenditures for a large Anyone who has ever seen private university, such as fans packed into the USC, pose a constant problem The Master Plan building progFam is something else, however. Much of the money spent there comes under the heading of restricted funds meaning that the donor specifically gave the money for the purpose of erecting a par-ersity. As Ucular 5uilding. of the machines which were originally used when the print the!shop was bought are the! there, he said. Down Under University Press remained beneath the Student Union SO,000 until this December when it Coliseum Mluvc-,aiLv uul moved into the vacated Hoff- football game at an average and alumni who must see that, - man rcwtronirs building of $2.50 a head could well they do not exceed the pro- ?ue,U- » _ . .... for a Scheewe said the press has be forgiven for believing the jected yearly income. survived some difficult times, rumor. It “During World War II, many sense. But of the students employed byjdoesnt work out. Athletics Cost An example of this is the new Vivian Hall of Engineering. The building, now under construction, will cost a total of So million. However, this USC-UCLA to~an Vrmv of Ttodnistratore ™oney f not bemg 3pent by the university, nor conse- ~ ' ' an- nual budget. The building is being paid for entirely by the Olin Foundation. seems to make on paper it The ballots which will be the company were sent overused to vote on the new) seas and the press was left ASSC constitution were print- without a hand.” PRECIOUS PRESS—Frank Shelly demonstrates the Original Heidelberg press, which was manufactured in Germany Daily Trojan Photo by Ed Stapleton and specially imported for use at the university. Printers who have used it call it the best press in the world. ed by University Press. Press Relocated Robert J. Scheewe, head of the University Press, said that USC originally began the press when it acquired the land on which the von KleinSmid center is now located. This purchase took place in 1925. At that time a post office, information center and Miller Printing Co. were located next to each other. “I often wonder if we, 4 A reecnt addition press has been an printing department to the offset Pre- viously all printing wras done the income dollar, well over from a letterpress.. “The new machinery ables us to print from a metal,the At USC the problems are just doubled due to extremely rapid growth of the physical plant as well as a concen-In yesterday’s article about trated effort underway for university income, it was the last five years to improve university is the new addition noted that revenue from ath- the academic worth of the to Doheney Library which is repre- university. Confused Objectives The two at times seem incompatible to those w-ho are dedicated lo the presj(jen£ 0f financial affairs improvement of ^ „____^____ letic events last year sented about three cents of $1 million. If someone were to check primarily annual report of the immediate Big Spenders Other such money being spent for. but not by. the being paid for by a grant under the Higher Education Act and the Ford Foundation. Dr. Carl M. Franklin, vice- plate. instead of directly from treasurer, he would also find one or the other the type set up on the linotype machine,” Scheewe said. Numerous Machines Among the fifteen machines used to produce printed material are a Heidelberg (Continued on Page 2\ that athletic expenditures came to about $700,000. The difference, they would conclude, would come to a tidy $500,000 — a rather nice profit. However, what is Last year the university budget called for expenditures totaling about $42 mil-, , . . , ...._ matched at- Plete? nearly S1S told the faculty last December that the university, following the announcement of the Master Plan, had com- lion. This was most to the dollar by income derived from sources noted in worth of building by June 30, 1964. Since that time, thir- not; yesterday's article. i I (Continued ©n Page 2) |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1433/uschist-dt-1966-03-30~001.tif |
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