Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 117, May 10, 1966 |
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WEATHER University of Southern California 19 6 6
14 will b» cloudy with light sh©w- SWEEPSTAKES WINNER
t*3 65 d^qrees, but wirmpr Wed- 1 A II \/ .w- r 1 1 y / 1 | A \ OP
nesday. Th* braches will be as warm as Civic Center, with a water I 1 f\ I I Y I |\ 1 II r\ ! \ CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION
♦rmperatur* of 62. JLX jl jL JLjL-J JL ^ JL JLJL ^
Vol. XY1I
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA. TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966
No. 117
7 Picked To Lead '66 Yells
Seven men wore chosen yesterday ns veil leaders for 1966-67.’
Yell leaders are: Jim Brown (junior. Pi Kappa Alpha). who was a yell leader this year: Rollin Foss (junior, unaffiliated): Jeff Herten (sophomore. Kappa Alpha), another current yell leader; Pat Larkin (sophomore. Sigma Chi); Bob Mo-lone.v (junior. Sigma Alpha Epsilon): Rick Meyer (sophomore. Kappa Sigma): and Pete Neuguier (junior. Kappa Sigma >.
The seven were chosen from a list of 22 applicants, all of whom were interviewed yesterday by Dean of Students Paul A. Bloland. Bob Jani. director of special events, and Bill Schmidt, one of last year’s yell leaders.
Only five yell leaders will perform at any one game, but the extra pair was added to combat the problem of illness. The seven yell leaders will alternate.
Jani said the yell king, traditionally elected by the student body as part of the campus-wide elections, would be elected in the fall.
The date of the elections will be announced during the first week of the fall semester.
&TJUCs Kerr Explains Mefj/toreUniversity Problems
By ’JOE TETHEROW g
ROSE GREEN
. . Leaves Troy
EDITH MILLER TUFTS
. . . Retires
2 Retire from Faculty Of Social Work School
Two women retiring from lhe faculty of School of Social Work were honored by alumni luncheon in tiie Foyer of Town and Gown Saturday.
Miss Rose Green and Mrs. Edith Miller Tufts have taught at USC since 191b and 1955.
Gifts were presented to Miss Green and Dr. Tufts University of Minnesota foi and the formation of an four years, alumni scholarship fund in £)r. Tufts is a graduate of their names was announced Pittsburgh. Bryn Mawr Colby Dr. Arlien Johnson, dean iege> and Baker University
emeritus of the School of So- and ajso jjj Special graduate
work at Boston University.
cial Work
John G- Milner, professor of social work and winner ot a SI.000 USC Associates award for excellent teaching was master of ceremonies.
When Jeane Dixon publicly announced that ‘‘a blueeyed Democratic president elected in 1960 will be assassinated" in Parade Magazine back in 1956, nobody paid much attention. When John F. Kennedy was shot to death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, everybody wished they had.
Mrs. Dixon, who also successfully foretold the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, the suicide of Marilyn Monroe, the adoption cf communism by China and the Russian Sputnik, again gazed into her crystal ball Satur-^,p day at the Spring Writer's ! ? Conference, sponsored by the USC chapter cf Theta Sigma ave Phi.
Make Predictions
The Washington psychic, returning t:> her native California for the first time in over 20 years, told a Hancock Auditorium news conference, “Our great trouble in America is going to be China and the racial problem.
“China will be admitted to the UN as time goes by,” she said, “but we won’t always have a UN.”
She could not. however.
Counselors For Incoming Frosh Sought
Vickie Rue. recently elected sophomore representative, became the first 1966-67 officer to carry through on a campaign pledge yesterday, as she announced plans for a sophomore fellow program.
Under this program a sophomore will be assigned to counsel two or three freshmen. The freshmen will thus get a more personal orientation than is available under the regular university orientation program.
Applications are available to current freshmen this week in the Student Activities Office. 324 Student Union.
Miss Rue feels the sophomores should be in charge of this project because they are the closest in age and understanding to the problems of the incoming freshmen.
All applicants will automatically become counselors. They will be given the names of the two or three freshman assigned to them and will be required to send them letters of greeting during the summer.
When the freshmen come to the campus in the fall, they will meet their counselors.
“From that point on, wc hope the sophomore will take the initiative and assist in any way he or she can in makin 5 the first two or three weeks of school an easier adjustment for the freshman,’’ Miss Rue said.
She added that freshman men will be assigned to sophomore men counselors and freshmen women to sophomore women counselors.
'Mademoiselle' SeeJcs Models
Representatives of Ma-demoiselle .Magazine will be on campus today to interview potenlia! models for fashion pirlures for ils August issue.
Nancy Benson, a fashion editor of the magazine, and David McCabe, a photographer, will interview coeds from 10 a.m. to noon in 212 Stndent Union.
The women who are chosen will earn $5 an hour or $25 a day. The magazine prefers that applicants be between five feet six and five feel 10 inches tall, thin, photogenic, and wear size five to ten dresses.
Dr. Tufts supervised the research dissertations of the first two students who were granted the doctor of social
A 1925 graduate of the work deSree at USC.
University of Pennsylvania. Her current interest is m say when the United Nations Miss Green earned the Mas- Lhe constructive use of au- will falter, ter of Social Science degree thority in the prevention and one 0f her more star-
from Smith College in 1929 control of juvenile delin- tling predictions, she said Before coming to USC quency and research on so- that the United States and Miss Green taught at the cial work education. Russia will become allies
against Red China. She re-vealed the same thing to President Roosevelt in 1945, several weeks before his death.
“There will be more racial
Foreign Student to Get His M.S. Posthumously
Hassan Ahmad El-Hassan. a foreign student who disturbances in Los Angeles died more than a week ago in a skin-diving accident, before the year :s over, but will be posthumously awarded an MS. from the Psy- not as large as last year,” sical Education Department. she said.
The announcement came yesterday from Registrar Predicts Kiots
William Hall, who said that She also preaicted race
permission requested of the feller Foundation, which had graduate school by the Phy been sponsoring Mr. El-Has-sical Education Department san in his master's work, in-had been granted. Hall has dicated they would extend reinstated Mr. El-Hassan's their sponsorship through his spring registration. The Sud- doctoral program.
In addition, honorarv mem-
SENIOR GIFT—Senior Glenelien Cooper watches as Dwight R. Ryerson draws a rough sketch of the design for the
Daily Troian Photo by Liana Kruse
Seniors +0 Give Sundial
sundiai he has been commissioned to sculpture for the 1966 graduating class' permanent gift to the school.
$50,000 GIFT
Industrialist Contributes To Med Research Center
Speaks
At 3-Day Confab
By TERRV BALKS
Sports Editor
Educators from all parts of the nation listened like the students they teach as Clark Kerr, president of the University of California. lectured yesterday to them on “Toward the More Perfect University/'
Kerr's speech was the major address at yesterday’s morning session of "The University in America’’ convocation currently in a three-day run at the Beverly Hilton H^tel u:tde.' he auspices of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.
Kerr. UC president since 1958. shocked some of the idealists in attendance when he said. “There is not now, never has bten. and never will be the perfect university.”
But he quickly add^d that the search for one should never be halted.
1’n paralleled Vitality
Kerr advocated that at least a segment of the American university system might be considered in a state of crisis but that "most of it is moving along with unparalleled vitality and productivity. and in harmony.”
The portion of the university system that Kerr focused his attention on a trouble spot is undergraduate instruction, which he says is finding it increasingly harder to co-exist with the university’s two ocher main research and
A $50,000 gift by Dr. pus,” Dr. Roger O. Egeberg. million grant from the Na-Eugene W. Kettering, Ohio dean of the School of Medi- tional Institutes of Health, industrialist, to the School of cine. said. “This building will Previously announced con-riots in Washington and New Medicine was announced to- house research and teaching tributions have included SI functions York, charging that all such day by President Topping. facilities for the departments million from Mr. and Mrs. H. service. riots are Communist-inspired. The contribution was desig- of OIOChemistry. medicine. Leslie Hoffman. $500,000 “Research. <*raduate train-When asked if she saw any nated for the Elaine Stevely micr°biology. pathology, psy- from the Hastings Founda- jn^ ancj service arp carried lull in the fighting in Viet- Hoffman Medical Research chlatry- public health, and tion. and $200,000 from Wil- forward she said. “There will Center, a S4.76-million, nine- su^gery. ..........-
lard W. Keith. Hoffman and
anese student's thesis and class work had been com bership had recently been pleted enough so that his bestowed upon him by the professors could sufficiently California Association for grade the material, allowing Health, Physical Education the degree to be given. and Recreation, a division of
Mr. El-Hassan’s thesis and the national association, letters of recommendation wall be sent with his diploma to his wife, said Professor Leonore C. Smith, the foreign students’ academic ad viser.
Onlv last week the Rocke-
Mr. El-Hassan drowned while trying to aid a fellow diver who was trapped in a kelp bed off Santa Catalina Island. The accident occurred on a physical education field trip.
negotiations in story building now under con- funding for the Hoftman Keith are both members of rejHte a[so to
be peace 0 ____________0______________
about 90 days, but it will be struction on the 12-acre USCi Medical Research Center was the USC board of trustees, when our enemies are ready.” medical campus near Los An- obtained by I SC from pri- The buildin^
She said that if Barry geles County General Hos- vate soutces to match a S2-Mrs. Hoffman.
Goldwater had been elected pital. to office, “he would have gone on to win the war and we would have come out on top.”
A few of Mrs. Dixon’s more frightful statements
through specialization. and thev increasingly
The Hoffman structure is one of the new buildings called for in the Master Plan, and will adjoin the Burrell O.
Cranston Gives Views on Politics
JUDGES ANNOUNCED
Research
Building.
predicted germ warfare in which there “will be more It be a much-needed By f] HARVEY
(Continued on Page 4) addition to the medical cam- ^ I here seems to be a widespread feeling in the
Lnited States that government is a necessarv evil hut politics are an unnecessary evil. State Comptroller Alan
thp outside community, to government, is named for industry, to the professions. to agriculture.’’ Kerr continued.
“Undergraduate instruction, on thp contrary, is inherently more internally oriented—toward the student on campus —- and some of these students are interested more in generalization than in specialization
Large-Scale Teaching The crisi? centers largely
Participants Rehearse Songfest Finale Tonight
says. “They have adapted themselves to teaching on a
All Songfest participants must attend tonight’s massed rehearsal at 6 p.m. in Bovard Auditorium.
Guest conductor John Scott Trotter will rehearse the grand finale with the participants and the Trojan Symphonic Band in preparation for Thursday's rehearsal of the entire program at the Hollywood Bowl.
Songfest is set for Saturday evening at 8 at the Bowl.
Tickets are now on sale in the university ticket office, 209 Student Union, at the following prices: $3.50 for box seats. $2.50 and $2 for reserved seats, and $1.50 for general admission.
Dean of Women .loan M. Schaefer will serve as mistress of ceremonies for the thirteenth edition of the musical extravaganza.
Sixteen groups will compete for the Tommy Awards, symbol of excellence and enterprise in entertainment.
Judging Songfest will be Robert Fowells. choral director at Cal State College at Los Angeles: Jerry Livingston, composer of “The Ballad of Cat Ballou;’’ Lloyd Stone, a member of the Los Angeles City Bureau of Music; Brian Sullivan, opera tenor and a USC alumnus; Don Weiss, choral director at UCLA: and John Zinn, musical administrator for a motion picture firm.
In past years Songfest judging panels usually consisted of six or seven famous songwriters or musicians known to all for their popular songs. However, in keeping with this years theme of eliminating much of the professional connotations of Songfest, not quality-wise hut personality-wise, the judging panel consists of experts in the music field who are less well-known.
By having competent judges who are not as famous as some of the past judges. Dobry feels people will come to Songfest to see the student performers rather than the judges. This is also the reasoning behind having a university figure host Songl'est, rather than a professional entertainer.
SONGFEST HOPEFULS—Trish Soodik is the featured performer in "Bedtime Story," Songfest entry of Theta C^hi and Birnkrant, Songfest is Saturday night.
„ . , , *-----------------------in the humanities and the
Cianston said Fndav befoie 19 people in Founders social sciences where as Kerr Hall.
“This is a silly idea,” he'~--
said. “You can't separate done everything we could to la^eT'scale ” politics from government, encourage negotiations so Kerr sees three approaches
That is an idea dangerous to far.” that might Iead tf> a regn_
a emocracy. « GOV. BROWN, TAXES lution of these internal prob-
It is dangerous because if — “Gov. Brown never said he lems. you abolish politicians, you wasn't going to raise t i.xes, "The first is to withdraw have a dictatorship, said In 1958, everyone knew that from thp crisis area: do Cranston, who lost in the whoever wras elected governor away with the lower division 1964 Democratic primary for would have to raise the cr even with all undergrad-senator to Pierre Salinger. taxes because the state was uate instruction. This solu-“The final basic decisions out of money. tion over-reaches the prob-
about our society: if we can “Whoever is elected gov tern.” Kerr said-find the way to a peaceful ernor this year will also have Kerr’s second and most world, howr public funds will to raise the taxes. The rea- practical solution is the one be used, the real purposes of son is population growth. offered in the Muscotine Re-our society, these will be de- “We have one new port which told what could
termined through processes of jn California °verv minntP and should be done at Kerr's politics. Some are born here, others institution at Berkeley:
Responsible People are migrants. But with rnor? “LO make improvements and ' “We need to have respon- people you need more facili- adjustments within the exrst-s.ible people in politics who ties and services: more hospi- inS university structure-’ are responsible to the needs tals. more jails, more roads.” Some of. thf devices would and hopes of the people. • BERKELEY PROTES- (Continued on Pas;e 4>
“Just the other day. I heard TORS — “I am delighted that ■
Ronald Reagan say that we the students of today have AccOUntinQ Fl'el'f must kick the politicians out shown an intc.resr. in pditica . _
of Sacramento. This angered rather than in how many gold me. I’m a politician and proud fish they can swallow as the of it.” students of my generation did.
In a question-and-answer “Remember, young people period that followed, Crans- had more to do with the 1961 jton commented on the follow'- Civil Rights Bill than anyo.ie ing subjects: else by going down to the
• VIETNAM — “I don't South and W'orking with the think we can pull out. But‘Negroes. They did a great I'm against more bombing or deal for the Negroes and the any steps to escalate the war. United States.”
I think we should try to ne- • MAYOR YORTY — “I gotiate and have elections think Gov. Brown is wrong held there. when he says Mayor Yorty
j “If it appears that the;is a paranoid because he Communists do not want to thinks eveiyone is against
negotiate wre muiit just keep him. Sam is a realist. Every- secretary ion trying. I don't think wetve,one is against him,'’ ,
Selects Officers
Reta Alpha Psi. the na tional honorary accounting fraternity, held its semi-annual elections meeting on Thursday. May 5. The purpose was to select the officers for the fall semester.
The newly elected officers are: Mike Barth, president: George Webster, vice-president; Nancy Carver. report secretary: Ken Smith, treasurer; and Carol L e e, corresponding
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 117, May 10, 1966 |
| Full text | WEATHER University of Southern California 19 6 6 14 will b» cloudy with light sh©w- SWEEPSTAKES WINNER t*3 65 d^qrees, but wirmpr Wed- 1 A II \/ .w- r 1 1 y / 1 A \ OP nesday. Th* braches will be as warm as Civic Center, with a water I 1 f\ I I Y I \ 1 II r\ ! \ CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION ♦rmperatur* of 62. JLX jl jL JLjL-J JL ^ JL JLJL ^ Vol. XY1I LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA. TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966 No. 117 7 Picked To Lead '66 Yells Seven men wore chosen yesterday ns veil leaders for 1966-67.’ Yell leaders are: Jim Brown (junior. Pi Kappa Alpha). who was a yell leader this year: Rollin Foss (junior, unaffiliated): Jeff Herten (sophomore. Kappa Alpha), another current yell leader; Pat Larkin (sophomore. Sigma Chi); Bob Mo-lone.v (junior. Sigma Alpha Epsilon): Rick Meyer (sophomore. Kappa Sigma): and Pete Neuguier (junior. Kappa Sigma >. The seven were chosen from a list of 22 applicants, all of whom were interviewed yesterday by Dean of Students Paul A. Bloland. Bob Jani. director of special events, and Bill Schmidt, one of last year’s yell leaders. Only five yell leaders will perform at any one game, but the extra pair was added to combat the problem of illness. The seven yell leaders will alternate. Jani said the yell king, traditionally elected by the student body as part of the campus-wide elections, would be elected in the fall. The date of the elections will be announced during the first week of the fall semester. &TJUCs Kerr Explains Mefj/toreUniversity Problems By ’JOE TETHEROW g ROSE GREEN . . Leaves Troy EDITH MILLER TUFTS . . . Retires 2 Retire from Faculty Of Social Work School Two women retiring from lhe faculty of School of Social Work were honored by alumni luncheon in tiie Foyer of Town and Gown Saturday. Miss Rose Green and Mrs. Edith Miller Tufts have taught at USC since 191b and 1955. Gifts were presented to Miss Green and Dr. Tufts University of Minnesota foi and the formation of an four years, alumni scholarship fund in £)r. Tufts is a graduate of their names was announced Pittsburgh. Bryn Mawr Colby Dr. Arlien Johnson, dean iege> and Baker University emeritus of the School of So- and ajso jjj Special graduate work at Boston University. cial Work John G- Milner, professor of social work and winner ot a SI.000 USC Associates award for excellent teaching was master of ceremonies. When Jeane Dixon publicly announced that ‘‘a blueeyed Democratic president elected in 1960 will be assassinated" in Parade Magazine back in 1956, nobody paid much attention. When John F. Kennedy was shot to death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, everybody wished they had. Mrs. Dixon, who also successfully foretold the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, the suicide of Marilyn Monroe, the adoption cf communism by China and the Russian Sputnik, again gazed into her crystal ball Satur-^,p day at the Spring Writer's ! ? Conference, sponsored by the USC chapter cf Theta Sigma ave Phi. Make Predictions The Washington psychic, returning t:> her native California for the first time in over 20 years, told a Hancock Auditorium news conference, “Our great trouble in America is going to be China and the racial problem. “China will be admitted to the UN as time goes by,” she said, “but we won’t always have a UN.” She could not. however. Counselors For Incoming Frosh Sought Vickie Rue. recently elected sophomore representative, became the first 1966-67 officer to carry through on a campaign pledge yesterday, as she announced plans for a sophomore fellow program. Under this program a sophomore will be assigned to counsel two or three freshmen. The freshmen will thus get a more personal orientation than is available under the regular university orientation program. Applications are available to current freshmen this week in the Student Activities Office. 324 Student Union. Miss Rue feels the sophomores should be in charge of this project because they are the closest in age and understanding to the problems of the incoming freshmen. All applicants will automatically become counselors. They will be given the names of the two or three freshman assigned to them and will be required to send them letters of greeting during the summer. When the freshmen come to the campus in the fall, they will meet their counselors. “From that point on, wc hope the sophomore will take the initiative and assist in any way he or she can in makin 5 the first two or three weeks of school an easier adjustment for the freshman,’’ Miss Rue said. She added that freshman men will be assigned to sophomore men counselors and freshmen women to sophomore women counselors. 'Mademoiselle' SeeJcs Models Representatives of Ma-demoiselle .Magazine will be on campus today to interview potenlia! models for fashion pirlures for ils August issue. Nancy Benson, a fashion editor of the magazine, and David McCabe, a photographer, will interview coeds from 10 a.m. to noon in 212 Stndent Union. The women who are chosen will earn $5 an hour or $25 a day. The magazine prefers that applicants be between five feet six and five feel 10 inches tall, thin, photogenic, and wear size five to ten dresses. Dr. Tufts supervised the research dissertations of the first two students who were granted the doctor of social A 1925 graduate of the work deSree at USC. University of Pennsylvania. Her current interest is m say when the United Nations Miss Green earned the Mas- Lhe constructive use of au- will falter, ter of Social Science degree thority in the prevention and one 0f her more star- from Smith College in 1929 control of juvenile delin- tling predictions, she said Before coming to USC quency and research on so- that the United States and Miss Green taught at the cial work education. Russia will become allies against Red China. She re-vealed the same thing to President Roosevelt in 1945, several weeks before his death. “There will be more racial Foreign Student to Get His M.S. Posthumously Hassan Ahmad El-Hassan. a foreign student who disturbances in Los Angeles died more than a week ago in a skin-diving accident, before the year :s over, but will be posthumously awarded an MS. from the Psy- not as large as last year,” sical Education Department. she said. The announcement came yesterday from Registrar Predicts Kiots William Hall, who said that She also preaicted race permission requested of the feller Foundation, which had graduate school by the Phy been sponsoring Mr. El-Has-sical Education Department san in his master's work, in-had been granted. Hall has dicated they would extend reinstated Mr. El-Hassan's their sponsorship through his spring registration. The Sud- doctoral program. In addition, honorarv mem- SENIOR GIFT—Senior Glenelien Cooper watches as Dwight R. Ryerson draws a rough sketch of the design for the Daily Troian Photo by Liana Kruse Seniors +0 Give Sundial sundiai he has been commissioned to sculpture for the 1966 graduating class' permanent gift to the school. $50,000 GIFT Industrialist Contributes To Med Research Center Speaks At 3-Day Confab By TERRV BALKS Sports Editor Educators from all parts of the nation listened like the students they teach as Clark Kerr, president of the University of California. lectured yesterday to them on “Toward the More Perfect University/' Kerr's speech was the major address at yesterday’s morning session of "The University in America’’ convocation currently in a three-day run at the Beverly Hilton H^tel u:tde.' he auspices of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. Kerr. UC president since 1958. shocked some of the idealists in attendance when he said. “There is not now, never has bten. and never will be the perfect university.” But he quickly add^d that the search for one should never be halted. 1’n paralleled Vitality Kerr advocated that at least a segment of the American university system might be considered in a state of crisis but that "most of it is moving along with unparalleled vitality and productivity. and in harmony.” The portion of the university system that Kerr focused his attention on a trouble spot is undergraduate instruction, which he says is finding it increasingly harder to co-exist with the university’s two ocher main research and A $50,000 gift by Dr. pus,” Dr. Roger O. Egeberg. million grant from the Na-Eugene W. Kettering, Ohio dean of the School of Medi- tional Institutes of Health, industrialist, to the School of cine. said. “This building will Previously announced con-riots in Washington and New Medicine was announced to- house research and teaching tributions have included SI functions York, charging that all such day by President Topping. facilities for the departments million from Mr. and Mrs. H. service. riots are Communist-inspired. The contribution was desig- of OIOChemistry. medicine. Leslie Hoffman. $500,000 “Research. <*raduate train-When asked if she saw any nated for the Elaine Stevely micr°biology. pathology, psy- from the Hastings Founda- jn^ ancj service arp carried lull in the fighting in Viet- Hoffman Medical Research chlatry- public health, and tion. and $200,000 from Wil- forward she said. “There will Center, a S4.76-million, nine- su^gery. ..........- lard W. Keith. Hoffman and anese student's thesis and class work had been com bership had recently been pleted enough so that his bestowed upon him by the professors could sufficiently California Association for grade the material, allowing Health, Physical Education the degree to be given. and Recreation, a division of Mr. El-Hassan’s thesis and the national association, letters of recommendation wall be sent with his diploma to his wife, said Professor Leonore C. Smith, the foreign students’ academic ad viser. Onlv last week the Rocke- Mr. El-Hassan drowned while trying to aid a fellow diver who was trapped in a kelp bed off Santa Catalina Island. The accident occurred on a physical education field trip. negotiations in story building now under con- funding for the Hoftman Keith are both members of rejHte a[so to be peace 0 ____________0______________ about 90 days, but it will be struction on the 12-acre USCi Medical Research Center was the USC board of trustees, when our enemies are ready.” medical campus near Los An- obtained by I SC from pri- The buildin^ She said that if Barry geles County General Hos- vate soutces to match a S2-Mrs. Hoffman. Goldwater had been elected pital. to office, “he would have gone on to win the war and we would have come out on top.” A few of Mrs. Dixon’s more frightful statements through specialization. and thev increasingly The Hoffman structure is one of the new buildings called for in the Master Plan, and will adjoin the Burrell O. Cranston Gives Views on Politics JUDGES ANNOUNCED Research Building. predicted germ warfare in which there “will be more It be a much-needed By f] HARVEY (Continued on Page 4) addition to the medical cam- ^ I here seems to be a widespread feeling in the Lnited States that government is a necessarv evil hut politics are an unnecessary evil. State Comptroller Alan thp outside community, to government, is named for industry, to the professions. to agriculture.’’ Kerr continued. “Undergraduate instruction, on thp contrary, is inherently more internally oriented—toward the student on campus —- and some of these students are interested more in generalization than in specialization Large-Scale Teaching The crisi? centers largely Participants Rehearse Songfest Finale Tonight says. “They have adapted themselves to teaching on a All Songfest participants must attend tonight’s massed rehearsal at 6 p.m. in Bovard Auditorium. Guest conductor John Scott Trotter will rehearse the grand finale with the participants and the Trojan Symphonic Band in preparation for Thursday's rehearsal of the entire program at the Hollywood Bowl. Songfest is set for Saturday evening at 8 at the Bowl. Tickets are now on sale in the university ticket office, 209 Student Union, at the following prices: $3.50 for box seats. $2.50 and $2 for reserved seats, and $1.50 for general admission. Dean of Women .loan M. Schaefer will serve as mistress of ceremonies for the thirteenth edition of the musical extravaganza. Sixteen groups will compete for the Tommy Awards, symbol of excellence and enterprise in entertainment. Judging Songfest will be Robert Fowells. choral director at Cal State College at Los Angeles: Jerry Livingston, composer of “The Ballad of Cat Ballou;’’ Lloyd Stone, a member of the Los Angeles City Bureau of Music; Brian Sullivan, opera tenor and a USC alumnus; Don Weiss, choral director at UCLA: and John Zinn, musical administrator for a motion picture firm. In past years Songfest judging panels usually consisted of six or seven famous songwriters or musicians known to all for their popular songs. However, in keeping with this years theme of eliminating much of the professional connotations of Songfest, not quality-wise hut personality-wise, the judging panel consists of experts in the music field who are less well-known. By having competent judges who are not as famous as some of the past judges. Dobry feels people will come to Songfest to see the student performers rather than the judges. This is also the reasoning behind having a university figure host Songl'est, rather than a professional entertainer. SONGFEST HOPEFULS—Trish Soodik is the featured performer in "Bedtime Story" Songfest entry of Theta C^hi and Birnkrant, Songfest is Saturday night. „ . , , *-----------------------in the humanities and the Cianston said Fndav befoie 19 people in Founders social sciences where as Kerr Hall. “This is a silly idea,” he'~-- said. “You can't separate done everything we could to la^eT'scale ” politics from government, encourage negotiations so Kerr sees three approaches That is an idea dangerous to far.” that might Iead tf> a regn_ a emocracy. « GOV. BROWN, TAXES lution of these internal prob- It is dangerous because if — “Gov. Brown never said he lems. you abolish politicians, you wasn't going to raise t i.xes, "The first is to withdraw have a dictatorship, said In 1958, everyone knew that from thp crisis area: do Cranston, who lost in the whoever wras elected governor away with the lower division 1964 Democratic primary for would have to raise the cr even with all undergrad-senator to Pierre Salinger. taxes because the state was uate instruction. This solu-“The final basic decisions out of money. tion over-reaches the prob- about our society: if we can “Whoever is elected gov tern.” Kerr said-find the way to a peaceful ernor this year will also have Kerr’s second and most world, howr public funds will to raise the taxes. The rea- practical solution is the one be used, the real purposes of son is population growth. offered in the Muscotine Re-our society, these will be de- “We have one new port which told what could termined through processes of jn California °verv minntP and should be done at Kerr's politics. Some are born here, others institution at Berkeley: Responsible People are migrants. But with rnor? “LO make improvements and ' “We need to have respon- people you need more facili- adjustments within the exrst-s.ible people in politics who ties and services: more hospi- inS university structure-’ are responsible to the needs tals. more jails, more roads.” Some of. thf devices would and hopes of the people. • BERKELEY PROTES- (Continued on Pas;e 4> “Just the other day. I heard TORS — “I am delighted that ■ Ronald Reagan say that we the students of today have AccOUntinQ Fl'el'f must kick the politicians out shown an intc.resr. in pditica . _ of Sacramento. This angered rather than in how many gold me. I’m a politician and proud fish they can swallow as the of it.” students of my generation did. In a question-and-answer “Remember, young people period that followed, Crans- had more to do with the 1961 jton commented on the follow'- Civil Rights Bill than anyo.ie ing subjects: else by going down to the • VIETNAM — “I don't South and W'orking with the think we can pull out. But‘Negroes. They did a great I'm against more bombing or deal for the Negroes and the any steps to escalate the war. United States.” I think we should try to ne- • MAYOR YORTY — “I gotiate and have elections think Gov. Brown is wrong held there. when he says Mayor Yorty j “If it appears that the;is a paranoid because he Communists do not want to thinks eveiyone is against negotiate wre muiit just keep him. Sam is a realist. Every- secretary ion trying. I don't think wetve,one is against him,'’ , Selects Officers Reta Alpha Psi. the na tional honorary accounting fraternity, held its semi-annual elections meeting on Thursday. May 5. The purpose was to select the officers for the fall semester. The newly elected officers are: Mike Barth, president: George Webster, vice-president; Nancy Carver. report secretary: Ken Smith, treasurer; and Carol L e e, corresponding |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1435/uschist-dt-1966-05-10~001.tif |
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