Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 106, April 21, 1966 |
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SEE COLUMNS 2 1
WEATHER
wH rlddf ««/1±U
Se*"fi «fiHy frowning c!otlrfs.
<*rd wor‘i,lhi J*«a •« »xpec^*d *c»dfiv «*%d *on*oernw. ToH<§y s ^n’,cer£-will rf«rh 7S H*
University of Southern California
DAILY# TROJAN
19 6 6 SWEEPSTAKES winner OF
CALIFORNIA IHTEBCOLL^IATl PRESS ASSOCIATION
Vol. XVH
LOS ANtrELES. CALIFORNIA. THURSDAY. APRIL 23. 1966
No lnG
More Than 400 Get 3.5 Average
Neil D- Warren, riean of of 12 units have exceeded Hip College of Letters. Art;* thp 3.5 srlp-point standard end Sciences. yesterday re rf thp list, leased tihe De«n's List for lhe This year. for the first fall jw*m***nTAr. Over 400 LAS time. thp dean's office is rot prudent* ta king a minimum j notifying thp students by
mail, bu/t is using thp Daily
Authority Will Talk On LSD
Trojan for acknowledgment. This avoids a two-week puWj-cation delay.
Approximately 10 percent r.f thp LAS students havp gained the Dean's List, De> n Warren said.
“1 am very pleaseH al fn large a number and I extend congratulations to these sin-dents witjh such high grade;;,” Sidney Cohen. nationally he said, recognised I^SD expert, will Thp following names in speak today al 3:15 p.m. large type arp those studentsi on •'Facts and Fictions about ,A-ho received 4.0 averages. Drugs." The remainder received below
Cohens talk, scheduled tor 4.0 and arp lis'tpd in descend-Hancock Auditorium, will ing ord«ii of grade point av3i-high light the Iasi in a four- agp.
part sen.*s prespnted by earn- Janice L. Mackev. .Melrd e
Pns religious groups on so- y McLennan. Mahlon Ch-m.
rial concerns. Mary Annette Meyer. WilKa'iri
Counselor's Luncheon Bartley Anderson. Ro and
Dr. OohtMi will also partiei- l^eslie Tropp. Paira Reheat.
I^to in a counselor's luncheon Kathryn I^ouisp Roe. John
jit noon wth USC deans, re- Stephen Crahtrep. Douglas
mdem Hwsistants. campus mjn- Craig Morton, .lohannen R.
isters and counseling staff?. Sack, delanip Adams Wein'
At 5:30 be will eat in th.? traub. Jere Wright Lanioert.
Marks Hall dining room, after Randal Paul Arase. .Io;/ce
which he will lead a fireside Diane Rrackenbury, Andrea
chai on the dangers of LSD. L. Caldwell. Melvin Cohen.
, u , Donald Engle. Robin Louise
Author ~ Hooks . , ~
, , Fitzgerald. Richard H. Gas-An associate clinical prn- n
. TT/~,T . kins. f«».osor of medicine at LOLA.
r* - Col Ml i« the author of ^ynne Merle Grow. Si’**
HVO hooks “Psyohochem- BJllzabefch Hines. Frances In-
o-he.apv" and “The Beyond sa,a™- Heborah S. kellett.
Within •' The LSD Story.” Tebh Kusserow. Janp Vamell
'■To Wch -ecognized LSD >'ps,pr- Miohael David Mann,
<- 1 ^ Hr Willis,m l,ee Michielutte. Y>;ile
experts is lyos Angeies i »r.
article in Mina ni. .lames Joseph O-Tool< . Clifford George Peale. Yolande M. Pollard. Steven Fisher Peahens. Julian Reyna, Yale M. Stockwel’. R,>jnev Leon Taylor. Charles F. Whitaker. John I>eo Dominguez. Bruce Clement Matzen. Judith i Kay M.illman. Frank Joseph Baudino, Judith Holla id Al-
ment ?
This is the question Bob Harmon wants answered if he is elected ASSC president for next year.
Harmon, currently serving as AMS president, feels the students should understand and want student government. He is basing his campaign on student support.
A special appeal is being made to all special interest groups by Harmon, who thinks involvement in student government is needed, not only for next year, but. as a lasis for student government in the years to follow'.
In answer to his own question Harmon cites five steps ••'irst that explain the student's lack of understanding of student government. Thf dilemma of student a p a. t h y is a common problem, found in all write-in candidate yesterday. American universities. Tlie
“To date all the candidates|faculty, in a similar state.! havp dredged up the same old adds,hp disinterest of the issues that T'vp been hearing student The studmts by about in my five years al their ,ack_of ^P0*’ neSat€ USC. There seems to be an unwritten rule that all candidates swear to uphold the :.notto: ’Promise them anything but give them a pledge.' ”
Thai SaYs Vietnam -Harmon Rejects Dictatorship
“Why student govern- f
People Determined To Control Destiny
LAUREL HERMANSON
. . . Write-in Candidate
Woman Bids for Top Job
Ivaurpl Hermanson. year medical student, announced her plans for the office of ASSC president as a
Increased Activities Called For
VIETNAMESE AMBASSADOR—Vu Van Thai tells a stu-dent audience of the Vietnamese people's search for self-determination and their rejection of dictators.
thc very function of ;»overn ment.
Communication ProlMem
The student government, ir return, has difficulty expressing its purpose to the students and faculty. And lastly. “T will not present^ my plat- the administration and facul-form of perfumed platitudes wi|| not commit themselves and, unlike my opponents . r|nr support any group, it will be free of a plethora of associations. It will make the f^rs
Censorship Symposium On Arts, Church Set
S dnpv <V>hen." an the current issnp of Timp reports. “thp ‘acid head' who is ‘taking * trip" is morp likery to become passively fascinated by 1 tie glories or horrors nf eontf-m plating his own it a' vel that, to react violently a-gainst others.
Suicide Probable “Suicide is a more probable SUP* result than murder. Scott W. Pressler, Zaida
“But Dr. Cohen concedes Ann Luthey, Char lei? Bryan lihat anv man who stavs on Zp.remba. R.onald Sheldon I^D for three davs would Marks. John Wilson Dougher-require repealed, increasing tv. Rosemary Therese Smith. fjnAf>c| and might have reac- l-^slie Ann Irene f»ray. V il-noi previously seen by ham Gordon Isaac. Jr.. Patrj-t*ycbifltri«i*.'’ ' ’ R- Biorklund. Robert
Dr. Cohen received a Ph.D. Charles Braun. Virginia Lou-frtyrr Columbia and an M.D. ^la,'l<. Charles K, Earles, frow Bonn University. He Susan Claire Eyster. P^trijia terveH his internship at Ja- (jertrude Foley. Joella Gerst-inaica Hospital on l^ong Is- meyer. Janis P a it h h'effton. land. New York, and his resi- Charles H. Hurd. Ronald Jer-denc>' at the Veterans' Ad- nigan, Susan Elizabeth Kin-miinsftration Hospital in Los kade. Richard Kuzneusky. Angles. RaxTnond W. I^ewis, Jr.
He was staff physician for Edward Michael McMon-V.A. Neuropsychiatric igle. Wilton Davis Miller. Hospital from 1P49 to 3960 Phyllis Jean Moore. Kathleen *nd chief of the Psychiatry Kiyoko Ouchi, Cheryl Susan Service of L.A. s Wadsworth Plank. I»well Alton Pqnte. V.A. Hospital from I960 to Tristine Lenore R.ainer. Gar-
; (Continued on Page 2)
Williams Charges Jordan Inactive
By ANN SALISBURY
Tn a speech sponsored by the Trojan Democratic Club yesterday. Democratic primary candidate for California Secretary of State William Williams charged 78-year-old incumbent Frank Jordan of running again only to assure his deputies of employment.
“Jordan will not be able to campaign on what he has “These people can think done in office, because he and listen and feel just like ha<=n 1 done anything. hp any other people,”
“People haven't even heard "li SPPn,S ,hat ""educated about the office a good part Negroes have an instinct that nf thr time This office needs m°st r°llp?F graduates don t Sompnnr with a gr*a; deal of have-" Williams noted. “I creativity.” he said. know ^cause I have lived in
Williams proposed that the an ?rr* Mke Watts al1 my <5 n 1 y way to eliminate the llfe> he sald' negative attitude of people to- “This sense is like the
sexual revolution look camp. Government" that said Miss Hermanson in a iiaa already begun prepared statement. president.
Miss Hermanson. who gra- ^ he Progressive
A symposium and panel dealing with “Censorship and the Arts" will be conducted April 2£ at £ p.m. in solution. Hannon of. lo3 Founders Hall.
Progressive Student! lhe symposium wi
Rv STAN AfFT/,1 KR Feature Editor
The South Vietnamese amhasia<-iov tr> rj-e | pireri States described the 19F3 o' ert.hrow of rhe- V70 Drn Diem regime as an unmistakable choice V>\ hi- people for self-determination
I hen. in my opinion, the \ letnamesp people ga\c a definite evidence that the national revolution had reached ? point of maturity." Ambassador Vu Van Thai said in a Great Issues P'ortim presentation yesterday.
“They resisted the temptation of aliianc^ with on? form of dictatorship in order to fight the other: they rejected both. Weekends for dorm stu-
“P’rom now r.n. th* PpcP e dpntS 5n'( «M!!Wlters 3r«? fra resolved to rontrol tleir own gically lacking ,n srtn uy. destiny, ^nd to reas^ t<> he Harold Berman, tig r^ndi. tools of imported doctrine dat^ for sophomore r-prc.
and personal ambitions." ,
sentative said ye'5,re.rd^,>
fnuisF Not Cleared
Thai, however, recogrized "CountI^ students 50 that though the course ha-s home on weekends because been determined, it has no the campus is so dead That's been cleared of obstacles why it’s essen'iril that dedi-
"W'nen long-contained as- cated independ2.it;5 a:e •lect-pirations surface amiast no- ed to securP thf> weIfare uf rhp hence, differences become con-studpnts, who haVft be,n ne„. flicts and clashes are dtffi- Iecl(>d for vear3 • hp ^ cult to~a»v0id- -4^e-w»+dr------
Among those par'icular Perman. an honor 5* 'dent problems he lisrod were re- who plans to Ke ;i ta-. ;f:or gion^I jealousies. r» igif*us np.'• also express'd
says he Knight, an instructor in the Cinema Department, as AMS Other members of tihe panel will include Jeffrey Shurlock.
Govern- head of the Production Code
duated in the spring of 1965 fnent is characterized by. Administration and Motion with a, B.S. in clinical tech- ® Stability and long range Picture Association, and Hen-nology, said her platform will! planning. ‘ry Hopkins, director of the
appear in Monday's D.T.
MFA Candidate Holds Art Show
When Roger (instafson creates artistically he has t certain purpose in mind.
As he puts it: “I trv fo capture thc essence of California colors and combine them with organic shapes 1 see jn nature to create a very personal statement ”
(itistafson is a candidate for the Master of Fine Arts degree at USC and his thesis exhibition is currently being shown at Quinn Gallery. Harris Hall.
The exhibition is a series of oil and watercolor paintings exploring the use of landscape forms.
# Continuity and leaaer- Los Angeles County Museum, ship development. panei include
• Continuous and directed Stanley Fleischman. an attor-entertainment and cultural
activities.
Volk s-tote To Get TV Coverage
:nv: r= t ri j I . • or ^ renter ’
ney who is active in censorship of books
the
and
oiifp rn
be moderated b\ Arthurintoleranc.es and social con- nvpr Pfopo?ed Studen Ar
tradictions. tivities Center. He feels that
“Moreover, rrystalisation students ;«tf of the sense of nationhood is ,hpv hp CPr) hampered by a climate of dis-/^a! house an cr-ttre trust." he explained, “becatse f]°°r university gdministra-for ma.iy years and on many ^*ve °fficps- he propose-i a occasions the leaders and ceri er ^th tticrea^td stuoent their slogans have betrayed facilities, ineludirg a ba; -the people, and oppnssian room-
has favored the proliferation If elected. Berman will insti-The Phi Delta Theta Yolks- of ?eetet PoliticaI structure:;.”: tute a program of weekly tote, which will receive na- But on the PrinciPal obj*?c- dances, increased I ve enter-
• Revitalization of Trojan ma„azines, and Doan Thomas
Trotter of the Claremont
spirit
• Responsiveness to stu- Sohoo, of Theology.
dent need and interest. .
Solutions Begun ‘Censorship, in us many
Harmon has already begun manifestations, has always
played an important role in ,r>
tihat
tional TV coverage, will be t'ves °r nation—seU - de- tainment on caripus. ;nter-held today on the corner of termination. socio-ecoiionic mural sports hetwe’r dormi-
-nd ^Rth Pro"ress snrl justice, human tories. anr: a sn drn- renrer
dignity and national indep**n- tailored to the needs r.f the
dence Thai heliev?c ?. ror,- student hodv.
be open sensus has been rpached h<>- _
... , , Rermar is a Fr-srmsn ma •
size tween political forces. •
nrt four \ VI'v nrocidont"'^hp arts and usu^llva nega- ’inat pays the .>.=» entry fee., “Efficient Answer" “ . a ,.n .■> . ,^a
nd tour. As /VM.S president: . T-u_ Ar-n. .. J .I . , tion and a memner of the
five one. In view of the re- olUswagen used in the 'The mere fart that r.-e
Portland Avenue Street at 2:30 p.m
Competition
working on steps two, three.
will
any group of any pays the $5 entry
3. Leadership
enhance stu f'erl1 Supreme Court dpcision race must be a fully equipped, can continue to search for in in the Ginsburg Case and the driveable. s-tanda-d. sedan appropriatp formula of oe county's efforts to close the 'nodeI with no part* added or mocracy in spite of war and Kienholz exhibit. 1 felt it i removed. subversion is the evidence
might be valuable to examine! The race will start with that we have an efficient ;-ns-the state of censorship today te<im members lined up on wer ^ Communist c.ial-I—- and what if anything can either side of the car. Whim len?e- he said.
has bten strange and unreal be doT1e about it,” said the race starts, they will "I believe that in the end^ nas oeen strange ana unieai . a ■3 . . , the internal contradictions of
to the vast majority of stu- Lmght. assemble the device on which a..ru
rr^i 1 -it 1 1 ;L. tt_1_ ins L/Omrfiiinist world. 3.s well
dents. Harmon says. With in- The panel will also touch thej must carry the \ oiks- ^ policv of firmness
volvement student govern- upon the churches stand a- wagen. Anything may be used .....
ment will have some mean- gainst censorship, and a pos- f°r the carrying device is
sible production code revision. as i‘ provides no auxil-
iary means of propulsion.
he formed
Workshop to dent leadership. He was chairman of "Art Forum '65'\ and as AMS president began a Lettevmen's Club to be effective in the fall.
Student government so far
and a debate team.
wards the race problem is to eliminate ghettos.
He emphasized the importance of the emotional attitude of people living in ghettos.
“People do not understand
sense blind people develop when they can’t 3ee. In the same way, a Negro eighth grade graduate will know when the government is slighting him. He will feel it.” Williams indicated he feels
After toting the
combined with reason, will make it possible for the Vietnamese people to exercise their right for option in free-car for dnm and ppare. and tc rom-: 100 fVet. the contestants must pjetP thpir nationaI revofu-•'hpn get into or on top of fcte rjon.”
car and drive it back 3croS?5 Following his speech. A rr. tihe starting lino bassadpr Thar was a?kpd in a
Kappa S i! g rn a fraternity question period if he would currentlv holds the natumnl support Ho Chi Minh. wer&t record, of 22.2 seconds. (Continued on Page 2)
IS USC DISCRIMINATING?
Battle Columns: Deadline Friday
The deadline for battle colnrrns for the Daily Tr»>. jan*? April !fi elp‘tion s-r-cial Fs I p. ti. tornorr‘r»v.
li t*tl<» columns raniv ir • cludp <*ictures anrt t>io,.r^^ ph e* of each candidab- fnt oflicp.
Tile information mr't >e
■•IlhniittPit to t.'t'I ><n#lrnt
I nion. Candidates may either furnish thp:r unrn picture* nr ha\e nnc trkcn hv- the Hajjv Tro|a-i photographer.
Hillel Stages Panel Talk On Negro Life in College
JUK TfTHKROW Ornish' live, you scratch off."
Are U§C students guilty of USC Prototype Soci<jt.t discrimination? A two-man Cheek Funk, a grid ate panel tried to come up with studert in philosophy repre-some answers at yesterday's sentint; tlie Jewish group. Hillel Foundation luncheon said that the experience of The views expressed grew out seeing JSC as a prototvp<- of of previous discussions be- where society is going is ve-y tween Jews and Negroes. interesting.
Eugene King, a senior in! He pointed out that wnen history, speaking for the Ne- the Negro is accepted into the
gro group, said that in the mainstre&m of college life there :is only one sign— “whites only.”
that the main problem of the that by improving voting and: Negro with only an eighthiregistration methods it will grade education is his irabi- help lo solve the Negro feel-! li*y to articulate,” he said, ing of being left out.
t
SIGN OF THE TIMES?
Thg controversy over the Kienholi axhi-bit <•! the County M useum of Art inspired signs like this one. The pseudo-
middle ci!ass, “he is bour.d to find it an unsatisfactory experience.” He said that although tbe Negro can go any-
campeiqn slogan posters mysteriously
made their way into l-ounders Hall and
von KleinSmid Center last week.
1
“I don't pitch wild parties where on campus he likes, he hut you still won't find me is not happy, livinz in an apartment on this Kir;g agreed. “Negroes ar * side of Hoover,” he said. not happy being able to g>* “Anywhere where coedstwhere thsy want. In the grill,
the ocs sir in their own
corner ghetto.'
He ;ai ! that Negroes ■
to he Ion;- to rampn: or -animations. but that the p.ippl = in ai ho *itatr^'e p o - i t » o n i
don't give them mucl» ;r>. coungament
“They make you feel so cold that you don t want to belong.” he said.
Fiaieraities and the Negro King spoke frankly on wh.it he termed “a strong fraternity system that controls aT so*:ial life on the campus ' When one student in attend ancp pointed out hat th Jewish tratermtie" have a<!-tContinued on Page 2)
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 106, April 21, 1966 |
| Full text |
SEE COLUMNS 2 1 WEATHER wH rlddf ««/1±U Se*"fi «fiHy frowning c!otlrfs. <*rd wor‘i,lhi J*«a •« »xpec^*d *c»dfiv «*%d *on*oernw. ToH<§y s ^n’,cer£-will rf«rh 7S H* University of Southern California DAILY# TROJAN 19 6 6 SWEEPSTAKES winner OF CALIFORNIA IHTEBCOLL^IATl PRESS ASSOCIATION Vol. XVH LOS ANtrELES. CALIFORNIA. THURSDAY. APRIL 23. 1966 No lnG More Than 400 Get 3.5 Average Neil D- Warren, riean of of 12 units have exceeded Hip College of Letters. Art;* thp 3.5 srlp-point standard end Sciences. yesterday re rf thp list, leased tihe De«n's List for lhe This year. for the first fall jw*m***nTAr. Over 400 LAS time. thp dean's office is rot prudent* ta king a minimum j notifying thp students by mail, bu/t is using thp Daily Authority Will Talk On LSD Trojan for acknowledgment. This avoids a two-week puWj-cation delay. Approximately 10 percent r.f thp LAS students havp gained the Dean's List, De> n Warren said. “1 am very pleaseH al fn large a number and I extend congratulations to these sin-dents witjh such high grade;;,” Sidney Cohen. nationally he said, recognised I^SD expert, will Thp following names in speak today al 3:15 p.m. large type arp those studentsi on •'Facts and Fictions about ,A-ho received 4.0 averages. Drugs." The remainder received below Cohens talk, scheduled tor 4.0 and arp lis'tpd in descend-Hancock Auditorium, will ing ord«ii of grade point av3i-high light the Iasi in a four- agp. part sen.*s prespnted by earn- Janice L. Mackev. .Melrd e Pns religious groups on so- y McLennan. Mahlon Ch-m. rial concerns. Mary Annette Meyer. WilKa'iri Counselor's Luncheon Bartley Anderson. Ro and Dr. OohtMi will also partiei- l^eslie Tropp. Paira Reheat. I^to in a counselor's luncheon Kathryn I^ouisp Roe. John jit noon wth USC deans, re- Stephen Crahtrep. Douglas mdem Hwsistants. campus mjn- Craig Morton, .lohannen R. isters and counseling staff?. Sack, delanip Adams Wein' At 5:30 be will eat in th.? traub. Jere Wright Lanioert. Marks Hall dining room, after Randal Paul Arase. .Io;/ce which he will lead a fireside Diane Rrackenbury, Andrea chai on the dangers of LSD. L. Caldwell. Melvin Cohen. , u , Donald Engle. Robin Louise Author ~ Hooks . , ~ , , Fitzgerald. Richard H. Gas-An associate clinical prn- n . TT/~,T . kins. f«».osor of medicine at LOLA. r* - Col Ml i« the author of ^ynne Merle Grow. Si’** HVO hooks “Psyohochem- BJllzabefch Hines. Frances In- o-he.apv" and “The Beyond sa,a™- Heborah S. kellett. Within •' The LSD Story.” Tebh Kusserow. Janp Vamell '■To Wch -ecognized LSD >'ps,pr- Miohael David Mann, <- 1 ^ Hr Willis,m l,ee Michielutte. Y>;ile experts is lyos Angeies i »r. article in Mina ni. .lames Joseph O-Tool< . Clifford George Peale. Yolande M. Pollard. Steven Fisher Peahens. Julian Reyna, Yale M. Stockwel’. R,>jnev Leon Taylor. Charles F. Whitaker. John I>eo Dominguez. Bruce Clement Matzen. Judith i Kay M.illman. Frank Joseph Baudino, Judith Holla id Al- ment ? This is the question Bob Harmon wants answered if he is elected ASSC president for next year. Harmon, currently serving as AMS president, feels the students should understand and want student government. He is basing his campaign on student support. A special appeal is being made to all special interest groups by Harmon, who thinks involvement in student government is needed, not only for next year, but. as a lasis for student government in the years to follow'. In answer to his own question Harmon cites five steps ••'irst that explain the student's lack of understanding of student government. Thf dilemma of student a p a. t h y is a common problem, found in all write-in candidate yesterday. American universities. Tlie “To date all the candidates faculty, in a similar state.! havp dredged up the same old adds,hp disinterest of the issues that T'vp been hearing student The studmts by about in my five years al their ,ack_of ^P0*’ neSat€ USC. There seems to be an unwritten rule that all candidates swear to uphold the :.notto: ’Promise them anything but give them a pledge.' ” Thai SaYs Vietnam -Harmon Rejects Dictatorship “Why student govern- f People Determined To Control Destiny LAUREL HERMANSON . . . Write-in Candidate Woman Bids for Top Job Ivaurpl Hermanson. year medical student, announced her plans for the office of ASSC president as a Increased Activities Called For VIETNAMESE AMBASSADOR—Vu Van Thai tells a stu-dent audience of the Vietnamese people's search for self-determination and their rejection of dictators. thc very function of ;»overn ment. Communication ProlMem The student government, ir return, has difficulty expressing its purpose to the students and faculty. And lastly. “T will not present^ my plat- the administration and facul-form of perfumed platitudes wi not commit themselves and, unlike my opponents . r nr support any group, it will be free of a plethora of associations. It will make the f^rs Censorship Symposium On Arts, Church Set S dnpv |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1435/uschist-dt-1966-04-21~001.tif |
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