Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 29, October 28, 1965 |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large (1000x1000 max)
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
PAGE THREE: Vest-Clad Association Plays It Cool at Ice House University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN PAGE FOUR: Double, Double Toil and California's Bears Vol. xvn LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965 No. 29 Senate Approves Budget With Overtones of TNE l*y ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Co-Xight Editor this threat was seemingly injate will either approve or re-1 evidence at last night’s meet- ject. The ASSC Senate last night ing when three hours of bitter adopted a revolutionary debate ended in Senate ap-budget as far as ASSC proval of a budget with budgets usually go by a nar- which Sullivan is not totally row 16-15 vote. satisfied. The vote was overshadow- The budget reduces the ed by a threat which ASSC seven areas of ASSC expendi-President John Sullivan said tures into two categories: was made to him yesterday General Administrative afternoon by a senator rep-;Funds, which includes $475 resenting Theta Nu Epsilon if,or materials and supplies (TNE). an illegal under- and $75 for postage; ground political organization. ^n(j a Qenerai Contingency Sullivan said this particular Fund, of which $900 is allo-senator told him he controll- cated for executive cabinet ed the entire TNE vote in the expenses and $3,420 for all Senate and that unless Sulli- other expenditures by ASSC van appointed 15 of “his committees. (TNE's) people" to the Elec- Under this budget all ASSC tion Commission, he would committees must submit to see none of Sullivan's legisla- the Senate, in appropriate le-tion passed the Senate. gislative form, a budget for A possible fulfillment of each activity, which the Sen- Stuttering Helps Relieve Tensions In cases of emergency requests for funds, the Senate could be called into special session. One onlooker at the meet-i ing said to Sullivan, “That's a I great bunch of senators you have to work with.” Sullivan replied: “Have you i ever seen a boat entering a harbor, and have you ever noticed all the refuse that comes in with it?” He did not elaborate. Senators’ Comments In the course of debate, Social Studies Senator Clyde) Doheny criticized the budget, saying, “I thought we wanted efficiency in student government, not a giant machine. “Under the provisions of this budget we'll have to endure the same sort of mishmash twice a month.” Council to Hear Mills' Proposal The Los Angeles City Council will meet today at 10:30 a.m. to further consider the Hoover Redevelopment Project. The Community Redevelopment Agency and City Planning Commission will make recommendations on Councilman Billy Mills’ proposed change of the western boundary. President Norman Topping will represent the university, as he has at all past hearings. Bureaucracy Threat To Freedom—Mosk Boskin Studies Rioting Six Firms Will Hold Interviews Who starts riots and why? is part of the question Dr. Joseph Boskin will attempt to . . answer for the McCone Com- He referred to the provi- missi(m Qn the WaUg Riotg sion that the Senate would discuss various committee! budgets at each of their meet- ings- Business Senator Scott A person who stutters | ment using two adult groups, when angered may get more One group, when angered, satisfaction out of stuttering was allowed to show aggres- Hn^enrv fund with Student than by directly attacking his sion by pushing a button tormentor, speculates. USC which gave their frustrators Dr. Boskin, assistant professor of history and co-director of the American Studies program, is currently finishing a 600-page paper Saunders said James Martin, entitled “a History of Negro who devised the idea of a con- Rioting in the 20th Century.” The commission has asked Activities Advisor Clive Graf- ^or paper by Friday, as ton, “should know that put- , f hv speech professor. Dr. William an electric shock. The other ting all your funds into one ^ P J H- Perkins. group was not allowed to, big contingency fund is ridi- P|I, in Per^tive Dr. Perkins, director of the show aggression, the profes- ruions rerspeci \e Center for the Study of sor said. jcuious. I am to put the W a 11 s Sneech and Hearing said he ~ ■ Martin, as a business Riots in historical perspec- P ", " 5’ , Speaking tests were given senator, should realize this.” t}ve - Boskin said in a Daily unexpectedly found evidence jmmediately following the Supporters of the budget Troian interview, that stuttering is an inward anger-provoking incidents. As argued that having the Sen-: «j am not talking about form of aggression that is a exp€Cted, stuttering decreas- ate control ASSC expendi- :n this naner” I am more satisfying catharsis for ecj m t^e gr0Up that showed tures would be a more effi- talking about the aggressor, anger than is outward aggres- aggression and increased in cient means of running the who is the aCTCTressor?” sion- the group that did not. government. The DIANNE BROCK . . "Little Colonel Representatives from s i x firms are on campus today interviewing USC students for employment. USC’s Vocational Placement Bureau is coordinating the interviews with representatives from Allstate Insurance Co.. Bendix Corp., Boeing Co., UARCO Inc., Ly-brand Ross Brothers and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Campus Representatives D. S. Paddock, personnel manager for Allstate Insurance, will talk to graduates majoring in any field. George Morzov, assistant employment manager for the Pacific Division of Bendix Corp., will interview applicants with engineering or physics degrees. Larry Blakeley and Bob Shanks, representatives from Boeing, will talk to students with degrees in engineering, math or physics. Harry H. Benedict, indus- . trial relations manager of en whlch Plans soclal eZents AFROTC Gets Coed Colonel' Penetrates Facets Of American Lite ^Liberty is endangered by the evils of bureaucracy, California Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk told an audience at the Ecumenical Center last night. I he state Supreme Court justice told the meeting ! of the Ecumenical Missions Forum series that thi? j bureaucracy has penetrated almost every aspect of Ameri- ence of the corporation or the ; can life, including universi- government agency.' ties. Today even the great He told the young audience | s c h o 1 a r Thorstein Veblen it is important that their gen-would be asked to structure eration be concerned with the a research project, to eniist relationships of the individual a team of researchers, to to bureaucracy, foray off in search of foun- “A few generations ago, dation grants to support a young men and women were scholarly enterprise obvious- charged with making the ly too large for one man, he WOI*ld safe for democracy, said Today, a major challenge our “Creative scholarship in generation faces is to keep the world safe from bureau- speech professor emphasized that his theory is still in the speculative stage and needs further investigation. but added that the relationship results from unexpected differences in blood pressure. In explaining this further. Dr. Perkins cited an experi- Professor Edits Book On Japanese Politics Boskin noted that in his UARC0 Co. will interview studies, he has discovered LaPPhcants ^1 t h ide^rees in there are two primary types Dr. George O. Totten, pro- Decision Withheld On ZBT s fessor of political science, has edited “Democracy in Japan — Groundwork or Facade." a political anthology soon to be on the market. The book is one in a series published by D. C. Heath and Company on problems in Asian civilizations. The series in-A decision has been reach- eludes such books as “1857 in ed, but the announcement India- Mutiny or War of In-wiil be withheld until later dependence?” and “China today in the hazing case of Civil Service—Career Open to six members of Zeta BetaTalent’’ Tau fraternity. Joel Rosen- Articles by well-kncwn blatt. chief justice of Men's American and Japanese Judicial, said last night. scholars comprise Totten's “The council feels it would anthology. It presents con-be unfair to release their de- flicting viewpoints on wheth-cision before they notify the er vestiges of democracy to parties involved.” Dean of pre-war Japan were legiti-Men Tom Hull told the Daily mate or merely fronts for the Trojan. eventual totalitarian regime. Last night's hearing was One of the articles was held to judge the individual written by Edward Reis-responsibility of the six ZBT chauer. American ambassador members in the recent hazing to Japan. Reischauer taught of a pledge. at Harvard while the late The Inter-Fraternity Coun- president John F. Kennedy cil had already suspended the was enrolled there, fraternity from all social acti- “Kennedy was so impressed vities for a semester. j with Reischauer that he gave him this appointment,” stated of riots. “One is the type that in-; volves racial clashes between i w h i t e s and Negroes, and i these are usually fomented 1 by whites,” he said. “When the Negro riots, business LAS. Charles L. Bond, personnel manager of Lybrand Ross Brothers and Montgomery, will interview accounting majors. our day has greater hazards than ever before.’’ v.rac>. Bureaucracy answered an Suggests Solutions urgent need by providing Mosk went on to suggest order in the industrial revohi-tvvo possible solutions to the ^ion era and holding great, threat of bureaucracy. promise for both government “First, in any human acti- and business. Mosk said, vity — government, business. Stifles Creativity Dianne Brock, public rela- charity, or scholarship — the “But a system can only tions sophomore, was chosen objective must shape the en- function well when it is nour-“Little Colonel” for this area deavors of those who partici- ished with ideas and strength last Saturday by the Arnold Pate . . . Second, and closely of spirit. Bureaucracy is be-Air Society Angel Flight Con- related to the first, we must ing intellectually and spiritu-clave at the Hacienda Hotel remember that organization ally starved today because in El Segundo. *s made to serve men: men there is timidity and blind Angel Flight is a national were not niade to serve or- conformity on the part of organization for college worn- Ionization. those who comprise its ranks. The justice described bu- both in government and in for the men in Air Force ^aucracy as the rigid and business.” RqTC formal attitudes which per- He also charged the bu- vade the managerial levels of reaucracy in America today bus- with stiffling creativity and O--------, .. , , v auc uiic uiaiiagci ldi lev administration or Every Angel Might chap- both government and ter submits one contestant mess — the bureaucracies of dissent. “I hope that ultimately we will all feel so cramped in the bureaucracy has re- bureaucratic world that a rein self - development action will set in which in Totten I his attention is directed to-1 Totten translated several ofjwards p™Pe0rty' not Pe0Ple- the Japanese documents that- , , : .° ■ nrPrtsot i That is why 1 wasn t sur-appear in the book, including . , ... . r,, , , • T prised that Negroes didn t an article by Takechi Ishida . . , • ^ * a c- -i. tt- go into white areas during that represents the first Eng- ° ° , f\. , ., ° the Watts Riots. This isn t lish puohcation by the young Japanese political scientist. Totten supplemented his research by a trip to Japan under the auspices of the Social Science Research Council. He is now working on another report which is. being financed by a Ford Foundation Grant through the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in Boston. usually the case.” Boskin said there were several differences between the Watts Riots and the recent Harlem Riots. “Harlem is a small area and relatively easy to police. All you have to do is close off the streets and subways.” “It's a different case Los Angeles; it's all spread out.” New Slant On Finance Published Sacred Cows' Rapped ly Woman Educator By >IAR\ .>1ILLER mental age is an undisputed "We've always done it this indicator. Future Therapists Earn Certificates Dr. Richard A. Ward, assistant professor of finance. in has published “International so Finance,” which outlines a new approach to the under-standing of international transactions. In his 200-page work. Dr. Ward has integrated money and banking with international economics. He describes the world monetary mechanism with particular emphasis Eighteen graduate students will be awarded their on commercial banks and the certificates of physical therapy on Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. in the Graduate Lounge, in the basement of Town and Gown, 666 Childs Way. All the students graduated with B.S. degrees in June. The certificates mark completion of five months of clinical internship This certificate makes them He also develops theories eligible to sit in the state re- for reform in monetary gistration examination given policy, particularly gold, ex-by the State Board of Medi-j change rates, and interna-cal Examiners. All physical tional monetary reserve, therapists must pass this exam to practice. Speaking at the ceremony will be Frances S. Grover, associate professor of physical therapy, who is now doing research in neurophysiology at Brain Research Institute at UCLA. for the area conclave. There ^e public and private sec-are 14 chapters or Flights tors in Area I, which includes T^s New Mexico, California, gujted Arizona and Hawaii. taking a back seat to securi- time will open both govem- The Arnold Air Force Soc- ty. he added. ment and business doors to a Luther b. Tanner, person-^ iety’s board of officers selects “Security has come to be stimulating inner flow of nel manager for the National five girIs from the 14 repre- synonymous with the exist- ideas, theories, and dissent.” Aeronautics and Space Ad-|sentatives. The finalists are ministration is interested in ch0Sen on their knowledge 1 engineering, math or physics. Qf the Air Force, poise, per- I sonality and beauty. Every Air Force ROTC area in the United States submits their “Little Colonel" for the “Little General” contest. Miss Brock will represent this area at the conclave way." and "We've never done “All our research today which will be held in Dallas, it any other way " are two proves that children can Texas, during spring vaca dangerous signs of the status learn to read at an early tion quo. Dr. Mavis Martin, direc- age." Dr. Martin said -tor of the USC Reading Cen. The ..So.called ter. said last night. approach " was also cited as In a speech before Pi Larnb- a sacred cow by Dr. Martin. Homecominc] Due da Theta. national honorary She said misplaced acceptance Xpolications for Home- education fraterntiy for worn- in research is a serious deter-1 en. Dr. Martin said these rent to progress. stock answers are the result Dangerous Acceptance of superstition or accident. Dr Martin feels that un and are adapted from a questioned acceptance ol some breakthrough at some previ- fact jlIS- because that fact is otis frontier. supported by research is Dr. Martin spoke on "Sa- dangerous, ered Cows—Shall We Keep Research has its araw-Them or Kill Them ? She backs, she said, because "we said one sacred cow in educa- have become leery of involve-tion is the idea a child must ment with the sources of reexhibit some mental or social search." maturity before he is ready for school or formal reading training. Applications for foreign exchange market. The book investigates the relationship between domestic policy and the balance of payments and examines trends of the evolving monetary system. coming decorations must be returned to 324 Student Union by 4 p.m. today. A •So entry fee must accompany the application. The theme this year will be “USC VS UCLA." Only officially recognized campus organizations are allowed to enter applications. Fraternities and sororities can spend a maximum of $75 on their entries: University Avenue decorations cannot exceed $35. All decorations must he completed by 1 p.m., Nov. 19, and winners will be announced at the Homecoming Dance that night. Speakers to Introduce Directory of Authors Dr. Martin said actual re-15 search must be done under controlled conditions in the This concept is based on classrooms, the chronological age and * vVe cannot avoid the SO-mental age. Dr. Martin said, phistication and responsibility She pointed out that the chro- cf vvork in the area where the nological age of a child is of action is." she contended. very little significance in de- _______ termining when a child is readv for rcadr’g training. Reading Failure Sex differentials in reading based on the statement that boys mature later than girls is a passive generality. Dr Scientific Information, pub- Martin asserted. She also lishes the index. stated “There is no scientific The combined Science De Health. The Institute for Helen Race Will Begin Cn Monday Preliminary judging for the proof that physical maturity „ , , 1, partments and School of is ot reading failure." Helen °‘ ^ contest W111 Marvin Schiller of the Institute for Scientific Informa-Dr. Charles Leroy Lowman, t i o n will introduce the medical director of the Physi- “Science Citation Index in a cal Therapy Department, and seminar for studnts and fac- . ^ , vi founder of Orthopaedic Hos- ulty Monday at 2:30 p.m. in Pharmacy are trying to ob- . „ >Ionday. >*ov- and pital in Los An-eles. will pre- 252 Science Hall. tain the index for their li- Mental a»e, one. tbe Wednesday. Nov. 3. All con- tu ^ brarv The inriev is nrpmrpH most criminal things lett un- cestants will attend both lot, Susan Bridges. ShTon and the! index was stalled in ^ " Garmon. John Helm, Virginia 3^103 they have published. ' bl Hilty, Melinda Hoag Smith1 (cum laude), Setsuke Kihara (summa cum laude), Jean Nebel, Marilyn Tepper (magna cum laude), Linda h ml PHYSICAL THERAPISTS—I 8 of these 1965 graduates will receive their certificates Nov. 4. The certificates, mark- ■ \ ' k i. .H Ml ing the end of a five month clinical -internship, will enable the therapists to take the state registration examination. Students can use this in research as source material for other articles. The student van then find subsequent ref-Kpfli n ge V, Cornelia "iLieb! erences which accompany the 4 000 journals. Shelby Mark, Carolyn I.lc-i*ist‘nSa- 1 Dr. Glenn Hamor GO. on an experimental j Women whose last names basis, in 1964 it contained The generalization that a j begin with A-L should report eight volumes covering 700 mental age of 6.5 years is a to 229 Founders Hal! and M-journal titles in all fields of significant requirement for Z to 335 FH at 3 p.m. science and U.S. Patents. The reading achievement was de- Any contestants who have 1965 index will* cover over veloped at this time. class conflicts, or for any Child Study jOther rer^on are not available of the The study Livolved 20 chil from to 5 p.m. on both Kenzie, Toni Nield, Samuelson, Linda Nancy Original research on the School of Pharmacy is a dren and Dr. Martin stated d-Spano, projcct wa" "v.pported by thejmembcr of the Editorial Ad- th^t ns scientific research - •Id Gayle Turner and Kay Uye-j hara. National Science Foundation visory Board of the Institute the findings cannot inr1 > . 7-° and the National Institute ofifor Scientific Information. ,w h e t h e r choronok^ical or,9 a m, contact the Committee at 9(Wj before Sunday. 1 I
Object Description
Description
Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 29, October 28, 1965 |
Full text | PAGE THREE: Vest-Clad Association Plays It Cool at Ice House University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN PAGE FOUR: Double, Double Toil and California's Bears Vol. xvn LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965 No. 29 Senate Approves Budget With Overtones of TNE l*y ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Co-Xight Editor this threat was seemingly injate will either approve or re-1 evidence at last night’s meet- ject. The ASSC Senate last night ing when three hours of bitter adopted a revolutionary debate ended in Senate ap-budget as far as ASSC proval of a budget with budgets usually go by a nar- which Sullivan is not totally row 16-15 vote. satisfied. The vote was overshadow- The budget reduces the ed by a threat which ASSC seven areas of ASSC expendi-President John Sullivan said tures into two categories: was made to him yesterday General Administrative afternoon by a senator rep-;Funds, which includes $475 resenting Theta Nu Epsilon if,or materials and supplies (TNE). an illegal under- and $75 for postage; ground political organization. ^n(j a Qenerai Contingency Sullivan said this particular Fund, of which $900 is allo-senator told him he controll- cated for executive cabinet ed the entire TNE vote in the expenses and $3,420 for all Senate and that unless Sulli- other expenditures by ASSC van appointed 15 of “his committees. (TNE's) people" to the Elec- Under this budget all ASSC tion Commission, he would committees must submit to see none of Sullivan's legisla- the Senate, in appropriate le-tion passed the Senate. gislative form, a budget for A possible fulfillment of each activity, which the Sen- Stuttering Helps Relieve Tensions In cases of emergency requests for funds, the Senate could be called into special session. One onlooker at the meet-i ing said to Sullivan, “That's a I great bunch of senators you have to work with.” Sullivan replied: “Have you i ever seen a boat entering a harbor, and have you ever noticed all the refuse that comes in with it?” He did not elaborate. Senators’ Comments In the course of debate, Social Studies Senator Clyde) Doheny criticized the budget, saying, “I thought we wanted efficiency in student government, not a giant machine. “Under the provisions of this budget we'll have to endure the same sort of mishmash twice a month.” Council to Hear Mills' Proposal The Los Angeles City Council will meet today at 10:30 a.m. to further consider the Hoover Redevelopment Project. The Community Redevelopment Agency and City Planning Commission will make recommendations on Councilman Billy Mills’ proposed change of the western boundary. President Norman Topping will represent the university, as he has at all past hearings. Bureaucracy Threat To Freedom—Mosk Boskin Studies Rioting Six Firms Will Hold Interviews Who starts riots and why? is part of the question Dr. Joseph Boskin will attempt to . . answer for the McCone Com- He referred to the provi- missi(m Qn the WaUg Riotg sion that the Senate would discuss various committee! budgets at each of their meet- ings- Business Senator Scott A person who stutters | ment using two adult groups, when angered may get more One group, when angered, satisfaction out of stuttering was allowed to show aggres- Hn^enrv fund with Student than by directly attacking his sion by pushing a button tormentor, speculates. USC which gave their frustrators Dr. Boskin, assistant professor of history and co-director of the American Studies program, is currently finishing a 600-page paper Saunders said James Martin, entitled “a History of Negro who devised the idea of a con- Rioting in the 20th Century.” The commission has asked Activities Advisor Clive Graf- ^or paper by Friday, as ton, “should know that put- , f hv speech professor. Dr. William an electric shock. The other ting all your funds into one ^ P J H- Perkins. group was not allowed to, big contingency fund is ridi- P|I, in Per^tive Dr. Perkins, director of the show aggression, the profes- ruions rerspeci \e Center for the Study of sor said. jcuious. I am to put the W a 11 s Sneech and Hearing said he ~ ■ Martin, as a business Riots in historical perspec- P ", " 5’ , Speaking tests were given senator, should realize this.” t}ve - Boskin said in a Daily unexpectedly found evidence jmmediately following the Supporters of the budget Troian interview, that stuttering is an inward anger-provoking incidents. As argued that having the Sen-: «j am not talking about form of aggression that is a exp€Cted, stuttering decreas- ate control ASSC expendi- :n this naner” I am more satisfying catharsis for ecj m t^e gr0Up that showed tures would be a more effi- talking about the aggressor, anger than is outward aggres- aggression and increased in cient means of running the who is the aCTCTressor?” sion- the group that did not. government. The DIANNE BROCK . . "Little Colonel Representatives from s i x firms are on campus today interviewing USC students for employment. USC’s Vocational Placement Bureau is coordinating the interviews with representatives from Allstate Insurance Co.. Bendix Corp., Boeing Co., UARCO Inc., Ly-brand Ross Brothers and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Campus Representatives D. S. Paddock, personnel manager for Allstate Insurance, will talk to graduates majoring in any field. George Morzov, assistant employment manager for the Pacific Division of Bendix Corp., will interview applicants with engineering or physics degrees. Larry Blakeley and Bob Shanks, representatives from Boeing, will talk to students with degrees in engineering, math or physics. Harry H. Benedict, indus- . trial relations manager of en whlch Plans soclal eZents AFROTC Gets Coed Colonel' Penetrates Facets Of American Lite ^Liberty is endangered by the evils of bureaucracy, California Supreme Court Justice Stanley Mosk told an audience at the Ecumenical Center last night. I he state Supreme Court justice told the meeting ! of the Ecumenical Missions Forum series that thi? j bureaucracy has penetrated almost every aspect of Ameri- ence of the corporation or the ; can life, including universi- government agency.' ties. Today even the great He told the young audience | s c h o 1 a r Thorstein Veblen it is important that their gen-would be asked to structure eration be concerned with the a research project, to eniist relationships of the individual a team of researchers, to to bureaucracy, foray off in search of foun- “A few generations ago, dation grants to support a young men and women were scholarly enterprise obvious- charged with making the ly too large for one man, he WOI*ld safe for democracy, said Today, a major challenge our “Creative scholarship in generation faces is to keep the world safe from bureau- speech professor emphasized that his theory is still in the speculative stage and needs further investigation. but added that the relationship results from unexpected differences in blood pressure. In explaining this further. Dr. Perkins cited an experi- Professor Edits Book On Japanese Politics Boskin noted that in his UARC0 Co. will interview studies, he has discovered LaPPhcants ^1 t h ide^rees in there are two primary types Dr. George O. Totten, pro- Decision Withheld On ZBT s fessor of political science, has edited “Democracy in Japan — Groundwork or Facade." a political anthology soon to be on the market. The book is one in a series published by D. C. Heath and Company on problems in Asian civilizations. The series in-A decision has been reach- eludes such books as “1857 in ed, but the announcement India- Mutiny or War of In-wiil be withheld until later dependence?” and “China today in the hazing case of Civil Service—Career Open to six members of Zeta BetaTalent’’ Tau fraternity. Joel Rosen- Articles by well-kncwn blatt. chief justice of Men's American and Japanese Judicial, said last night. scholars comprise Totten's “The council feels it would anthology. It presents con-be unfair to release their de- flicting viewpoints on wheth-cision before they notify the er vestiges of democracy to parties involved.” Dean of pre-war Japan were legiti-Men Tom Hull told the Daily mate or merely fronts for the Trojan. eventual totalitarian regime. Last night's hearing was One of the articles was held to judge the individual written by Edward Reis-responsibility of the six ZBT chauer. American ambassador members in the recent hazing to Japan. Reischauer taught of a pledge. at Harvard while the late The Inter-Fraternity Coun- president John F. Kennedy cil had already suspended the was enrolled there, fraternity from all social acti- “Kennedy was so impressed vities for a semester. j with Reischauer that he gave him this appointment,” stated of riots. “One is the type that in-; volves racial clashes between i w h i t e s and Negroes, and i these are usually fomented 1 by whites,” he said. “When the Negro riots, business LAS. Charles L. Bond, personnel manager of Lybrand Ross Brothers and Montgomery, will interview accounting majors. our day has greater hazards than ever before.’’ v.rac>. Bureaucracy answered an Suggests Solutions urgent need by providing Mosk went on to suggest order in the industrial revohi-tvvo possible solutions to the ^ion era and holding great, threat of bureaucracy. promise for both government “First, in any human acti- and business. Mosk said, vity — government, business. Stifles Creativity Dianne Brock, public rela- charity, or scholarship — the “But a system can only tions sophomore, was chosen objective must shape the en- function well when it is nour-“Little Colonel” for this area deavors of those who partici- ished with ideas and strength last Saturday by the Arnold Pate . . . Second, and closely of spirit. Bureaucracy is be-Air Society Angel Flight Con- related to the first, we must ing intellectually and spiritu-clave at the Hacienda Hotel remember that organization ally starved today because in El Segundo. *s made to serve men: men there is timidity and blind Angel Flight is a national were not niade to serve or- conformity on the part of organization for college worn- Ionization. those who comprise its ranks. The justice described bu- both in government and in for the men in Air Force ^aucracy as the rigid and business.” RqTC formal attitudes which per- He also charged the bu- vade the managerial levels of reaucracy in America today bus- with stiffling creativity and O--------, .. , , v auc uiic uiaiiagci ldi lev administration or Every Angel Might chap- both government and ter submits one contestant mess — the bureaucracies of dissent. “I hope that ultimately we will all feel so cramped in the bureaucracy has re- bureaucratic world that a rein self - development action will set in which in Totten I his attention is directed to-1 Totten translated several ofjwards p™Pe0rty' not Pe0Ple- the Japanese documents that- , , : .° ■ nrPrtsot i That is why 1 wasn t sur-appear in the book, including . , ... . r,, , , • T prised that Negroes didn t an article by Takechi Ishida . . , • ^ * a c- -i. tt- go into white areas during that represents the first Eng- ° ° , f\. , ., ° the Watts Riots. This isn t lish puohcation by the young Japanese political scientist. Totten supplemented his research by a trip to Japan under the auspices of the Social Science Research Council. He is now working on another report which is. being financed by a Ford Foundation Grant through the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in Boston. usually the case.” Boskin said there were several differences between the Watts Riots and the recent Harlem Riots. “Harlem is a small area and relatively easy to police. All you have to do is close off the streets and subways.” “It's a different case Los Angeles; it's all spread out.” New Slant On Finance Published Sacred Cows' Rapped ly Woman Educator By >IAR\ .>1ILLER mental age is an undisputed "We've always done it this indicator. Future Therapists Earn Certificates Dr. Richard A. Ward, assistant professor of finance. in has published “International so Finance,” which outlines a new approach to the under-standing of international transactions. In his 200-page work. Dr. Ward has integrated money and banking with international economics. He describes the world monetary mechanism with particular emphasis Eighteen graduate students will be awarded their on commercial banks and the certificates of physical therapy on Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. in the Graduate Lounge, in the basement of Town and Gown, 666 Childs Way. All the students graduated with B.S. degrees in June. The certificates mark completion of five months of clinical internship This certificate makes them He also develops theories eligible to sit in the state re- for reform in monetary gistration examination given policy, particularly gold, ex-by the State Board of Medi-j change rates, and interna-cal Examiners. All physical tional monetary reserve, therapists must pass this exam to practice. Speaking at the ceremony will be Frances S. Grover, associate professor of physical therapy, who is now doing research in neurophysiology at Brain Research Institute at UCLA. for the area conclave. There ^e public and private sec-are 14 chapters or Flights tors in Area I, which includes T^s New Mexico, California, gujted Arizona and Hawaii. taking a back seat to securi- time will open both govem- The Arnold Air Force Soc- ty. he added. ment and business doors to a Luther b. Tanner, person-^ iety’s board of officers selects “Security has come to be stimulating inner flow of nel manager for the National five girIs from the 14 repre- synonymous with the exist- ideas, theories, and dissent.” Aeronautics and Space Ad-|sentatives. The finalists are ministration is interested in ch0Sen on their knowledge 1 engineering, math or physics. Qf the Air Force, poise, per- I sonality and beauty. Every Air Force ROTC area in the United States submits their “Little Colonel" for the “Little General” contest. Miss Brock will represent this area at the conclave way." and "We've never done “All our research today which will be held in Dallas, it any other way " are two proves that children can Texas, during spring vaca dangerous signs of the status learn to read at an early tion quo. Dr. Mavis Martin, direc- age." Dr. Martin said -tor of the USC Reading Cen. The ..So.called ter. said last night. approach " was also cited as In a speech before Pi Larnb- a sacred cow by Dr. Martin. Homecominc] Due da Theta. national honorary She said misplaced acceptance Xpolications for Home- education fraterntiy for worn- in research is a serious deter-1 en. Dr. Martin said these rent to progress. stock answers are the result Dangerous Acceptance of superstition or accident. Dr Martin feels that un and are adapted from a questioned acceptance ol some breakthrough at some previ- fact jlIS- because that fact is otis frontier. supported by research is Dr. Martin spoke on "Sa- dangerous, ered Cows—Shall We Keep Research has its araw-Them or Kill Them ? She backs, she said, because "we said one sacred cow in educa- have become leery of involve-tion is the idea a child must ment with the sources of reexhibit some mental or social search." maturity before he is ready for school or formal reading training. Applications for foreign exchange market. The book investigates the relationship between domestic policy and the balance of payments and examines trends of the evolving monetary system. coming decorations must be returned to 324 Student Union by 4 p.m. today. A •So entry fee must accompany the application. The theme this year will be “USC VS UCLA." Only officially recognized campus organizations are allowed to enter applications. Fraternities and sororities can spend a maximum of $75 on their entries: University Avenue decorations cannot exceed $35. All decorations must he completed by 1 p.m., Nov. 19, and winners will be announced at the Homecoming Dance that night. Speakers to Introduce Directory of Authors Dr. Martin said actual re-15 search must be done under controlled conditions in the This concept is based on classrooms, the chronological age and * vVe cannot avoid the SO-mental age. Dr. Martin said, phistication and responsibility She pointed out that the chro- cf vvork in the area where the nological age of a child is of action is." she contended. very little significance in de- _______ termining when a child is readv for rcadr’g training. Reading Failure Sex differentials in reading based on the statement that boys mature later than girls is a passive generality. Dr Scientific Information, pub- Martin asserted. She also lishes the index. stated “There is no scientific The combined Science De Health. The Institute for Helen Race Will Begin Cn Monday Preliminary judging for the proof that physical maturity „ , , 1, partments and School of is ot reading failure." Helen °‘ ^ contest W111 Marvin Schiller of the Institute for Scientific Informa-Dr. Charles Leroy Lowman, t i o n will introduce the medical director of the Physi- “Science Citation Index in a cal Therapy Department, and seminar for studnts and fac- . ^ , vi founder of Orthopaedic Hos- ulty Monday at 2:30 p.m. in Pharmacy are trying to ob- . „ >Ionday. >*ov- and pital in Los An-eles. will pre- 252 Science Hall. tain the index for their li- Mental a»e, one. tbe Wednesday. Nov. 3. All con- tu ^ brarv The inriev is nrpmrpH most criminal things lett un- cestants will attend both lot, Susan Bridges. ShTon and the! index was stalled in ^ " Garmon. John Helm, Virginia 3^103 they have published. ' bl Hilty, Melinda Hoag Smith1 (cum laude), Setsuke Kihara (summa cum laude), Jean Nebel, Marilyn Tepper (magna cum laude), Linda h ml PHYSICAL THERAPISTS—I 8 of these 1965 graduates will receive their certificates Nov. 4. The certificates, mark- ■ \ ' k i. .H Ml ing the end of a five month clinical -internship, will enable the therapists to take the state registration examination. Students can use this in research as source material for other articles. The student van then find subsequent ref-Kpfli n ge V, Cornelia "iLieb! erences which accompany the 4 000 journals. Shelby Mark, Carolyn I.lc-i*ist‘nSa- 1 Dr. Glenn Hamor GO. on an experimental j Women whose last names basis, in 1964 it contained The generalization that a j begin with A-L should report eight volumes covering 700 mental age of 6.5 years is a to 229 Founders Hal! and M-journal titles in all fields of significant requirement for Z to 335 FH at 3 p.m. science and U.S. Patents. The reading achievement was de- Any contestants who have 1965 index will* cover over veloped at this time. class conflicts, or for any Child Study jOther rer^on are not available of the The study Livolved 20 chil from to 5 p.m. on both Kenzie, Toni Nield, Samuelson, Linda Nancy Original research on the School of Pharmacy is a dren and Dr. Martin stated d-Spano, projcct wa" "v.pported by thejmembcr of the Editorial Ad- th^t ns scientific research - •Id Gayle Turner and Kay Uye-j hara. National Science Foundation visory Board of the Institute the findings cannot inr1 > . 7-° and the National Institute ofifor Scientific Information. ,w h e t h e r choronok^ical or,9 a m, contact the Committee at 9(Wj before Sunday. 1 I |
Filename | uschist-dt-1965-10-28~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1437/uschist-dt-1965-10-28~001.tif |