Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 100, April 13, 1966 |
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WEATHER Low clouds this morning, followed by a sunny afternoon, with « high temperature of 72 and a low for tonight predicted near 50. Ski conditions on Mt. Pinole are reported to be excellent. University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN 19 6 6 SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION Vol. XVII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966 No. 100 Draft Test Materials A vail able By VERX CONLEY Assistant Dean of Men John A. McKinstry urged yesterday that all men interested in student draft deferment tests pick up registration ma- j teiials immediately. Persons interested in tak-| ing the Selective Sendee deferment tests must register and mail the registration material not later than April 23.-Registration materials are available now in the Testing! Bureau. 250 Administration, and in the office of the dean of men. 255 Student Union. 3 Dates McKinstry explained that George Christopher, candi- only those who have com- j date for the Republican nom- pleted the registration forms1 ination for governor of Calif- will be eligible to take the ornia. will address faculty deferment tests. The tests nnd students today at 3:15 will be given at USC on May p.m. in Hnncock Auditorium. 14. May 21 and June 3. prob-His speech, sponsored by ably in the administration Phi Sigma Alpha, political building, science honorary, will focus Registration is urged for on the role of the college stu- those males presently classi-r *nt in politics and how he is fjecj ]_g ancj 2-S. affected by the current gubernatorial campaign. San Francisco Mayor tests scheduled. McKinstry GEORGE CHRISTOPHER ... To Address Troy Ex-Mayor To Discuss Campaign Hackford Files For Top Spot 3 Groups Seek Male ficants Key Is Movement Of Many Voices Taylor Hackford. junior class presi dent, announced his candidacy for the ASSC presidency yesterday. Hackford s is the second declaration of candidacv for this office before the filing deadline this afternoon. Bob Harmon. AMS president, filed Mondav. Uncle Tommy wants Men • you! | Trojan men interested in serving the university may apply for Knights. Squires or '^em*c challenge offered Hackford will try to get students involved with what he calls the intensified aca-bv Men’s 'week. Judicial Council this the Master Plan. Applications are available PRIVATE LINE—Paul Liles, a Chi Phi, is shown at the keyboard of the teletype machine he installed to communi- cate with Jan Feltz, a Gamma Phi, whose sorority sisters became disturbed by Liles' late night phone calls. “At present, these tests in Mav and June are the only Kienholz Exhibit Tmy Rome° _ r l • i ends L°ve To Be Explained ny Teletype Outspoken In a prepared statement, he until Friday in Dean of Men said that he will present stu- Tom Hull's office, 225 Stu- , , ... u . . , , T T dents with an outspoken and dent L nion. ^ clean campaign" which he To be eligible for Knights, hopes will “bring out the real men must presently be sopho- mores or juniors, have a. 2.0 issues that are now affecting said. He feels, however, that Slides of the controversial I Other controversial ex Christopher served the n >JP;'iTV L'lJnr.i~Sn'Tnm the tests will be repeated in Edward Kienholz exhibit now hibits. including “Roxy's,” the nr C' i f^ii a irtiiu isc. o a * * * i » . . , _ _ _ # , 3956 to 1961 and was elected future< perhaps this fall, at the County Museum of Art artist s conception of a 1943 to his first term by the larg- Kills Rumor will be shown and discussed Las Vegas brothel, will be est majority ever achieved by McKinstry said he wanted by Delmore Scott, lecturer in explained along with those a candidate lor that office. biast, once and for all, the fine arts, at 3:15 todav in 229 works which Warren Dorn, et Christopher played a big,runior tjiat rumor pari in bringing the Giantsjscore to San Francisco, and any particular Founders Hall, on these tests would Scott has photographed the Romeo sent Juliet his love via a balcony. Pat Boone sent his through “Love Letters in the Sand’’ and Paul Liles, a Chi Phi, sends his by teletype. The junior history major al, found offensive and por- communicates with his pinned rade point average, and have ®n tS Part'c’Pat'on ar-a record of sendee to the university. Wants Participation Squire applicants must cur- „Student participation is rently be freshmen with a , . , . , . 9 *>5 avera<re something which is essential Leaders Sought to an institution such as our Those applying for Men's university," Hackford said. Judicial need a 2. <5 grade “A movement of many voices TAYLOR HACKFORD . . . Second Candidate nographic. cwPpthMrt Tan TTalt? o insure deferment. He has entire exhibit, along with(iunior education maior in achieved one of the best ad hearc] that scores of below 70 some works that are not in ; In a previous lecture, Scott p p. • soror;tv ministered cities in theLnited or 75 wouid make the person the current show. His slides said that Kienholz' work is t .. rnnoe.iveri the teletvne os durng his term, said niore likely to be drafted, but include details of the interior!difficult to understand be- because Miss Feltz said, l-.iv ini'1 Magazine. that this is not true. of “Back Seat Dodge. ’38," cause of many hidden mean- “the crjris at the Gamma Phi He emphasized that only which is not seen by the ma-jings. Toay’s lecture will un- house° don-t like the phone ringing at 12:30 a.m. and that’s when Paul gets off “ * 1 11 it/v tmenu i/i i.iriii » vV7»v.co » point and must display lead- _ the voices of the Af I J ] n I Lr ership abuities. Membership is ^ /1 vLU 3 VJ 1 IV To Focus On Draft open to present sophomores ~ must be heard to meet the and juniors. dynamic growth of USCs Knights and Squires hope- Master Plan." fuls must pass a written test and personal interview before being accepted. Private Businessman More filtering politics in he , , ca|1 say ^ jority of museum visitors on ,h<? Sa" score will be used in any spe- cific case, and added that some boards might completely ignore the test scores. cover some of them. Board of Supervisors, he practiced as a public accountant and founded his own business. which became the successful Christopher Dairy Farms of todav. Only the specific needs of :ach local board would deter- Christopher has also had mine its actions. His personal international political experi- opinion is that the Selective cnee, having visited Russia Service would not have gone pnd former Soviet Premier to all the trouble to institute Foreign Delegate Qualifications Set A joint decision on the method of selecting a For- work.” One-Way Street However, at the moment, love's true course is in one way. Only because Miss Feltz' unit isn't equipped to return Paul's messages. Liles built the three units, one at the Chi Phi house. Student Involvement In order to make these voices heard. Hackford will The test, which wid cover provide a broad program of The timely subject of the Troyditions as outlined in the student involvement in uni- draft will be the topic of a 1964-65 edition of the student versity and community af panel debate, featuring At-handbook, SCampus. will be fairs. torney J. B. Tietz. in the given Monday at 3:15 p.m. in “It is my hope that during first major campus program ! 133 Founders Hall. the campaign my ideas and of the recently recognised Two review sessions will be qualifications will be tested campus chapter of the Amer-held prior to the exam, to- not only by the students, but icai4 Civil Liberties L'nior. morrow and Friday at 3 p.m. also through debates with my -pj-jg panej participant.' who in 129 Founders Hall. opponents.” he added. X kit a Khrushchev during term as mavor. his such a testing service tests were to be ignored. Columbia JR Dean to rsaiyze Soviet Policy qualifications. Each candidate must be amon; the method chosen. Nominating petitions for the office must be filed by r.11 , ■ , ,, ui.1 x- , , noon on April 18 by inter- Po--=:ih!e causes which could world balance of strategic . , , , . xt * u * . ested students who meet the rrrult in a more aggressive;power, a NATO breakdown, Rnd demanding p o 1 i t i c a 1 or a Moscow-Peking reconcili- s-ance on the part of Moscow ation. will be outlined by Columbia The lecture will be the sec- citizen of a country other University's Philip E. Mosely ond in the five-part Charles tor.:ght in Town and Gown Malamuth Memorial Series on foyer at 8 p.m. Soviet and Chinese Ccm- Change in Balance munist foreign policy sponsored by the Research Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda and the School of International Relations. Honor Malamuth The lectures honor the late His remarks will include an senior research associate by assessment of such influences the institute and coeditor of on Soviet foreign policy as Communist Affairs, published April 26 and 27, concurrently any possible change in the .by the institute. jwith the general election. if the C,"T! Students Representative for the ASSC Executive the control unit there also. Council lias been reached by the Foreign Students Of- ancl the other at The fice and the USC foreign student population. ? The°totaI cost for the set Direct election by all foreign students fro m up was S1500. eligible candidates was Womens Week Born To Reward Tro janes SDS Challenge Image, Want Student Action Director of the European Institute at Columbia and associate dean of International Affairs there. Mosely will discuss “Soviet Foreign Poli cv since Krushchev." than the United States throughout his term of office, must have a cumulative grade average of 2.5 for undergraduates and 3.0 for graduate students, must be a registered full-time student, term The election will be held Tuesday and Wednesday, COUNSELORS NEEDED Orientation introduces Frosh to Campus Life By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Kditor The big. wide, wonderful world of USC will become a little smaller, a little narrower and a litle more familiar to incoming freshmen through the efforts of the orientation counselor program. Instituted last fall, the program assigns groups of 20 freshmen to student counselors. who take charge of the freshmen during orientation week, answering questions about university life in general. Applications for orientation counselors are still available in the Student Activities Of- fice, 324 Student Union. Interviews will be held tonight from 7 to 9:30 p.m. in 204 von KleinSmid Center. A student's introduction to his university probably has a great deal to do with his enjoyment or disgust with it during his four-year stay. “It is therefore extremely important to present a glimpse of the vast array of opportunities available to him 'as a member of the university | community during his first few days,” Orientation Vioe-Ohairman Mike Gordon explained. Freshmen will be assigned ,to their counselors on the By ROXY SPIRO of an interracial movement In spite of the stereotype of the poor to fight for social of sign carrying, protesting, equality, peace-marching kooks, there On the campus. SDS s pro is a better side to the Stu- grams concentrate on redents for a Democratic Soc search into the university iety. power structure, the creation The main purpose of the of student unions and the de-1 group, which started on the finition of the free university, and must have completed at Universit of Michigan campus The group also encourages least two academic semesters jn ^960 and has a chapter at students to study in various at USC by the end of his use, is research in peace and countries, hoping that they economics. will learn about the politics Under SDS sponsorship, and economics. The group the Economic Research and further feels that university Action Project was founded, students follow a set policy The project seeks the creation instead of having a voice in - affairs which affect them. In all programs connected with SDS, the focus is on how far people are included in decision-making in areas that directly affect their lives. (Continued on Page 2) Eligibilty Defined For Class Office Eligibility requirements for class delegates and senior class president are different than (hose stated in the ASSC Elections Code because of the transistion from the old to the new constitution. To run for class delegate or senior class president, students need have only 30 units for sophomore delegate, 60 units for junior class and 90 for senior class delegate and president. Students who may have thought themselves ineligible with the higher requirements, but who now find themselves eligible, must file by 4 p.m. today in 301'A Student Union. By KI TH ROSENSHINE Society Editor Women's recognition has taken on a new look this year. Formerly, recognition and the presentation of awards was confined to one assembly. This year, the activities will be expanded to one week. April 25 to May 2. During the week, new members cf women’s service groups will be announced and initiated. A number of awards, including the Order of the Laurel, will be presented at special programs. The week will be given a light-hearted kickoff Saturday, April 23, at the Delta Delta Delta Pansy Breakfast honoring senior women and their mothers. Women's Week will run simultaneously with the Festival of Arts, another innovation this year, made possible through a grant from the Danforth Foundation. Janet Rybicki. AWS president. said she is hoping that Women's Week will be successful and worthy of repetition in the future. ‘ Tne orientation is still toward recognition, but we would like to include more cultural activities in the future. emphasizing the total woman student." Miss Rybicki said. Still in the incubation stage is a program that will feature an outstanding local woman who is involved with the arts. Ronnie Renekamp is chairman of the week. will talk Thursday at 1 p.m. in the lounge on the second floor of the Law Schoo' h’vp been chosen to presen; wirte ranging viewpoints on military conscription. Attorney Tietz is * L^s Angeles lawyer who probab'y 'has given legal assistance to more conscientious objectors tha.n any other attorney in the nation. Draft Expert Having specialized in all varieties of Selective Service System problems sine® 1944. Tietz is generally considered to be one of the for°-most experts in the country on the draft. ASSC Hopefuls Must File Today The deadline for declaration of candidacy for all ASSC offices for fall. 87. is this afternoon at I p.m. Candidates should make their declaration in the VMS-AWS office. room 301 A. Student Union. POLY SCI JUNIOR Kazanjian Seeks Senior Post, Stresses Planning first day of orientation, Sunday, Sept. 11. After that, it will be up to the counselor :and the members of his group j to attend as many of the orientation activities as they 1 desire. These activities will include sample lectures, a football rally, street dances, panel discussions and other traditional orientation week programs. Since next year’s opening football game will be played in Texas, orientation week cannot climax in the Friday night game as it has in the past. Instead, the orientation committee is arranging for buses to transport the fresh men and committee members to Disneyland on Saturday night, Sept. 17. at special reduced rates. In addition to the full schedule of campus events,! counselors and their groups will have one free afternoon j in which to do anything they want. “They will not necessarily be limited to campus,” Gordon said. “They can go to the beach, the Music Center, or wherever they want,” Phil Kazanjian, a junior in stitution, the duties of senior political science, declared his class president center around candidacy for senior class making arrangements for the president yesterday. senior gift. His greatest func- Organization will be the tion will be served after gra-keystone of his campaign, dilation in handling of alumni Kazanjian said. He pointed relations, out that ill the past, lack of Senior Party organization has hindered However. Kazanjian is plan-many senior classes from ac- ning additional senior activi-complishing worthwhile ob- ties, one of which is a party jectives. at the end of the year honor- Use Experience ing all seniors. Kazanjian intends to use A former social studies the experience he gained senator, Kazanjian has also working on the freshman, been a member of the fresh-sophomore, and junior class man and varsity track teams, councils for the benefit of the the varsity debate squad, next senior class. Squires, and Knights. “I hope to draw out three He is a member of Theta years of class endeavor to- Xi fraternity, as well as gether in a memorable senior Blackstonians, pre-law honor-year,” he said. ary. and Pi Sigma Alpha, poli- Under the new &5SC Con-,Ucal science honorary. PHIL KAZANJIAN , .SeniorCandidate
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Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 100, April 13, 1966 |
Full text |
WEATHER
Low clouds this morning, followed by a sunny afternoon, with « high temperature of 72 and a low for tonight predicted near 50. Ski conditions on Mt. Pinole are reported to be excellent.
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
19 6 6 SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF
CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS ASSOCIATION
Vol. XVII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966
No. 100
Draft Test
Materials
A vail able
By VERX CONLEY
Assistant Dean of Men John A. McKinstry urged yesterday that all men interested in student draft deferment tests pick up registration ma- j teiials immediately.
Persons interested in tak-| ing the Selective Sendee deferment tests must register and mail the registration material not later than April 23.-Registration materials are available now in the Testing! Bureau. 250 Administration, and in the office of the dean of men. 255 Student Union.
3 Dates McKinstry explained that George Christopher, candi- only those who have com- j date for the Republican nom- pleted the registration forms1 ination for governor of Calif- will be eligible to take the ornia. will address faculty deferment tests. The tests nnd students today at 3:15 will be given at USC on May p.m. in Hnncock Auditorium. 14. May 21 and June 3. prob-His speech, sponsored by ably in the administration Phi Sigma Alpha, political building, science honorary, will focus Registration is urged for on the role of the college stu- those males presently classi-r *nt in politics and how he is fjecj ]_g ancj 2-S. affected by the current gubernatorial campaign.
San Francisco Mayor
tests scheduled. McKinstry
GEORGE CHRISTOPHER
... To Address Troy
Ex-Mayor To Discuss Campaign
Hackford Files For Top Spot
3 Groups Seek Male ficants
Key Is Movement Of Many Voices
Taylor Hackford. junior class presi dent, announced his candidacy for the ASSC presidency yesterday.
Hackford s is the second declaration of candidacv for this office before the filing deadline this afternoon. Bob Harmon. AMS president, filed Mondav.
Uncle Tommy wants
Men • you!
| Trojan men interested in serving the university may apply for Knights. Squires or '^em*c challenge offered
Hackford will try to get students involved with what he calls the intensified aca-bv
Men’s
'week.
Judicial Council this the Master Plan.
Applications are available
PRIVATE LINE—Paul Liles, a Chi Phi, is shown at the keyboard of the teletype machine he installed to communi-
cate with Jan Feltz, a Gamma Phi, whose sorority sisters became disturbed by Liles' late night phone calls.
“At present, these tests in Mav and June are the only
Kienholz Exhibit Tmy Rome°
_ r l • i ends L°ve
To Be Explained ny Teletype
Outspoken
In a prepared statement, he until Friday in Dean of Men said that he will present stu-
Tom Hull's office, 225 Stu- , , ... u . . , , T T dents with an outspoken and
dent L nion. ^
clean campaign" which he
To be eligible for Knights, hopes will “bring out the real men must presently be sopho-
mores or juniors, have a. 2.0
issues that are now affecting
said. He feels, however, that
Slides of the controversial I Other controversial ex
Christopher served the
n >JP;'iTV L'lJnr.i~Sn'Tnm the tests will be repeated in Edward Kienholz exhibit now hibits. including “Roxy's,” the
nr C' i f^ii a irtiiu isc. o a * * * i » . . , _ _ _ # ,
3956 to 1961 and was elected future< perhaps this fall, at the County Museum of Art artist s conception of a 1943
to his first term by the larg- Kills Rumor will be shown and discussed Las Vegas brothel, will be
est majority ever achieved by McKinstry said he wanted by Delmore Scott, lecturer in explained along with those
a candidate lor that office. biast, once and for all, the fine arts, at 3:15 todav in 229 works which Warren Dorn, et
Christopher played a big,runior tjiat
rumor
pari in bringing the Giantsjscore to San Francisco, and
any particular Founders Hall, on these tests would Scott has photographed the
Romeo sent Juliet his love via a balcony. Pat Boone sent his through “Love Letters in the Sand’’ and Paul Liles, a Chi Phi, sends his by teletype.
The junior history major al, found offensive and por- communicates with his pinned
rade point average, and have ®n tS Part'c’Pat'on ar-a record of sendee to the
university. Wants Participation
Squire applicants must cur- „Student participation is
rently be freshmen with a , . , . , .
9 *>5 avera |
Filename | uschist-dt-1966-04-13~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1439/uschist-dt-1966-04-13~001.tif |