DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 41, November 15, 1966 |
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ASSC considers joining NSA
Panel tells council about student group
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Editorial Director
The ASSC is once again on the verge of joining the United States National Student Association, an organization of which USC was a charter member in 1957.
USC resigned its NSA membership in 1957 during the administration of ASSC President Hugh Helm for financial reasons.
Membership in NSA was one of the campaign promises of ASSC President Taylor Hackford. The first step toward fulfillment of this promise came in a three-hour symposium Sunday in the Ecumenical Center as members of the ASSC Executive Council listened to a panel of students speak for and against the National Student Association.
Urging membership were Chris Emerson, a UCLA student and a member of NSA's National Super-
visory’ Board, and John Sullivan, former ASSC president and an observer at the 1965 NSA convention.
Arnold Steinberg and Dennis Turner, representing Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative political group, spoke against NSA.
In the course of discussion following the formal presentations, the mood of the council seemed to indicate the ASSC will join NSA as soon as the Executive Council decides to vote on the matter. Only one council member spoke against membership.
2(50 MEMBERS
NSA is an association of student governments with approximately 260 American colleges and universities claiming membership.
The organization reached an all-time high membership of 399 in 1960, but an NSA resolution on civil rights prompted a pullout by several South-
LB J, sex, Batman
will star in Trolios production tomorrow
Sex. The Master Plan. LBJ. Batman. No one will accuse “Out to Lynch." this year's Trolios production, of being limited in scope. The satirical review will begin at 8:30 to-Union and at the YWCA today and morrow night in Bovard Auditorium
Tickets for the performance will be available in front of the Student tomorrow for Si. They may also be purchased at Bovard the night of the show.
Trojan Olios, from which Trolios is derived, is defined as a number of vaudeville acts usually performed on a variety bill or minstrel show.
Bomb call turns into bum scare
An 8 a.m. bomb scare call added a little excitement to the usually dreary Monday morning.
The anonymous caller told the chief telephone operator that a bomb had been placed in Von KleinSmid Library on Saturday and set to go off Monday morning.
The Campus Police were immediately called and they in turn alerted the Los Angeles Police Department Bomb Squad.
After some confusion as to which library the bomb was supposed to be in. the Yon KleinSmid Library was searched, but no bomb or evidence of a bomb was found.
MOViE TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Tickets for the Senior Class’ special Troy Camp screenings of “The Bible” and “The Sound of Music” are now on sale at the YWCA.
Tickets for “The Bible” cost SI.50 and 81.75 for “The Sound of Music.”
“The Bible” will be presented on Dec. 3 at the Beverly Theater in Beverly Hills. “The Sound of Music” will he shown Dec. 10 at the Fox Wilshire Theater in Beverly Hills. Both shows will start at 9:30 a.m.
ern schools. Other schools have quit over the years for various reasons.
NSA provides services for student governments by supplying material on various projects a government may wish to attempt. It has a detailed file on different projects, and can supply information on where other schools failed or were successful. how they financed the projcct, etc.
NSA also offers cut-rate travel and insurance programs and runs a Southern human relations project and an international student relations seminar.
In the past NSA has taken public stands on civil rights, the Vietnam
Directed by Bob Moloney and produced by Scott Miller, the revue will feature 15 musical numbers and 20 comedy bits. Tom Pedrini is the musical director.
This is the beginning of a new era for Trolios. a minus-John Sullivan era. Sullivan, former ASSC President, was the director for the last two
years.
CAST, WRITERS
Performers will be Mary Parker. Jane Proppe, Carole Schulholf. Karen Smith, Bob Johnston. Scott Miller. Nancy Hickey, Trish Soodik. Laurel Taylor. Tom Arganese. Bill Bolstead. A1 Buncon. Bob Moloney. Mike Redmond. Bob Shipp. Paul Walberg and Ron Warden.
Writers are Nancy Hickey, Alan Hubbs. Suzanne Hunsucker, Bob Moloney, Tom Pedrini. Laurie Lynch, Roxanne Burkin, Bob Radinsky and Peggy Smith.
Jack K. Horton named to Board of Trustees
Jack K. Horton, president and chief executive officer of the Southern California Edison Co.. has been named to the Board of Trustees. Chairman Frank L. King announced yesterday.
war and the draft. Because of these stands, many people regard NSA as a liberal organization.
Steinberg admitted he is against NSA “because of its leftist policies,” and pointed out it represents only 15 per cent of the students in the United States although it claims to speak for all of them.
“This is intellectually dishonest,” he said. “Isn’t it rather presumptuous of them to claim to speak for all the students?”
He also said NSA has become more and more moderate in order to maintain its membership.
He criticized the organization be-
cause its delegates are often hand-picked by student governments and do not truly represent the student bodies they supposedly represent.
Sullivan said in rebuttal NSA has changed with the times as the students’ views have changed. “That’s what representation is all about,” he said.
“The arguments seem to run that NSA is unrepresentative of student thought because it speaks for only 15 percent of American students. That is just unfortunate,” he continued.
“We should not prohibit USC from taking part in NSA, the most important dialogue in American uni-
versities. Joining NSA would be an unbelievable benefit. And it would be a black mark on the ASSC if we prevent NSA membership.”
Hackford plans to make speeches and explain the benefits of NSA membership in letters to the Daily Trojan during the next couple of weeks. Othor members of the council will also be available to answer student questions.
Hackford intends to leave the decision of membership up to the Council without bringing it to a student vote. “Otherwise, the council will not be fulfilling its purpose as elected representatives of the students,” he explained.
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
VOL. LVIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1966
NO. 41
Sex decision is yours: Pike
STRESSING INVOLVEMENT, RESPONSIBILITY—THE BISHOP SPEAKS TO USC Bishop James Pike spoke at Great Issues Forum yesterday on 'The New Morality'
Registration sets new I.D. system
JACK K. HORTON New Board of Trustee Member
Horton is the third trustee elected by the board this year, joining John G. Brooks, president of Lear Siegler, Inc., and Phyllis Norton Cooper.
Horton, a graduate of Stanford University and the Oakland College of Law, has worked for the Shell and Stsndard Oil companies, Cor^t Counties Gas and Electric Co. and the Pacific Gas and Electric Co.
He wras named president of the Edison Co. on Feb. 1, 1959.
Horton is a director of the United California Bank, the United States Borax and Chemical Corp., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and the United Way General Board.
He is a member of the Board of Governors of Town Hall, the Board of Trustees of the California Museum Foundation and the National Industries Conference Board.
He is also on the President’s Board of Pepperdine College and the Board of Directors of the Lutheran Hospital Society of Southern California.
Beginning with the fall semester, student numbers will be replaced by Social Security numbers as a means of student identification, Mark Frazin, assistant registrar, said yesterday.
“We believe this change will facilitate any business the student transacts with the Registrar’s Office,” Frazin said.
He said students are far more likely to know or have in their possession their Social Security numbers than their student numbers.
While this change won’t take place until September, Frazin said the Registrar’s Office will distribute Social Security card applications during the Spring registration period.
STUDENT INFORMATION
“Sometime next semester, we will contact every current student and let him know what information we have on him in regard to his Social Security number. Then it will be up to him either to correct our information or to supply us with his number,” he added.
The Registrar's Office currently knows the Social Security numbers of about 80 percent of the students.
A student does not have to be a citizen of the United States to have a Social Security card.
“We urge all students, including foreign students, to get their Social Security cards now,” Frazin said.
By STAN METZLER News Editor
When you make a decision on your ^sxual involvement, Bishop Pike told a full Bovard audience yesterday, don’t make it because of outside reasons.
“If you decide against sex because Holy Mother Church says no. or because mommy and daddy don’t want you to. or because you read somewrhere that it's wrong that’s no good,” he said, “because that’s not you.”
Explaining the rationale behind situation ethics, his talk on “What is the New Morality” stresed the necessity for internal decisions.
“The answer for any moral problem can be found in the context of the given situation, and each is different,” he said.
Bishop Pike said situation ethics, as opposed to the legalistically free antinomianism or strict code ethics, places a prime emphasis on the area of responsibility.
When a person decides under situation ethics to have intercourse, he explained, he must have first concluded that to his way of thinking the act would not be sacriligious.
Having pased this hurdle, he must consider the damage that might be done emotionally to one or the other as a result from the act.
“In each situation you must fig-
ure out the likely effects of the action on the future and present of both yourself and the other persons involved,” he said.
Bishop Pike began his remarks with a critical analysis of “the two alternatives to situation ethics,” antinomianism and code ethics.
The first, meaning action apart from any law, is related, he said, to the Playboy view of “recreational Bex.”
“Playboy seems to be saying that sex is a good thing.” he explained, “and if there is also love, with its individualism and unity, it is better.
“But they won't say that love is not good in any case."
He compared this attitude towards sex to eating, noting that the ideal meal is the Thanksgiving feast with family and turkey and all the emotion.
“But.” he said, “we manage eat at other times too.”
to
Turning to the strict code ethics, he said this system tends to “answer all the questions in advance.
“But it gets a little fuzzy when it says how far you can go from the first handshake to what one might describe as technical virginity,” he said.
“In other words, how much love and commitment calls for how much action, and how and where.”
ALL THAT STUDYING PAID OFF
539 Make LAS Dean's List
SCANDALOUS DT'S HERE TOMORROW
In the espionage biz, one who rats (tells on) someone else is called an informer.
The Daily Trojan informer in the Great Newspaper Drop has in-. formed us it will definitely happen Wednesday.
"It” is the alleged helicopter drop of phony Daily Trojans by our rival newspaper in Westwood.
Editor Steve Harris exposed the plot in yesterday’s DT.
Our informer will be protected at all times. He will be escorted to and from his house and wherever he goes. That’s customary in the espionage biz.
There were 104 perfect students at USC last spring.
At least, their grade point averages wrere perfect 4.0's, and they earned spots on the Dean's List for the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.
The list, containing all 539 students in LAS who earned over a 3.5 average for 12 or more units, was released yesterday by Dean Neil D. Warren.
The lucky 4.0s:
Roland Trope, Sharyn Frankel, Eugene Pocock. Randolph Harrison, Judy Hayashi, Vicki Williams, Han-nelore Buss, Ronald Marks, Margaret Hallock, Lei Lani Hinds, Val Lepo-vitz Jr.. Brenda Barken, Clark Butler, Peter Thurston. Mahlon Chinn. Randolph Noble, Richard Fern, Deanna Gin, Sandra Morgan. Judith Millman, Robert Biggers, Veralynn Bowles, James Smoot, Brendan Jundanian. Toni Thale.
Peggy Avery, Brian Wright, Mark Schneider, Kathie Lowrey, James Kilbury, Warren Wallace, Bruce Mat-zen, Karen Petersen, Geoffrey Per-rett, Randall Monsen, Greg Heet, Keith Henderman, Judith Bauer, Rosemary Smith, David Holmes, Karen Humphrey, Susan Kinkade, Janice Manson, Dale Minami, Stephanie Moore, Sharon Moriwaki, William Naftel, Michael Norland, Kathleen Ouchi.
MORE 4.0’s
Gerald Pacelli, Marcia Palmer, Chris Patterson, Jane Pesterfield, Bonita Tilford, Judith Ransom, Lynn
Grow, Laura Halem, Richard Handel, Louise Hashimoto. William Johnston, Victoria Joy, Harry Kahn, Sandra Katich. Tiffany Kemper. Regine Pod-rizki, Steven Poole, Robert Quint.
Tristine Rainer, Diane Decenzo. Susan Eyster, John Marshall, Marilyn Martin, Catharine Martz, Gary Robertson, Kathleen Ross. Janet Rybicki, Patricia Foley, Richard Gaskins, Judith Gelfand, Robert Lange. Joan Lavine. Jane Lester. Joanne Willens. Carl Willgeroth, Mary Bernstein, Bruce Bess.
Patricia Bjorklund. Janet Hung, Charles Hurd, Elizabeth Spencer, Garrett StSwart, Yale Stockwell, Edward McMonigle, Marshall Mtez, Andrea Sidney. Johannes Sack, William Gipple, Patricia McGinn, Jerry Cromwell, Marsha Curiel, Evelyn Cole, Roberta Collen, Barry Sullivan and Robert Tefft Jr.
3.95 — 3.76
John Sandberg, Margaret Oliver, Mary Meyer, Lucy Marino, Beverly McLeod, Ashby Chadburn, Timothy Knowles, Tarry Perkins, Thomas Lo, Ellen Burg, John Delotell, Joella 3erstmeyer, Barbara McCoard, Joan Ross, Joseph Glazner, Robert Barnwell, Hollace Mounts, Ralph Blair.
Ronald Jernigan, Mark Pultman, John Ross, Ethan Llpsig, Stuart Brower, James Miss, Bert Gallagher, Ralph Brown, Theodore Harris, Alice Frazer, Kathleen Haskins, Michael Truher. Tugm Aladaq, Michelle Simon, Margaret Minnett, John Reynolds, Arlene Gonzales, Stewart Cranston, John Gi»en, Joyce Brackenbury, Martin Foley, Robert Lowman, Marilyn MacDonald. Dale Johnstone.
Carol Eskijian, George Uba, Donald Thomas, Juanita Ching, Earl Lubitow, Zaida Luthey, Alma Suehiro, Susan Carifon, Keren Desmond, Martin Kumbera, Leslie Watson, Aaron Wolf, Mark Friedman, Constance Greenbaum, Carolyn Hogg, Marsha Krieger, Randal Arase, Karen Bever, Edrie Golding, Bonnie Gadless, Matthew Hud* son, James Mack, Carl McAfee, Lynne Reg* giardo, Norman Wilky, Kathleen Flaherty.
THE 3,75'*
Don Graham, Phyllis Gay, Kathleen Toda, Wesley Terasaki, Deboreh^Durkee, Olivia Emit, Don-
na Frame, John Crebtree, Gwendolyn Smith, Karen Kramer, Arlene Lieberman, Frances Moon, Gary Gilbert, Lome Person, Loretta Fargo, Jer# Lambert, Leila Saad, Barbara Sullivan, Riv-EHen Prell.
Michael Bassell, Marty Beatty, Carl Bellone, William Brown, Catherine Suck, Andrea Caldwell, Katherine Davis, Diana Dennis, Laura Edwards, Judith Erdmann, Lizabelle Evans, Jan Ezell, Ralph Fertig, Talbert Fox, Alexander Girit-sky, Richard Goodrich, Noel Hasty Jr.. Lucille Hino.
Gordon Holm, Deann Hoshide, Glen Justice, Robert Kebric, Paulla Kimi, James Kushner, William Lande, Jack Rose, Christine Burrill, Yvonne Des Lauriers, John Dominguez, Mare Chase, Alice Katagiri, Perry Nicassio. William Morgan, Frank Baudino, Barbara Cruse, Allan Fine. V-'illiam Davidson, Judith Devore, Lon Mickelson, James McNutt, Anne Menne, Wilton Miller, Neal Moore, Hamid Naficy.
Marv Nason, Edward Ncube, James O'Toole, Dan Ozenne, David Paluska,. George Petro, Cheryl Plank, Lowell Ponte. William Pretant, John Rehm, Dennis Smith, Kazunobu Terao, Carlos Viniegra. Claire Wadsworth, Kent Welton, Janet White, Robin Yeamans, Kathryn Young, Andrew Zimbaldi.
3.70—AND FALLING
Thomas Henrickson. Janice Mackey. Susan Shakespeare Cathleen Cain, Linda Lewin, Susan James, Joann Clarke, Mary Weiis, Anita Abascal, Allen Holmquist, Gerald Jones. Dede Wolcott, Keith S.-own, Deborah Kellett. Lawrence Whalley, Dianne Brock, Joanne Sericko. Mary Myers. Kenneth T^Omes, Pearl La V<>n, Dennis Osgood. David Krinsky, Barry Madore, Nancy Bridges. David Crain, David Deutseh, Gregory Jackson. Jr.
Jay Kaplan, James Marshall, Robert Olson, Wilbur Quon, Thomas Starrett, Sheryl Keith. Wendv Christenfeld, Michael Crisp, Caroly Gus-tilt, Ernest Hales, Leslie Hanson, June Lauri% Antoinett” Mollatt, Sandra Moure. Mary Nyberq. J«mes Stroot, Loui'e Watanabe, Nanev Burroughs, Sarah Harding, Lynn Blankfort, Patricia Schulman, Margaret Mattori, Barclay Edmundson, Melanie Weintraub, Gilbert Platt, Carol Mathias, Katherine Cornwell, Nina Cutler, Linda Defelice, Penelope Dickerson.
Pamela Dubin, Reona Herz, Bruce Kessel, Myrne Krahn, Nancy Lapidas, Cynthia Maduro, Michael Mann, Stanley Massey Jr., Michael Mills, Jackson Moses Jr., Linda Norris. Leslie Olsen, Allan Powell, Carol Resner, Ty Salness, Marjorie Smith, George Clemons, Melinda M«i-fert, William Barger, Jo Bowlus.
THE 3.44'lRS
Richard Takagaki, Harold Wulfsberg, Fredrick Flam, Susan Mansueto, Jnetl Ludwick, Maxine Cutler, Cynthia Skinner, Kathleen Ruh, Edward Little, Timothy O'Neil, Mary Prouty, Shiqeru Takehana, Phillip Peierson, Alice Vermeer, Holly
(Cont. on Page 3)
I
r
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 41, November 15, 1966 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 58, No. 41, November 15, 1966. |
| Full text | ASSC considers joining NSA Panel tells council about student group By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Editorial Director The ASSC is once again on the verge of joining the United States National Student Association, an organization of which USC was a charter member in 1957. USC resigned its NSA membership in 1957 during the administration of ASSC President Hugh Helm for financial reasons. Membership in NSA was one of the campaign promises of ASSC President Taylor Hackford. The first step toward fulfillment of this promise came in a three-hour symposium Sunday in the Ecumenical Center as members of the ASSC Executive Council listened to a panel of students speak for and against the National Student Association. Urging membership were Chris Emerson, a UCLA student and a member of NSA's National Super- visory’ Board, and John Sullivan, former ASSC president and an observer at the 1965 NSA convention. Arnold Steinberg and Dennis Turner, representing Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative political group, spoke against NSA. In the course of discussion following the formal presentations, the mood of the council seemed to indicate the ASSC will join NSA as soon as the Executive Council decides to vote on the matter. Only one council member spoke against membership. 2(50 MEMBERS NSA is an association of student governments with approximately 260 American colleges and universities claiming membership. The organization reached an all-time high membership of 399 in 1960, but an NSA resolution on civil rights prompted a pullout by several South- LB J, sex, Batman will star in Trolios production tomorrow Sex. The Master Plan. LBJ. Batman. No one will accuse “Out to Lynch." this year's Trolios production, of being limited in scope. The satirical review will begin at 8:30 to-Union and at the YWCA today and morrow night in Bovard Auditorium Tickets for the performance will be available in front of the Student tomorrow for Si. They may also be purchased at Bovard the night of the show. Trojan Olios, from which Trolios is derived, is defined as a number of vaudeville acts usually performed on a variety bill or minstrel show. Bomb call turns into bum scare An 8 a.m. bomb scare call added a little excitement to the usually dreary Monday morning. The anonymous caller told the chief telephone operator that a bomb had been placed in Von KleinSmid Library on Saturday and set to go off Monday morning. The Campus Police were immediately called and they in turn alerted the Los Angeles Police Department Bomb Squad. After some confusion as to which library the bomb was supposed to be in. the Yon KleinSmid Library was searched, but no bomb or evidence of a bomb was found. MOViE TICKETS ON SALE NOW Tickets for the Senior Class’ special Troy Camp screenings of “The Bible” and “The Sound of Music” are now on sale at the YWCA. Tickets for “The Bible” cost SI.50 and 81.75 for “The Sound of Music.” “The Bible” will be presented on Dec. 3 at the Beverly Theater in Beverly Hills. “The Sound of Music” will he shown Dec. 10 at the Fox Wilshire Theater in Beverly Hills. Both shows will start at 9:30 a.m. ern schools. Other schools have quit over the years for various reasons. NSA provides services for student governments by supplying material on various projects a government may wish to attempt. It has a detailed file on different projects, and can supply information on where other schools failed or were successful. how they financed the projcct, etc. NSA also offers cut-rate travel and insurance programs and runs a Southern human relations project and an international student relations seminar. In the past NSA has taken public stands on civil rights, the Vietnam Directed by Bob Moloney and produced by Scott Miller, the revue will feature 15 musical numbers and 20 comedy bits. Tom Pedrini is the musical director. This is the beginning of a new era for Trolios. a minus-John Sullivan era. Sullivan, former ASSC President, was the director for the last two years. CAST, WRITERS Performers will be Mary Parker. Jane Proppe, Carole Schulholf. Karen Smith, Bob Johnston. Scott Miller. Nancy Hickey, Trish Soodik. Laurel Taylor. Tom Arganese. Bill Bolstead. A1 Buncon. Bob Moloney. Mike Redmond. Bob Shipp. Paul Walberg and Ron Warden. Writers are Nancy Hickey, Alan Hubbs. Suzanne Hunsucker, Bob Moloney, Tom Pedrini. Laurie Lynch, Roxanne Burkin, Bob Radinsky and Peggy Smith. Jack K. Horton named to Board of Trustees Jack K. Horton, president and chief executive officer of the Southern California Edison Co.. has been named to the Board of Trustees. Chairman Frank L. King announced yesterday. war and the draft. Because of these stands, many people regard NSA as a liberal organization. Steinberg admitted he is against NSA “because of its leftist policies,” and pointed out it represents only 15 per cent of the students in the United States although it claims to speak for all of them. “This is intellectually dishonest,” he said. “Isn’t it rather presumptuous of them to claim to speak for all the students?” He also said NSA has become more and more moderate in order to maintain its membership. He criticized the organization be- cause its delegates are often hand-picked by student governments and do not truly represent the student bodies they supposedly represent. Sullivan said in rebuttal NSA has changed with the times as the students’ views have changed. “That’s what representation is all about,” he said. “The arguments seem to run that NSA is unrepresentative of student thought because it speaks for only 15 percent of American students. That is just unfortunate,” he continued. “We should not prohibit USC from taking part in NSA, the most important dialogue in American uni- versities. Joining NSA would be an unbelievable benefit. And it would be a black mark on the ASSC if we prevent NSA membership.” Hackford plans to make speeches and explain the benefits of NSA membership in letters to the Daily Trojan during the next couple of weeks. Othor members of the council will also be available to answer student questions. Hackford intends to leave the decision of membership up to the Council without bringing it to a student vote. “Otherwise, the council will not be fulfilling its purpose as elected representatives of the students,” he explained. University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN VOL. LVIII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1966 NO. 41 Sex decision is yours: Pike STRESSING INVOLVEMENT, RESPONSIBILITY—THE BISHOP SPEAKS TO USC Bishop James Pike spoke at Great Issues Forum yesterday on 'The New Morality' Registration sets new I.D. system JACK K. HORTON New Board of Trustee Member Horton is the third trustee elected by the board this year, joining John G. Brooks, president of Lear Siegler, Inc., and Phyllis Norton Cooper. Horton, a graduate of Stanford University and the Oakland College of Law, has worked for the Shell and Stsndard Oil companies, Cor^t Counties Gas and Electric Co. and the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. He wras named president of the Edison Co. on Feb. 1, 1959. Horton is a director of the United California Bank, the United States Borax and Chemical Corp., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and the United Way General Board. He is a member of the Board of Governors of Town Hall, the Board of Trustees of the California Museum Foundation and the National Industries Conference Board. He is also on the President’s Board of Pepperdine College and the Board of Directors of the Lutheran Hospital Society of Southern California. Beginning with the fall semester, student numbers will be replaced by Social Security numbers as a means of student identification, Mark Frazin, assistant registrar, said yesterday. “We believe this change will facilitate any business the student transacts with the Registrar’s Office,” Frazin said. He said students are far more likely to know or have in their possession their Social Security numbers than their student numbers. While this change won’t take place until September, Frazin said the Registrar’s Office will distribute Social Security card applications during the Spring registration period. STUDENT INFORMATION “Sometime next semester, we will contact every current student and let him know what information we have on him in regard to his Social Security number. Then it will be up to him either to correct our information or to supply us with his number,” he added. The Registrar's Office currently knows the Social Security numbers of about 80 percent of the students. A student does not have to be a citizen of the United States to have a Social Security card. “We urge all students, including foreign students, to get their Social Security cards now,” Frazin said. By STAN METZLER News Editor When you make a decision on your ^sxual involvement, Bishop Pike told a full Bovard audience yesterday, don’t make it because of outside reasons. “If you decide against sex because Holy Mother Church says no. or because mommy and daddy don’t want you to. or because you read somewrhere that it's wrong that’s no good,” he said, “because that’s not you.” Explaining the rationale behind situation ethics, his talk on “What is the New Morality” stresed the necessity for internal decisions. “The answer for any moral problem can be found in the context of the given situation, and each is different,” he said. Bishop Pike said situation ethics, as opposed to the legalistically free antinomianism or strict code ethics, places a prime emphasis on the area of responsibility. When a person decides under situation ethics to have intercourse, he explained, he must have first concluded that to his way of thinking the act would not be sacriligious. Having pased this hurdle, he must consider the damage that might be done emotionally to one or the other as a result from the act. “In each situation you must fig- ure out the likely effects of the action on the future and present of both yourself and the other persons involved,” he said. Bishop Pike began his remarks with a critical analysis of “the two alternatives to situation ethics,” antinomianism and code ethics. The first, meaning action apart from any law, is related, he said, to the Playboy view of “recreational Bex.” “Playboy seems to be saying that sex is a good thing.” he explained, “and if there is also love, with its individualism and unity, it is better. “But they won't say that love is not good in any case." He compared this attitude towards sex to eating, noting that the ideal meal is the Thanksgiving feast with family and turkey and all the emotion. “But.” he said, “we manage eat at other times too.” to Turning to the strict code ethics, he said this system tends to “answer all the questions in advance. “But it gets a little fuzzy when it says how far you can go from the first handshake to what one might describe as technical virginity,” he said. “In other words, how much love and commitment calls for how much action, and how and where.” ALL THAT STUDYING PAID OFF 539 Make LAS Dean's List SCANDALOUS DT'S HERE TOMORROW In the espionage biz, one who rats (tells on) someone else is called an informer. The Daily Trojan informer in the Great Newspaper Drop has in-. formed us it will definitely happen Wednesday. "It” is the alleged helicopter drop of phony Daily Trojans by our rival newspaper in Westwood. Editor Steve Harris exposed the plot in yesterday’s DT. Our informer will be protected at all times. He will be escorted to and from his house and wherever he goes. That’s customary in the espionage biz. There were 104 perfect students at USC last spring. At least, their grade point averages wrere perfect 4.0's, and they earned spots on the Dean's List for the College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. The list, containing all 539 students in LAS who earned over a 3.5 average for 12 or more units, was released yesterday by Dean Neil D. Warren. The lucky 4.0s: Roland Trope, Sharyn Frankel, Eugene Pocock. Randolph Harrison, Judy Hayashi, Vicki Williams, Han-nelore Buss, Ronald Marks, Margaret Hallock, Lei Lani Hinds, Val Lepo-vitz Jr.. Brenda Barken, Clark Butler, Peter Thurston. Mahlon Chinn. Randolph Noble, Richard Fern, Deanna Gin, Sandra Morgan. Judith Millman, Robert Biggers, Veralynn Bowles, James Smoot, Brendan Jundanian. Toni Thale. Peggy Avery, Brian Wright, Mark Schneider, Kathie Lowrey, James Kilbury, Warren Wallace, Bruce Mat-zen, Karen Petersen, Geoffrey Per-rett, Randall Monsen, Greg Heet, Keith Henderman, Judith Bauer, Rosemary Smith, David Holmes, Karen Humphrey, Susan Kinkade, Janice Manson, Dale Minami, Stephanie Moore, Sharon Moriwaki, William Naftel, Michael Norland, Kathleen Ouchi. MORE 4.0’s Gerald Pacelli, Marcia Palmer, Chris Patterson, Jane Pesterfield, Bonita Tilford, Judith Ransom, Lynn Grow, Laura Halem, Richard Handel, Louise Hashimoto. William Johnston, Victoria Joy, Harry Kahn, Sandra Katich. Tiffany Kemper. Regine Pod-rizki, Steven Poole, Robert Quint. Tristine Rainer, Diane Decenzo. Susan Eyster, John Marshall, Marilyn Martin, Catharine Martz, Gary Robertson, Kathleen Ross. Janet Rybicki, Patricia Foley, Richard Gaskins, Judith Gelfand, Robert Lange. Joan Lavine. Jane Lester. Joanne Willens. Carl Willgeroth, Mary Bernstein, Bruce Bess. Patricia Bjorklund. Janet Hung, Charles Hurd, Elizabeth Spencer, Garrett StSwart, Yale Stockwell, Edward McMonigle, Marshall Mtez, Andrea Sidney. Johannes Sack, William Gipple, Patricia McGinn, Jerry Cromwell, Marsha Curiel, Evelyn Cole, Roberta Collen, Barry Sullivan and Robert Tefft Jr. 3.95 — 3.76 John Sandberg, Margaret Oliver, Mary Meyer, Lucy Marino, Beverly McLeod, Ashby Chadburn, Timothy Knowles, Tarry Perkins, Thomas Lo, Ellen Burg, John Delotell, Joella 3erstmeyer, Barbara McCoard, Joan Ross, Joseph Glazner, Robert Barnwell, Hollace Mounts, Ralph Blair. Ronald Jernigan, Mark Pultman, John Ross, Ethan Llpsig, Stuart Brower, James Miss, Bert Gallagher, Ralph Brown, Theodore Harris, Alice Frazer, Kathleen Haskins, Michael Truher. Tugm Aladaq, Michelle Simon, Margaret Minnett, John Reynolds, Arlene Gonzales, Stewart Cranston, John Gi»en, Joyce Brackenbury, Martin Foley, Robert Lowman, Marilyn MacDonald. Dale Johnstone. Carol Eskijian, George Uba, Donald Thomas, Juanita Ching, Earl Lubitow, Zaida Luthey, Alma Suehiro, Susan Carifon, Keren Desmond, Martin Kumbera, Leslie Watson, Aaron Wolf, Mark Friedman, Constance Greenbaum, Carolyn Hogg, Marsha Krieger, Randal Arase, Karen Bever, Edrie Golding, Bonnie Gadless, Matthew Hud* son, James Mack, Carl McAfee, Lynne Reg* giardo, Norman Wilky, Kathleen Flaherty. THE 3,75'* Don Graham, Phyllis Gay, Kathleen Toda, Wesley Terasaki, Deboreh^Durkee, Olivia Emit, Don- na Frame, John Crebtree, Gwendolyn Smith, Karen Kramer, Arlene Lieberman, Frances Moon, Gary Gilbert, Lome Person, Loretta Fargo, Jer# Lambert, Leila Saad, Barbara Sullivan, Riv-EHen Prell. Michael Bassell, Marty Beatty, Carl Bellone, William Brown, Catherine Suck, Andrea Caldwell, Katherine Davis, Diana Dennis, Laura Edwards, Judith Erdmann, Lizabelle Evans, Jan Ezell, Ralph Fertig, Talbert Fox, Alexander Girit-sky, Richard Goodrich, Noel Hasty Jr.. Lucille Hino. Gordon Holm, Deann Hoshide, Glen Justice, Robert Kebric, Paulla Kimi, James Kushner, William Lande, Jack Rose, Christine Burrill, Yvonne Des Lauriers, John Dominguez, Mare Chase, Alice Katagiri, Perry Nicassio. William Morgan, Frank Baudino, Barbara Cruse, Allan Fine. V-'illiam Davidson, Judith Devore, Lon Mickelson, James McNutt, Anne Menne, Wilton Miller, Neal Moore, Hamid Naficy. Marv Nason, Edward Ncube, James O'Toole, Dan Ozenne, David Paluska,. George Petro, Cheryl Plank, Lowell Ponte. William Pretant, John Rehm, Dennis Smith, Kazunobu Terao, Carlos Viniegra. Claire Wadsworth, Kent Welton, Janet White, Robin Yeamans, Kathryn Young, Andrew Zimbaldi. 3.70—AND FALLING Thomas Henrickson. Janice Mackey. Susan Shakespeare Cathleen Cain, Linda Lewin, Susan James, Joann Clarke, Mary Weiis, Anita Abascal, Allen Holmquist, Gerald Jones. Dede Wolcott, Keith S.-own, Deborah Kellett. Lawrence Whalley, Dianne Brock, Joanne Sericko. Mary Myers. Kenneth T^Omes, Pearl La V<>n, Dennis Osgood. David Krinsky, Barry Madore, Nancy Bridges. David Crain, David Deutseh, Gregory Jackson. Jr. Jay Kaplan, James Marshall, Robert Olson, Wilbur Quon, Thomas Starrett, Sheryl Keith. Wendv Christenfeld, Michael Crisp, Caroly Gus-tilt, Ernest Hales, Leslie Hanson, June Lauri% Antoinett” Mollatt, Sandra Moure. Mary Nyberq. J«mes Stroot, Loui'e Watanabe, Nanev Burroughs, Sarah Harding, Lynn Blankfort, Patricia Schulman, Margaret Mattori, Barclay Edmundson, Melanie Weintraub, Gilbert Platt, Carol Mathias, Katherine Cornwell, Nina Cutler, Linda Defelice, Penelope Dickerson. Pamela Dubin, Reona Herz, Bruce Kessel, Myrne Krahn, Nancy Lapidas, Cynthia Maduro, Michael Mann, Stanley Massey Jr., Michael Mills, Jackson Moses Jr., Linda Norris. Leslie Olsen, Allan Powell, Carol Resner, Ty Salness, Marjorie Smith, George Clemons, Melinda M«i-fert, William Barger, Jo Bowlus. THE 3.44'lRS Richard Takagaki, Harold Wulfsberg, Fredrick Flam, Susan Mansueto, Jnetl Ludwick, Maxine Cutler, Cynthia Skinner, Kathleen Ruh, Edward Little, Timothy O'Neil, Mary Prouty, Shiqeru Takehana, Phillip Peierson, Alice Vermeer, Holly (Cont. on Page 3) I r |
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