Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 81, March 04, 1966 |
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WEATHER
The forecast ?s for slowly rising temperatures and no rain. Today's high will be 65, the low 40. The water temperature will be 56. Yesterday'* high was 61.
University of Southern California
DAILY • TROJAN
1965
nOZE-WMNMG HEWS? Aft*
tflU
CAUFOftttA NEWSPAPER PUUJSKK ASSOCIATION
Vol. XVII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1966
No. 81
'SC, UCLA
Ian Watts Hospital
l»y ( iicintim: II \( R
I’SC has not only proposed new totmI euro out-patient linic in Walls, but it also )lans to t.ake part in a newly-ptoposed "' iivt il hospital in tiie .Sim;* area.
USC and UCLA would be combining medical forces to sponsor a p .st-gmduate medical school to be incorporated in the suggested 700-bed bespit a 1.
It is the liope of Dr Robert Tranquada. associate professor of medicine, that USC'« medical care program would l>e affiliated with the Watts hospital. Ho said that the school wants to cooperate in every way ix>r-iblo.
When asked if the proposed hospital would conflict with tho hoped-for clinic. Dr. Tran-quada replied. ‘‘No. the clinic is to be a prototype for other such out-patient services.
“They will be two different things but hopefully will be complementary”.
Watts Needs Hospital
There is no doubt that W alts needs a hospital. A report by the Los Angeles Area Development Agency states the Watts area has a higher incidence of every major disease compared to the rest of Los Angeles.
According to the McCone Commission report. Watts lias a physician-resident ratio that is one-third that of the rest of Los Angeles County. It said that only two of the eight proprietary hospitals in Watts have been approved by the Joint Commission on Ac-, creditation.
The McCone Report pointed out that L A. County General Hospital, utilized by the Watts ]>opulation. is “distant and difficult to reach.”
Information taken fromi records at tbe State Department of Public Health. Bureau of Hospitals, and reviewed by the McCone Commission. revealed: “In a 49-bed hospital, the report indicated cockroach infestation near the coffee urns, torn or missing screens, no written manual of maternity nursing, procedures, and inoj)erative1 nurse-call signals.”
Several Objectives
The proposed hospital has several objectives. It is to be a center for comprehensive and high quality health services.
Community pride will be a purpose, as well as the promotion of interracial harmony.
The hospital is to be built with the help of construction grant funds from the California and federal Hill-Harris program.
. .. 'T
n
TYR Split With
CYR Imminent
Unicameral
Legislature
Suggested
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor (The ASSC Constitutional Convention’s drafting subcommittee revised many of the proposals stated below. A complete report of convention proceedings and decisions will appear in Tuesday’s Daily Trojan. — The Editor)
Objections Raised by Regional Director
By ANN SALISBURY
Trojan Young Republicans is undergoing a part?, split over an amendment that would sever relations with its parent group, tiie California Young Republicans.
Stan Risdon. an ex-Bircher and present regional director of the county Young
Republicans, said he feels TYR is not ready to withdraw from CYR at the present time.
He also said the current board of directors was not
Republican Cen'ul C . t:nr,*r-
te^.
Trojan Republican Club v. never given any reeo., nition.
“Furthermore, an o '-t-niza-tion has to be recogr.ked on
qualified to mate a decision «"»!>“»JJeto* tt can collect
rr.onev. TRC didn t have cam'
DEDICATION SET—Next Thursday will be Dedication Day for the Religious Center. Four separate, air-conditioned buildings house campus ministries for Pres-
byterian, Methodist, Episcopal, Baptist and Lutheran students. The $425,000 structure is located on W. 34th Street betv/een University Avenue and Hoover Street.
SET FOR MARCH 10
concerning the withdrawal-ot . .
TYR from CYR because of‘pu* recognition their absence at many recent t) in?s • ^r- : ~
A proposal for a unicam- Republican events and con- rcl?“lveIy ineffective :r. coi:r.-eral student legislature to re- ventions. L-' Young^ Republican p< .i *
place the current two-house TYR Vice-President Dick lto amall raemser-
set up of Senate and execu- Spencer said the organization S*"P* Bisdon feels, tive cabinet may be present- wants to withdraw because ^,,vo >'ear5 a?°- there were ed to the ASSC Constitutional they do not wish to be associ- ~-s many as 500 rejj*s~-r. J Convention Sunday afternoon ated with the image CYR has members but sin ; tne by the convention’s ten-mem- created, but Risdon sees the election of the new af "cers, ber drafting subcommittee. situation in a different light, ittmbership his dropped If accepted bv the delegates ‘,TYR "'as unhappy about ^rply, ne said, and included in the new ASSC fhe election of Mike Djord- ^narne“fIIfnt ?asses Constitution, the proposal jevich to the presidency of . k I^ll'n.Mraw’s
will establish a legislative CYR- He has made various CYR. it could still renr council of 15 members, with statements to which TYR is active political organization several others sitting in as not in agreement. so t h e y on campus by assuming a dif-The first annual Lew Akin- nonvoting members. to withdraw.” Risdon:ft** name.
Constructed ut steel frame. ,jor Scholarship Fund basket- Serving on the council will He also maintained that the lege Republicans or another $425,000 Religious Center will seminar room and a common plaster and brick, the Re- balI game (to pay for his be ‘he ASSC president, listed membership of organization recognized by
Trousdale Estate) between cutive ^ce-president men^s TyR ^ the CQuntv CYR of. the Republican Central Com-the Daily Trojan and the Daily vice-president womens vice- og accused TYR mittee
Bruin will take place tomor- president and senior class *. -
di ” . ., , of sponsoring a membership Risdon summed up his
row afternoon at 1 p.m. in the,president. drive under a different name, view bv saving. “I will agree
women s gym. Also on the councilI wdl be (h(, ^ o£ that Mike Djordjevich not
cour ^aic Admission is free (with or ..’'' VtV-' *' ^ 'V th ,) rm : Republican Club, they attract-!the type of person that I
Religious Center Dedication Will Feature Campus Notables
DT Fields 'Cagers7 vs. Daily Bruin
from remain an
The uniquely designed kitchen facilities, a large
ligious Center's four units are
completely and air-conditioned.
individually
be dedicated March 10 with! workroom for office mach-a host of campus luminaries ines.
heading the program. The chapel has a wooden
Participants will include parquet floor. Its full-length The four units of the cen-Frank L. King, chairman of windows have been draped] ter surround
the Board of Trustees, Dr. i^th a Herman Miller fabric|which functions as an exter- without student I.D.) tVV° commuters'1 ec* approxima.tely 90 more:would like to see running
^ represen i & j », rn~rrti~.£iT~: >• cmvt 44
president,
in stripes ranging from deep
to light gold tones. A Baroque
Norman Toppin
and Dr. John E. Cantelon. organ is to be installed, with university chaplain. organ pipes situated above
ior auditorium.
A unique feature center is the large, primary j
At stake will be the owner- ^ members.” he said. “But they CYR. but I would also like to
of the ship of the town. A prelim-j8^31 ua 0 s u eI\sL an also reduced the S3 member-see TYR represented in the
inarv game will take place at rie coup es- nnc our 0 ltrs ship fee charged by TYR to county and state in order to organ pipes situated aoove —— ~ ‘^'^^“finnr 8:30' Friday night in Pauley to be elec.ted at-large. S2 make its influence felt.
Dr William Easton chair and 011 dther Slde °f the en- to the second floor paviIi(m Nonvoting members W'lll be: UJn d this thev have; would ^ Iike to 3ee
ur. VMiuam n.aston, cnair *— which is exposed and center-! _ _ the ASbC secretary, treas-
trv.
man of the Department of
Geology, will respond for the Y0Unq Musicians faculty and John A. Laubert, ^
president of the Student Jq Give Concert Council on Religion, will speak for the students
ed in the courtyard Ing provides speakers.
Paul Morantz was named
broken two rules,” he said, the current board of diree-
luid- xttul >>cl° “““"-^ urer and several committee.,, , ... , e- • i
its land DT coach after an u„s„CCess- ",’n The subcommittee5 A caniPus Republican o-ga- tors straigthen up financial
a podium for ful attempt t0 secure the ser-'mnkp 'any specific n'‘7atio11 has to he «iven a matter with respect to CYR
vices of Mike Garrett. Landscaping for the center price was too high
-T . . j includes four large pittospo- Imitating anothei Musicians , , . ,
His
well
did not make suggestions on which committees should be seated — they are leaving that up to!
charter by a volunteer or- before any action is taken to g.’nization recognized by the sever relations with them.”
The \ oung Musicians: , , , , - S knowm USC team, three star , * .. . , . „
„ , ,. rum undulatum trees in the . m the other delegates.
Foundation will present its , , , e CA DT nlavers are lost: Terry T , . .
. .. ., . -1.. | courtvard and four bO year-^ f , . \ ° u.;, In order to vote i
*eet fourth concert of the season ,, .. , . . . Bales (chicken), Greg Hill - . , ,.
- Rnrorri old ohve trees along the street ' >' - - new legislative prop
imder this j
. , , c* A, „ rjn„ ncn proposal, stu-
frontage. I ^?!at,eS. , r. j" ’ dents will have to register -.r
n . . , .. .. ville (a twisted ankle l a ither Rmvites. dorm dwel-
Designed by the architect-up drill). ’ndeoendents (com-
conduct the Debut Orchestra, ural firm of Killingsworth- But according to the coach, °ys*°r ^ d _tsl
as a Brady and Assoc, of Long “We still have the team cap- m,*ters-
Beach, which has won 3? tain and star player. Paiu'and^mamed couples). ^ major architectural awards, Morantz, who should the Religious Center was built break Block's record, by the Contracting Engineers Also being counted on are Company: Kocher. Bradford sharp shooter Lance Spiegel, and Nishimura were median- handsome Greg Kieselmann.
Brandow and Steve Harvey (the rabbit)
Erected on W 34th Street between University Avenue lonight at 8:30 in Bovard and Hoover Street, the com- Auditorium, plex of four free-standing Michael Tilson Thomas will buildings houses the campus
ministries for 5.000 Presby- 35 we^ as appearing terian. Methodist, Episcopal, Piano soloist. The 21-year old
Baptist and Lutheran stu-;student wiU share sol° honors dents and the offices of the with violinist Robert Notkoff, chaplain associate concert master
cf orchestra.
Each of the denominations I has its own suite in the cen- ^le Pr°£lam comprises the ]Ca
Weekend Offers Varied Programs
teT with all other sTOce'shari rt‘Concerto in A Major, johlS"th7kracturai'enri' «eve (“Size XL «”)' Harris votes cast in that group. film presentation for tonight, ed space 4gg> ^ Thomas ^ con_, Johnston, the structural engi ^ ^ ciaMs„ Thiis_ th(? grm,p OTth ,he The adventure-comedy ts re-
ductor-pianist: “Three Places caster. highest percentage of the placing The Haunting si^ce
The 12,000-square-foot cen- in New England" by Ives; the Anthony D. Lazzaro, as- John Bacon and Harry total votes cast will gain an; a print of the film is una\ ail -ter includes a chapel for 50 Cliausson “Poems” for violin sociate business manager and Wells offered their services, extra seat or tw'o. in addi- able for this evenings show-nnd a student lounge, both and orchestra; and the Haydn director of campus develop-but the Daily Bruin noted a tion to the two seats it al-. Also on the program is the \Ai
with 21-foot ceilings; there is Symphony No. 102 in B Maj- ment, coordinated the project rule which prohibits the use ready has. fourth chapter of the Flash " Vffft/f f t/fr
i recreation-dining room with or ’ !for the university. of crutches on the court. (Continued on Page 2) [Gordon serial. Buster Crabbe Sessions of research paper
and Jean Rogers star in the [dissertations and discussions 1936 science-fiction episoder. I will highlight the intematioo-Admission is 30 cents for J1 Rations conference to be the 7 and 9:30 p.m. show- heW tomorrow at 1 p.m.
Fifteen graduate students
ino-s °
° in international relations
The Cheshire Cat will have from nine western imiversi-
a L SC Methodist campus t-es coiieges will read
minister appearing on their research papers. The
premises tonight but not in conference is the first of its
an official capacity. David kind_ encompa^ing -jie great-
Lehmberg, who specializes in er Angeles area.
singing songs of contempo- The School of International
rary social protest, will enter- pteia^ionS- founded in 1924 as
tain at the 34th Street coffee school in the
house at 8:30. 10 and 11 p.m. anj the Institute of
muters. graduate
The old moral from “The Wizard of Oz” — “there’s •i . The number of additional: no place like home” — will apply to the USC campus e>1bl ' seats (to fill the four open- this weekend as the on- and off-campus facilities offer ings) that each segment of a variety of entertainment programs for one and all. the campus will be able to' Jolin Wayne, Stewart Granger. Ernie Kovacs. Fab-
hold will be based on a per-ian and Capucine star in centage basis of the total “North to Alaska.” the DKA
film presentation for tonight.:
IR Seminar Slated for
Rv (iEORGE W. NEILL (education News S<*rviee If there is one person uix>n whom the success or failure of efforts to upgrade the educational level and goals of impoverished children depends, it is the classroom teacher.
Unfortunately, in the opinion of thpse responsible for developing successful school programs for disadvantaged children. most California teachers are unprepared for the challenge.
The problem in a nutshell: Our teachers. mostly products of middle-class environment, lack specialized training designed to help them understand, motivate and effectively teach the children of poverty.
Remedial efforts, mostly financed by the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, are rapidly being organized throughout the state. They consist of special classes, workshops, conferences ?.nd the use of consultants for teachers now in service and for teacher-candidates still in college. Stress will be on the culture of the disadvantaged and teaching techniques which have proved •successful in pilot programs.
Ruth Love, chief of the Bureau of
Poverty Teachers Given Background in Culture
Program Development in the State Department of Education's Office of Compensatory Education, says colleges and universities could make a significant contribution by providing demonstration schools for disadvantaged children. They would serve in tw'o ways—train teachers and teach children at the same time.
Another approach has already been started in Los Angeles, Miss Love says. A training program for future teachers is being conducted in five slum area schools. Aim is to give potential teachers t better understanding of the cultural settings of schools in our poorest neighborhoods.
One of the keys to success, in Miss Love’s opinion, is tact. Teachers must understand that although most of the children in the slums are against school, they are not against education. And teachers must also understand that they have tended to place their expectations for these children much too low. By expecting more they can get better results. In fact, there is a high correlation between high teacher expectations and high achievement.
It is vital for teachers to know that the same range of intellectual potential
exists in disadvantaged children as in others. Miss Love said. They are not, as some too quickly conclude, mentally retarded. They are educationally retarded.
Teachers should also know’ that current standardized tests do not accurately measure the real abilities of disadvantaged children. Thus, the major burden of assessing true ability falls on the classroom teacher, she said.
Dr. Frank Riesmann, an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New' York City, recently told a group of educators in Los Angeles that teachers must know the “positives” of disadvantaged children. Onlv then can they learn to respect them. And these are plenty of “positives,” he a d d e d : informality, sense of humor, freedom from selfblame, equalitarianism. enjoyment of music, games and sports.
Our goal should be to change the attitude of teachers, Riesmann says. And the most important of these changes should be aimed at stimulating an interest in the disadvantaged and their culture.
“Generally, teachers have , not been especially interested in the makeup of
these youngsters. The poor, for the most part, are seen as an undifferentiated, drab mass.”
When teachers visit the home environment of their poor children, he continues, “the focus should not be environment as such — the crowdedness, the lack of privacy, the lack of economic security. The focus should rather shift to how these people struggle with this environment. We can't just give tours and home visits. Teachers must be carefully prepared to look beneath surface behavior to comprehend the meaning of life.
He must establish clearly defined limits of conduct and then stand firm against transgressions. He should also be aw’are that, unlike middle-class children. disadvantaged pupils rarely respond to exhortations intended to control behavior through invoking feelings of shame or guilt.
And finally, he must also be warm and outgoing, adapting his behavior to the individual pupils in his class—and showing his respect and liking for his pupils and his belief in their latent tal-
ents.
(TOMORROW:
Pay Offs)
Offbeat Teaching
The Hideaway Cafe is offering its weekly dance tonight and a Laurel and Hardy film musical tomorrow night as part of its cultural en-
World Affairs are sponsoring the conference. A crowd of 100 to 125 graduate student is expected to attend.
Reservations for a dinner
lightenment buildup program, between the seminars and a
The dance will begin at 9 P^f1 and will end whenever the ^ school of International
cops raid the joint. Marvin Rations. oo0 von KleinMmd
ucntpr
Jones, Hideaway entertain- , ,
ment chairman. Laid. The conference has oeen set
up with two objectives m The Laurel and Hardy mu- mind. The first purpose is to sical, “Bohemian Girl," a 1932 acquaint students with the featurette musical starring different programs being pur-Rudy \ allee. and chapter sued on each campus. This is four of “The P h a n t o m +o promote greater communi-Creeps comprise the pro- cation and interscholastic re-gram for the Saturday night lations with neighboring in-at 9 movie series. stitutiens.
But if none of this interests The second objective is to you, there’s always television give students the opportunity and the Saturday night to understand what will be movies (“The Five Pennies,” their ultimate value and re-
“On the Waterfront” and sponsibilty to their academic “Something of Value”). communities, Young said.
K
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 81, March 04, 1966 |
| Full text | WEATHER The forecast ?s for slowly rising temperatures and no rain. Today's high will be 65, the low 40. The water temperature will be 56. Yesterday'* high was 61. University of Southern California DAILY • TROJAN 1965 nOZE-WMNMG HEWS? Aft* tflU CAUFOftttA NEWSPAPER PUUJSKK ASSOCIATION Vol. XVII LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1966 No. 81 'SC, UCLA Ian Watts Hospital l»y ( iicintim: II \( R I’SC has not only proposed new totmI euro out-patient linic in Walls, but it also )lans to t.ake part in a newly-ptoposed "' iivt il hospital in tiie .Sim;* area. USC and UCLA would be combining medical forces to sponsor a p .st-gmduate medical school to be incorporated in the suggested 700-bed bespit a 1. It is the liope of Dr Robert Tranquada. associate professor of medicine, that USC'« medical care program would l>e affiliated with the Watts hospital. Ho said that the school wants to cooperate in every way ix>r-iblo. When asked if the proposed hospital would conflict with tho hoped-for clinic. Dr. Tran-quada replied. ‘‘No. the clinic is to be a prototype for other such out-patient services. “They will be two different things but hopefully will be complementary”. Watts Needs Hospital There is no doubt that W alts needs a hospital. A report by the Los Angeles Area Development Agency states the Watts area has a higher incidence of every major disease compared to the rest of Los Angeles. According to the McCone Commission report. Watts lias a physician-resident ratio that is one-third that of the rest of Los Angeles County. It said that only two of the eight proprietary hospitals in Watts have been approved by the Joint Commission on Ac-, creditation. The McCone Report pointed out that L A. County General Hospital, utilized by the Watts ]>opulation. is “distant and difficult to reach.” Information taken fromi records at tbe State Department of Public Health. Bureau of Hospitals, and reviewed by the McCone Commission. revealed: “In a 49-bed hospital, the report indicated cockroach infestation near the coffee urns, torn or missing screens, no written manual of maternity nursing, procedures, and inoj)erative1 nurse-call signals.” Several Objectives The proposed hospital has several objectives. It is to be a center for comprehensive and high quality health services. Community pride will be a purpose, as well as the promotion of interracial harmony. The hospital is to be built with the help of construction grant funds from the California and federal Hill-Harris program. . .. 'T n TYR Split With CYR Imminent Unicameral Legislature Suggested By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor (The ASSC Constitutional Convention’s drafting subcommittee revised many of the proposals stated below. A complete report of convention proceedings and decisions will appear in Tuesday’s Daily Trojan. — The Editor) Objections Raised by Regional Director By ANN SALISBURY Trojan Young Republicans is undergoing a part?, split over an amendment that would sever relations with its parent group, tiie California Young Republicans. Stan Risdon. an ex-Bircher and present regional director of the county Young Republicans, said he feels TYR is not ready to withdraw from CYR at the present time. He also said the current board of directors was not Republican Cen'ul C . t:nr,*r- te^. Trojan Republican Club v. never given any reeo., nition. “Furthermore, an o '-t-niza-tion has to be recogr.ked on qualified to mate a decision «"»!>“»JJeto* tt can collect rr.onev. TRC didn t have cam' DEDICATION SET—Next Thursday will be Dedication Day for the Religious Center. Four separate, air-conditioned buildings house campus ministries for Pres- byterian, Methodist, Episcopal, Baptist and Lutheran students. The $425,000 structure is located on W. 34th Street betv/een University Avenue and Hoover Street. SET FOR MARCH 10 concerning the withdrawal-ot . . TYR from CYR because of‘pu* recognition their absence at many recent t) in?s • ^r- : ~ A proposal for a unicam- Republican events and con- rcl?“lveIy ineffective :r. coi:r.-eral student legislature to re- ventions. L-' Young^ Republican p< .i * place the current two-house TYR Vice-President Dick lto amall raemser- set up of Senate and execu- Spencer said the organization S*"P* Bisdon feels, tive cabinet may be present- wants to withdraw because ^,,vo >'ear5 a?°- there were ed to the ASSC Constitutional they do not wish to be associ- ~-s many as 500 rejj*s~-r. J Convention Sunday afternoon ated with the image CYR has members but sin ; tne by the convention’s ten-mem- created, but Risdon sees the election of the new af "cers, ber drafting subcommittee. situation in a different light, ittmbership his dropped If accepted bv the delegates ‘,TYR "'as unhappy about ^rply, ne said, and included in the new ASSC fhe election of Mike Djord- ^narne“fIIfnt ?asses Constitution, the proposal jevich to the presidency of . k I^ll'n.Mraw’s will establish a legislative CYR- He has made various CYR. it could still renr council of 15 members, with statements to which TYR is active political organization several others sitting in as not in agreement. so t h e y on campus by assuming a dif-The first annual Lew Akin- nonvoting members. to withdraw.” Risdon:ft** name. Constructed ut steel frame. ,jor Scholarship Fund basket- Serving on the council will He also maintained that the lege Republicans or another $425,000 Religious Center will seminar room and a common plaster and brick, the Re- balI game (to pay for his be ‘he ASSC president, listed membership of organization recognized by Trousdale Estate) between cutive ^ce-president men^s TyR ^ the CQuntv CYR of. the Republican Central Com-the Daily Trojan and the Daily vice-president womens vice- og accused TYR mittee Bruin will take place tomor- president and senior class *. - di ” . ., , of sponsoring a membership Risdon summed up his row afternoon at 1 p.m. in the,president. drive under a different name, view bv saving. “I will agree women s gym. Also on the councilI wdl be (h(, ^ o£ that Mike Djordjevich not cour ^aic Admission is free (with or ..’'' VtV-' *' ^ 'V th ,) rm : Republican Club, they attract-!the type of person that I Religious Center Dedication Will Feature Campus Notables DT Fields 'Cagers7 vs. Daily Bruin from remain an The uniquely designed kitchen facilities, a large ligious Center's four units are completely and air-conditioned. individually be dedicated March 10 with! workroom for office mach-a host of campus luminaries ines. heading the program. The chapel has a wooden Participants will include parquet floor. Its full-length The four units of the cen-Frank L. King, chairman of windows have been draped] ter surround the Board of Trustees, Dr. i^th a Herman Miller fabric which functions as an exter- without student I.D.) tVV° commuters'1 ec* approxima.tely 90 more:would like to see running ^ represen i & j », rn~rrti~.£iT~: >• cmvt 44 president, in stripes ranging from deep to light gold tones. A Baroque Norman Toppin and Dr. John E. Cantelon. organ is to be installed, with university chaplain. organ pipes situated above ior auditorium. A unique feature center is the large, primary j At stake will be the owner- ^ members.” he said. “But they CYR. but I would also like to of the ship of the town. A prelim-j8^31 ua 0 s u eI\sL an also reduced the S3 member-see TYR represented in the inarv game will take place at rie coup es- nnc our 0 ltrs ship fee charged by TYR to county and state in order to organ pipes situated aoove —— ~ ‘^'^^“finnr 8:30' Friday night in Pauley to be elec.ted at-large. S2 make its influence felt. Dr William Easton chair and 011 dther Slde °f the en- to the second floor paviIi(m Nonvoting members W'lll be: UJn d this thev have; would ^ Iike to 3ee ur. VMiuam n.aston, cnair *— which is exposed and center-! _ _ the ASbC secretary, treas- trv. man of the Department of Geology, will respond for the Y0Unq Musicians faculty and John A. Laubert, ^ president of the Student Jq Give Concert Council on Religion, will speak for the students ed in the courtyard Ing provides speakers. Paul Morantz was named broken two rules,” he said, the current board of diree- luid- xttul >>cl° “““"-^ urer and several committee.,, , ... , e- • i its land DT coach after an u„s„CCess- ",’n The subcommittee5 A caniPus Republican o-ga- tors straigthen up financial a podium for ful attempt t0 secure the ser-'mnkp 'any specific n'‘7atio11 has to he «iven a matter with respect to CYR vices of Mike Garrett. Landscaping for the center price was too high -T . . j includes four large pittospo- Imitating anothei Musicians , , . , His well did not make suggestions on which committees should be seated — they are leaving that up to! charter by a volunteer or- before any action is taken to g.’nization recognized by the sever relations with them.” The \ oung Musicians: , , , , - S knowm USC team, three star , * .. . , . „ „ , ,. rum undulatum trees in the . m the other delegates. Foundation will present its , , , e CA DT nlavers are lost: Terry T , . . . .. ., . -1.. courtvard and four bO year-^ f , . \ ° u.;, In order to vote i *eet fourth concert of the season ,, .. , . . . Bales (chicken), Greg Hill - . , ,. - Rnrorri old ohve trees along the street ' >' - - new legislative prop imder this j . , , c* A, „ rjn„ ncn proposal, stu- frontage. I ^?!at,eS. , r. j" ’ dents will have to register -.r n . . , .. .. ville (a twisted ankle l a ither Rmvites. dorm dwel- Designed by the architect-up drill). ’ndeoendents (com- conduct the Debut Orchestra, ural firm of Killingsworth- But according to the coach, °ys*°r ^ d _tsl as a Brady and Assoc, of Long “We still have the team cap- m,*ters- Beach, which has won 3? tain and star player. Paiu'and^mamed couples). ^ major architectural awards, Morantz, who should the Religious Center was built break Block's record, by the Contracting Engineers Also being counted on are Company: Kocher. Bradford sharp shooter Lance Spiegel, and Nishimura were median- handsome Greg Kieselmann. Brandow and Steve Harvey (the rabbit) Erected on W 34th Street between University Avenue lonight at 8:30 in Bovard and Hoover Street, the com- Auditorium, plex of four free-standing Michael Tilson Thomas will buildings houses the campus ministries for 5.000 Presby- 35 we^ as appearing terian. Methodist, Episcopal, Piano soloist. The 21-year old Baptist and Lutheran stu-;student wiU share sol° honors dents and the offices of the with violinist Robert Notkoff, chaplain associate concert master cf orchestra. Each of the denominations I has its own suite in the cen- ^le Pr°£lam comprises the ]Ca Weekend Offers Varied Programs teT with all other sTOce'shari rt‘Concerto in A Major, johlS"th7kracturai'enri' «eve (“Size XL «”)' Harris votes cast in that group. film presentation for tonight, ed space 4gg> ^ Thomas ^ con_, Johnston, the structural engi ^ ^ ciaMs„ Thiis_ th(? grm,p OTth ,he The adventure-comedy ts re- ductor-pianist: “Three Places caster. highest percentage of the placing The Haunting si^ce The 12,000-square-foot cen- in New England" by Ives; the Anthony D. Lazzaro, as- John Bacon and Harry total votes cast will gain an; a print of the film is una\ ail -ter includes a chapel for 50 Cliausson “Poems” for violin sociate business manager and Wells offered their services, extra seat or tw'o. in addi- able for this evenings show-nnd a student lounge, both and orchestra; and the Haydn director of campus develop-but the Daily Bruin noted a tion to the two seats it al-. Also on the program is the \Ai with 21-foot ceilings; there is Symphony No. 102 in B Maj- ment, coordinated the project rule which prohibits the use ready has. fourth chapter of the Flash " Vffft/f f t/fr i recreation-dining room with or ’ !for the university. of crutches on the court. (Continued on Page 2) [Gordon serial. Buster Crabbe Sessions of research paper and Jean Rogers star in the [dissertations and discussions 1936 science-fiction episoder. I will highlight the intematioo-Admission is 30 cents for J1 Rations conference to be the 7 and 9:30 p.m. show- heW tomorrow at 1 p.m. Fifteen graduate students ino-s ° ° in international relations The Cheshire Cat will have from nine western imiversi- a L SC Methodist campus t-es coiieges will read minister appearing on their research papers. The premises tonight but not in conference is the first of its an official capacity. David kind_ encompa^ing -jie great- Lehmberg, who specializes in er Angeles area. singing songs of contempo- The School of International rary social protest, will enter- pteia^ionS- founded in 1924 as tain at the 34th Street coffee school in the house at 8:30. 10 and 11 p.m. anj the Institute of muters. graduate The old moral from “The Wizard of Oz” — “there’s •i . The number of additional: no place like home” — will apply to the USC campus e>1bl ' seats (to fill the four open- this weekend as the on- and off-campus facilities offer ings) that each segment of a variety of entertainment programs for one and all. the campus will be able to' Jolin Wayne, Stewart Granger. Ernie Kovacs. Fab- hold will be based on a per-ian and Capucine star in centage basis of the total “North to Alaska.” the DKA film presentation for tonight.: IR Seminar Slated for Rv (iEORGE W. NEILL (education News S<*rviee If there is one person uix>n whom the success or failure of efforts to upgrade the educational level and goals of impoverished children depends, it is the classroom teacher. Unfortunately, in the opinion of thpse responsible for developing successful school programs for disadvantaged children. most California teachers are unprepared for the challenge. The problem in a nutshell: Our teachers. mostly products of middle-class environment, lack specialized training designed to help them understand, motivate and effectively teach the children of poverty. Remedial efforts, mostly financed by the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, are rapidly being organized throughout the state. They consist of special classes, workshops, conferences ?.nd the use of consultants for teachers now in service and for teacher-candidates still in college. Stress will be on the culture of the disadvantaged and teaching techniques which have proved •successful in pilot programs. Ruth Love, chief of the Bureau of Poverty Teachers Given Background in Culture Program Development in the State Department of Education's Office of Compensatory Education, says colleges and universities could make a significant contribution by providing demonstration schools for disadvantaged children. They would serve in tw'o ways—train teachers and teach children at the same time. Another approach has already been started in Los Angeles, Miss Love says. A training program for future teachers is being conducted in five slum area schools. Aim is to give potential teachers t better understanding of the cultural settings of schools in our poorest neighborhoods. One of the keys to success, in Miss Love’s opinion, is tact. Teachers must understand that although most of the children in the slums are against school, they are not against education. And teachers must also understand that they have tended to place their expectations for these children much too low. By expecting more they can get better results. In fact, there is a high correlation between high teacher expectations and high achievement. It is vital for teachers to know that the same range of intellectual potential exists in disadvantaged children as in others. Miss Love said. They are not, as some too quickly conclude, mentally retarded. They are educationally retarded. Teachers should also know’ that current standardized tests do not accurately measure the real abilities of disadvantaged children. Thus, the major burden of assessing true ability falls on the classroom teacher, she said. Dr. Frank Riesmann, an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New' York City, recently told a group of educators in Los Angeles that teachers must know the “positives” of disadvantaged children. Onlv then can they learn to respect them. And these are plenty of “positives,” he a d d e d : informality, sense of humor, freedom from selfblame, equalitarianism. enjoyment of music, games and sports. Our goal should be to change the attitude of teachers, Riesmann says. And the most important of these changes should be aimed at stimulating an interest in the disadvantaged and their culture. “Generally, teachers have , not been especially interested in the makeup of these youngsters. The poor, for the most part, are seen as an undifferentiated, drab mass.” When teachers visit the home environment of their poor children, he continues, “the focus should not be environment as such — the crowdedness, the lack of privacy, the lack of economic security. The focus should rather shift to how these people struggle with this environment. We can't just give tours and home visits. Teachers must be carefully prepared to look beneath surface behavior to comprehend the meaning of life. He must establish clearly defined limits of conduct and then stand firm against transgressions. He should also be aw’are that, unlike middle-class children. disadvantaged pupils rarely respond to exhortations intended to control behavior through invoking feelings of shame or guilt. And finally, he must also be warm and outgoing, adapting his behavior to the individual pupils in his class—and showing his respect and liking for his pupils and his belief in their latent tal- ents. (TOMORROW: Pay Offs) Offbeat Teaching The Hideaway Cafe is offering its weekly dance tonight and a Laurel and Hardy film musical tomorrow night as part of its cultural en- World Affairs are sponsoring the conference. A crowd of 100 to 125 graduate student is expected to attend. Reservations for a dinner lightenment buildup program, between the seminars and a The dance will begin at 9 P^f1 and will end whenever the ^ school of International cops raid the joint. Marvin Rations. oo0 von KleinMmd ucntpr Jones, Hideaway entertain- , , ment chairman. Laid. The conference has oeen set up with two objectives m The Laurel and Hardy mu- mind. The first purpose is to sical, “Bohemian Girl" a 1932 acquaint students with the featurette musical starring different programs being pur-Rudy \ allee. and chapter sued on each campus. This is four of “The P h a n t o m +o promote greater communi-Creeps comprise the pro- cation and interscholastic re-gram for the Saturday night lations with neighboring in-at 9 movie series. stitutiens. But if none of this interests The second objective is to you, there’s always television give students the opportunity and the Saturday night to understand what will be movies (“The Five Pennies,” their ultimate value and re- “On the Waterfront” and sponsibilty to their academic “Something of Value”). communities, Young said. K |
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