Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 59, January 04, 1966 |
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1985
PMZMfflNMK NJWSWffi «f Hw
oufowiw mmm
PU8USHESS ASSOCIATION
Universitv of Southern California
DAILY ® TROJAN
toi. xvn LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 4. 1966 No, 59
WEATHER
'Surtnv *cday with increasing cloud mess. Hiqh today £7, low, »n the 30's. Wjfer te moerature e* th» beaches, 57 deqrees.
$40,000
Pledge A warded
A $40,000 pledge to the Master Plan for enterprise and excellence in education has been made by the Esso Education Foundation o f New York, and the first of four annual installments of S10.000 has been paid in a check presented to Dr. Norman Topping, president.
The unrestricted gift will earn another one-third from the Ford Foundation, which; matches with $1 every S3 raised by USC from other private sources before Dec.. 31. 1967.
Esso Education Foundation is supported by Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and several of its affiliates, including Humble Oil & Refining Company. Esso Research and Engineering Company. Esso Production Research Company and Humble. Pipe Line Company.
Present Check
P. F. Sollars. exploration manager for the western division. and Marshall Black, reservoir engineer, both of: Humble Oil & Refining Com-! pany in Los Angeles, present-! ed the check to President: Topping.
Grants of $2,348,000 to! 300 colleges, universities and related educational institu-i tions and organizations! throughout the nation were'
USC Senior Gets Rhodes Scholarship
Prof Hits
Health
Centers
James OToole Named To Program at Oxford
THEATER STARS—Two of the stars in the Harold Pinter play, "The Collector,” are Gar Campbell (left) and Tom Basham. The play was originally written for TV.
REPERTORY PRESENTATION
EXPERIMENTAL THEATER—The three stars in Peter Shaffer's "The Private Ear" discuss their lines. They are Jack Rowe (left), Bob Maloney, and Marcy Lafferty.
Ticket Sale Begins Today For Three Experimental Plays
N ight Class
Statement
Clarified
By BRENDA HUDSPETH
For the first time in 25 years a Rhodes Scholar has been selected from USC. James J. OToole. a senior in English, has been named one of the four students from the Southwestern District to attend Oxford University in England next fall.
“Approximately 20 per cent O'Toole entered the Rhodes of all children referred to any Scholarship competition as % IIII
public health center for men- one of 38 nominees from Cal-tally retarded children will be ifornia. After a week of in- * found not to be retarded." terviews he was selected as This view was voiced by one two representatives
Dr. Richard Koch, associate to enter regional competition. professor of pediatrics at the Tutorial Founder
School of Medicine and the He is founder of the Tu- jjil
Children s Hospital of Los torial Project in which USC M
Angeles, following a recent students tutor underpinvileg- \ Wm
news story about a 17-year-ed children in Los Angeles, $ W %£->. 111
old boy with genius IQ who Two years ago O’Toole and a %p| '%■
spent 12 years in an Okla- fellow student. Mitch Forster. if
1 homa school for the mentally innovated the Tutorial Proj- f>
Doctors discovered that School in Watts. A*/-~
there was really nothing From just two students tu- jr ''V§y'y' ^ ,JM
wrong with the boy s mind: toring at Jordan High School, ne was deaf. the Tutorial Project has ex- ■ si&i
“Many children, slow to de- panded to over 300 USC stu- ft .
velop because of hearing de- dents who tutor at schools •;£ects or other physical handi- throughout Los Angeles. "We caps, have erroneously been are in a fortunate area to I considered retarded. In a di- study what is actually going'
|agnostic clinic, these condi-;on in America, and tutorial is tions may be corrected.” Dr. the best way." said O Toole.
Koch continued. Names Professors
JAMES O'TOOLE
. . . Rhodes Scholar
A story appearing in the;
Wrong Ailment “Two men at USC whom I
— . Hundreds, perhaps thou- admire most and who have
made by the Esso Education Tickets go on sale today speare. and is an acting com- :and “Ways and Means” will Uec- Daily I rojan stated sandSs of youngsters in Cali- helped me in all areas of en-Foundation for the academic at the Bovard box office for pany where each actor is be performed. On Jan. 11 and that no more than four Uni-fornia are going untreated deavor at USC are Dr. Charles
year 1965-66. the second set of plays per- given the chance to perform a
This brought to almost f°rmed by *he Experimental variety of roles. Modern ex-
$19.5 million the amount the Theater Workshop on Jan. 10- amples of repertory theater foundation contributed^ at the Stop-Gap Theatre.! are the Old Vic Company in
to some 500 institutions of Tickets are $1.00 for week- London, and more locally, higher education during its nights and Si 50 for week- “The Richard Boone Sliow
ends.
versity College courses will be for physical ailments because Hadwen and Dean Thomas accepted toward graduation, they are thought to be men- Hull.” said O'Toole, who is This statement is erroneous, tally retarded. also a teaching assistant for
Floyd E. Sternbe”g, assis- Because care of retarded race relations. Although he is tant director of admissions, !children in institutions is majoring in English. O'Toole ii-------^ t------.costing California S45 millionis very interested in television
Pledge RF: Actives Go Foodless
13 at 8:30 p.m. and on Jan.
15 at 7:30 p.m. the plays.
“The Private Ear” and “The Collector” will be presented.
“Arrangement in Black and White” is adapted from a clarified the statement by ex-
plaining that undergraduate a year’ ^r- stresses the.journalism. fratpmrhpe -at
students who have not been;imPorlance of earl-v recogm-! The Rhodes Scholarships rrateniit ...
formerly accepted into the tion of raental retardation by are well known both for the ™ to rtinner iast msiiL
B> ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Co-Night Editor
Eighteen fraternities
first 11 years. ;enas. ion television. ghort , f ,
Limited Grants ! . For of plays, the: Several plays will be pre- |by Dorotjjy parker. It will be
Grants in the unrestricted exp, nm al workshop will sented each night. On •lanu''djrected bv Louise Leonhard iUllut 11 * attcpicu mm uic * --- -------------------- -—ha
capital, and engineering and:°Perate aa a repertory the- ary 10, 12 and 14 at 8:30, and gtar Nancv ^ickev and university are the only stu-doclors- psychologists. _social broad range of qualities used * J,
science areas continue to be a,,jr- and on Jan. 15 at the 10 P-m- j)aje Waldorf. dents to which this statement w°rkers anr* public health as a basis for the choice of " ^ ‘ ~
limited to privately control- The repertory theater dates show, the plays “Arrange-, ’ would apply. nurses scholars, and for the highly Piea»e masses,
led colleges and universities ^ack t0 ^e time of Shake- ment in Black and White”! “Ways and Means” is a ^ j “Adequate diagnosis is the competitive nature of the Six weeks of planning
such as USC.
Esso foundation said in an annual report that it is endeavoring to perform an increasingly constructive role in the underwriting of some of the costs of seeking solutions to several problems besetting higher education.
M. L. Haider and J. K. -Tamieson. chairman and vice chairman of the foundation, said that success in providing more and better oduca-
Faculty
Rise 9
Salaries Per Cent
Fulfilling the pledge Presi-increased from last years
dent Norman Topping made!539 to the current 556.
to the faculty in 1960, the! Excluding the Schools of
average faculty salarv has Medicine and Dentistry, the
reached the current Ameri- averaSe salary of the four
. r • can \ssociatK>n nf ITnivprcitv academic ranks at USC are
r r af 1 ™ Profesn™ ”r"d° bT f"11™'5 t>rofpss”r S]5:f37 future of lhe American ^^ s sraae k at aii| . -
five-year associaLe
■|comedy witten by Noel Cow-;ard. The director of this play !is Gene Carlson; and the cast includes Rosemary Fleming, : Lance Larsen, Claudia Dunn, :Jon Triesault, Linda Twomey, (Paul Golding, Carlos Vinegra, ■Marcina Motter and Jim Wil-; cockson.
“The Private Ear”
The third play. “T!he Private Ear,” was written by
Students who are not en- foundation for future plan-,award.
rolled as full time day stu- ning/- Dr. Koch says> At an:
Al Grasso Tau Epsilon Phi Founder Rhodes pledge class president, cuimi-
dents and are therefore not evaluation clinic the child's In founding the scholar- nated in the removal of Mon-formally^enrolled at USC may probiem can be determined as ships, Cecil John Rhodes, Bri- day night's food supply from
physical or mental and the tish statesman and philan- the kitchens of the eighteen proper steps can be taken. A thropist, stressed goals of houses.
complete diagnosis may take public service and world un- The food was taken to the several visits to an evaluation demanding, indicating that Los Angeles Volunteer Food clinic over a period of 18 he wished the Rhodes Scholar Distribution Center. 1654 E-
t.he
professor $11,902,
take only a maximum of four courses or 16 units in University College. After taking four courses, the student must enroll formally as a full-time day student to continue taking University College courses. A full-time dav student is one who is
months, he said.
(Continued on Page 2)
Peter Shaffer, an English I taking 12 or more units a se-
playwright, and first appear- :mester.
ed off-Broadway with an-! students who are formally; other short play called “The ,admitted to the university! assistant, professor $9,577, in-Public Ej,e It is directed by may take as many courses ^ structor S7,oo4. G3rcia ?ind features Jd.ck ;^^ many units they
Researcher to Discuss Conditioned Reflexes
societv. (levels within
“In seeking the most effec-j^™*^
tive use Of Its available funds. The AALP chapter indi- According to the AAIJP Rowe. Bob Maloney and Mar-; vvant in University College/ ;flexes through brain stimula-the Department of Psvcholo^ d the Esso Education Founda-cates that the average com-; this places the professor and icy La«erty. ! ! tion today at 2:15 p.m. in 226 1 ‘ E'- niQht.
tion of full-time USC ____.........! ......... - ! The s t a t e m e n t. which F d H u and the Hancock Foundation Grasso che,:
118th St.. in the Watts-Wil-lowbrook area yesterday by more than 100 pledges.
! None of rh? actives knew iof the pledge project bow-1 pver. and were rather s>>r 'prised to find that dinner
noted neurophysiologist sored by Psi Chi, the honor- w^l,ld not b<- .-,erved Incident j 1 , ally- n o n ° of th° pledges
discuss conditioned re- a r y psychology fraternity: nr. fpr dinner la,t
tion will mntinue to study;pensation of full-time USC associate professor compensa-, A the changing needs of higher faculty (in all rajiks) is cur-;tion at the B grade level and!tor education and to adjust therently $12,260. up 9% from!the assistant nrofessor anHl* '
emphasis of its arant iim war's tn rrL ,he assistanl professor andjfor television by the British
‘ ^iant pro-last .vear s $11,„48- The num- instructor compensation at ■ playwright Harold Pinter
grams t o help meet them." her of full-time f aculty has j the A grade level. jpiaywngjnt, narom rtnter
Vice-President Tracy
The last play. The Collec- created widespread confusion was originally written ancj apprehension, does not
Decorator Restores 2 Mudd Hall Relics
j Strevey and the AAUP chap-:ter emphasized that it is im-i possible when dealing with ;556 faculty members in a va-iriety of fields including some professional schools for each individual professor to see his Miss Dotti Risi. an interior salary only in relation to the decorator who specializes in averages stated above. They furniture and who in her off- feel it is desirable to see one's time is known as Mrs Her- ran^in8 'n relation to his im-j u . u 0 ... , mediate peers as well as see-
bert H. Smalkin. mother of a in? lh(, sa|ary achiev(,ments
I SC coed, has donated a for the whole faculty, special gift to art lovers at _____________
USC.
Starring in this play will be E- Steve Bellon, Gar Campbell,
apply to the majority of students reading the Daily Trojan. It applies only to those
e-:ked with r^s-in the area 5ur-
Dr. Robert W. Doty, pro- as E®11 ^ a Iecture 5enes' taura”ts u „ _ . . fessor of neurophysiology at | "Coll°quia ™ the Biological rounding the Row. .Voodys
1 and the Vagabond had an
he
overflow
reported.
of customers.
Claire Wadsworth and Tom Bashom, under the direction of Scott Miller.
DT Staff Cries,
Miss Risi. at her own ex-: i ,
pense, restored two 5 feet L mOT© to 03O
• « • Rmit*
high, antique chairs from the! Philosophy Library. The j chairs are hand-carved, in the! Spanish and English style of the late 16th century Miss Risi discovered the antiques while on a tour of Mudd Hall.
Since the chairs were faded with torn upholstery, broken springs and pieces missing, Miss Risi checked into the possibility of having them fixed. She called the maintenance service, but since maintenance is not equipped to restore antique furniture, the chairs had been labeled "beyond repair.”
Last week the chairs were returned to USC They are now standing on the stairway platform in Mudd Hall.
7J;e last issue of the Daily Trojan for this semester will be published Thursday, Jan. 6.
Any persons or organizations desiring stories or announcements published should submit their material no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 5.
The next paper after (lie semester break will be a special orientation issue to be published Feb. 2. Regular publication will resume the first week of next semester.
Publication is ceasing in order to enable, the Daily Trojan staff members to havp time to study for their finals.
FIRST DONATION—President Topping
opened Phrateres-sponsored Project ACTT on Dec. 12 when he gave his gifts to
the LTniversity of Rochester's Foundations of Learning and
Center for Brain Research Memory.”
students not yet admitted toj^jU deliver the talk entitled i By using electrical currents; The amount of food do-the universitv who mav haw* Cortical Stimulstion 3,nd.: •% , j rv + u
totakemSrSttmtt Conditioned Reflexes,." i“ s™'** the bram, Doty nated to the Food Distnbu-
wanteo to lane more inan » .... has gotten conditioned re- non Center was enough to
units in University College. I The speech is being spon- sp0nsJ3 slmilar to thc>M ob_ feed 500 Grasso ^
tained with peripheral stimu- He got the idea for the Ration, such as light. (Continued on Page 2)
Project ACTT Drive Proves To Be Success
Linda Dulgarian. chairman and thp surrounding commun-of Project ACTT and a mem- ity. The USC Thrift S'1 op do-ber of Phrateres, the sponsor- nated clothing and DartelT ing organization, extends a Laboratories gave three 30 lb. thank you to the students and boxes of medical supplies, faculty of USC for their en- On P/ec. 22. Mayor Yorty thusiasm and cooperation presided at a ceremony at th*2 which made Project ACTT, Van Nuys Airport where alt America's Christmas Trains the donations from USC. the and Trucks., a successful San Fernando Valley, and the drive. Los Angeles area were load-
Project ACTT was a nation- ed onto a marine transport wide drive to collect goods. Phrateres’ Linda Dulgarian including food, clothing, toys, presented the South Vietna-and medical supplies, for the mese Ambassador. Nu Van U.S. servicemen in South Than, with the last box of Vietnam and for the South goods symbolizing the support Vietnamese people. , and good wishes of the Amer-
The project officially start-1 ican college students, ed at USC Dec. 12. w h e n | Throughout the nation $83 President Topping donated million worth of goods were the first gifts. Due to the collected, enough to fill 100 warm response on campus, box cars. All the donations the project, originally slated from California were shipped to end Dec. 17, was extended by train to San Francisco for until Dec. 22. delivery overseas. On Dec^m-
Twenty-three large boxes ber 25. the Marma Hawk, an of supplies were collected army carrier- took off for
from the students, faculty, j Vietnam loaded wila jiXUk.
Barbara Raia (left), ana Linda Dulgarian. Twenty - three boxes of supplies
were collected for Vietnam Christmas.
i
v
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 57, No. 59, January 04, 1966 |
| Full text | 1985 PMZMfflNMK NJWSWffi «f Hw oufowiw mmm PU8USHESS ASSOCIATION Universitv of Southern California DAILY ® TROJAN toi. xvn LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 4. 1966 No, 59 WEATHER 'Surtnv *cday with increasing cloud mess. Hiqh today £7, low, »n the 30's. Wjfer te moerature e* th» beaches, 57 deqrees. $40,000 Pledge A warded A $40,000 pledge to the Master Plan for enterprise and excellence in education has been made by the Esso Education Foundation o f New York, and the first of four annual installments of S10.000 has been paid in a check presented to Dr. Norman Topping, president. The unrestricted gift will earn another one-third from the Ford Foundation, which; matches with $1 every S3 raised by USC from other private sources before Dec.. 31. 1967. Esso Education Foundation is supported by Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and several of its affiliates, including Humble Oil & Refining Company. Esso Research and Engineering Company. Esso Production Research Company and Humble. Pipe Line Company. Present Check P. F. Sollars. exploration manager for the western division. and Marshall Black, reservoir engineer, both of: Humble Oil & Refining Com-! pany in Los Angeles, present-! ed the check to President: Topping. Grants of $2,348,000 to! 300 colleges, universities and related educational institu-i tions and organizations! throughout the nation were' USC Senior Gets Rhodes Scholarship Prof Hits Health Centers James OToole Named To Program at Oxford THEATER STARS—Two of the stars in the Harold Pinter play, "The Collector,” are Gar Campbell (left) and Tom Basham. The play was originally written for TV. REPERTORY PRESENTATION EXPERIMENTAL THEATER—The three stars in Peter Shaffer's "The Private Ear" discuss their lines. They are Jack Rowe (left), Bob Maloney, and Marcy Lafferty. Ticket Sale Begins Today For Three Experimental Plays N ight Class Statement Clarified By BRENDA HUDSPETH For the first time in 25 years a Rhodes Scholar has been selected from USC. James J. OToole. a senior in English, has been named one of the four students from the Southwestern District to attend Oxford University in England next fall. “Approximately 20 per cent O'Toole entered the Rhodes of all children referred to any Scholarship competition as % IIII public health center for men- one of 38 nominees from Cal-tally retarded children will be ifornia. After a week of in- * found not to be retarded." terviews he was selected as This view was voiced by one two representatives Dr. Richard Koch, associate to enter regional competition. professor of pediatrics at the Tutorial Founder School of Medicine and the He is founder of the Tu- jjil Children s Hospital of Los torial Project in which USC M Angeles, following a recent students tutor underpinvileg- \ Wm news story about a 17-year-ed children in Los Angeles, $ W %£->. 111 old boy with genius IQ who Two years ago O’Toole and a %p '%■ spent 12 years in an Okla- fellow student. Mitch Forster. if 1 homa school for the mentally innovated the Tutorial Proj- f> Doctors discovered that School in Watts. A*/-~ there was really nothing From just two students tu- jr ''V§y'y' ^ ,JM wrong with the boy s mind: toring at Jordan High School, ne was deaf. the Tutorial Project has ex- ■ si&i “Many children, slow to de- panded to over 300 USC stu- ft . velop because of hearing de- dents who tutor at schools •;£ects or other physical handi- throughout Los Angeles. "We caps, have erroneously been are in a fortunate area to I considered retarded. In a di- study what is actually going' agnostic clinic, these condi-;on in America, and tutorial is tions may be corrected.” Dr. the best way." said O Toole. Koch continued. Names Professors JAMES O'TOOLE . . . Rhodes Scholar A story appearing in the; Wrong Ailment “Two men at USC whom I — . Hundreds, perhaps thou- admire most and who have made by the Esso Education Tickets go on sale today speare. and is an acting com- :and “Ways and Means” will Uec- Daily I rojan stated sandSs of youngsters in Cali- helped me in all areas of en-Foundation for the academic at the Bovard box office for pany where each actor is be performed. On Jan. 11 and that no more than four Uni-fornia are going untreated deavor at USC are Dr. Charles year 1965-66. the second set of plays per- given the chance to perform a This brought to almost f°rmed by *he Experimental variety of roles. Modern ex- $19.5 million the amount the Theater Workshop on Jan. 10- amples of repertory theater foundation contributed^ at the Stop-Gap Theatre.! are the Old Vic Company in to some 500 institutions of Tickets are $1.00 for week- London, and more locally, higher education during its nights and Si 50 for week- “The Richard Boone Sliow ends. versity College courses will be for physical ailments because Hadwen and Dean Thomas accepted toward graduation, they are thought to be men- Hull.” said O'Toole, who is This statement is erroneous, tally retarded. also a teaching assistant for Floyd E. Sternbe”g, assis- Because care of retarded race relations. Although he is tant director of admissions, !children in institutions is majoring in English. O'Toole ii-------^ t------.costing California S45 millionis very interested in television Pledge RF: Actives Go Foodless 13 at 8:30 p.m. and on Jan. 15 at 7:30 p.m. the plays. “The Private Ear” and “The Collector” will be presented. “Arrangement in Black and White” is adapted from a clarified the statement by ex- plaining that undergraduate a year’ ^r- stresses the.journalism. fratpmrhpe -at students who have not been;imPorlance of earl-v recogm-! The Rhodes Scholarships rrateniit ... formerly accepted into the tion of raental retardation by are well known both for the ™ to rtinner iast msiiL B> ELLIOT ZWIEBACH Co-Night Editor Eighteen fraternities first 11 years. ;enas. ion television. ghort , f , Limited Grants ! . For of plays, the: Several plays will be pre- by Dorotjjy parker. It will be Grants in the unrestricted exp, nm al workshop will sented each night. On •lanu''djrected bv Louise Leonhard iUllut 11 * attcpicu mm uic * --- -------------------- -—ha capital, and engineering and:°Perate aa a repertory the- ary 10, 12 and 14 at 8:30, and gtar Nancv ^ickev and university are the only stu-doclors- psychologists. _social broad range of qualities used * J, science areas continue to be a,,jr- and on Jan. 15 at the 10 P-m- j)aje Waldorf. dents to which this statement w°rkers anr* public health as a basis for the choice of " ^ ‘ ~ limited to privately control- The repertory theater dates show, the plays “Arrange-, ’ would apply. nurses scholars, and for the highly Piea»e masses, led colleges and universities ^ack t0 ^e time of Shake- ment in Black and White”! “Ways and Means” is a ^ j “Adequate diagnosis is the competitive nature of the Six weeks of planning such as USC. Esso foundation said in an annual report that it is endeavoring to perform an increasingly constructive role in the underwriting of some of the costs of seeking solutions to several problems besetting higher education. M. L. Haider and J. K. -Tamieson. chairman and vice chairman of the foundation, said that success in providing more and better oduca- Faculty Rise 9 Salaries Per Cent Fulfilling the pledge Presi-increased from last years dent Norman Topping made!539 to the current 556. to the faculty in 1960, the! Excluding the Schools of average faculty salarv has Medicine and Dentistry, the reached the current Ameri- averaSe salary of the four . r • can \ssociatK>n nf ITnivprcitv academic ranks at USC are r r af 1 ™ Profesn™ ”r"d° bT f"11™'5 t>rofpss”r S]5:f37 future of lhe American ^^ s sraae k at aii . - five-year associaLe ■ comedy witten by Noel Cow-;ard. The director of this play !is Gene Carlson; and the cast includes Rosemary Fleming, : Lance Larsen, Claudia Dunn, :Jon Triesault, Linda Twomey, (Paul Golding, Carlos Vinegra, ■Marcina Motter and Jim Wil-; cockson. “The Private Ear” The third play. “T!he Private Ear,” was written by Students who are not en- foundation for future plan-,award. rolled as full time day stu- ning/- Dr. Koch says> At an: Al Grasso Tau Epsilon Phi Founder Rhodes pledge class president, cuimi- dents and are therefore not evaluation clinic the child's In founding the scholar- nated in the removal of Mon-formally^enrolled at USC may probiem can be determined as ships, Cecil John Rhodes, Bri- day night's food supply from physical or mental and the tish statesman and philan- the kitchens of the eighteen proper steps can be taken. A thropist, stressed goals of houses. complete diagnosis may take public service and world un- The food was taken to the several visits to an evaluation demanding, indicating that Los Angeles Volunteer Food clinic over a period of 18 he wished the Rhodes Scholar Distribution Center. 1654 E- t.he professor $11,902, take only a maximum of four courses or 16 units in University College. After taking four courses, the student must enroll formally as a full-time day student to continue taking University College courses. A full-time dav student is one who is months, he said. (Continued on Page 2) Peter Shaffer, an English I taking 12 or more units a se- playwright, and first appear- :mester. ed off-Broadway with an-! students who are formally; other short play called “The ,admitted to the university! assistant, professor $9,577, in-Public Ej,e It is directed by may take as many courses ^ structor S7,oo4. G3rcia ?ind features Jd.ck ;^^ many units they Researcher to Discuss Conditioned Reflexes societv. (levels within “In seeking the most effec-j^™*^ tive use Of Its available funds. The AALP chapter indi- According to the AAIJP Rowe. Bob Maloney and Mar-; vvant in University College/ ;flexes through brain stimula-the Department of Psvcholo^ d the Esso Education Founda-cates that the average com-; this places the professor and icy La«erty. ! ! tion today at 2:15 p.m. in 226 1 ‘ E'- niQht. tion of full-time USC ____.........! ......... - ! The s t a t e m e n t. which F d H u and the Hancock Foundation Grasso che,: 118th St.. in the Watts-Wil-lowbrook area yesterday by more than 100 pledges. ! None of rh? actives knew iof the pledge project bow-1 pver. and were rather s>>r 'prised to find that dinner noted neurophysiologist sored by Psi Chi, the honor- w^l,ld not b<- .-,erved Incident j 1 , ally- n o n ° of th° pledges discuss conditioned re- a r y psychology fraternity: nr. fpr dinner la,t tion will mntinue to study;pensation of full-time USC associate professor compensa-, A the changing needs of higher faculty (in all rajiks) is cur-;tion at the B grade level and!tor education and to adjust therently $12,260. up 9% from!the assistant nrofessor anHl* ' emphasis of its arant iim war's tn rrL ,he assistanl professor andjfor television by the British ‘ ^iant pro-last .vear s $11,„48- The num- instructor compensation at ■ playwright Harold Pinter grams t o help meet them." her of full-time f aculty has j the A grade level. jpiaywngjnt, narom rtnter Vice-President Tracy The last play. The Collec- created widespread confusion was originally written ancj apprehension, does not Decorator Restores 2 Mudd Hall Relics j Strevey and the AAUP chap-:ter emphasized that it is im-i possible when dealing with ;556 faculty members in a va-iriety of fields including some professional schools for each individual professor to see his Miss Dotti Risi. an interior salary only in relation to the decorator who specializes in averages stated above. They furniture and who in her off- feel it is desirable to see one's time is known as Mrs Her- ran^in8 'n relation to his im-j u . u 0 ... , mediate peers as well as see- bert H. Smalkin. mother of a in? lh(, sa ary achiev(,ments I SC coed, has donated a for the whole faculty, special gift to art lovers at _____________ USC. Starring in this play will be E- Steve Bellon, Gar Campbell, apply to the majority of students reading the Daily Trojan. It applies only to those e-:ked with r^s-in the area 5ur- Dr. Robert W. Doty, pro- as E®11 ^ a Iecture 5enes' taura”ts u „ _ . . fessor of neurophysiology at "Coll°quia ™ the Biological rounding the Row. .Voodys 1 and the Vagabond had an he overflow reported. of customers. Claire Wadsworth and Tom Bashom, under the direction of Scott Miller. DT Staff Cries, Miss Risi. at her own ex-: i , pense, restored two 5 feet L mOT© to 03O • « • Rmit* high, antique chairs from the! Philosophy Library. The j chairs are hand-carved, in the! Spanish and English style of the late 16th century Miss Risi discovered the antiques while on a tour of Mudd Hall. Since the chairs were faded with torn upholstery, broken springs and pieces missing, Miss Risi checked into the possibility of having them fixed. She called the maintenance service, but since maintenance is not equipped to restore antique furniture, the chairs had been labeled "beyond repair.” Last week the chairs were returned to USC They are now standing on the stairway platform in Mudd Hall. 7J;e last issue of the Daily Trojan for this semester will be published Thursday, Jan. 6. Any persons or organizations desiring stories or announcements published should submit their material no later than 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 5. The next paper after (lie semester break will be a special orientation issue to be published Feb. 2. Regular publication will resume the first week of next semester. Publication is ceasing in order to enable, the Daily Trojan staff members to havp time to study for their finals. FIRST DONATION—President Topping opened Phrateres-sponsored Project ACTT on Dec. 12 when he gave his gifts to the LTniversity of Rochester's Foundations of Learning and Center for Brain Research Memory.” students not yet admitted toj^jU deliver the talk entitled i By using electrical currents; The amount of food do-the universitv who mav haw* Cortical Stimulstion 3,nd.: •% , j rv + u totakemSrSttmtt Conditioned Reflexes,." i“ s™'** the bram, Doty nated to the Food Distnbu- wanteo to lane more inan » .... has gotten conditioned re- non Center was enough to units in University College. I The speech is being spon- sp0nsJ3 slmilar to thc>M ob_ feed 500 Grasso ^ tained with peripheral stimu- He got the idea for the Ration, such as light. (Continued on Page 2) Project ACTT Drive Proves To Be Success Linda Dulgarian. chairman and thp surrounding commun-of Project ACTT and a mem- ity. The USC Thrift S'1 op do-ber of Phrateres, the sponsor- nated clothing and DartelT ing organization, extends a Laboratories gave three 30 lb. thank you to the students and boxes of medical supplies, faculty of USC for their en- On P/ec. 22. Mayor Yorty thusiasm and cooperation presided at a ceremony at th*2 which made Project ACTT, Van Nuys Airport where alt America's Christmas Trains the donations from USC. the and Trucks., a successful San Fernando Valley, and the drive. Los Angeles area were load- Project ACTT was a nation- ed onto a marine transport wide drive to collect goods. Phrateres’ Linda Dulgarian including food, clothing, toys, presented the South Vietna-and medical supplies, for the mese Ambassador. Nu Van U.S. servicemen in South Than, with the last box of Vietnam and for the South goods symbolizing the support Vietnamese people. , and good wishes of the Amer- The project officially start-1 ican college students, ed at USC Dec. 12. w h e n Throughout the nation $83 President Topping donated million worth of goods were the first gifts. Due to the collected, enough to fill 100 warm response on campus, box cars. All the donations the project, originally slated from California were shipped to end Dec. 17, was extended by train to San Francisco for until Dec. 22. delivery overseas. On Dec^m- Twenty-three large boxes ber 25. the Marma Hawk, an of supplies were collected army carrier- took off for from the students, faculty, j Vietnam loaded wila jiXUk. Barbara Raia (left), ana Linda Dulgarian. Twenty - three boxes of supplies were collected for Vietnam Christmas. i v |
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