DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 64, No. 109, April 21, 1972 |
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University of Southern California
DAILY TROJAN
VOL. LXIV NO. 109 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1972
ARM IN ARM (FOR PEACE)—WoodyOiaz, (far right) regional director for the Student Mobilization Committee and coordinator of La Raza, demonstrates the method of marching for Saturday's antiwar demonstra-
tion, which will close with a rally at MacArthur Park. A group of rally monitors met Thursday at the Student Activities Center to discuss final preparations for the march. DT photo by Tony Korody.
Colleges protest war
The U.S. air strikes on Haiphong harbor in North Vietnam has set off a wave of protest on college campuses across the nation.
Many colleges have announced support for moratoriums and strikes, as well as support for planned antiwar marches Saturday in New York and Los Angeles.
Protestors threw stones Tuesday at the Harvard University Center for International Studies, then entered the building and set fire to part of the three-story structure. About 200 demonstrators rushed the building but fled within minutes. The action was part of an earlier demonstration of 1.200 persons in a sit-down in Boston Commons.
About 300 students at the University of California at Santa Barbara marched on the administration building, protesting the university’s military recruiting program and voicing their support for a nationwide student strike.
In College Park, Md., about 100 state troopers, using tear gas and dogs, moved along U.S. Route 1. which runs through the university, to break up
Art sale to raise scholarship funds
The School of Architecture and Fine Arts is sponsoring an all-media art sale today and Saturday to raise funds for student scholarships.
The sale, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday in the University Galleries, will offer the works of students, faculty and others in a wide range of forms. All items in the sale have been inspected by a professional jury.
Black women to be topic of panel
A three-day Black Women's Conference will begin at noon Tuesday in Student Activities Center 204.
Discussion topics include black women in the legal profession, minority, involvement in university politics, black sororities’ response to the community and campus, and poetry and the black woman.
Assemblywoman Yvonne Brathwaite(D-63rd District); Gloria Myklebust. director of the Student Services Center; Bobbi Rodgers, coordinator of admissions and student services; Vida Van Brunt, assistant director of the Urban Teacher Corps will be featured panelists.
Also scheduled are two sessions on gala wrap ping (head wraps) and an African fashion show.
a demonstration by about 500 students who blocked the highway after a rally.
Scuffling broke out among protestors who briefly took control Wednesday of Columbia University’s School for International Affairs. About 300 students marched down Broadway from the campus before they moved in.
Attendance was said to be down at Columbia University as a result of the unrest, but William J. McGill, president ofthe University said he would guarantee that anyone who wanted to attend class would be able to do so.
Most of the demonstrations have been peaceful; however, at least eight persons were arrested when 3,000 noisy protestors carried their march from the campus ofthe University of Wisconsin at Madison to the steps of the state capitol building, with the march erupting into minor violence.
In Los Angeles, police and federal officials moved in before midnight Wednesday and arrested about 15 demonstrators who have barricaded themselves inside the U.S. Naval Reserve Center.
Some of the demonstrations have been linked to racial tension as well as to antiwar sentiment.
About 24 persons seize the ROTC building at the University of Massachusetts to protest the bombing of North Vietnam and alleged racism in the university's school of education.
At Harvard University, 50 blacks took over Massachusetts Hall, objecting to the fact that Harvard retains stock in an oil company with investments in Angola, a Portuguese colony in southern Africa.
Demonstrations at Stanford University involved approximately 400 students protesting war-related research conducted on the campus.
In San Francisco. 1.500 persons, carrying huge Viet Cong flags and signs saying “Nixon’s Peace Plan is a Bomb.” surrounded a federal building. Five persons were arrested by police after 16 demonstrators occupied an Air Force recruiting station, while others burned a car owned by the U.S. Navy.
Across the bay in Alameda, 40 persons were arrested for blocking the entrance to Alameda Naval Station, home port of many ships stationed in the South China Sea off Vietnam.
Science fiction author to speak
Larry Niven. Hugo Award-winning science fiction author, will speak in Von KleinSmid Center 250 at 7 p.m. Monday.
Niven has written “Ringworld” and “Neutron Star.” The “Science Fiction and Mythology” class of the Experimental College will sponsor Niven.
Antiwar rally to begin at noon
By LOREN LEDIN
A rally to protest recent U.S. military actions in Vietnam will take place on the steps of Bovard Auditorium today at noon.
The announcement was made Thursday at a meeting of rally monitors, who were gathered to discuss preparation for the antiwar demonstration Saturday in Los Angeles.
The USC rally will feature five to eight student leaders and faculty members. At the meeting Thursday, it was not yet known who would be the speakers.
Natalie Bombaro, a USC secretary and coordinator for the Student Mobilization Committee, said preparations were just starting to move.
An organizing committee will meet in front of Tommy Trojan at
9 a.m. About 2.000 leaflets will be passed out.
Carole Newcomb, organizer of the rally, hopes the rally here and others on campuses across the nation will lead to a student moratorium next Friday.
The monitors’ meeting in the Student Activities Center served as a training session for those in the antiwar demonstration.
The Saturday march will begin at 11 a.m. at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Bronson Avenue and will close at MacArthur Park.
Newcomb and Woody Diaz, a member of La Raza, stressed that the demonstration must remain orderly.
“We don’t want violence; this is a peaceful demonstration,” Newcomb said.
“Anybody who breaks the rules will be treated as an enemy of the demonstration. We are not encouraging civil disobedience or violence,” Diaz said.
Newcomb said the purpose of the monitors is to carry out certain tasks necessary to the smooth running of the event and to assure the orderly nature of the demonstration.
She said that three rules for demonstrators to follow are not to argue with police, not to jump to conclusions, and to practice courtesy.
Newcomb said three types of monitors will watch the demonstrators. Contingent monitors will walk with the procession; front line monitors will lead the procession; assembly monitors will guard the stage at MacArthur Park. _
“We don’t anticipate any major problems,” she said.
Diaz, however, seemed more apprehensive, giving the monitors instructions on how to remove bottles and rocks from any potential trouble-makers and how to remove an individual.
Newcomb said she didn’t know how many people the USC rally would attract.
She suggested the idea at a meeting of the Student Mobilization Committee.
“Everybody was saying ‘What are we going to do at USC? What are we going to do at USC?’ So I said. How about a rally4’ ”
Bombaro said of the rally today, “I think it will be a united probe.
A lot is going to depend on how many students we can get to come today.”
Women’s Week starts Monday; men invited
Women’s Week is coming to USC next week. It will present a study ofthe woman in America, from motherhood to management.
A multitude of free films, discussion groups, speakers, demonstrations, exhibits, luncheon meetings and multimedia shows are planned.
Men need not think that the week is only for woman, said Pat Drummond, counselor in the Career Planning and Placement Center. She said, “We need the support of men very badly. I think men, too, are looking for liberty from the stereotyped roles society asks us to play. We’re partners in the search.”
Monday’s events, begin with workshops on nonsexist child-raising. Gloria Hirsch, a licensed marriage and family counselor, will lead the workshops in the Student Activities Center. They will be held at 10 a.m., noon and 2 p.m.
“The Story of Eric” is a film on La Maze childbirth. It will be shown at 11:30 a.m. in the Student Activities Center.
At 12:30 p.m., Liz Arch from Planned Parenthood will be at the Student Activities Center to answer questions.
A rap session especially for men will be held at noon on the second floor of the Student Activities Center. It will discuss aspects of the ways men react to the women’s movement. Herman Lee. a counselor in career planning, and Rick Saslaw, a cinema student, will conduct the session.
A birth control display and a film will be in the Student
Activities Center from noon through the afternoon.
“The Story of Eric” will be shown again at 7 p.m. in the Alpha Epsilon Phi house. 624 W. 28th St. A discussion with the parents in the movie will follow the showing.
To conclude Monday’s events. Dr. Gale Anderson, a gynecologist at County-USC Medical Center, will present a medical childbirth film and lead discussion at 7:30 p.m. in Birnkrant Dining Room.
Tuesday will start with the Self-Help Clinic for women. The “Learn-in” discussion-
workshop will be held in the Student Activities Center at 9:30 to 11 a.m., noon to 1:30 p.m. and 2:30 to 4 p.m.
Birth control methods, therapeutic abortion
techniques, detection of breast and cervical cancer and venereal disease will be discussed. Films and demonstrations will be included.
Other subjects discussed
(Continued on page 3)
Aid office to hear students
In an attempt to evaluate the status of the Student Aid Office and to make recommendations for improvement, the university’s Student Aid Committee will hold open hearings in Student Union 302 Monday and Tuesday from 1 to 3 p.m.
AI1 students who want to comment or make recommendations are invited.
Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 64, No. 109, April 21, 1972 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 64, No. 109, April 21, 1972. |
| Full text | University of Southern California DAILY TROJAN VOL. LXIV NO. 109 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1972 ARM IN ARM (FOR PEACE)—WoodyOiaz, (far right) regional director for the Student Mobilization Committee and coordinator of La Raza, demonstrates the method of marching for Saturday's antiwar demonstra- tion, which will close with a rally at MacArthur Park. A group of rally monitors met Thursday at the Student Activities Center to discuss final preparations for the march. DT photo by Tony Korody. Colleges protest war The U.S. air strikes on Haiphong harbor in North Vietnam has set off a wave of protest on college campuses across the nation. Many colleges have announced support for moratoriums and strikes, as well as support for planned antiwar marches Saturday in New York and Los Angeles. Protestors threw stones Tuesday at the Harvard University Center for International Studies, then entered the building and set fire to part of the three-story structure. About 200 demonstrators rushed the building but fled within minutes. The action was part of an earlier demonstration of 1.200 persons in a sit-down in Boston Commons. About 300 students at the University of California at Santa Barbara marched on the administration building, protesting the university’s military recruiting program and voicing their support for a nationwide student strike. In College Park, Md., about 100 state troopers, using tear gas and dogs, moved along U.S. Route 1. which runs through the university, to break up Art sale to raise scholarship funds The School of Architecture and Fine Arts is sponsoring an all-media art sale today and Saturday to raise funds for student scholarships. The sale, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday in the University Galleries, will offer the works of students, faculty and others in a wide range of forms. All items in the sale have been inspected by a professional jury. Black women to be topic of panel A three-day Black Women's Conference will begin at noon Tuesday in Student Activities Center 204. Discussion topics include black women in the legal profession, minority, involvement in university politics, black sororities’ response to the community and campus, and poetry and the black woman. Assemblywoman Yvonne Brathwaite(D-63rd District); Gloria Myklebust. director of the Student Services Center; Bobbi Rodgers, coordinator of admissions and student services; Vida Van Brunt, assistant director of the Urban Teacher Corps will be featured panelists. Also scheduled are two sessions on gala wrap ping (head wraps) and an African fashion show. a demonstration by about 500 students who blocked the highway after a rally. Scuffling broke out among protestors who briefly took control Wednesday of Columbia University’s School for International Affairs. About 300 students marched down Broadway from the campus before they moved in. Attendance was said to be down at Columbia University as a result of the unrest, but William J. McGill, president ofthe University said he would guarantee that anyone who wanted to attend class would be able to do so. Most of the demonstrations have been peaceful; however, at least eight persons were arrested when 3,000 noisy protestors carried their march from the campus ofthe University of Wisconsin at Madison to the steps of the state capitol building, with the march erupting into minor violence. In Los Angeles, police and federal officials moved in before midnight Wednesday and arrested about 15 demonstrators who have barricaded themselves inside the U.S. Naval Reserve Center. Some of the demonstrations have been linked to racial tension as well as to antiwar sentiment. About 24 persons seize the ROTC building at the University of Massachusetts to protest the bombing of North Vietnam and alleged racism in the university's school of education. At Harvard University, 50 blacks took over Massachusetts Hall, objecting to the fact that Harvard retains stock in an oil company with investments in Angola, a Portuguese colony in southern Africa. Demonstrations at Stanford University involved approximately 400 students protesting war-related research conducted on the campus. In San Francisco. 1.500 persons, carrying huge Viet Cong flags and signs saying “Nixon’s Peace Plan is a Bomb.” surrounded a federal building. Five persons were arrested by police after 16 demonstrators occupied an Air Force recruiting station, while others burned a car owned by the U.S. Navy. Across the bay in Alameda, 40 persons were arrested for blocking the entrance to Alameda Naval Station, home port of many ships stationed in the South China Sea off Vietnam. Science fiction author to speak Larry Niven. Hugo Award-winning science fiction author, will speak in Von KleinSmid Center 250 at 7 p.m. Monday. Niven has written “Ringworld” and “Neutron Star.” The “Science Fiction and Mythology” class of the Experimental College will sponsor Niven. Antiwar rally to begin at noon By LOREN LEDIN A rally to protest recent U.S. military actions in Vietnam will take place on the steps of Bovard Auditorium today at noon. The announcement was made Thursday at a meeting of rally monitors, who were gathered to discuss preparation for the antiwar demonstration Saturday in Los Angeles. The USC rally will feature five to eight student leaders and faculty members. At the meeting Thursday, it was not yet known who would be the speakers. Natalie Bombaro, a USC secretary and coordinator for the Student Mobilization Committee, said preparations were just starting to move. An organizing committee will meet in front of Tommy Trojan at 9 a.m. About 2.000 leaflets will be passed out. Carole Newcomb, organizer of the rally, hopes the rally here and others on campuses across the nation will lead to a student moratorium next Friday. The monitors’ meeting in the Student Activities Center served as a training session for those in the antiwar demonstration. The Saturday march will begin at 11 a.m. at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Bronson Avenue and will close at MacArthur Park. Newcomb and Woody Diaz, a member of La Raza, stressed that the demonstration must remain orderly. “We don’t want violence; this is a peaceful demonstration,” Newcomb said. “Anybody who breaks the rules will be treated as an enemy of the demonstration. We are not encouraging civil disobedience or violence,” Diaz said. Newcomb said the purpose of the monitors is to carry out certain tasks necessary to the smooth running of the event and to assure the orderly nature of the demonstration. She said that three rules for demonstrators to follow are not to argue with police, not to jump to conclusions, and to practice courtesy. Newcomb said three types of monitors will watch the demonstrators. Contingent monitors will walk with the procession; front line monitors will lead the procession; assembly monitors will guard the stage at MacArthur Park. _ “We don’t anticipate any major problems,” she said. Diaz, however, seemed more apprehensive, giving the monitors instructions on how to remove bottles and rocks from any potential trouble-makers and how to remove an individual. Newcomb said she didn’t know how many people the USC rally would attract. She suggested the idea at a meeting of the Student Mobilization Committee. “Everybody was saying ‘What are we going to do at USC? What are we going to do at USC?’ So I said. How about a rally4’ ” Bombaro said of the rally today, “I think it will be a united probe. A lot is going to depend on how many students we can get to come today.” Women’s Week starts Monday; men invited Women’s Week is coming to USC next week. It will present a study ofthe woman in America, from motherhood to management. A multitude of free films, discussion groups, speakers, demonstrations, exhibits, luncheon meetings and multimedia shows are planned. Men need not think that the week is only for woman, said Pat Drummond, counselor in the Career Planning and Placement Center. She said, “We need the support of men very badly. I think men, too, are looking for liberty from the stereotyped roles society asks us to play. We’re partners in the search.” Monday’s events, begin with workshops on nonsexist child-raising. Gloria Hirsch, a licensed marriage and family counselor, will lead the workshops in the Student Activities Center. They will be held at 10 a.m., noon and 2 p.m. “The Story of Eric” is a film on La Maze childbirth. It will be shown at 11:30 a.m. in the Student Activities Center. At 12:30 p.m., Liz Arch from Planned Parenthood will be at the Student Activities Center to answer questions. A rap session especially for men will be held at noon on the second floor of the Student Activities Center. It will discuss aspects of the ways men react to the women’s movement. Herman Lee. a counselor in career planning, and Rick Saslaw, a cinema student, will conduct the session. A birth control display and a film will be in the Student Activities Center from noon through the afternoon. “The Story of Eric” will be shown again at 7 p.m. in the Alpha Epsilon Phi house. 624 W. 28th St. A discussion with the parents in the movie will follow the showing. To conclude Monday’s events. Dr. Gale Anderson, a gynecologist at County-USC Medical Center, will present a medical childbirth film and lead discussion at 7:30 p.m. in Birnkrant Dining Room. Tuesday will start with the Self-Help Clinic for women. The “Learn-in” discussion- workshop will be held in the Student Activities Center at 9:30 to 11 a.m., noon to 1:30 p.m. and 2:30 to 4 p.m. Birth control methods, therapeutic abortion techniques, detection of breast and cervical cancer and venereal disease will be discussed. Films and demonstrations will be included. Other subjects discussed (Continued on page 3) Aid office to hear students In an attempt to evaluate the status of the Student Aid Office and to make recommendations for improvement, the university’s Student Aid Committee will hold open hearings in Student Union 302 Monday and Tuesday from 1 to 3 p.m. AI1 students who want to comment or make recommendations are invited. |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1518/uschist-dt-1972-04-21~001.tif |
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