Daily Trojan, Vol. 46, No. 105, March 25, 1955 |
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1 World Fun’ XLVI LOS ANGELES, CALIF., FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1955 for Tonight Carnival Booths Features Games, Foods, Dancing By Darlene Hall “A World of Fun” will become a reality Friday afternoon and evening when the YWCA stages its annual carnival from 4:30 until 11 p.m. Fun will be there in the form of games, food, dancing, laughter, and typical Coney Island merriment. Price To Be Crowned Baseball Week Queen Cyclists Told to Form on Row k ★ ★ ★ ★ ike Week Rolls Soon The Daily Trojan's “Bike Week" campaign will get the grand end-off Monday morning at 7:50 a.m. when DT Managing Editor dodger Darbonne leads all cyclists from the Row down the bike oute to campus. All cyclists with 8 o'clocks are requested to meet n 28th Street at University Avenue to form the caravan. Bike campaign coordinator, Darbonne will redo the bike route t 8:50 a.m. to join in with students having 9 a.m. classes. “If everyone with a bike will take part in this campaign, we ;an contribute greatly to easing the parking problem and also contribute to our own convenience. No one spot on campus is further rom another than four minutes via bike,” Darbonne said. “That means more time to greet friends and take in this great beach weather while waiting between classes.” The following bike dealers are able to offer new and used bikes «t reasonable prices. National Cycle Shop, 724 South San Pedro Street, used $14-$25, new $45-75. Playrite 3icycle Supply Co., 227 East 6th Street, $10 ‘p. Haynes Bike Shop. 1021 South LaBrea, $20 up. Norman’s Cyclery, 4267 South Vermont, about $25 up. Safety Cycle Shop, 1014 North Western, balloon tires $12.50 :p, lightweight bikes .$15 up, with gears, $25 up. Robinson's Cycle Shop, 1136 North Vermont, about $20 up. Al's Bike Shop, 168 North aBrea, $10 up. Ralph's Bicycle Store, 8408 West 3rd Street, $15 up. IContrasts of Two Berlins old By Hans Hirschfeld NAMED QUEEN - Joan Price will be crowned SC's first baseball queen at a pep rally inaugurating "Baseball Week" on campus. By Andy Dimas Berlin is a city of contrasts that lies at the crossroads of ‘two worlds.” This is the picture that was Irawn Thursday afternoon ^y Dr. Hans Hirschfeld, anti-lazi in Wofld War II and jresent anti-Communist public affairs director for the \rest Berlin Senate. Dr. Hirschfeld spoke on what > happening in Berlin “In the thadow of the Iron Curtain.” as I art of a series of talks he is de- : vering while on a tour sponsor-by the Berlin Senate. Constant Contrast “The inhabitants of Berlin are iving in two separate worlds in onstant contrast with each oth-fr. divided by an in^ginary line.” . |-« West Berlin representative a,d. The Western and Eastern sectors or Berlin are different in jnany ways, from their econom-?s. and governments, to their srsonal modes of life, he said. “Each section has a different , -renew The West Berliners | who work in the East section are paid in a different currency than they must have to live in their own section,” Dr. Hirschfeld said. Solve Differences He said this is only one of the problems which has faced the people in the German city. To solve the currency differences an exchange commission has been set up in each zone where the inhabitants living and working in the two sections can exchange their monies. “There has been some grumbling about differences in the Eastern and Western mark but most of the people are quite content with the solution.” he said. Live in Oppression On one side of the imaginary line separating the East from the West is a people living in oppression without the freedoms of speech, assembly, press, or religion. “On the other side, in the West zone, is a people living in a democracy, free to act and think as they want, reconstructing the city they love,” the 61-year-old German statesman said. By Bob Speck A few hours before SC battles it out with Stanford on Bovard Field, Joan Price will be crowned baseball queen at a giant pep rally, in Bovard Auditorium. The noon “Beat Stanford” gathering will be the beginning of the final two climatic days of “Baseball Week” activity on campus. Following the rally, at 2:45 p.m. the Trojans, defend i n g champions of the California Intercollegiate Baseball Asociation, will meet the Stanford Indians, the second rated team last year, in the first of two crucial games. Queen Crowned Highlight of the lunch rally will be the crowning of Joan Price, as SC’s first baseball queen, by co-captains John Garten and John Stevenson of the varsity team. Miss Price was chosen queen from a field of 12 contestants Tuesday afternoon by a five-man committee. Those making the selection were Rod Dedeaux, head baseball coach; Tommy Walker, director Trojan Band; Harry Nelson, director of student activities; Stevenson, and Howard Smith, president of the Trojan Knights, who are in charge of “Baseball Week.” The queen’s two attendants, or ! honorary batgirls, Sandy Hardin. ! AOPi, and Barbara O’Callaghan, | Independent Women’s Council j representative, will also be pre- j sented. The entire varsity baseball squad, Walker’s Pep Band, and Don Ward and his yell crew, will 1 also participate in the activities, j Game Crucial The basebal game series must definitely be termed “crucial” for | both sides, as far as champion- j ship hopes are concerned. Last’! year the Indians came in second i because they couldn’t beat the top team, the Trojans. In four meetings, SC won three. In the fina lstandings, Stanford trailed by two. SC is faced with a mild “must win.” It’s a little early to rule teams out of the race, but should the Trojans drop this series, the chances of gaining a fifth straight CIBA championship would be narrowed considerably. The Trojans suffered an upset loss 10-6 in the season’s opener against UCLA last Saturday. This will be Stanford’s first conference game. Trojans Favored Despite having arleady taken a 'league loss, the Trojans must be favored. These are almost the same two teams that faced each other last year. Only major Indian less is shortstop Warren Goodrich. Troy is an all veteran team. Stanford had the league’s outstanding pitching staff last year, but was weak at the plate, as is true this season. WELL PREPARED — These happy and costumed Trojanes are all ready and rarin' to go for the "World of Fun" at the Y carnival that is scheduled for tonight from 4:30 to 11 p.m. Y personnel report that more than 20 groups have planned booths 300 Students Will Attend Newspaper Day Tomorrow Each Berlin has its own theaters, transportation systems, and gas, water, and power companies, he added. Going Forward “Even though the people are living in two worlds they are still going forward. Reconstruction of homes, businesses, and industries is taking place throughout the free -par of Berlin,” Dr. Hirschfeld said. “There are still many unemployed persons in West Berlin and we are striving in every way to reconstruct our city so these persons can find jobs. We are also showing the people of East Berlin that we are able ! to strengthen the democracy which exists in our Berlin,” he said. At The Crossroads . By their steps forward the free Berliners are drawing people from other parts of Germany to | see how they are living “at the crossroads of the two worlds,’’ Dr. Hirschfeld said. The West Zoners are working constantly at. rebuilding their I great cultural showplaces. Baxter Leaves For Library of Congress Talk Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English and SCs first TV teacher, will fly to Washington, D.C. Sunday night to do an evening of poetry reading by invitation at the Library of Congress Monday evening. Dr. Baxter has chosen selections of poetry on the theme, “The Unfaltering Lamp: Homage to 13 Centuries of English’ Poetry.” Starting with “Doer’s Lament,” "The Ruined Burgh,” and ‘The Wanderer” from a period he calls the beginning, Dr. Baxter will (,then read from Medieval Latin lyrics of the Middle Ages, folk ballads, Tudor poems, and works of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. Dr. Baxter will fly East on American Airlines’ non-stop DC-7 “Statesman” leaving Interna-I tional Airport at 9:45 p.m. Sun-1 day. A day full of lectures, panel discussions, food and entertainment has been scheduled Saturday for more than 300 high school and junior college students who will be guests of the School of Journalism for the 30th annual Newspaper Day. There will be an assembly at 9:45 a.m. in 229 FH in which the Crombie-AUen plaque, donated by the California Newspaper Publishers Asociation. will be presented to the high school newspaper showing the greatest improvement over last year. There will also be a series of junior college awards for best’news coverage, photographs, editorials, sports, and page one makeup. Still another award will be the Ruth Apperson Eaker Award for the best editorial Included on the program will be speeches by Wanda Phillips, women’s editor of the Beverly Hills Daily News Life, and Dial Torgerson, staff correspondent for the Associated Press. An innovation of this year’s Newspaper Day will be two special features of interest to sports-minded students. First will be a panel discussion led by 'Jesse Hill, head football coach of SC, and Rube Samuel-son. sports editor cf th? dena Star-News. Crystal Room Dance to End Nov- Dean and Mrs. Bernard Hy-ink and Student Activities Coordinator Harry Nelson wil have the final word on the entries when festivities are interrupted at 9 to award trophies. 20 Groups The more than 20 groups participating in the carnival went to work early Wednesday afternoon to prepare their entries for Friday night competition. Booths will present an array of colors and original and authentic games. Guests may try to “Break China” by tossing balls through a pagoda to break China dishes or they may visit the World Under a World of Fun” when they join the fish world by throwing ping pong balls into fish bowls. Sell Foods “Foods from Around the World ’ as well as foreign candies from the sugar plum tree will be sold to visitors. An Italian nightclub and entertainment will be open for visitors, while another boooth will depict France with a typical Can-can game. One group will represent the cold northland when they sell ice cream over its igloo counter. Another will represent Hawaii and sell pineapple sticks and Hawaiian punch. Shoot Apples William Tell will be the theme of the freshmen group, who will let guests try to shoot the apple off his head. Comic-strip characters will come to life when funsters visit “Li’l Abner’s Slobovia.” A plantation and the Old South will rise again when a dormitory group enters its “Gollywog Cake Walk” game booth. Other games, houses, shows, and entertainment will be attracting carnival goers, while some will prefer dancing to the music of Dick Walker and his four-piece combo. Official rooz Notice “Nov-rooz,” the 13-day Iranian New Year’s celebration will be climaxed Friday at 9 p.m. when the New Year’s Ball is held at the Crystal Room in the Beverly Hills Hotel. Bob Mosallai, vice president of the Jrano-American Relations Club, which is sponsoring the ball, said that 92 per cent of the $2 dance tickets have been sold whereas only 2 per cent sold at this time last year. The remaining 8 per cent of the tickets are reserved for SC students and their friends. Entertainment for the 3000 year old celebration will include an Irano quartet featuring students of the SC opera department and Iranian dancers. A1 Gale’s orchestra will play. Singing original folk song from northern and southern Persia will be Nasrin Hekmat Farrokh, soprano; Marion Oles, alto; Fred Smith, tenor; and Robert Back, bass. Students now enrolled In the university who will complete the two-year pre-Pharmacy requirements this semeseter and plan to apply for admission to the School of Pharmacy for the class beginning September 1955 are requested to notify the Office of Admissions by April 15. Applications, required of all Pharmacy applicants, may be obtained at the Office of Admissions. Dorothy P. Nelson Assistant Director of _Admissions 'Mark Time!' In Today's DT “Mark Time!,” Mark Thore-son’s regular Tuesday and Thursday column, appears in today’s 6-page DT on Page 4, features. THEIR TRENDS ARE SHOWINC! WINNERS — Gamma Phi Beta's powerhouse six girl team, shown receiving their trophy for winning the 1954 SAE Volleyball Tournament, return intact to defend its title. Pi Phi's fivetime winners, are considered the strongest threat to dethrone the Gamma Phis. Twelve 0 V ,r- —Owl photo by Desfor. other sororities have entered. Preliminaries begin Monday and Tuesday, semi-finals and finals are scheduled for Thursday. The winning team and a player selected as the most valuable in the tourney will be guests at a victory dinner at the SAE house after Easter Chen Lecture Will Outline Role Of China in Red Conquest Plan By Jeanine StHes Concrete ways in which the Chinese Communist program fits in with the world plan for a proletarian-socialist revolution will be named by Dr. Theodore H. Chen, head of the department of Asiatic studies, in Wednes- day’s Graduate School dinner. Speaking to the 22nd annual research lecture and dinner which will be held at 6:15 Wednesday night in Town and Gown Banquet Hall, Dr. Chen will summarize the major trends in Communist China toward this revolution. Tickets for the dinner will be sold for $1.75 in the ticket office, second floor of the Student Union, until the deadline at noon Monday. Department Head Since 1941 With the exception of a few months spent in the Far East, Dr. Chen has been head of Asiatic §tudies since 1941. He was president of Fukien Christian University in China during 1946. In 1954 he founded a new university in Formosa, and served as president. For the past five years Dr. Chen has done intensive research, analyzing the nature and context of Chinese Communist publications. The research lecture he will present next week is based on this investigation. “There are five major trends in the Chinese proletarian-socialist revolution,” Dr. Chen commented Thursday. The Communists’ agrarian, socilal, and economic reforms are means to this definite end.” The first of these reforms was designed to strengthen the proletarian character of the party by enlisting the support of the peasant class. Since China is still not industrialized and therefore has a small working class, the Communists must turn to the peasants for allies. Second, Dr. Chen said that the Chinese Communists “have continued to stress that the class struggle is a necessary process leading finally to the dictatorship of the proletariat.” This struggle, he pointed out, is indicated by the liquidation of the landlord class in the rural areas and the attempted elimination of the cit-ie’s bourgeoisie. “They have also stepped up the transition toward socialism,” said Dr. Chen, indicating the general phases necessary to reach complete socialism—from private enterprise, then to semi-public ownership, and finally to enterprise completely owned and operated by the state. For the fourth trend. Dr. Chen showed how the Communists have tightened governmental con ! trols. “Every reorganization of government since the beginning of the regime in 1949 has resulted in greater centralization of I power,” he said. Dr. Chen indicated that the last of the major steps is the Chinese Communist pledge of unswerving loyalty to the cause of world revolution. “They consider their own revolution in China as only a part ot the world-wide proletarian-socialist revolution. “They continue to pay high honor to the Soviet Union ani are ever ready to join the Soviet bloc in a coordinated policy. They willingly accept the leadership of Russia.” Dr. Chen said people are often under the illusion that the Chinese Communists are a “particu- ! lar brand of Communist—more Chinese than Communist.’ “I maintain,” he said, “that they are regular Communists, thoroughly committed to the program of the proletariat-socialist world revolution.” Dean Stanley R. Townsend of the Graduate School feels that ! this annual research lecture is “perhaps the highest honor which 1 the university can bestow upon a faculty member.” Called “Distinguished” “Certainly this year’s appointment of Professor Chen as research lecturer brings the attention of the university to one of ' its most distinguished faculty members.” Preceding the dinner a conference on Far Eastern problems, open to the public, will be held I from 4 to 5:30 Wednesday after-I noon in 133 FH,
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Description
Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 46, No. 105, March 25, 1955 |
Full text | 1 World Fun’ XLVI LOS ANGELES, CALIF., FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1955 for Tonight Carnival Booths Features Games, Foods, Dancing By Darlene Hall “A World of Fun” will become a reality Friday afternoon and evening when the YWCA stages its annual carnival from 4:30 until 11 p.m. Fun will be there in the form of games, food, dancing, laughter, and typical Coney Island merriment. Price To Be Crowned Baseball Week Queen Cyclists Told to Form on Row k ★ ★ ★ ★ ike Week Rolls Soon The Daily Trojan's “Bike Week" campaign will get the grand end-off Monday morning at 7:50 a.m. when DT Managing Editor dodger Darbonne leads all cyclists from the Row down the bike oute to campus. All cyclists with 8 o'clocks are requested to meet n 28th Street at University Avenue to form the caravan. Bike campaign coordinator, Darbonne will redo the bike route t 8:50 a.m. to join in with students having 9 a.m. classes. “If everyone with a bike will take part in this campaign, we ;an contribute greatly to easing the parking problem and also contribute to our own convenience. No one spot on campus is further rom another than four minutes via bike,” Darbonne said. “That means more time to greet friends and take in this great beach weather while waiting between classes.” The following bike dealers are able to offer new and used bikes «t reasonable prices. National Cycle Shop, 724 South San Pedro Street, used $14-$25, new $45-75. Playrite 3icycle Supply Co., 227 East 6th Street, $10 ‘p. Haynes Bike Shop. 1021 South LaBrea, $20 up. Norman’s Cyclery, 4267 South Vermont, about $25 up. Safety Cycle Shop, 1014 North Western, balloon tires $12.50 :p, lightweight bikes .$15 up, with gears, $25 up. Robinson's Cycle Shop, 1136 North Vermont, about $20 up. Al's Bike Shop, 168 North aBrea, $10 up. Ralph's Bicycle Store, 8408 West 3rd Street, $15 up. IContrasts of Two Berlins old By Hans Hirschfeld NAMED QUEEN - Joan Price will be crowned SC's first baseball queen at a pep rally inaugurating "Baseball Week" on campus. By Andy Dimas Berlin is a city of contrasts that lies at the crossroads of ‘two worlds.” This is the picture that was Irawn Thursday afternoon ^y Dr. Hans Hirschfeld, anti-lazi in Wofld War II and jresent anti-Communist public affairs director for the \rest Berlin Senate. Dr. Hirschfeld spoke on what > happening in Berlin “In the thadow of the Iron Curtain.” as I art of a series of talks he is de- : vering while on a tour sponsor-by the Berlin Senate. Constant Contrast “The inhabitants of Berlin are iving in two separate worlds in onstant contrast with each oth-fr. divided by an in^ginary line.” . |-« West Berlin representative a,d. The Western and Eastern sectors or Berlin are different in jnany ways, from their econom-?s. and governments, to their srsonal modes of life, he said. “Each section has a different , -renew The West Berliners | who work in the East section are paid in a different currency than they must have to live in their own section,” Dr. Hirschfeld said. Solve Differences He said this is only one of the problems which has faced the people in the German city. To solve the currency differences an exchange commission has been set up in each zone where the inhabitants living and working in the two sections can exchange their monies. “There has been some grumbling about differences in the Eastern and Western mark but most of the people are quite content with the solution.” he said. Live in Oppression On one side of the imaginary line separating the East from the West is a people living in oppression without the freedoms of speech, assembly, press, or religion. “On the other side, in the West zone, is a people living in a democracy, free to act and think as they want, reconstructing the city they love,” the 61-year-old German statesman said. By Bob Speck A few hours before SC battles it out with Stanford on Bovard Field, Joan Price will be crowned baseball queen at a giant pep rally, in Bovard Auditorium. The noon “Beat Stanford” gathering will be the beginning of the final two climatic days of “Baseball Week” activity on campus. Following the rally, at 2:45 p.m. the Trojans, defend i n g champions of the California Intercollegiate Baseball Asociation, will meet the Stanford Indians, the second rated team last year, in the first of two crucial games. Queen Crowned Highlight of the lunch rally will be the crowning of Joan Price, as SC’s first baseball queen, by co-captains John Garten and John Stevenson of the varsity team. Miss Price was chosen queen from a field of 12 contestants Tuesday afternoon by a five-man committee. Those making the selection were Rod Dedeaux, head baseball coach; Tommy Walker, director Trojan Band; Harry Nelson, director of student activities; Stevenson, and Howard Smith, president of the Trojan Knights, who are in charge of “Baseball Week.” The queen’s two attendants, or ! honorary batgirls, Sandy Hardin. ! AOPi, and Barbara O’Callaghan, | Independent Women’s Council j representative, will also be pre- j sented. The entire varsity baseball squad, Walker’s Pep Band, and Don Ward and his yell crew, will 1 also participate in the activities, j Game Crucial The basebal game series must definitely be termed “crucial” for | both sides, as far as champion- j ship hopes are concerned. Last’! year the Indians came in second i because they couldn’t beat the top team, the Trojans. In four meetings, SC won three. In the fina lstandings, Stanford trailed by two. SC is faced with a mild “must win.” It’s a little early to rule teams out of the race, but should the Trojans drop this series, the chances of gaining a fifth straight CIBA championship would be narrowed considerably. The Trojans suffered an upset loss 10-6 in the season’s opener against UCLA last Saturday. This will be Stanford’s first conference game. Trojans Favored Despite having arleady taken a 'league loss, the Trojans must be favored. These are almost the same two teams that faced each other last year. Only major Indian less is shortstop Warren Goodrich. Troy is an all veteran team. Stanford had the league’s outstanding pitching staff last year, but was weak at the plate, as is true this season. WELL PREPARED — These happy and costumed Trojanes are all ready and rarin' to go for the "World of Fun" at the Y carnival that is scheduled for tonight from 4:30 to 11 p.m. Y personnel report that more than 20 groups have planned booths 300 Students Will Attend Newspaper Day Tomorrow Each Berlin has its own theaters, transportation systems, and gas, water, and power companies, he added. Going Forward “Even though the people are living in two worlds they are still going forward. Reconstruction of homes, businesses, and industries is taking place throughout the free -par of Berlin,” Dr. Hirschfeld said. “There are still many unemployed persons in West Berlin and we are striving in every way to reconstruct our city so these persons can find jobs. We are also showing the people of East Berlin that we are able ! to strengthen the democracy which exists in our Berlin,” he said. At The Crossroads . By their steps forward the free Berliners are drawing people from other parts of Germany to | see how they are living “at the crossroads of the two worlds,’’ Dr. Hirschfeld said. The West Zoners are working constantly at. rebuilding their I great cultural showplaces. Baxter Leaves For Library of Congress Talk Dr. Frank C. Baxter, professor of English and SCs first TV teacher, will fly to Washington, D.C. Sunday night to do an evening of poetry reading by invitation at the Library of Congress Monday evening. Dr. Baxter has chosen selections of poetry on the theme, “The Unfaltering Lamp: Homage to 13 Centuries of English’ Poetry.” Starting with “Doer’s Lament,” "The Ruined Burgh,” and ‘The Wanderer” from a period he calls the beginning, Dr. Baxter will (,then read from Medieval Latin lyrics of the Middle Ages, folk ballads, Tudor poems, and works of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries. Dr. Baxter will fly East on American Airlines’ non-stop DC-7 “Statesman” leaving Interna-I tional Airport at 9:45 p.m. Sun-1 day. A day full of lectures, panel discussions, food and entertainment has been scheduled Saturday for more than 300 high school and junior college students who will be guests of the School of Journalism for the 30th annual Newspaper Day. There will be an assembly at 9:45 a.m. in 229 FH in which the Crombie-AUen plaque, donated by the California Newspaper Publishers Asociation. will be presented to the high school newspaper showing the greatest improvement over last year. There will also be a series of junior college awards for best’news coverage, photographs, editorials, sports, and page one makeup. Still another award will be the Ruth Apperson Eaker Award for the best editorial Included on the program will be speeches by Wanda Phillips, women’s editor of the Beverly Hills Daily News Life, and Dial Torgerson, staff correspondent for the Associated Press. An innovation of this year’s Newspaper Day will be two special features of interest to sports-minded students. First will be a panel discussion led by 'Jesse Hill, head football coach of SC, and Rube Samuel-son. sports editor cf th? dena Star-News. Crystal Room Dance to End Nov- Dean and Mrs. Bernard Hy-ink and Student Activities Coordinator Harry Nelson wil have the final word on the entries when festivities are interrupted at 9 to award trophies. 20 Groups The more than 20 groups participating in the carnival went to work early Wednesday afternoon to prepare their entries for Friday night competition. Booths will present an array of colors and original and authentic games. Guests may try to “Break China” by tossing balls through a pagoda to break China dishes or they may visit the World Under a World of Fun” when they join the fish world by throwing ping pong balls into fish bowls. Sell Foods “Foods from Around the World ’ as well as foreign candies from the sugar plum tree will be sold to visitors. An Italian nightclub and entertainment will be open for visitors, while another boooth will depict France with a typical Can-can game. One group will represent the cold northland when they sell ice cream over its igloo counter. Another will represent Hawaii and sell pineapple sticks and Hawaiian punch. Shoot Apples William Tell will be the theme of the freshmen group, who will let guests try to shoot the apple off his head. Comic-strip characters will come to life when funsters visit “Li’l Abner’s Slobovia.” A plantation and the Old South will rise again when a dormitory group enters its “Gollywog Cake Walk” game booth. Other games, houses, shows, and entertainment will be attracting carnival goers, while some will prefer dancing to the music of Dick Walker and his four-piece combo. Official rooz Notice “Nov-rooz,” the 13-day Iranian New Year’s celebration will be climaxed Friday at 9 p.m. when the New Year’s Ball is held at the Crystal Room in the Beverly Hills Hotel. Bob Mosallai, vice president of the Jrano-American Relations Club, which is sponsoring the ball, said that 92 per cent of the $2 dance tickets have been sold whereas only 2 per cent sold at this time last year. The remaining 8 per cent of the tickets are reserved for SC students and their friends. Entertainment for the 3000 year old celebration will include an Irano quartet featuring students of the SC opera department and Iranian dancers. A1 Gale’s orchestra will play. Singing original folk song from northern and southern Persia will be Nasrin Hekmat Farrokh, soprano; Marion Oles, alto; Fred Smith, tenor; and Robert Back, bass. Students now enrolled In the university who will complete the two-year pre-Pharmacy requirements this semeseter and plan to apply for admission to the School of Pharmacy for the class beginning September 1955 are requested to notify the Office of Admissions by April 15. Applications, required of all Pharmacy applicants, may be obtained at the Office of Admissions. Dorothy P. Nelson Assistant Director of _Admissions 'Mark Time!' In Today's DT “Mark Time!,” Mark Thore-son’s regular Tuesday and Thursday column, appears in today’s 6-page DT on Page 4, features. THEIR TRENDS ARE SHOWINC! WINNERS — Gamma Phi Beta's powerhouse six girl team, shown receiving their trophy for winning the 1954 SAE Volleyball Tournament, return intact to defend its title. Pi Phi's fivetime winners, are considered the strongest threat to dethrone the Gamma Phis. Twelve 0 V ,r- —Owl photo by Desfor. other sororities have entered. Preliminaries begin Monday and Tuesday, semi-finals and finals are scheduled for Thursday. The winning team and a player selected as the most valuable in the tourney will be guests at a victory dinner at the SAE house after Easter Chen Lecture Will Outline Role Of China in Red Conquest Plan By Jeanine StHes Concrete ways in which the Chinese Communist program fits in with the world plan for a proletarian-socialist revolution will be named by Dr. Theodore H. Chen, head of the department of Asiatic studies, in Wednes- day’s Graduate School dinner. Speaking to the 22nd annual research lecture and dinner which will be held at 6:15 Wednesday night in Town and Gown Banquet Hall, Dr. Chen will summarize the major trends in Communist China toward this revolution. Tickets for the dinner will be sold for $1.75 in the ticket office, second floor of the Student Union, until the deadline at noon Monday. Department Head Since 1941 With the exception of a few months spent in the Far East, Dr. Chen has been head of Asiatic §tudies since 1941. He was president of Fukien Christian University in China during 1946. In 1954 he founded a new university in Formosa, and served as president. For the past five years Dr. Chen has done intensive research, analyzing the nature and context of Chinese Communist publications. The research lecture he will present next week is based on this investigation. “There are five major trends in the Chinese proletarian-socialist revolution,” Dr. Chen commented Thursday. The Communists’ agrarian, socilal, and economic reforms are means to this definite end.” The first of these reforms was designed to strengthen the proletarian character of the party by enlisting the support of the peasant class. Since China is still not industrialized and therefore has a small working class, the Communists must turn to the peasants for allies. Second, Dr. Chen said that the Chinese Communists “have continued to stress that the class struggle is a necessary process leading finally to the dictatorship of the proletariat.” This struggle, he pointed out, is indicated by the liquidation of the landlord class in the rural areas and the attempted elimination of the cit-ie’s bourgeoisie. “They have also stepped up the transition toward socialism,” said Dr. Chen, indicating the general phases necessary to reach complete socialism—from private enterprise, then to semi-public ownership, and finally to enterprise completely owned and operated by the state. For the fourth trend. Dr. Chen showed how the Communists have tightened governmental con ! trols. “Every reorganization of government since the beginning of the regime in 1949 has resulted in greater centralization of I power,” he said. Dr. Chen indicated that the last of the major steps is the Chinese Communist pledge of unswerving loyalty to the cause of world revolution. “They consider their own revolution in China as only a part ot the world-wide proletarian-socialist revolution. “They continue to pay high honor to the Soviet Union ani are ever ready to join the Soviet bloc in a coordinated policy. They willingly accept the leadership of Russia.” Dr. Chen said people are often under the illusion that the Chinese Communists are a “particu- ! lar brand of Communist—more Chinese than Communist.’ “I maintain,” he said, “that they are regular Communists, thoroughly committed to the program of the proletariat-socialist world revolution.” Dean Stanley R. Townsend of the Graduate School feels that ! this annual research lecture is “perhaps the highest honor which 1 the university can bestow upon a faculty member.” Called “Distinguished” “Certainly this year’s appointment of Professor Chen as research lecturer brings the attention of the university to one of ' its most distinguished faculty members.” Preceding the dinner a conference on Far Eastern problems, open to the public, will be held I from 4 to 5:30 Wednesday after-I noon in 133 FH, |
Filename | uschist-dt-1955-03-25~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1547/uschist-dt-1955-03-25~001.tif |