Ballots Will Name 'Best Dressed Woman' GRAPHIC
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Ballots Will Name 'Best Dressed Woman' GRAPHIC Vol. XXI No. 17 Friday, February 21, 1958 Pepperdine College 10 Candidates Seek Selection In Election Pepperdine’s “Best Dressed Coed” will be chosen to- day in an all school popular vote on 10 candidates who vie for a chance to represent the college in area, state and national competitJon. Election tables will be in the center of the campus near Dolores and will be open from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Student body cards will be needed to vote, according to Bay Mossholder, student body vice-president and chair- man of elections. In the event of rain, the election tables will be 2a the Administration Building. Candidates are Noel Stone, Llona Elf or d, Pat Lane, Loretta Hill, Jackie Todd, Sandy Bloomquist, Susie Saun- ders, Maureen Brill, Lorraine Hill and Carol Butler. The contest is being held 2n conjunction with “Glamour” magazine, which each year chooses the “10 JAY ROELEN, record break- Best Dressed College Girls in America” and awards them ing quarterback, was awarded a tour of New York, among other things. Pepperdine’s two top grid awards Monday candidate for the national title will be announced and pic- in Chapel. He was named to tured in next week’s GRAPHIC. the Williamson Rating Little All-American team and was selected as the Pacific coast's Copenhagen, Books, Yoga top football player by "Coach SNOWY ARKANSAS is enjoyed by Pepperdine's delegates to and Athlete" magazine. Roe- a college government conference last week at Harding College. len was also Helms Athlete of Featured on Arts Docket the Month for 1957. are (from left) Bruce Fortine, Bob Pratt and Dick Bachus. October, Pictured The Danish Kingdom will be pictorially presented by Hjordis Kittel Parker, a native of Norway, in film-lecture “The People of Denmark and Greenland” Monday at 8 Heavy Rains Government Here Is Highest p.m. in the main auditorium. Seen in the film is cosmopoli- tan Copenhagen, the traditional Wednesday at 10:15 a.m. in the Pelf Through Developed, Reports Bachus celebration in Jut- Christmas main Auditorium. land, the ruins of Hammershus The “Pepperdine is by far the most developed of all Castle in Bornholm, the home of film attempts to appraise Building Tops Church Christ connected colleges in its student govern- Hans Christian Anderson with the place of Christianity and the of role of religion in independent A pelting rain storm which ment and student activities,” said Dick Bachus, student depiction from his fairy tales, forced the closing of several and life on the world’s largest Asia. body president, after returning from a college government public schools Tuesday took its island—Greenland. YOGA toll on Pepperdine also, accord- conference at Harding College, Searcy, Ark. CAVALCADE A demonstration of Hatha ing to Nelson Gardner, director yoga (the yoga supposedly “Cavalcade of Books,” a that plants auxiliaries. Bachus made the 3800 mile purification of and Forum Arts book review by a deals with the of Gardner said Tuesday after- round trip with Bob Pratt, the body achieve ‘yoga’ or panel of students scheduled for to that extensive damage had freshman, and Bruce Fortine, union with the Divine) be noon Chorus Will Wednesday, has been postponed will been done to the Library, Gar- given the main auditorium junior class vice-president. to Monday after Chapel. in den Room and Book Store. today at p.m. Tour “We complain at Pepperdine NEW ROLE 1 Light damage was reported in North “Christianity’s New Role The demonstration be about certain but in will the Fine Arts, Science and Ad- of the Pepperdine restrictions, Members Asia,” a color film with narra- given by Yogaraj, literally ministration Buildings. we are indeed liberal when we tion by John Arokiaswamy, ‘king’ of yoga, disciple of Mixed Chorus will embark on a a Most of the damage was re- compared to other church will northern California tour Sun- are alumnus of Pepperdine, be Swami Sivananda, the Hindu ported to walls and floors from presented by Forum Arts revivalist. day afternoon on a Greyhound schools,” Bachus continued. seeping and dripping water. A pointed out that there bus. Bachus small amount of books and seems be too much paternal- desks was also damaged. The group will perform in to ism in some of the other schools Large leaks in the ceiling of Santa Monica, Ventura, Bakers the Cafeteria and Alumni House and “the student many field, Fresno, San Leandro, in cases were battled with towels and Berkeley, Sacramento and Mer- is over-protected” by governing pans to collect the moisture. ced, and will return March 1. bodies. “The whole floor of one girl’s room in Marilyn Hall Accompanying the He added that because of Pep- was group will flooded,” according to dormi- be Richard Palm, director, and perdine’s unique form of stu- a the Wave del- tory spokesman. Vance Carruth. Carruth do dent government, will stu- No monetary estimate of the narration special num- egation encouraged more on a damage was made by Gardner. ber in each performance, “The dent leadership in the deter- affairs Creation.” mination of school for the other schools. On tour will be Sue DeJer- lando, Colleen Rae, Beatrice “Controls on dating and so- Banquet Tickets Brown, Barbara Andrew, cial activities at some other On Sale Monday Eleanor Gutierrez, Pat McCon- schools are regarded by stu- nell, Norma Wade, Joyce Ware, dents as being antiquated,” Tickets for the Junior-Senior Sandra Kenney, Nancy Burton, Bachus said. Banquet will go on sale Mon- Joyce Deatherage, Barbara It was apparent that the day in the Dean of Students Grumbles, Jona Ivey, Letha strict discipline was to make a Office. Juniors planning to at- Sanders, Juanita Goodlow, Lar- favorable impression for the tend, and seniors taking dates ry White, Jim Cooper, Bernardo school on the public and com- who are not members of the Garcia Garcia, Paul Minturn, munity, he related, senior class, are asked to sign- Herbert Jones, Bob White, Finos “Hospitality at Harding was up for their dinner choice be- Graves, Jim Ashurst, Dean Den- excellent, and many good ideas fore February 28. nis, Verne Flock. were exchanged for the benefit The banquet will be held of all student governments,” March 28 at the Portuguese Bachus concluded. Bend Club in Palos Verdes. Suicide on T.V. Represented at the conference Abilene Christian College, Harry Woodard, instructor in were JAMIE H. SMITH, (left) executive vice-president and general Texas; Lipscomb College, Nash- Voters to Signup phychology, will present a new manager of the Seven Up Bottling Company of Los Angeles, ville, Tenn.; Freed-Hardeman with President Mrs. Elizabeth McGregor will program on television Sunday College, Henderson, Tenn.; Cen- discusses the Pepperdine President's Council M. register eligible voters at Pep- at 10:30 p.m. on channel 5. tral Christian College, Bartles- Norvel Young. Smith, former chairman of the Los Angeles perdine February 27 from 10:15 Theme of the program will be ville, Okla.; Florida Christian Coliseum Commission, says the President's Council has plans for a.m. to noon. A booth will be why persons choose suicide as College, Tampa, and Alabama gaining additional funds to aid the college. He was named set up in the Administration an escape. Christian College, Montgomery. chairman of the council early this week. —Thompson Photo Building near the switchboard. 2!—GRAPHIC Friday, February 21, 1958 'Poetic Jazz' EDITORIALS Continues Run Poet Kenneth Patehen and Editorials the not reflect opinion of the GRAPHIC and are nec- the Chamber Jazz Sextet, origi- essarily connected with administrative or student body opinions. nators of poetry readings with jazz, are now completing their second month and being held Moderation Pays Off... over at the L. A. Jazz Concert Hall, 3020 Crenshaw Boulevard, Violence and terror in southern communities within with concerts four nights week- the past year prove that quick and forceful integration is ly—Wednesday through Satur- as outdated in theory as segregation itself. day—at 8:30 and 10:30. AH seats are priced at $2, Today, good sense and moderation in the South’s in- with special student rates. Res- tegration problem is paying off, especially in the minds ervations may be made by call- of youth. College students are being influenced by facts ing CR. 4-6075. and rather than the of mob-emotion reason, by overflow BUDDIES the proclaiming supremacy of the Caucasian race. Whooping it up to welcome Los Angeles Dodgers to town at L.A. International recently It is a slow process, but a sure one. Its results are Airport were Book Exchange more sound than those of forced integration. (from left) Supervisor Kenneth Hahn, Walter O’Malley and Concludes Today Harding College is located in Searcy, Ark., about 50 Councilman Gordon Hahn. In back is Joe Baffa, director of miles from Little Rock. It is a small college, with approx- the Inglewood Boy's Band and also a Pepperdine alumnus. "Today will definitely be the imately 1000 students. It does last day that the book exchange not accept Negro stu- will be this year,” stated dents, but if the progressive student body has its way, open Negroes Jim Eckmann, junior class pres- will be respected additions to the Harding com- ident, this week. munity in the near Wave Alums Pave Dodgers' future. Eckmann went on to explain A student-originated statement of attitude, signed by that the reason the exchange 856 students, 49 faculty members and 42 staff members, was being opened was to en- was circulated lalt semester at Harding, stating in part: Long Path to LA. Coliseum able students to pick up money “Believing that it is wrong for Christians to make “The Los Angeles Dodgers rolled and books that have not been to their new home claimed.