CHARLES H ITC H , President of the University of California, equivocates on a joint legislative committee's recommendation to drastically reshape the governance of higher education in California: "I was surprisad and happy to find that the report actually reveals wide areas of agreement... Of course, there are areas of disagreement." Hitch and the University will reveal a firmer opinion if the recommendations become legislation this May.

"The future o f California postsecondary education depends upon the thoughtful involvement and commitment o f every Californian. An open dialogue w ill help the Legislature and postsecondary education fu lfill their The Legislature views responsibilities to the people o f California. "To foster that dialogue, the Joint Committee on the Master Plan for Higher Education has chosen to break tradition and present its report first in draft form to the public, for a final round o f discussion and critique. "The Joint Committee hopes you w ill discuss this draft report with your fam ily, friends, neighbors and colleagues thè state Master Pian — especially w ith educators and students. We invite you to share your response w ith us..." With these words, California's Joint Committee on the Master Plan prefaced 118 pages o f recommendations for the future o f California higher education they submitted to the Legislature and the people o f California in February. March saw members o f the Joint Committee traveling to public hearings throughout the state, gathering for Higher Education: professional and public opinion on the state o f higher education in California. In May, the Joint Committee w ill submit a final report with recommendations to the Legislature for action. What are the Joint -Committee's conclusions about the nature o f education ¡n California’s junior colleges, state colleges and universities and the University o f California? What recommendations for changes in the current Master Plan fo r Higher Education does the committee suggest to correct flaws in California college systems? Today's issue explores these questions. And the plans of 1960 meet the pragmatists of 1973

By Mike Gordon undergraduate and master's degree programs, while Coordinating Council for Higher Education first California's Master Plan for Higher Education had the University of California had control over doctoral reviewed the Master Plan in 1965-66, more as a been the envy of out-of-state college administrators programs, professional postgraduate training and most progress report than a critical study. In 1968, college for a decade when, in 1970, the state legislature research. These "differentiations of function" were admissions policies also saw some changes. passed a concurrent resolution creating the Joint added to the Master Plan to increase efficiency and Then in 1970, the Legislature created the Joint Committee on the Master Plan. A predominantly economy by preventing most duplication of Committee on the Master Plan. In response, the liberal group of five assemblymen (chairman John programs. Coordinating Council for Higher Education created a Vasconcellos, Willie Brown, Jerry Lewis, Ken Meade Select Committee on the Master Plan, which did an and John Stull) joined five State senators (Howard STORMY SIXTIES independent study of current California higher Way, Alfred Alquist, Dennis Carpenter, Mervyn Under the Master Plan, California's public colleges education and reported its findings to the Joint Dymally and Albert Rodda) to take a critical look at and universities entered an era of unruly growth in Committee in December, 1972. the Master Plan at the second five-year mark before the sixties. The University of California absorbed the The Joint Committee's preliminary report was its expiration in 1975. mainstream of the education dollars that flowed from issued in February of this year. Perhaps one o f its Originally created in 1960 when the Donahoe Act the Brown administration. By 1966; the UC system most basic findings was that the Coordinating Council incorporated recommendations from the original received 5.9% o f the annual state budget, compared for Higher Education should be abolished: 'The master plan studies into the State Education Code, to 4.1% for state colleges and 1.7% for junior Council is inadequate for our future," it flatly the Master Plan for Higher Education was the first colleges. declared. comprehensive attempt to orient California higher Then came the Reagan years, electorally created in In its place, the report recommends, the state education to a planned future. part by Governor Brown's inability to curb the Free constitution should be amended to create a It established a Coordinating Council for Higher Speech Movement at UC Berkeley and the antiwar Postsecondary Education Commission with broad Education to oversee three distinct elements of the disruptions which spread across the UC system. UC planning powers. This and other recommendations of higher education system: community (junior) President Clark Kerr also lost his job. And state the Joint Committee's preliminary report are detailed colleges, state colleges and universities, and the monies for higher education began to tighten up. By in Abby Haight's accompanying article. University of California. 1972, Governor Reagan's UC allocation had dropped In May of this year, the Joint Committee will The Master Plan assigned each part of the system to only 4.6% of the state budget. present its final report, which w ill become the basis specific areas of instruction. Junior colleges gave The passing years also saw new looks being taken for legislation expected to eventually lead to a new vocational and academic instruction for two years at the Master Plan itself, to keep pace with changes Master Plan to guide California education in the after high school. The state colleges offered occurring in California higher education. The seventies. PAGE 2 UCSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY, APRIL 6.1973 But no concensus emerges Debate over group’s findings ranges wide

By Leonard Felson Assemblyman John Vasconcellos in reality ominous Spokesmen from nearly all and members o f the Joint developments" are occuring that spheres o f the University of Committee- or at Regents should force the committee "to California are coming out with meetings. take another look at the crisis comments on the draft report by Just last Friday, Wofsy, a UC now afflicting higher education." the Joint Committee on the Berkeley biologist, spoke to the MINORITY CUTS Master Plan. Joint Committee about the draft Wofsy claimed that due to Ranging from UC President report. The A FT spokesman federal budget cuts, the Hitch to Leon Wofsy, American pointed out that while the report universities are reversing policy Federation of Teachers Union on the master plan is introduced "away from- the previously (UC Council) spokesman; from by . rightfully stating that assumed goals." Due to increasing members of the UC Student California's commitment is to budget cuts, more and more Lobby to members of the Board provide education to anyone minority students cannot obtain o f Regents, all are offering their without restrictions based on financial aid. criticism either personally to race, sex or economic conditions. The Work-Study program, too, "has been sharply cut down and is actually wiped out for this coming summer," Wofsy said. 3TVMBK5 £04132 "Federal training grants, the CAREERS in CATHOLIC MINISTRY: A rap session with three main support for graduate men from St. John's Seminary, April 9 - 7:30 pm. education in the health sciences, Assemblyman John Vasconcellos, Chairman of the Joint Committee on CATHOLIC BELIEF and PRACTICE CLASS: Tuesday, April 10 O are being phased o u t," and the Master Plan, is still soliciting response to hb group's proposals. 7:45 pm. ^ moreover, the AFT spokesman BLOOD BANK DONATIONS - Thursday, April 12, 2:30 - 6:30 pm. 2 contended, it is not just student education is being turned more Education in California" and SUNDAY programs that are cut. "Programs (Sat. Eve. 5:00 P.M CONFESSIONS than it has been into a luxury "Graduate Education in MASSES in Education fo r training and 8:00 A .M . Weekday: 11:50-12:00 NoonJ rather than a right," said Wofsy. 9:15 A.M. (Folk) 4:50- 5:00 P.M. certifying new teachers are being California." Wofsy singled out two other 10:45 AAA. (Folk) Saturday: 4:00-5:00 P.M. closed o u t." "The report on financing specific reports that the 5:30 P.M. (Folk 8:00-8:30 P.M. R With the trend toward higher makes proposals for tuition for committee distributed: PHONE 9 6 8 6 8 0 0 D costs in education, "higher community colleges and the ""Financing Postsecondary universities far more extreme than the Reagan administration has voiced in public," Wofsy told the joint committee. - A Good-Sounding Component Sy stem 'BRAINWASHING JOB' 'These reports," the AFT professor charged, "are par For Only $148 excellence of a nationwide brainwashing job to the effect that society cannot afford to Here is a complete stereo component system featuring BSR sustain expanding opportunity at reliability, and we have it at a rock-bottom price of $148.'. all educational levels, that higher You’ll have a lot of trouble finding any other component system education must be rolled back to at this price, let alone one that has so much to offer. The receiver pre-Sputnik days." is the new BSR 30 and BSR is to be complimented for coming up Since the authors of these two with a $130 receiver that sounds this good. Until now, the only things available in this price range were all-in-one compacts which, reports (A Stanford professor and in contrast to the BSR 30, were never designed to work with a Academy for Educational component-quality record player using a magnetic cartridge. Development Inc.) "are unlikely Another unusual feature is the FM center-channel tuning meter, to surrender their own Ph.D.'s, or which shows when you have the cleanest signal for good FM stereo those which may be forthcoming reception. The receiver has separate bass and.treble tone controls, to their superintendent a headphone jack, and an attractive oiled walnut case. offsprings and heirs, the The BSR automatic record player is a fine value at $49.45, meaning," Wofsy said, "is clear: including a base and a Shure M75 magnetic cartridge with a the pinnacles of educational diamond stylus. The 310 is an extremely reliable performer with a cueing lever that makes it awfully hard to scratch your records. opportunity are the private The new Audio Design 806’s are two-way speaker systems with preserve of an elite—let those an eight-inch bass speaker. They sell for $59.90 a pair, and who are less fortunately endowed sound as if they should cost a lot more than that. They deliver find their place in some 'relevant' the kind of clear, natural sounding bass lines that you can't get service down below." just by turning up the bass control on your portable. (Cont. on p. 12, col. 1)

Audio Design IV QUAKER GROUP Full manufacturers' warranties are included jcr S ih r s & Slunn To purchase these separately, you would pay: Meets Every Thursday 7:30 PM, URC BSR 3 0 ...... $129.95 777 Camino Pescadero BSR 310 with base and cartridge . . 49.45 $ 1 4 8 Come on By Audio Design 806 (p a ir) ...... 59.90 TOTAL $239.30 SAVE $91.30 STUDENT-FACULTY PLAN FLY-DRIVE EUROPEI Low youth fare plus car for summer PHONE For Free Folder write: D ow ntow n 963-1417 Car-Tours in Europe, Inc. 555 Fifth Ave.,N.Y.10017/697-5800 STORE HOURS: SANTA BARBARA Name . ■ . ___ MON.-FRI. 10 to 9 5 1 9 STATE STREET SAT. 10-6 SUN. 12-6 Tel.

Cl Student Q Teacher □ Lease □ Buy FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973 UCSB DAILY NEXUS PAGE 3

Shorter terms for Regents; controls 'The days of money on demand

over the Governor's nominations are p a s t.’

to Regent positions; a California ‘In the future, post-secondary

Cooperative University; regional education will be less campus-bound...'

planning and local governing boards ‘Equality of opportunity is still far off.’ What the Joint Committee on Higher Education sees

By Abby Haight outlines goals o f academic freedom, segments were assigned different A lack of diversity characterizes the Criticizing California higher equal fle xib ility, lifelong learning, functions by the 1960 Master Plan for present system, they point out, education as having "advanced the diversity, : flexibility, - cóppératiotì Higher Education. The Community especially w ithin each segment of higher needs and aspirations of institutions, between institutions, fcommunity Colleges are to offer vocational, education. "The potential for diversity considering persons largely- •. as involvement, understanding of the collegiate and general education is greatly undermined by standardized abstractions l and statistics to be learrtihg[ process, «valuation of teaching through the fourteenth grade. The state system-wide criteria for selection, matched with institutional 'vacancies," and learning and accountability as a system is restricted to undergraduate retention and promotion of faculty," the Joint Committee on the Master Plan statement of intent which they education and advanced training the report charges. for Higher Education has released a recommend that the legislature adopt. through the Master's Degree, and the "We are not convinced that every draft of its report to the public for "California has no statement of goals University o f California has exclusive member of the University of California comments, criticism and input. for higher education," the report points jurisdiction over doctorate degrees, faculty should be funded at every point The report contains an evaluation of out. It cites the need fo r such a some kinds of professional training (e.g. in his or her career as a half-time or the present Community College, State statement of goals to "facilitate acting law and medicine), and is the location more researcher. There is not College/University and University of consistently and responsibly." of most research. necessarily a correlation between California systems, and makes a total of The Joint Committee on the Master excellence in teaching and excellence in 56 recommendations for reorganization Plan for Higher Education criticises the published research," concluded the of the higher education system in STRUCTURAL CHANGES present set-up for "fragmentation of committee, expressing "alarm " at California. Changes in the structure, Three segments presently constitute responsibility which had led to a critical finding that publication requirements governance, planning, admissions the public higher education system of absence of state-wide coordination, are imposed on some faculty as a standards, financing and inter-school California: the Community Colleges, planning and policy development." The condition of their employment, relations are proposed by the report. the State Colleges and University and system is more concerned with promotion and tenure. the University of California. The three protecting the differences between the Recommendations for the PRIORITIES OUTLINED institutions than with . cooperating improvement of the structure of higher "The foremost purpose of each and between segments, the Committee education include keeping the present every California institution of public declares. differentiation between JC, state college higher education is learning," states the and UC segments but allowing a joint report. It ranks research and public doctoral program between the state service as secondary concerns, but system and the University of California. The report advocates creating more (Cont. on p. 8, col. 1)

The University of California in the mid-1960's: at UCSB, its course was former UC President Clark Kerr (right). How much will that University guided by Chancellor Vernon Cheadle (left); on the statewide level, by have to change to meet new needs of the 1970's7 PAGE 4 UCSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973

By Scott Larson system that would serve the campus, Isla An alternative to the quarter system is Vista and Goleta with minibuses that * under consideration for endorsement by would also connect with transit lines into A.S. Leg Council with action probably to New quarter plan downtown Santa Barbara. Circulators of be taken at next week's meeting. the initiative to amend the A.S. A new system called 4-4-X has been Constitution to provide for fees to help proposed by Academic Affairs Board to pay for the project were given a week's replace the quarter system presently used considered by A.S. grace so that the measure would appear in the UC system. The 4-4-X amounts to on the same ballot with A.S. officers for an early semester system with a voluntary next year. month to be used to implement many a week so that members would have a and reporting grades. innovative ideas in teaching and learning chance to study the plan. Administrative advantages would BSU BUDGET which have been developed and are being Several advantages offered to students include better turn-around time between Black Student Uniorv's budget developed. by this plan were cited, including less terms, less expense involved, fewer breakdown was later approved in an RHA rep Kathy Tuttle presented the pressure, more time for flexibility, more bookkeeping responsibilities and greater irregular action, as A.S. organizations' proposed system to Leg Council for time to learn and the possibility for use of facilities with the extended year. budgets are generally reviewed and endorsement at the regular meeting accelerating one's education since it After Leg Council's endorsement, the approved at the beginning of each year. Wednesday and the matter was tabled for would be possible to complete two and a proposal will be dealt with in depth by a The breakdown had been due last half semesters a year. committee composed of all levels of September. interest on campus. The finalized In other business, council passed a Second class pottage paid at Goleta, budget for the upcoming Barbary Coast California, 93017, and printed by the ADVANTAGES document will be submitted to the Campus Press, 323 Magnolia, Goleta, Advantages noted for faculty included Academic Senate, to the Chancellor and Days, endorsed the American Friends California. Please return PO form 3S79 to P.O. Box 13402, University Center, Santa time for more depth in courses, then to University President Hitch. Service Committee's North/South Barbara, California, 93102. Editorial Office In other business. Leg Council voted to Vietnam Fund and also endorsed Measure T .M . Storke Publications Bldg. 1035, phone innovative teaching and experimentation ‘961*2091. Advertising Office T.M. Storke possibilities during the "X " month of waive a regulation which would have A which deals with the Santa Barbara Publications Bldg. 1045, phone 961-3929, City College area and will be voted on in j Gayle Kerr, Advertising Manager. June, possibility of combining teaching required a special election to vote on an with research, and more time for grading initiative dealing with a projected transit an upcoming election.

^IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII^

THE STUDENT LOBBY PRESENTS MAYITAS Speaker Bob Moretti Moretti’s Mexican Food | CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR ’74 | Complete Dinners at Reasonable Prices speech has I Lunch-Dinner Sun.-Thurs. 11 A.M.-10 P.M. on Lunch-Dinner Fri. & Sat. 11 A.M.-12 P.M. | THE EEEECIS OE MXQYS SOC IAL U ELI AIIE Cl 'IS | I Food to go been moved I 0.\ CALIEOHMA GRAND OPENING The site for Assembly FRIDAY, NOON APRIL, 6 UCen Lawn Speaker Bob Moretti's iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig appearance at UCSB today has been changed. Instead of speaking at noon in Campbell Hall, Moretti will speak at noon on the UCen Free Speech Lawn. Moretti plans to speak on the effect of Nixon budget" cuts on social welfare in California. The Assembly Speaker w ill appear as th e second participant in the Student Lobby's Legislator on Campus program at UCSB. One of several Democratic candidates for governor in 1974, Moretti may run into local flak over the recently-defeated Assembly reapportionment plan that would have gerrymandered The Paulists are helping to build the earth. Isla Vista into a Kern County district. Moretti is downtown American priests expected to introduce a new on the campus on the move reapportionment plan in the in the parish throughout Assembly in the next few in the office North America. weeks. building bridges For more information write: working with Father Donald C. Campbell, the young and old Room 101. Book drive spreading the Christian spirit, Paulistfethers. for inmates praying 415 West 59th Street New York. N.Y. 10019 The Lompoc Prison Project is celebrating sponsoring a spring quarter book drive counseling to help inmates start a library at Lompoc Federal Correctional Institution. Donations are expected to come as a result of the small return value obtained from refunds of used books from the book store. A book of little monetary worth to most students is worth a lot to an intellectually starved inmate. If you have any books you think you could donate you are strongly urged to deposit them In the special carton outside the UCen Bookstore. A For further Information you can contact the Lompoc Project office by“* calling 961-2939. FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973 U CSB DAILY NEXUS PAGES Thalamus holds acupuncture secrets? Prof prods primates with pins

By Matt Koerber function and has served as the conjectured that prosteglandons The striking success of focus of study for the and histamines may be partly acupuncture — an ancient experiment. responsible. Explains Jacobs, Chinese method of healing with Selecting only monkeys that "Cortisone is known to have an needles — has long been an are not easily excitable, Jacobs effect on these two substances inexplicable enigma to "western" first implants a nine-wire and, since acupuncture is micro-electrode into a specific ineffectual for patients - minds. However, Samuel Jacobs, JR assistant professor of ergonomics nucleus of the thalamus. After undergoing chronic cortisone at UCSB, is now conducting sufficient time has been allowed treatment, some relationship experiments in acupuncture on for recovery, the animals are between the two substances may monkeys which may provide the placed in a comfortable chair and exist." first steps towards clearing up the a series of small shocks of A great deal more experimenting will be required mystery surrounding this increasing intensity are » vYV**» ». fascinating practice. administered. The voice pattern before a more complete The primates were chosen of the monkeys is recorded and understanding of acupuncture is Professor Jacobs explaining the various devices used in his experiments because of their similarity to man the reaction of the thalamus is possible. With the continuing with acupuncture of monkeys. Monkeys sit in chair pictures while being and, in fact, their reactions to determined from the electrode. help of the National Acupuncture acupunctured. acupuncture — strong on The point where the animal just Association, which is providing ^ analgesic effects — have proven begins to feel pain is ascertained funds for his experiments, Jacobs remarkably akin to those of from this data. may next attempt experiments In all probability, however, a JTP^* Help I . men. The series of shocks (which are on cats, the results of which complete understanding of Though the experiments are not'very painful) is administered could be directly compared with acupuncture cannot come about *O ur S c h o o ls .•• still at an inconclusive stage, again, up to the "pain the findings of the Chinese, who until a comprehension of the some of the results have thus far threshhold," but this time, have been using acupuncture on Chinese mode of thought is first contradicted the vast majority of acupuncture needles are first them for centuries. achieved. - th e American professional implanted by an expert from Los opinion at the present. "Despite Angeles working with Jacobs. the widespread belief in America Although the same voltage is FRESH I M I T I f COFFEE that hypnosis is responsible, the applied as before, the animal's, reactions of some of the monkeys voice pattern shows no sign of BORED i BRÍR o r indicate that the causes cannot be pain whatsoever. Jerem y just psychosomatic," says Jacobs. At the same time, however, electrical activity of the thalamus RöSOT’ß K ra m e r THALAMUS undergoes some interesting The real sources are much more changes, indicating that- some OPEN EVERY MORNING School Board complex, probably founded in an activity is occurring in the Paid for by unknown relationship between nervous system. What this AT 7:30 Deborah Redmond neurological and biochemical activity may be is entirely functionings of the body. The unknown, but Jacobs, on the thalamus area of the brain, which basis of the reactions of patients " is thought to be associated with simultaneously trying to use pain, has been found to be a good c o rtis o n e treatm ent and HILLEL * TONIGHT acupuncture, has tentatively indicator of the changes in this 7:30 PM ■ CREATIVE SHABBAT SERVICE You Have Until Friday the 13th to &30 PM ■ “ SOVIETJEWRY ■ A CULTURE SAVE $100 on your flight to Europe for a wide US PERIL W Film and Discussion choice o f flights. a t t h e URC LOUNGE 777 CAMINO PESCADERO OFFICIAL ASIICSB

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Z?T£ y^F/as • io * n s* y7t ¿ Spring Clearance Saie ACCT FINE PTI i J S T 4 9 * KA P I P 0 6 W H * 9 T 4 7 0 0 Thursday, Friday, Saturday ~XA7 TP0 P c crt/T s> 02.SO ¿ 2 . 7S TUHSG- . ¿ 1 * 4 ? t LEE — Highrise, Cuffed, & Pleated — PANTS Z7TP6X CPPPS- JO* Corduroy Reg. $15 Now $10 Pleated Polyester-Rayon Highrise X&KOX 3 1 o/errniit. Brushed Cotton Reg. $12 Now $8 Reg. $14 Now $9 rxu i PPOH&STMZ fy FTAY 'm oro ifcpo/fr fOXGET aim •OU/£PXr/rTtfG JSCKVXX.B 1 also some Imports on Sale U p t o s o % o f f NEW SHIPMENT INDIAN BEDSPREADS w®©®®®©®©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©®©©©©©©©©®©©©®©©©©©©©©©©* so w » ® © « PAGE 6 UCSB DAILY NEXUS FRIDAY, APRIL 6.1973 äiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitmiiiiiiimmiHiimiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiHiiiimiimiHiiiHmimmHiiimiiiininimimimmiimiiiimHiiiiiiimiiniimniimiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimg A view on UC’s Values of academia educational goals

(Editor’s Note: The following is a statement by Professor Leon Wofsy, a UC Berkeley biologist, presented on behalf o f the University What is at stake in the debate over enrollment. Worried administrators fear I Council-AFT before the Joint Committee on the Master Plan for 1 whether California’s higher education that students And their education §j Higher Education last Friday.) § system needs a new Master Plan? irrelevant to finding a job in the Real § It is not merely an assessment of World, and thus are slowly starting to I The Joint Committee’s report has stated well what most people have § whether the 1960 Plan is outmoded. It is reshape curricula to fit what they 1 assumed was California’s major educational goal: the commitment to | not a matter of altering the old Plan to a perceive to be student needs. But this 1 provide education to every individual to the full extent of his or her I less growth-oriented 1973. perception is less suited to advancing I potential and motivation, without restrictions based on race, sex or economic condition. What is now being considered by the knowledge than to producing what C. § While we praise the Joint Committee’s call for reaffirmation of | Legislature's Joint Committee and the Wright Mills calls the “happy robot’’ | California’s ;unique commitment and support some of its 1 Regents’ Select Committee is, instead, a needed to play the interchangeable roles i recommendations made in that spirit, we are here to express as | question bound up in the future of the of a standardized society. urgently as we can some very serious misgivings and criticisms. We 1 University of, California. That issue is Clearly there is a contradiction | hope to persuade the committee to make some changes. We urge you 1 this: Is the University of California a between the traditional role of the 1 to.take another look at the nature of the crisis now afflicting higher 1 community of scholars engaged in University and the Massiversity called for I education, above all at some thoroughly ominous developments in the | perpetuating an academic tradition by the planners of mass society. To 1 several weeks since the committee released its report. I seemingly isolated from society’s maintain the academic tradition of UC I We believe that what is now happening to higher education in I everyday run; or is it a factory to superiority is elitist; to abandon that I California is a fundamental reversal of policy away from the previously | produce people with the skills they need tradition is a threat to the University's § assumed goal. While the Joint Committee criticizes the rate of | to be a productive part of a mass academic worth. progress, the aim itself — to assure full and equal educational | society? We hope that the Legislature I opportunity — has been abandoned. That aim has been rejected and recognizes this contradiction and = undermined for several years by the State Administration; it is now being decimated as one more target of the massive federal budget cuts, This debate, of course, is nothing new remembers the academic values of the 1 reorganizations and policy changes through which the Nixon 1 - to 1973 or the wrangle over the Master institutions they are judging as they I administration is proclaiming, its total break with the concept of i Plan. But perhaps in 1973 the University concern themselves with matters of 1 government responsibility and accountability in areas of social welfare, | of California is moving a little closer to efficiency and economy. The best 1 health and education. I the practical end of the continuum: University is not that which is serving 1 EMERGENCY HEARINGS 1 never before has the University facedsuch the most students, but that which is i We call on this committee to schedule emergency hearings to focus 1 pressure to favor vocational and producing the best ones. on the impact of present state and federal cuts and policy changes on 1 professional fields of instruction. Both legislators and administrators | the hopes and 'plans of young Californians for higher education At UCSB, this pressure has developed seemed to forget this in the I throughout the community college, state university and University of 1 in response to the continuing decline in growth-oriented 1960’s. California system. We believe , such hearings would document for the public that the federal and state administrations are now acting out a policy that the Nixon majority on the Supreme Court has dared to put in words in its March 21 decision on school financing, which declared

riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiR that education is not a fundamental constitutional right. We will not try m our testimony to roll out the growing list of facts and figures. We believe that there is not a college or university campus in the state that could not offer proof that the chances are far worse' DOONESBURY by Càarry Trudeau now than they were even a year or two ago for the youngster with low or average family income to go as far as may be of benefit through by 1968, k/e hiere ■ W BOMBINE NORTH VIETNAM: UJEREN'T California’s system of higher education. For young blacks, Chicanos HNP OVER A HALT MII4.It/N THERE- AN y and Native Americans« the possibilities of limited assistance and men mene stdtiuyep PROTESTS OR OH, VEAN, IN VIETNAMI' ANYTHING? A FEN... scholarship programs are far outweighed not only by galloping living costs, but by cutbacks in areas to which they have only begun to gain access. On the UC Berekdey campus, for example, the Schopl of Public Health is in desperate straits, having lost over one million dollars in funding. Programs in education for training and certifying new teachers are being closed out. Whether the School of Social Welfare JC .STT ra r an rur _ a cm e j j l . i t should continue even to exist is being debated. As for student aid, the IL . )C. 3L JL —n?c ae .asm ____ I JL. il i r J Work-Study Program has been sharply cut down and is actually wiped ■ri'. '■ . v ~ ir out for this coming Summer. Federal support to EOP is, of course, out. Federal training grants, the main support for graduate education in the health sciences, are being “phased out,” a euphemism for “destroyed:” retroactive to Jan. 29, 1973, no incoming student can receive fellowship aasistance from the National Institute of Health. We are convinced that we are witnessing not the usual annual state and federal budget battles, but an historic turning back from the principle of equal opportunity which the Joint Committee has taken O p in io n for granted as the main goal in California’s system of higher education. MIKE GORDON In fact, higher education is being turned even more than it has been Editor-In-Chief into a luxury rather than a right. DAVID HANDLER TOM CREAR JON HEINER ALAN SAVENOR Editori«! Pige Campus News County News Photo Editor It is certainly not our intention to blame the Joint Committee for-1 the present holocaust, or even for not anticipating its scope. But we HENRY SILVERMAN ABBY HAIGHT BERT NIXON WENDY THERMOS Managing Editor Isla Vista News Arts Editor Night Editor believe this committee can do a major public service and fulfill its DAVE CARLSON MARILYN HISATOMI PAM PHILLIPS mission only by bringing to the public and legislators the reality and News Editor JIM CLARKE Kiosk Editor Copy Editor Sports Editor full implications of the crisis. Moreover, we are compelled to suggest that the Joint Committee, despite its clearly expressed commitment of Staff Writers expanding opportunity in higher education, may itself be doing some M IKE DREW SCOTT LARSON ANNE SUTHERLAND M IKE GOLD injury to that cause. We take very strong exception to two of the DAN HENTSCHKE JILL HARRIS HENRY BERG MURVIN GLASS CAROL MOCK BOB G ETTLIN LARRY PADWAY reports prepared for and distributed by the Joint Committee: (1) the LEONARD FELSON report of the Academy for Educational Development, Inc., “Financing Arts Writers Photographers Reporters Copy Staff Postsecondary Education in California,” and (2) the report of Lewis B. FRED NIEDERMAN MELINDA FINN Mayhew, “Graduate Education in California.” MATT KOERBER RICH PROCTER LYNNE FOWLER BONNIE ADAMS N E IL MORAN HOLLI GOLDSTEIN JUDY BAIN " SUZY LAFER These reports are examples par excellence of a nationwide NANCY JEAN LOSH brainwashing job to the effect that society cannot afford to sustain Editorial offices: 1035 Storke Communications Building, UCSB, phone RENATE OTZEN 961-2691. Advertising offices: 1045 Storke Communications Building, expanding opportunity* at all educational levels, that higher education UCSB, phone 961-3829. Gayle Kerr, Advertising Manager. LINDSEY STATLER Second class postage paid at Goleta, California 93017. Printed by DEBBIE COX must be roiled back to pre.-Sputnik days. Education is reduced to a Campus Press, 323 So. Magnolia, Goleta, California. marketing problem rather than a matter of rights and aspirations. The Opinions expressed are those of the Individual writer and do not necessarily represent those of the UCSB report on financing makes proposals for tuition for community D A IL Y NEXUS, Associated Students of UCSB or the University of California Regents. Editorials represent a colleges and the universities far more extreme even than the Reagan consensus viewpoint of the NEXUS Editorial Board unless signed by an individual writer. We welcome letters and columns from opposing viewpoints. administration has voiced in public. It is based on the assumption that the great majority of California’s families and youngsters over 18 can afTord to pay skyrocketing tuitions and fees in higher education. (Cont. on p. 7, col. 1) PAGE 7 FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973 UCSB D A IL Y NEXUS LETTERS: No on amnesty

To the Editor: Much has been written lately about the need for amnesty, the most recent example being the letter from Mr. Griffin (Nexus, 4-3-73), who asserts “...there definitely is a need for amnesty.” I disagree with Mr. Giffin, and also with the Nexus editorial staff: in my opinion, there can be no amnesty. Forgiveness and restitution, yes; but amnesty, no. It is impossible to forget what the evaders have done without insulting those who obeyed the call to arms and dishonoring those who died. Further, it is most insulting to the most honorable of all who opposed Vietnam: those who stood up to the government by refusing to obey and went to jail. These men were willing to accept the consequences of their stand; history honors such men. Mr. Griffin, and others like him, do not appear to be willing to accept responsibility for their actions; he wants amnfesty because he is tired of being inconvenienced. Such a position is unworthy of the support they seek from us. The position of President Nixon, who has said that amnesty or forgiveness is impossible, is also wrong, for he confuses the meaning of the word: amnesty does not mean forgiving, but forgetting. Forgiveness is possible; Christian moral teaching requires it. Also required, however, is restitution, for being forgiven does not absolve one of the responsibility for the consequences of one’s actions. Forgiveness and restitution must not be separated. Those willing to make restitution must be given a reasonable and conciliatory opportunity to do so. The government, for its part, must recognize that its own moral position is so questionable that it has no basis for the self-righteous attitude that the President seems to be taking. However, to those not willing to do so, and who seek only amnesty, there is nothing else to offer; “forgetfulness” is not possible.

Vietnam has created deep divisions within this nation. The time has University goals... come to close up these divisions with forgiveness and understanding, rather than making them even deeper by calling for an insulting, (Continued from p. 6) “too” representative, is about as appropriate a unwise and unneeded amnesty. The feeble justification for this betrayal of the comment on the current university scene as it would -MICHAEL HOLMES goak of California’s Master Plan is that high tuition be to wish mourners at a funeral, “Many happy will yield a reduced state education budget and returns of the day/’ permit meager scholarships for a few of those who can prove poverty. Does anyone really Relieve that FULLY AGREE Delano clinic such a program can possibly lead to increased We call on this Joint Committee to stick to the goal it has affirmed. We fully agree with the opportunity for the poor? It can result only in To the Editor: commitee that California’s commitment is “to making higher education a heavy burden on A small group of pre-meds traveled to Delano over the quarter break insure that considerations of quality early schooling, California families, placing it outside the reach of to visit the United Farm Workers’ health clinic there. We were sad that ethnic grouping, family income, geographic location many, discouraging most of all youngsters from other pre-medical students missed this valuable opportunity to and age no longer impede the access of any citizen poor and middle income families. As a poisonous experience the humanistic side of medicine that pre-meds are often not who can benefit from higher education.” If the by-product, it will surely generate the same exposed to. commitment is to mean anything, this committee antagonisms against the few who receive a little The clinic is one of the benefits arising from the grape contracts should be ready to show that the state and federal educational “charity” that the Governor now signed in 1970 which the UFW has struggled to attain. It is staffed by administrations are now burying that promise. When directs against recipients of welfare. four doctors (paid $600/month) and by volunteers. government wears the apparel of economy while The Mayhew report applies the corporation and The clinic’s construction and its staff contribute to an overall destroying educational gains and wiping out the computer logic of the Carnegie Commission on cheerful and warm atmosphere. The doctors all speak Spanish which chances of minorities and the poor in higher Higher Education to California. It accepts the helps those patients who speak mostly Spanish feel comfortable and education, someone must be ready to say: “The premise that society can’t afford too many educated more at ease to talk about their problems. King is naked!” people and that, in fact, they represent a serious We talked to one of the doctors and the health administrator at We request that this Committee, before issuing its problem in terms of both economics and public length about the types of problems they encounter, their operation, final report, act to: morale. It suggests that an oversupply was produced etc. They told us about the acute need of adequate, low-cost health 1. Convene hearings during April in communities in graduate education in response to the care that existed in Kern County before the advent of the clinic and and on campuses to gather and make known the technocratic race set off by Sputnik and, how the clinic is beginning to fulfill that need by treating one hundred facts of the emergency created by destructive state presumably, by the hot and cold wars of the fifties or more patients a day. They also told us how the very existence o f the and federal actions against higher education in and sixties. Now things must return to “normal” — clinic is dependent upon the outcome of the contracts that are coming graduate education and liberal arts education in California; up for renewal in April of this year. It made a deep impression on us 2. Reject those reports prepared for this general are largely irrelevant to society’s needs and how interrelated the political struggle of the boycott and strike is to committee that argue for tuition and justify major beyond its resources. Programs must be curtailed or the quality of health care for farmworkers and their children. retrenchment in higher education: namely, the redirected to where the dollar and material benefits As part of the pre-med society, we would hope to see more documents presented by the Academy for are clear-cut. pre-meds showing an active concern for health care of poor people. We Educational Development, Inc. and by Lewis B. Thus, we have the sophisticated justification of urge people to support the UFW by joining the picketing and Mayhew; the Reagan and Nixon programs as nothing more boycotting of Safeway, contributing canned goods to La Huelga 3. Make recommendations . for emergency nor less than an inevitable acquiescence to reality, Committee for strikers in Santa Maria. We also hope more pre-meds legislative action to counter the federal and state to the practical needs of society. Gone is any will join the Pre-Med Society, so that we may have more activities of cutbacks in education, especially in the health idealism, the sense that education is a universal this nature. sciences and in programs that provide support to right, that it should offer expression to individual Que viva la causa! minority students. aspirations for cultural development, for expansion DAVID IRVINE Our union has in other testimony in previous of knowledge, for contribution to new frontiers in MICHAEL CURTIS Committee hearings elaborated its positions on science and art. KAREN EDINGER It is revealing indeed that the Joint Committee many of the specific recommendations in the Joint struck a nerve in President Hitch with its stated aim Committee Report. We have chosen here and now that: “By 1980, each segment of California public deliberately to sound a different chord. We have higher education shall approximate the general chosen to raise the general and basic theme of Mistaken identity ethnic, sexual and economic composition of the direction, of intent. state.” Of course, without a change in the present We believe the hard work of this Joint Committee is in danger of being bypassed by events, of being Rick' Loomis, whose signature appeared on a letter entitled course of events, no one can conceive of that as a “Fingerpaint Mentality” in yesterday’s Nexus, disavows any washed out with nary a stir among the people of the serious possibility. knowledge of the letter or its author. As Loomis is the only Rick state. We ask this committee to take! a new look at Yet with the roof crashing around the once bright Loomis listed in local directories and states he has no involvement in what is really happening now, to bring that reality prospects for higher education in California, the letter’s issue, we must assume that someone randomly picked his to the people of California. We hope the committee President Hitch’s main concern before this name as the letter’s author. Our apologies to Loomis, but time limits will come out fighting for and with popular support committee in his March 2 testimony was that the us from tracing down and contacting every letter writer. We can only to restore pride and determination to the effort for UC campuses should not be required to become assume, perhaps naively, that people writing letters to the Nexus are full opportunity at all levels of education in “microcosms of general society.” Such concern, willing to be associated with their opinions. that higher education may soon be forced to be California. PAGES UCSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY.

‘"We can look forward to 10,000 studelhsl Valley Chamber of Commerce in M arch,J pre-Ellison Hall days. ‘Students should not be taxed to pay f J facilities in lieu of fund

(Continued from page 3) Governor, Lieutenant- Governor, Speaker of the Assembly, and developing a criteria for eva education system. The commissi] specific designations for campuses of the state system and the Superintendent o f Public Instruction, and the President of the university system than the current "general campus" label, which University; ADMISSIONS incudes UCSB. • Continuing membership on the Board of Regents for an alumni 4 J representative; Reaffirming the pledge made the committee says California RESTRUCTURING THE REGENTS 0 Sixteen public members of the Board o f Regents, to be chosen by education for every high-school j The joint committee finds that "many of the provisions regarding the Governor from a list submitted by a nominating committee from education. They recc the composition and appointment of governing boards are inadequate composed of the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, the opportunity in postsecondary ec for the present and the future." They especially condemn the Speaker and m inority leader of the Assembly, the president pro tern of The report points out that re homogeneity of the UC Board of Regents, and the political nature of the Senate and the Senate's m inority leader, the chairman of the Board of Regents, an alumni representative and peer-selected student and with the most restrictive entranc regental appointments. "O ur present selection method does not assure students. diversity or adequate independence from partisan political currents," faculty members; • Elimination of the current regental representatives from the To solve these problems, tH the report stated. ethnic, sexual and economic ball The committee's proposal goes on to recommend a 24-person Board Mechanics Institute and the State Board of Agriculture. • Eight-year terms for appointed Regents rather than the current match that of the state of Ca of Regents for the University of California, including two non-voting changes in the admissions crit] members: a peer-selected faculty member and a peer-selected student. 16-year term; • Strict conflict of interest and disclosure provisions for members of including: Other features of the new structure include: • Flexibility in admitting up • Continuing membership on the Board of Regents for the the board; • And, a suggestion that the University of California experiment different criteria; with local governing boards. • A ceiling of 40% lower-divisl o Coordination of transfer pr

f t - perhaps even more," declared UCSB Chancellor Samuel P. Gold to the Goleta His prediction was met a decade early, by the fall of 1965. At right: the campus in

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physical i pR 11 ggfij i s e b it » w a ri ►i g by the people...’

g the effectiveness of the higher regional councils throughout the state who w ill promote people or their elected representatives," the report concluded. uld be based in Sacramento. inter-institutional cooperation and comprehensive regional planning. A clear need for more student aid drew the attention of the "Regional planning shall have high priority In the use of federal committee, which advocated an expanded financial aid program with DROPOUTS grants for comprehensive statewide planning," the report suggested. more money fo r students through state scholarships. College 960 by the current Master Plan, Opportunity Grants, EOP and a full funding for the Graduate uld provide a place in higher INNOVATIVE EDUCATION Fellowship Program. Under their proposal, State Scholarships would ate able and motivated to benefit "In the future, postsecondary education will be less campus-bound fund 5% of high school graduates, EOP would fund 5% of full time however, that "equality of and w ill serve persons in all age groups," the report concluded. They enrollments and Graduate Fellowships would fund 2% of A.B. on is still far o ff." noted a great unmet need for higher education in California, and degree-holders. has shown that the Institutions explored the concept of off-campus education and alternative means The report pointed to the fact that many people other than students irements have the least effect on of attaining degrees and credentials. receive services from the University such as research, entertainment A radical proposal for a fourth segment of higher education, the and data accumulation. They recommended that a study be done to mmittee advocates achieving an California Cooperative University (CCU), is outlined in the report. The determine whether full cost is now being charged for these services, in the higher education system to CCU would be responsible for planning and coordinating off-campus and develop a full-cost pricing policy. ia by 1980. They also propose learning, including alternative delivery services such as technology The report additionally recommended that "the state make every or the University of California, permits. The CCU would also feature a "College of California" which effort to achieve parity in faculty compensation between the would be an Institution designed and staffed by non-academic University of California and the California State University and 2% of their freshmen classes by professionals. Colleges." Another recommendation of the committee was the establishment ;u dents; of a policy for the state to redeploy 1-3% of its annual operating res; budget for educational innovation through a fund to be administered d fee for all four-year public by the Postsecondary Education Committee. JAPANESE CINEMA Diversity of California and the The committee also recognized the importance of non-public ozu and others les; 1 institutions, and recommended that state aid to these schools be nd financial aids so that part-time channeled through student financial aid. ' Sundays, 7:30 pm, Campbell Hall, UCSB time, o ff from school are not BUCKS Apr. 8 Banshun ’May 13 Miyamoto Musashi Jen t’ counseling centers in urban "The efficient allocation and utilization of limited resources will be (LATE SPRING) (LEGEND OF MUSASHI) information and counseling to a continuing problem for higher education in the years ahead," the Apr. 15 Nora Inu May 20 Tokyo Boshoku report foresaw. It hit the concept of higher education being used as a (STRAY DOG) (TOKYO TWILIGHT) ds to assess competencies rather balancing factor in the state budget, but realized that "the days of Apr. 22 Bakushu May 27 Nobi iteria for entrance; money on demand are past." Noting many uncertainties surrounding (EARLY SUMMER) (FIRES ON THE PLAIN) from the tenth grade rather than the issues of financing, the committee decided not to propose any Apr. 29 Tanin No Kao Jun. 3 Kohayagawa-no Akt significant alterations jn pricing and budgeting. (FACE OF ANOTHER) (END OF SUMMER) risibility for the undergraduate Tuition, however, was criticized by the committee. They May 6 Tokyo Monogatari Jun. 10 Shinjuku Dorobo Nikka tutions. recommended that the Legislature assume jurisdiction ovfer all student (TOKYO STORY) (DIARY OF A SHINJUKU charges, and specified that student fees should not be used for BURGLAR) f higher education is essential Series: $3 Students/$6 Non-Students the committee found. They construction of physical facilities fo r instruction purposes. "Students Single: 5O i Students/$1 Non-Students *Chem Aud. 1179 should not be taxed to pay for such facilities in lieu of funding by the ut, and proposed a series of PRESENTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SANTA BARBARA, C.A.L., PH. 961*3535. ______PA 6E 10 U CSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY. APRIL 6,1973 ‘Pigs,’ ‘Gaslight,’ ‘Tango’ slated

John Arden's "Live Like Pigs" which occur when a family of the Lobero Theatre's Centennial will be presented by the UCSB impoverished but contented observance. The performances are Department of Dramatic Art May transients are forced into a a combined salute to the Lobero 21-26 in the Main Theatre. The housing development. The move by the UCSB College of Letters modern drama w ill be directed by is intended to provide a "decent" and Science, the Committee on Stanley L. Glenn and will be the environment and out of this Arts & Lectures and the final departmental presentation situation Arden creates a Department of Dramatic Art. of the 1972-73 school year. The boisterous, lusty, moving and Scenery w ill be designed by Le play deals with the problems shocking theatrical work. Strasburg and Michael Morris; Graduate student Robert Strnad lighting designed by Michael is designing the scenery and Beery and costumes by JoAnne Our logo today features the UCSB costumes for the production. Fleck. Graduate student „George Dancers in rehearsal for their concert Before "Live Like Pigs" opens, DeNobriga is serving as next week in the Main Theater, however, the Department will co-director with Dr. Reardon. Thursday through Saturday, April offer campus and community "Tango," written by Slawomir 12-14 at 8 p.m. Pictured is audiences productions of "Urider Mrozek, w ill be presented in the "Continuo," a work choreographed the Gaslight," ‘Tango," and "El Studio Theatre May 17-19 and by faculty director Patricia Sparrow. Teatro De La Esperanza." May 23-26. The production is Tickets are available in advance from "Under the Gaslight" is a directed by David Stone and the Arts and Lectures Box Office. spectacular melodrama written concerns Arthur who lives with BAMBOO HOUSE RESTAURANT by Augustin Daly more than 100 his Bohemian family in appalling I was a Student at UCSB for 2 years. < know what you want: years ago. Dr. William Reardon is disorder. © Best Chinese Food Auditions d ire ctin g .this play for Jorge Huerta w ill direct "E l presentation at the Lobero Teatro De La Esperanza" which (D Low, Low Prices This Friday, April 6, and Theatre May 11-13 in honor of w ill be presented May 16-19. ® Post Service Saturday, the seventh, Shakespearian thespians will have Come to US. You'll Get All of Them. George Liu, Instructor of the opportunity to audition for Chinese Cooking. 5957-F Calle Real, Goleta — 964-4013 — Same the United Illuminating Co. Building as Santa Marla Savings, near Bray’s Theatre's production of "The Tempest" at the Interim Coffeehouse on Campus. No prepared scenes are necessary. Audition times are from 7-10 — FEA TOM iNG- p.m. on Friday, and from 2-6 # £ •-V f- Í WALDO'S p.m. on Saturday. Tentative dates ar O A X O Z A for first performances are Presenti planned for early June, and cast members must be available I \ ? 4 joB ii sA iar *' through August. « P E T E R X O W A. sr ' '' ^ JOHN, STEVE and RICK The emphasis of the production w ill be on the magical jy - \ Gmal and sensual aspects of the play, NO SM OKING Rob Thrasher the director having compared it to Fellini's " 8 If ¿ í ¡¡y Thüißäay Eve., April * £ as successful as hoped, there is FRANK and JEFF also a possibility of taking the £ w o sHoi*&*j¡¡7*30 & 10-¡50 f 1 production to the Edinburgh ; -K .jpirá^a*- h m JÍ n . Festival in Scotland this Fall. For further information, 1st FLOOR UCEN FRI. EVES. 8:80 PJM. contact Rob Thrasher at 968-1782.

Rock and Ro||.r TICKETSItll Mit ti S a tu rd a y April T ~ $ 4 . 0 0 in návmnct S M UCen Cafeteria Mot new IV band a.S. concerts « back- h a -school- weekend

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complaint." on the Board of Regents. The In justifying the reports Regents could interpret this to * Comments from University... suggestion to continue research at mean that one , student is UC, Hitch emphasized that representative of all students and / (Continued from p. 2) immediate consideration." faculty as well as students must therefore, Moberly feared, "the Wofsy urged the committee to The UC president took issue learn. The faculty's responsibility Regents might stop listening to reject these two reports before with certain other proposals in is "to leam, to discover new any other student input." issuing the final report on the the report. For instance, the truths, in short to participate in Generally she felt that this master plan. He also requested report states: " If higher research. "tokenism at its very best" might the committee recommend education is to be responsive to "For the State," Hitch only hinder students rather than "emergency legislative actions to the diverse needs of a pluralistic explained, "research at UC is a help them. counter the federal and state society, those who govern must critically important function; and "What we want," said cutbacks in education." be drawn from diverse not just for the benefit of the Moberly, "is all the UC student HITCH COMMENTS backgrounds." institution or its faculty members body presidents to sit on the UC President Hitch, in his Hitch strongly disagreed with but for all of society." Board of Regents just like it is remarks on the report also this proposal of a laymen board. On another topic the report done at the state colleges' Board recognized the crucial problem of "Layboards are an outstanding recommends that the Legislature of Trustees." student aid and federal cutbacks. American institution for many should assume responsibility for Throughout the report the Though his remarks were made purposes, especially in cases the undergraduate admissions subject of quality undergraduate nearly two weeks before Wofsy's w here they have large policies at the community teaching is emphasized. The comments. Hitch said the administrative units to whom colleges, the state Lobby favors this but adds "we UC President Hitch: "Act at problem of budget cuts is "so they can delegate extensive areas colleges/universities and UC. vrant a program that would make once." crucial to the present generation of authority...But...busy people Hitch agreed "the appropriate better use of the Teaching of students that I think it devoting a day or two a month to "with final authority over such role for the State is to determine Assistant as a link to a teacher. warrants separate and immediate the agency, even with the best matters as campus architecture, percentages of eligibles and "The program," Moberly action." will in the world can't produce an buildings and grounds and allowable exceptions but," he explained, "should prepare T.A.'s * The Committee should "act at academic plan for all of higher personnel." argues, "the segments (UC et.al) for being scholarly excellent once," Hitch urged, and send education." The president of one of the are much better equipped to teachers; the program shouldn't ^ proposals in the area of student The report also suggests the biggest bureaucracies in the state determine who is best qualified just act as financial aid for aid "to the Legislature for creation of local governing boards criticizes the legislators within these lim its." T.A.'s." The lobbyist also interested in otHer p««pte? suggestion for wbat he views as STUDENT LOBBY suggests UC add to the more bureaucracy? Hitch said: "] Though the UC Student Lobby curriculum freshmen seminars must confess to an administrative has not taken an "official" stand taught by professors. "Every— professor would be required to - frlvnittr to bt 3 gut reaction of downright distress on the report, as they are still at the paper work paralysis I waiting for more student teach a freshman seminar." know would result from the response, student lobbyist Jamoa The Lobby does not see much m ultiplicity of agencies suggested Moberly from UC San Diego told improvement in the report's here. the Nexus what the general proposal fo r a new Board of Hitch concluded, "in this concensus among student Regents which besides including broad bureaucratic array, the lobbyists in Sacramento is. "a peer-selected student," would "One touchy issue, Moberly individual student or the public also include 1 ¿„"public members said, "is the report's suggestion to citizen may not know where to and "a peer-selected faculty ftlATION? CENTER-UU nAORIOTWito include a "peer-selected student" IVWumn take his suggestion or register his member." "This proposed new board is still very political," Moberly told nc the Nexus. "Since public officers are still choosing who will sit on j EBEÄI WESTEBH the board." REGENTS SPEAK OUT Student lobbyists aren't the jSTEAKS; HOAGIECO. only ones critical of the newly suggested board. Most regents have voiced their opinion on this subject, too. Regent Eleanor H. iSteaks & Burgers Heller, of Atherton, agreed with (Next to Rusty's) the lobby's analysis: The new proposal "is just as much a political process as the governor's," she told Vasconcellos at a Board of Regents meeting early last month. home "We may get the least common denominator of a Regent." — b a l l o t ------Vasconcellos explained to the Regents that the reason for the nomination for proposed change in the board ,is for that the joint committee concluded that the Board of Regents is not representative of | of the the state's population. Perhaps surprisingly, there QUARTER s p r in g 1 9 7 3 sale were regents who agreed with the ¡5 San Jose assemblyman. The name of professor board "right now...represents (6778 Sueno Rd.,) only the personal wealth and big business interests of the state," A two bedroom home, cottage, two car garage, said Regent Frederick G. Dutton. out buildings, many plants, trees, and a lawn on a "None of us (regents)." he continued, "are working men, large Isla Vista Jot. This is both nicer and cheaper department and wom en are vastly than one could rent. You can live with your underrepresented." friends in one of the best situations possible. It is Another proposal that was greeted with criticism was the an economical way to live. You or your parents class or classes taught joint committee’s proposal to would get a tax break and build up equity (not limit the regent’s term from the available to renters) present 16 years to 8. Regent Edward W. Carter, a long time advocate o f the 16-year phone 968-0529 W ould you help us in the selection process? If so give us term, said it was a necessity to sit your name and phone on the board for 16 years just to after 6:00 pm learn the complexities of the Deposit this ballot in one of two election boxes located University. He added that the ask for Peter (student) at the UCen and Library. long term also isolates the regents , - from domination by appointees r ------C L IP O U T ______. . of any one governor. FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973

TODAY Creative Shabbat service sponsored by Hiücl at 7:30 at the URC. FÜm: Lounge ?n this beauty. Famous Maker's fine “Soviet Jewry — A Culture in Peril” quality, extra-heavy (32 oz.) vinyl. Double at 8:30. stitched. Double zippered. (Who'll be­ Kundalini Yoga classes from 6-7 at the lieve you paid the bargain price!) l.V. Service Center, Suite F. Please Bag your room with vivid wet-look bring donations. ^ colors: Lipstick red, black, white, D epartm ent o f Mathematics: lemon yellow, royal blue, lime Colloquium with John E. Doner, green, brown and gold. At Purdue University, 4:15 in SH this special price, do 6607F. Tea will precede the lecture at 3:15 in the Faculty Lounge, SH it today. 6623. Reg. 29.99 Speaker Moretti will talk at noon on UCen lawn. University Religious Conference country store rummage sale this afternoon from 1-5 at the URC, 777 Camino Pescadero. Yogi Haeckel holds classes in Complete Yoga from 12-2 and 3-5 in UCen 2272. A special class by invitation is available from 5:30-6:30. More info at 687-1860 or 966-7400 (messages). ,.>r SATURDAY Ecology Action recycling at 9 a.m. behind the Village Market. L riant jumbo bean bags, black; white, red, blue: Reg. 39.99 Now 34.99 Searchlight Car Rally “Shine it On” from 7-11 p.m. Meet in Parking Lot No. 22. Sponsored by the 7th floor of San Rafael. 2 x 3 University Religious Conference 4.00 off country store rummage sale from 10-5 at 777 Camino Pescadero. 2 x 4 SUNDAY 4.00 off l.V. Planting Festival: come and help us plant a garden from 1 p.m. until sunset at Madrid Park. Four rock bands, featuring The Yankees and free beer. IWI TOSS A FLUFFY HUE OR TWO. Sheepskin» Krishna Yoga Society: p p P |||::- WARM THE BONE-BARE FLOORS. Scatter É1 ] in vibrant hues. Toss them about the Transcendental Bus leaves at 1 pun. them with colored Numdah rugs, handwoven for Hare Krishna Temple in L.A. Free in India. Pier 1 has many designs, all finely water bed. Ruffle them on the floor. You'll find them in red, yellow, natural 6* 9. 15.88 feast and festival. Please call 685-1230 crafted. 50% wool, 50% cotton. 2'x 3', 2"x 4', for more info. It leaves from 6584 El orange, green and blue at Pier I. Sp«eW Greco, Apt. 20. 4'x 6'. . . 12.99 -3499 Auditions for one-act plays The Department of Dramatic A rt announces that auditions for Spring quarter one-act plays will be held on Monday and Tuesday, April 9 and 10, in the Old Little Theatre (Bldg. 494) from 7-10 JARDINCITOS...(Little Cardens). You TATAMI SANDALS . . . velvet and bam­ simply add warm water and watch the p.m. boo . . . a unique combination for any jiffy-pellet expand. It contains seeds, The one-acts are part of a two feet. A bright variety of coiors to continuing program of excellent choose from. ^ compressed peat moss and all the necessary productions directed by graduate ingredients to make your herb garden grow. and undergraduate students of Thyme, Savory, Basil, Dill. - j 39 theatre. A variety of roles w ill be open to all students interested in the tryouts. Plays by such distinguished authors as Anton Chekhov, Arrabal and Joe Orton have been chosen by the directors for presentation this quarter. Course credit is available for actors and stage managers who participate in A POTTED CO M BO ... the productions. Interested stage an artistic arrangement of managers should attend the BEACH COMPANION. Colorful grass tatami plants in a 4" pot. You audition sessions and notify the mats. Keep your beach day sand-free. As­ choose the combination sorted colors with black trim. 36" x 72”. directors at that time. to suit your needs.

IM news One last reminder: the softball officials' clinic is scheduled for this Saturday SHOP MON. THRU SAT, 10-»: SUN. 104 JB U fc April 7, at 10 a.m. in Rob BankAmericaru Gym 1125. A ll those wishing 928 STATE STREET PHONE »054)118 l|P S tl to earn $2.59 an hour for EVERYTHING UNDER THE SUN umpiring must attend! SALE PRICES EXTENDED TO UCSB STUDENTS WITH IDENTIFICATION PAGE 14 U CSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973 IM action begins next week Trackmen meet Intramural sports explode into w ill then be placed into round action next week with the robin leagues. Roster cards are CSUF there commencement o f both men's due in the IM office no later than and women's softball. All entries Monday, April 9. Weekend Sports UCSB's track team travels are due TODAY, April 6 in the Later on in the quarter, north this weekend to take on IM office by 5 p.m. A managers' Intramurals will offer two other the challenge of PCAA rival meeting for softball men's volleyball activities: sand Friday, April 6,1973 Fresno State, tomorrow on the Bataball San Joée State There 7:30 p.m. representatives will be held on 2-man and 4-man indoors. Bulldog oval. Golf vv5V '--‘7~: Loyola La Cumbre 1 :00 p.m. Monday, April 9. See Monday's Women will have one week-night Tennis, Varsity : CSU Ceil Angelas UCSB 2:30 p jn . Though unable to win a meet Nexus fo r time and place. Play is (Thursday, April 26) 2-women Tennis, JV Long Beech City There 11:00 a.m. as yet, the Gauchos have slated to begin on April 10. indoor match. Coed competition Volleyball UCLA, BYU UCSB 6 & 8 p.m. nonetheless turned in a number # * # comes in between with a 6-person of excellent early season marks. Saturday, April 7,1973 These include Wayne Syder's VOLLEYBALL! VOLLEYBALL! tournament set for the weekend Baseball San Jose (2) There Noon IM has five big volleyball of April 14. Gymnastics, Women Culminating meet San Diego All day 47.3 440, Dave Poure's 229’9 " tournaments set for Spring Tennis, Varsity CSUSF UCSB 8:30 a.m. javelin toss and Rory Kenward's quarter this year. Men's, women's For further info regarding IM Tennis, Women CSULB There 9:00 a.m. school record 7554 score in the Track CSU Fresno There 1:15 p jn . decathlon, which was also good and coed contests w ill all be events, call the hot line: Volleyball UCSB Invitational' UCSB All Day offered w ith a diversity in levels 961-2400, or come on over to the enough to qualify him for the of competition and types. IM office, trailer 567-B (adjacent NCAA finals later this Spring. The biggie of '73 is the men's to RG). We've got a good thing Over quarter break, in an 6-man tourney which will begin going. underpublicized but highly on April 11 and continue all Last weekend the Gaucho club prestigious event, UCSB hosted quarter. Games are scheduled for participated along with over 400 the 35th annual Easter Relays at Wednesday and Thursday Judo in Riverside other contestants in a tourney Del Playa Stadium. Over 1600 evenings and w ill be played in sponsored by Mishi Dojo. UCSB's athletes in high school; JC, The UCSB judo club, which two gyms. Participants may enter slated to compete this Sunday in Abdulah Modavi brought home college and university-open placed second in the Far Western on either of two levels of a tournament sponsored by the first place honors in his novice divisions competed. UCSB placed Regionals earlier this year, is competition, "A " or "B". learns Sendai Dojo at Riverside. ' ; white belt division at this meet, third in the 440 R with a 4T.5,

Stereo Repair, all models, free Urgent rmmate needed now own Schwinn Varsity $45 6823 Del estimate 968-6757, 968-6909 Bill. rm & bath $225 for Qtr 968-6092. Playa 968-8770 Mike Lewis Photography We know a lonely young person 3MF share 3bd 2bath 6651 DP 1 ItalVega 10 speed excel, cond. I who needs you. Volunteer at $80/m o util Incl 968-9729. Schwinn 3 speed good campus Social Advocates for Youth I Going to Europe? Passport Lost on campus 4 /3 Woman’s silver bike. Bland frame 968-0136. call or come In 967-2343 or Photos 6/$4. Fast Delivery watch sentiment. 963-8451. Portral^worl^oQ^68-7087. 5973 Endna Rd. Goleta. 7N Lost: Final for Drama 160E. Come to 6643 Abrego, B-l or ph Need F. to share !g lBdrm apt. $60 968-9754. Help Wanted Soc. Major call 685-1525. T r a v e l ■ \ 72 Honda CL 175 xlnt cond $350 or ? Lost: Brown Cape w/hood In C.H. 3 Dave 968-5863. Israel/Europe:[ 11 wks-lncl 4 wks PLEASE! RETURN 967-2773. Audio Visual Serviceman maintenance tape recorders F o r S a le Europe, Kibbutz experience t 67 Suzuki 250 X6 Exdnt archaeological dig In Jerusalem, No Found: Wallet and money near movie pro], aut. slide pro]. Mech Cond $225 968-0839. Village Mkt. Sat. nlte 968-7319. 2 Yrs. exper. req. Call 961-3661 ( hassle Program, call 685-1411. Heathkit tuner. Very ~ sensitive. M ult Sell. $65/offer 964-3027. r , 72 Honda SL100, Just rebuilt, no Going to/thru Europe/Orient/USA Lost Beautiful female calico cat on Guides, Instructors needed: Ski mechanical problems 968-3197. Trlgo we love her 685-1754. Free info on youth fares, charters touring, Mountaineering. Granite Hostel, Jobs, Eurall. Sue 685-2002 Stairway Beautiful old red vinyl chair $25’ 1970 Honda 350 Scrambler - Mandolin $30 Tom 685-1230. Found: Good wood recorder In car Superb cond. w/great tires, chrome Europe, Israel & Japan. Low cost left by travler 685-1357. rack, helmet, lock and chain 40/H.P. VW Motor-Just reblt. will student flights, camping & ski W ork Wanted included. $400 or best offer tours. A.I.S.T. 1436 S. La Cienega MYSTERIOUSLY VANISHED help transport. Install. $250 call 968-3204 or 968-9090. Los Angeles 90035 Tel: 652*2727 CAM ERA. FuJIca 35mm, grey 964-2971, after 5 PM. ------IIA- finish, In plain brown leather case. I cF needs up to 10 hrs work per Country Store rummage sale see N s t l e t l EUROPE—ISRAEL—AFRICA can identify negatives. Call Mike at week. Please call Anne 68^-1997. Student flights all year round. 685-1757 or 961-3828. Display ad this Issue. iM lrttiB eA l» Sliver flute for sale 962-0939 Work CONTACT: Lost: IV Siamese cat. Male, no wanted outside painting. Bose speakers model 501 $200excl ISCA collar. Reward, ph 968-8859 Neil. cond, like new 968-2338. Sunn Bass & Guitar amp, JBL’s, 11687 San Vicente Blvd No. 4 120 watts rms, $295. 968-0404. LA . Calif. 90049 TEL: (213) 826-5669. 826-0955 Make your own furniture 40 gal Ampex Stereo Taperecorder 3-spd P e r R e n t barrels $7 ea. 965-9197. Special Notices $250 new, In excel, cond, sell for CHARTERS YEAR ROUND $120 see In 7315 San. NIc. L J Pioneer 800 amp-tuner 165 watts No more club fee.! 50 departures, Girl’s Beachslde Del Playa. Fall IHF new $340. 968-4063. also NYC, Japan & Australia. cAssassination: We need to see book lease, 4 bedrms 3 bath 967-6311. 5-Strlng Banjo, “Ventura” new, Youth fares, too. Since 1959: ISTC “America Burns“. Also called resonator-case $200. 685-1507. SCUBA PRO JET FINS/BOOTIES 323 N. Beverly Dr., Beverly Hills, “ Farewell America** or LOW SUMMER RATES 275-8180 “L*Am$rique Brfile.** 968-6207. Lge 2 bdrm & 2 bath apt 968-3182. 8120 mo & up, 1 bdrm $75 mo up U pay util. 1 bl fr sea Girls bike elect, blnkt AM car radio Pel* & Suppl!«* Come see my puppies on Market 6571 Trlgo No. 3 685-1357. Day, tomorrow. Free while they & campus. M AKE UR RESERVA NOW 6522 Sab Tarde No. 2 [ last. STEREO COMPONENTS 4 Kittens Free litter trned Call COST + 10% Shure M91E’s $19.99 Steve 968-1385 after 4PM. Decent rock drummer looking for This Fall live where owners care Typing My Home-Accurate, Call Jeannette 968-2910, 963-8771. Fast, 45c. PH 962-2611 band 9 yrs. exp. 969*5184 7*8 p.m. about you! 2 bdrm 2 bath on El Free Two gray & white kittens need Nido & Sabado Tarde $500 & $625 good homes Ph. 968-2084. ' Manuscripts — All kinds — expertly Fraternity Rush April 4th 5th ea In 4 man 6522 Sabado Tarde proofed and typed. 968-7802. 7:30-10:00 pm, April 6th 8-11 pm. Mgr. on prop. Prl. Owners. FREE PUPPIES: German Shepherd mix. 1216 Indio Muerto. 962-0431. Typing my home. Fast accurate, BOOKS BOUGHT! Summer & Fall furn. apts, 1&2 experienced, reasonable 968-7478. Madeleine Bookshop 968-1782. bdrm. Pool, close to campus. 6521 69 Datsun wagon runs well. Make ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I Free: all-school dance w / JAM IE Cordoba or call 968-5442, offer. Call Brad 968-8971. Sat. nlte Apr 7 UCEN cafeteria 968-8972. W ant««! 8:30 Rock and Roil! 56 Dodge runs well clean body For Fall: clean 2 bedr. 2 bath apts. doors stick $75/off. 968-3134. Learn Relaxation & Tension One block from beach, shops and Control thru HATHA YOGA phone Serioust Student desires single YOUR PERSONAL HOROSCOPE campus at 6572 Sabado Tarde. Diana, 968-6197, 961-2495 61 CORVAIR Runs good trnsport. 963-8771, . dwelling house or cottage. Prefer $550 and $590 per girl per Steve 968-1385. Quiet. Kathleen 962-7783. schoolyear - 4 grl. Owners-managers Learn Relaxation & Tension Horseback Riding Lessons. Sign-ups 968-1882 or come to 6511 Del 68 VW Bus clean, goöd Control thru SELF HYPNOSIS Old Peanut or gum-ball machine this week only! 8 lessons lMt hrs. Playa No. 4.______condition 682-1349. Call Carol 968-1091. each, $26. UCSB Rec. Dept Rental phone 963-8771. rides also available. Now renting fall. 3bd 2bath + 2bd 2ba apt. Next to campus and on the 67 Austin Healey Sprite new rings. A BAD SCENE WITH BAD Valves 33M.P.G. 968-9963. Pregnant? Distressed? Call a friend: beach. 6507&6525 D.P. Dishwasher SOUNDS? SEE STEREO-TV Birthright, 963-2200. 4or5 girls. Best In IV . 968-5066 DOCTOR CAREFUL, Summer rentals too. ’70 TO Y O TA COROLLA PROFESSIONAL ELECTRONIC 27,000 mlles-prlmo REPAIRS 879-A Emb Del Norte Poetry Wanted for Anthology. Incl. make offer 968-2123. stamped envelope. Contemporary R o o m m a te 968-5771. GIRLS: Literature Press, 311 California St. 67 MGB Roadster, sacrifice! Best Suite 412, San Francisco 94104. W a n te d Offer over $750 968-1943.______TAX RETURNS PREPARED Interested in Clothes and Trained Professional. 10% off for Í 63 VW Bug reblt eng., sunroof, UCSB. 963-5381 evenings. Hear Speaker Moretti *74 Gov. M-F Own room/share. sbo/month. Fashion Trends? Need candidate talk on Social welfare 2 Quiet, but friendly, roommates. exlnt shape. $450. Bob 968-5393. FrL Anr- 6 Noon CH. Sun porch. Call Jeff 968-1776. “Jamie” Rock and Roll—dorms, several girls \Mth some 67 VW POP-TOP FACTORY frets, sororities, pvt. 968-3475. Own room In IV house 968-6803 CAMPER. $1000/make offer modeling experience to Personals Female or couple preferred. Must 962-3843 eves. FUN PALACE SPRING CLASSES like little boy $65 util paid. auto mechanics, motorcycle rep, help VMth Nexus Spring MUST sell 1968 VW good cond., guitar, leather, yoga, massage, My mushroom friend (The one $850 or best offer. 965-3628 c 1 or 2 F Rmmtes to share apt with tal-chi, dog training, sewing, Fashion Edition. No pay that talks) P/T student. Share .or own room. drawing, carpentry. 968-1710. Says "Bump City really rocks** just experience. See Gayle I admit, I guess they do 6650 Abrego-205. 968-0605. with TOP, The sheep, and you. Male 1-bdrm apt $45/m o. + clean B le v e l« * Kerr, Room 1045. Starke deposit 685-1016, 6581 Trlgo IV - C ar H«pair What well known yearbook ed. & c Building Today 12 - 2. Nexus managing editor were caught Need 3rd roommate Sp quarter $65 t committing petty larceny In the mo. 6561 Sabado Tarde No. 1 see Incredible Lambert all alloy 10 & UCenUC Cafeteria? Only the shadow Rick or Henry. 968-9594. 15 speed, sealed bearing cotterless UNIVERSITY TEXACO crank 21/lb. $1

By Dan Shiells A penalty kick, awarded for a backwards, and fumbles violate Can th irty . men throw their major infraction (most frequently this rule). D e l t a T i r e s bodies violently at each other for "offsides," where members of the When a knock-on occurs, the over an hour and become friends offensive team- get in front of the scrums from each side lock arms for the experience? Can winners ball as it advances downfield) is to form a bridge-like huddle. and losers gather together as also worth three points. The Next, the offended team's scrum equals w ithout maliQe, following offended team has the option of back tosses the ball into the. one of the most physical and a defensive "freekick" if the center and the struggle for often punishing of all athletic point of infraction is such that a possession begins. Each side tries events? penalty kick is not feasible. to push and gain position while "DURA STEEL" Beginning tomorrow morning A rugby field is approximately the hooker tries to roll the ball WIDE, STEEL BELTED WHITEWALLS over 800 players, comprising over the same as football field, but through his scrum's legs (only teams are comprised of 15 rather feet may be used), and out to the 40 teams, will show to Santa s in PRICE EXCISE TAX Barbarans that one sport, rugby, F78xl4 31.91 2.68 can answer yes to both queries. l <578x14 33.81 2.85 For, in a fashion unique to H78x14 35.14 2.95 t i f f athletics, rugby seems to have G 78xl 5 33.94 2.87 mastered the element of H78x15 35.17 3.10 178x1 S 37.87 3:19 H competition and established a 178x15 38.32 3.38 perspective based on sportsmanship, camaraderie and f f C : individual enjoyment, rather than ä m M O U N T IN G * BALANCING total concentration on the final ^ NEW VALVE STEMS score. Rugby players want to WITH EACH NEW TIRE PURCHASED FREE! AT BIG BRAND TIRE CO. win, make no mistake about that. ■ V- - ■ Few contests are waged with the w â È Ê intensity and fierceness of a DELTA "178" 2+ 2 BELTED rugby match but it's not a life or death matter, as long time UCSB WHITEWALLS R F Ílífe lP » player Dennis Ward explains. "You may cry in your beer," he ¡ u m SIZE PEICE EXCISE TAX adds, "b ut the score is only one A 7 8 x 1 3 2 3 .4 9 1.81 part of rugby." Gaucho captain Dennis Ward prepares for collision in fast paced rugby 0 7 8 x 1 4 2 5 .2 7 2.01 Rugby is, perhaps above all action. For more of the same, come to Storke Fields all day Sat. and Sun. E78x14 26.58 2.31 else, a social experience to those Photo by Semple F78xl4 28.07 2.50 that play and follow it and does G 7 8 x 1 4 -29.27 2 .6 7 2 .9 4 not end with the timer's whistle. than 11 players. Terminology circling scriiWiback, who quickly H78x14 30.88 pitches back to the standoff, G 7 8 x 1 5 2 8 .4 7 2 .7 3 * Parties are an integral part of a varies but basically the 15 are H 7 8 x 1 5 30.61 2 .9 6 staunch tradition, which imbues divided into 8 scrum (rough initiating the offensive play. J 7 8 x 1 5 31.91 3 .1 2 the players with a feeling of a equivalent to linemen) and 7 A ball out of bounds results in 178x15 3 4 .4 9 3.31 * common bond. "Players part as backs. a "lineout," where the'opposing scrums fine up, three feet apart, BEST TIRE W ARRANTY AROUND! ¿friends, not rivals," explains Within the scrum the names Should your D rN n Tire become unserviceable due to workmanship or material defects, or rood hazard fail­ and the offended team throws u re , UP to the remammo 2 32 o« tread depth. Big Brand T.re Co will replocejhe tire absolutely tree of second year UCSB player Charlie depend on the player's function chnrae ream dlrwo? time or mileage No. qimmick time, mileage, or prorating schedules where you p o y Kaska. in the actual scrum to be the ball down the center, each spore lot your odp.stment than you paid originally, but on honest, dearly defined warranty that gives you O new tire free of charge if it to-is • The secret to rugby's unique described later. They are side jumping for possession. aspects and tradition lie in its "hooker," key man and greatest There is no blocking in rugby DELTA "784" SUPREME informal, casual nature. As daredevil, "props," who hold the and no padding or helmets so ball WIDE 7 8 SERIES Charlie Curzat, a third year hooker up, "locks," who back up carriers are running "naked" in WHITEWALLS player in his first season at UCSB, the props and hooker, and comparison- to football. Hence, SIZE PRICE EXCISE TA) explains, "T h e more ."breaks," who anchor the scrum tackles are avoided by pitches and kicks. The game, like soccer, i C 7 8 x l 3 2 2 .7 2 1.93 organization, the more emphasis and form its outside ring. 2 .0 8 is continuous and fast paced. 1 C 7 8 x l 4 2 3 .2 7 on winning." Hence, rugby The backs arrange themselves, ÍI iiill i m b I E 7 8 x 1 4 2 4 .5 8 2 .2 2 retains its unregimented social ideally, in a "V," starting with Anyone who has never seen a F 7 8 x l4 2 6 0 7 2 .3 7 atmosphere; a game of limitless the "scrum back" and extending game w ill truly Cheat themselves I G 7 8 x 1 4 2 7 .2 7 2 .5 3 2 .7 5 aggression within a gentlemanly out to the "standoff" (playmaker of a rare and enjovable 1 H78xl4 28.88 experience if they miss the action J 7 8 x l4 2 9 .9 7 2 .8 9 context. of the backs), wings and then 2 6 .4 7 2 .6 0 of this weekend's Eighth Annual G 7 8 x 1 5 But all is not carefree back the other way to the H 7 8 x 1 5 28.61 2 .8 0 mayhem. Basically a simple defensive "fullbacks." Santa Barbara Rugby J 7 8 x 1 5 29.91 3.01 game, rugby is often called a To many the heart of rugby is Tournament. 17 8x1 5 3 2 .4 9 3.1 3 F ü ll 4 PlY cross between American football the scrum, which looks much like and soccer, and involves most of a giant crab with thirty-two legs DELTA SUPER PREMIUM \ the primary skills of the two in action. A scrum follows a IV BOOK COOP1 sports. However, an increasing "knock-on" or fumble. (In rugby, Still Recycling Books "140" WHITEWALLS Used Texts, Fiction, EXCISE TAX f number of players have played the ball may be kicked forward, SIZE PRICE Sci. Fict.: 25 Categories B78(6S0)x13 18.53 l . B l 879 A Em bare, del Norte neither sport before, and. the but thrown only laterally or C78( 700)xl3 2 0 .0 8 1.93 notion of rugby as a haven for C78(695)xl4 20 .7 7 2 .0 8 ex-football players is long E78( 735)* 14 21.73 2 .2 2 2 .3 7 outdated. F78(775)x14 2 2 .7 6 Looking for a place to have your next meeting or party? G78( 825)xl4 2 4 .1 0 2.5 3 The main method of scoring is H 78 ( 85 5) x l4 26.21 2.7 5 a try (equivalent to football’s Try the West Campus J78( 885)xl4 2 8 .5 2 2 .8 9 touchdown). This occurs when a Conference Center, E78( 735) X 15 2 1 .3 6 2 .1 7 player advances the ball across F78(775)xl5 21 6 7 2 .4 2 overlooking Oevereux Beach G78( 8251X15 23.01 2 .6 0 the goal line and touches it down. $30 for 24 hours use H78{855)x!5 2 5 .5 0 2 8 0 This is worth four points and a' J78(8B5)x15 2 7 .9 8 3.01 $20 for 12 hours use . FULL 4 PlY two-point place kick attempt, 178( 9 1 5 ) x l 5 2 8 9 5 3.1 3 POLYESTER call the Recreation Dept, at 961-3737 taken 15-20 yds back from the goal in direct vertical line from where the ball was touched down. A drop kick, worth -three points, may be attempted at any ÔUMM6D 0 (/T ? time but is very difficult and Ctrtte, V# us > BIG BRAND TIRE STORES seldom attempted. HOME OF DELTA - GOODYEAR ■ SEMPERIT - FIRESTONE & MANY MORE v s (o^eves n-vrr GOLETA SANTA BARBARA LOMPOC • Enhance Your Beautiful Day at • 5 7 1 1 HOLLISTER 126 W. Carrillo 301 W. Ocean (Across from Goleto Union 9 6 3 -2 3 0 0 RE6-1550 taco bell’s School in the rear) MINI DINING ROOM 9 6 7 -1 9 1 7 or -cartfvKy franseJ voiu*tt*crs - HOURS: t-5:30 MON. thru FRI. • 8 to 4:30 SAT. OUTSIDE PATIO INSTANT CREDIT AVAILABLE IV HUMAN WIATI0N3 CEPfTE«-tó8l flíW lO U M PAGE 16 UCSB D A IL Y NEXUS FRIDAY, APRIL 6,1973 Grim Truths about our Quarter System would enroll in the sumruer." UCSB was By Leonard Felson next in line o f the UC's to run a regular "Only a system of 1ed uca tion' in te n t on Summer quarter, "b u t," added Jensen, mass-producing diplomas and calculated to "when we saw the results at Berkeley and in still anxiety could expect you to learn three UCLA, it just became obvious that we or four different subjects at the same time in 10 w ouldn't get close to our target of 25% of weeks." - U.C. Berkeley Slate Collective, from the student population enrolling." (Note: an article entitled "Surviving Your Education" figures for this last summer session, 1972, Every quarter — when midterms come reveal that only 7-8% o f UCSB students around the second or third week of enrolled.) school, or when preparation for finals Callan astutely observes: "there was turns students into psychotics — debate just not as much interest by students to flourishes about a "better system." A attend school during summer as we common suggestion by both professors thought." and students is to do away with the But another important reason why the quarter system — a system often Summer quarter did not come off as characterized by pressures and intehsive planned is that "state funding for study loads for students. ' Summer quarter was very lim ited," Callan Many professors long for the days since said. past when a term meant 15 weeks — a WHY NOT SWITCH BACK? semester. Finals were given only twice a So now the question remains: if there year (rather than three times) and is no money and people during Summer students registered just twice a year. quarter, and with many state But in reality, whether one supports colleges/universities and community colleges still on semesters indicating the the semester system or the quarter system V doesn't really matter. As in so many proposal for articulation has failed, why educational programs, the deciding factor doesn't UC switch back to semesters — an THREE UCSB STUDENTS, aahast at perfidias of the quarter system, glumly survey remains of is not which is a more rational system or idea that would please many students and a cheese. "What innocent victim next?" they ask. which is better for the student; rather the professors. paramount factor is . money and the It is true, as Callan states, that eight week summer session," said Callan. transformed from semester run decisive issue is how much of it the state "switching over would be a very, very Another reason for the change over, operations to a quarter system of government will allot to the University. expensive process." reported Richard Jensen of Planning and operation. At first, the fourth quarter or Perhaps even more interesting and ECONOMIC REASONS Analysis here at UCSB, was summer quarter remained just a summer telling reason why a switch back doesn't Indeed, a major reason why the UC "articulation." session o f six or eight weeks, not a regular take place is, as one bureaucrat in the UC system switched from semesters to "Many students who transferred from ten week quarter. system said, " I t would be politically quarters, was in part due to economics. community (or junior) colleges had UC Berkeley experimented first with a unattractive for the politicians who sold The main idea behind the quarter system trouble because many community regular Summer quarter, followed the something to the public almost ten years was "year round operation of the school colleges were on quarters while state next year by UCLA. ago to come to the public now and say facilities," explained Pat Callan, a colleges and UC were on semesters." According to Jensen's estimates, about 'we were wrong'." consultant for the Joint Committee on "The idea," Jensen explainedf"was to 20% o f the student body enrolled at Even with costs and politics Higher Education. Classes would be held get all higher education systems on Berkeley the first regular Summer prohibiting a switch back to semesters, during a summer quarter just like during quarters, to eliminate the gap between quarter. The next year 25% enrolled. Jensen is not so sure it would be any other time during the year. different colleges." "However," Jensen pointed out, "we beneficial fo r students and faculty to " I t was to be more than just a six or So in the Fall, 1966, all UC's estimate that 40% of the student body lobby for semesters.

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4. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦»♦»+»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦< ►+♦♦♦♦♦■+-»»+-.1. SNEAK UP ON EXAMSj BEFORE THEY SNEAK UP ON YOU The Reading-Study Center is a free service, open to ail % students (undergraduate and graduate), providing assistance | in the broad areas of reading, writing, and study skills. We | see students both individually and in groups, trying to meet I their specific needs. Our aim is to show you ways in which § your academic work can become both effective and | personally rewarding.

WE HAVE SPECIFIC GROUPS IN READING ( SPEED & COMPREHENSION) AND WRITING (LOWER AND UPPER DIVISION) BEGINNING THE WEEK OF APRIL 9th.

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