Activities Fee Must Passi

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Activities Fee Must Passi University of California at Irvine Volume 1, 'Num.ber 7 MORNING EDITION Thursday, Novembe·r 17, 1966 Orange County's Growth, Politics Activities Fee Make Newsweek Orange County's· growth and ' poli~ics hit the national scene Must Passi last week. N eiwsweek, No- The Activities Fee is a Must! Without it there will be vember 14 unearths the "rightist virtually nothing to da way O'Ut here in the middle of haven of Orange County." nowhere "It is the land of buldozed These are some of the many functions the Activity Fee orange groves and American has supported: flags 40 feet long. It is: the fifth • Chad and Jeremy Concert hous,ing project after the fourth • Sports events (rall ies and rooter buses) freeway wreck on the right. It • The Yearbook is waving at a next-door neigh- • Jose Feliciano concert bor and then realizing with a • The Anthill (If you can take it!) .start that hes not the one who 9 The Association concert was there last week. It is iin • The Family Dog show (Op-Dance) short, Orange County, Calif. - • And hopefully, in the future, a·n ASUCI Book fastest changing county in the Store so you won't have to pay the exhor.bitant U.S., and the one fastest to re- prices that you pay now. sist change." • And also, hopefully, a Student Union. The article considers the ~::::::'::::·::::::::ti.::.·:,:·::_·;::~ ;:.=~x ~~~~@dLk1\hitu~;·~~~ :: .:::; .;~.:···::'.:··· ···~::::·::·~::;:3:~:::.~:/'.fkUfLIU:L ??itrnH1MIMMJfatMl So do it! Vote "YES" for the Activities Fee! county's fantastic population STUDENTS IN GATEWAF PLAZA - Four students sit on the The Anthill Staff rise, pointing to• Ga['den Grove, steps in UCl's Gateway Plaza as one student lies among a town fifteen years old with a them. Behind the group, two more students watch the 118,800 population. Housing excitement. projects boom all over as does FS Leader Savio industry, baseball, Disn,eiylandl, and UCI also are part of the widespread upheaval. Duke Ellington, Orchestra Newsweek quoted a north Denied Entrance Californian as say,ing, "The best At Campus Tomorrow Ma.do Savio, leader of Berke- its use ait noon political rallies part of Orange County is under Hall ley's 1964-65· Free Speech gave a "anti-intellectual posture" Ameiica's ambassador of good spokes~nan. water." "In Orange County," noted an orchestra Movement was denied read- to the campus. He sai:di the ral- music, Duke Ellington, will ap- "Mr. Ellington will give his au- the magazine goes on, "the mittance the University of lies were1often "vicious in intent, pear with his orchesh·a tomor- to American flag ,is used as cas- dience a taste of everything. California last week. dishonest, ]aced with slander row, Fiiday, Nov. 18 at 7:30 ually as the neon sign." Then he'll concentrate on the Berkeley administrators main- and character assassination, in - p.m. at UCI's· Campus Hall. kind of music which got the A description of County pol- ta,in-ed >that Savio was rnjected different to evidence and truth, itics· .ensues. Walter Knott, Sen- The concert is a1special event most enthusiastic response." because he broke univeTsity rules contemptious of diisagreement a!tor Schmitz, Congressman in univers,ity Extension's Fall It will be preceded by a brief at a recent political rally. and often charged with hahed." series, "Ameiican Culture: the James Utt, and R. C. Hoiiles, symposium on jazz, featuring At the rally, staged in oppo-- It was. at the rally, sponsored Negro's Conhibution." Ellington, composer - orchesha Santa Ana Register Editor, are sition to Chancellor Roger W. by the Council of Catrnpus depicted in their conservative Because o.f his talents as com- leader Benny Carter and Leon- Heyns' suggestion of moving a Organizations, that Savio passed ard Feather, \¥Titer on modern splendor. "Why is Orange Coun- poser as· well as ananger, band microphone from the steps of out his pamphlets. During the music and a1Uthor of the New ty a monument of monolithic leader .rund pianist, Ellington has Sproul Haili, Savio· handed out rally he said that moving the conserva1tism?" Newsweek de- been tabbed by critics at "the Encyclopedia of Jazz. half a dozen pamphlets that he microphone might bring about a mands. complete genius." Tickets at the door will be had written about student rights. student strike. (Continued on Page 5) "His program will be flexible," $3 general admission and $1.50 Chancellor Heyns had request- In a letter wiitten by William for all students. Further details ed that the microphone be re- B. Boyd, vice chancellor for may be hadi by calling 833-5414. moved from Sproul Hall because student affairs, Sa.vio was told ~ "This· decision was made /c)..La/l., } be- cause of your deliberate viola- Aldrich In Washington D.C., tion on Friday Nov. 4, of uni- 1~~~!c:Fk~ ver;ity rules prohibiting non- Addresses Convention students from disbib';,ting liter- America's universities should cies of society. ature on the campus. ~~~~~­ resist indisc1iminate pressures "Improved understanding of Boyd continued, "The prac- for routine public service and man himself and of the world tice o.f this university has been kv. w-'- ~ r/l; ~ JJf give highest p1fo1ity to projects in which he lives provides so- to favor admission where the which involve real research and ciety with the payoff that ex- applicant shows reasonable pro- ~ ~ CL- ~ fd ~ scholarship. ceeds any other service which a mise that he: w;i.ll obey the rules c1W-u- This warning was given Mon- university can provide. and regulations· ... An assump- day at the 80th annual conven- "It is more crucial for the tion in your case strongly sup- (in.~ 4 ~ ~ ~ ().- ~- tion of the National Ass·ociation univers,ity to supply society with ports the conclusion that, if of State Universities and Land- successive generations of edu- readmitted, you would not com- Grant Colleges by Chancellor cated people, including tomor- ply with university regulations ~ ~J~~~~. Daniel G. Aldr,ich, Jr. The Chan- row's· teachers, researchers and with which you did not agree." ~ ~) 31~0 ec~M..-o~.s, ~ cellor is in Washington, D.C. problem solvers, than it is to at- Savio was also infonned that for this week. tack specific problems of special he could haV'e a hearing cover- Never before have w1iversities groups," Dr. Aldrich said. ing "the facts upon which this ~ ~- ~k~ ~ been expected to fulfill so many Dr. Ald1ich added that prob- decision is based" if he asked for 1-/ruv dreams and projects o.f the peo,. lem-solving in many instances one before Friday (tNov. 11). ple, 1Dr. Aldrich said. These provides .~mportant opportunities He has decided to appeal the ;;fituu_ /11~~ ~ F~ ~ range from the space race and a for scholarly research and much decision and requested a public cure for cancer to ::matters of new knowledge is gained hearing on the facts of his case /: ()0 /'""- ~ fMIUl 5:()1) f·W..- community, state, national and through attacks on immediate and the question of whether the international policy. social and technical problems. regulation is valid. 'i,ov-L) "In the face of overwhelming However he said, "the uni- Savio feels that the r·egulartion and conflicting pressures," Dr. versity mu~t be· careful to , en- against non-students handing Aldrich asserted, "the univers,ity courage1 only those projects out pamphlets contradicts· the f£J. ~ should resist institutionalization which involve real research and resolution guaranteeing reason- of problem-solving activites that to discourage or place in low aible protection of free speech on ~-~-JW/r can be accomplished as quickly p1iority those that requ,ire on]y campus, passed by the Berkeley and as well by the other agen- routine application of skills·. faculty on Dec. 8, 1964. VOTE TODAY & FRIDAY Page 2 ANTHILL Thursday, November 17, 1966 Dream Proves Success I ul On Campus FORENSIC SOCIETY discussion of general problems Quiet on the Western Front is As Participants ·furn On The UCI Forensic Sodety will fac,ing grad students at UCL the Academy Award winning their elaborate costumes, but By Sondra Evans have its f,irst meeting of tl1e Students who are interested film of Remarque's novel about were poised! and competent in should anive about 6:00 p.m., "Man js but an ass if he go a- their roles. Puck, played by year today, November 17 at 12 purchas·e dinner and sit in the seven young Germans who learn bout to expound this dream" ... James Penrod, was physically noon in the conference room on small room adjacent to the1 far the1 horrors of war from four so says ~o~tom when ~e awakei:s perfect for the pait of the b-ou- the third floor of the Commons. end of the main Commons din- years in the Imperjal Army. from lus bottomless dream m blemaking, spir,ited imp, but at Anyone who is interested in de- ing area. Pa1ts o.f this movie were filmed Shakespeare's M id s u m m e r times it seemed he was uncertain bate or speech should attend. ait the Ii-vine Ranch. Runner, the Night's Dream. And so say I of of die meaning of the lines he For information, contact Joyce accompanying short, is a narrat- anyone attempting to review spoke and miss.eidi much of the Wilensky at TA 8-9199. WW I FILM ed visjual study of a runner in Clayton GaJ.Tison's product;ion of wit and double entendrei in his A double feature w,ill be pre- flight. Both movies will be the· Dream which opened here speeches.
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