Leaflets, Deadwood Gone; Primary Today Thousands of political leaflets read and thousands POLITICS: JAMES SOTO Brown is r celving his rough st competition from more thrown away; ends round one of its Mayor Joe Alioto and Speaker Bob MorettI. Currently election sweepstakes today by eliminating the nomination in the Democratic party are Secretary of Brown leads the pack with 34% of the voters polled deadwood from the major parties in the statewide State Edmund G. Brown Jr ., Assembly Speaker Bob Alioto trails a distant second With 16 % and Moretti primary. All House and Assembly seats are up for Moretti, and San Francisco Mayor Joe Alioto. Other follows With 14 % grabs as well as half of the State Senate seats. In Democrats with an outside chance include The Triton Times saw thiS past Sunday, addition there are countless local issues to be Congressman Jerome Waldie, Regent William and he acted and sounded lik a winner The a - decided in the form of propositions, judgeships, and Matson Roth, and Los Angeles Supervisor Baxter as ion was a picnic for Brown upporters at San constitutional offices Ward . Diego's Spanish Landing The whole affair could only Major interests in the Republicans will either nominate Lt Governor Ed be described as nonchalant. Here In San Diego, the : ampaign has focused upon Reinecke or State Controller Houston Flournoy. third largest metropollton area In the state, was the the statewide constitutional According to the latest Mervyn Field Californian leading candidate In the largest party, eating hot offices, state propositions, Poll, the frontrunners in today's election are dogs with his faithful campaign workers on the • and the U .S. Senate seat. Democrat Brown and Republican Flournoy. Flournoy Sunday b fore the election Brown's big supportf'rs has moved ahead of Reinecke in the past few weeks On Friday the Triton Times were casually dressed as If Tuesday was a year away as Reinecke has apparently been unable to fight the covered most of the races Ed Butl r, prominent San Diego Democrat who ran allegations raised in the ITT case . Although Reinecke except governor and the against Mayor Pete Wilson thr e years ago, was has protested innocence, the indictments from the fight for Proposition 9 . dressed In tennis togs and sang happy birthday to ITT affair have effectively ruined any chances the Lt. another local Brown supporter The Governor's Race Governor had in getting nominated. Flournoy has Floyd Morrow, longtime Councilman and Brown attracted a record number raised nearly 10 times the amount of money scraped supporter, Introduced Brown by reminding all of candidates as Ronald up by Reinecke and has showed himself to be an present how he supported hiS father, the former Reagan decided to his effective candidate in attracting all sorts of governor Brown gave a brief but sharp speech about candidacy for President of Solo Republicans to his banner. Look for Flournoy to win the probable Republi can candidate Houston the nation instead of big tonight. Flournoy. Brown attacked Flournoy for becoming embroiled in another four years of The Democratic primary has proved somewhat of masquerading as a liberal but receiving support from political 'warfare with the Democratic controlled a surprise in that there are eighteen candidates Reagan su pporters. Brown termed th Flournoy legislature. running, with seven of those running, well known supporters as being Reagan 's " kitchen cabinet" Democrats have put up 18 candidates and and relatively strong; yet one candidate, Jerry Brown, Brown talked like Tuesday's election was a mere Republicans six. The leading contenders for has dominated the polls from the vp.ry beginn ing. continued on a e 3 Polls On Campus In Primary Election

by Chris Rauber 4000-4999 must vote at th times UCSD students who live Conference Room In Blake Volume 22, Number 19 UCSD Tuesday, June 4, 1974 on campus will be able to Hall, on Revelle, a 5 vote on campus in today's 5999 vote at the garage of election, in marked contrast to the situation last CALPIRG Requests TUSC Aid ovember I n that election many students had to vote at off­ by Wade Chandler could be paid at the same time as the other registration campus polls, due to a fees, either separately or in the same check. Because of the failure of its spring quarter voluntary mixup at the an Diego Asked to comment on the actual returns, Schwent membership drive, CALPIRG has again requested said, " I don't think there's another organization on County Registrar of Voters financial support from The Undergraduate Student campus that could have gotten 21 percent." Based on Office Cou ncil (TUSC). the results of similar systems at other colleges, as well as A total of $8,300 is being sought for 1974-75 A spokeswoman for the the recent experience here, he now feels that "Optional operations. If granted, the funds will be allocated from Registrars Office said that funding at its best will only get you 25 or 30 percent." the $6 per quarter student activity fee . CALPIRG the hange was made " to Schwent pointed out that about 2,000 tudents have received $3,630 in student activity fee money for 1972- mak it mor convenient their fees waived or paid by a scholarship. He feels that 73, and $7,200 for 1973-74. for the tudents " "We try Co si nce these students did not have to send anything to The $8,300 total requ~t is composed of $6,000 for the put polls in public places," the cashier's office, they were less likely to make a Who's Next? 1974-75 academic year, at the rate of 52,000 per quarter, he said, "and It seems special effo.rt to return the CALPIRG card, and that this plus an ~dditional ium of appt'QXimatelv 52,300 for logical to have the polls on MC 702, on Matthew factor significantly detracted from the membership operations .5l\fflmer fwnding is campus." Campus, and No 6000-6999 this~~ . Th~ r~est returns. ~ presently beina.. CQJlsldered by a special temporary vot at the Lower lOlln~e of When asked why CALPIRG had decided to again seek Students who live in the the Muir Commons. budget committee ~-!l5..C;~""""'ppropri.tion for an apptoJ)riation, after annoucing earlier this year that dorms have been assigned In tructions on where to next year will ~.~~.~~., ~..,~ by the ?tudent the ot'8cmtZMIof) would in tbe future be entirelv self- CQ()pe,ati~~, ~E~ II ~.4'· • : _. . to polls by P.O . Box vote are included in each . The mef)Jb I'p plan; ." here ~ for the fjrst continued on pa~e 2_ • number. Those with No voter's amole ballot time, ,..,as · , #mbAt'y __ <.. membership' lees to efUnl_C"\tte need for ap­ ~------~------~~~~------~------~~---- propriations from stude,ll activity' fee funds. 110wever, AS Will Decjde ·Plus-Minus Issue Today despite a campus-wide~ campatgR and appeals for membership published in the Triton Times, the final figures from the cashier's officeindtcate a participation by Paul Osterman III students responding to the Today will undoubtedly In favor of the pius/ minUs rate of only 21 .5 percent. registrar's poll on the issue trike UCSD archives with Thusly, th CEP did not As of May 1, a total of 7,159 undergraduate and Adoption or rejection of prefer th present sc heme Impact on stud nts, faculty, Incorporate a plu / mlnu the plus (+) minus (-) graduate students had paid spring quarter registration and wi h no change. Ap- and the administratIOn cheme Into It grading fees . Of the e, 1,536 had paid the 5100 CALPIRG grading sy tern will be prOXimately 53% of Regaldle of A S action proposal However th membership fee . The CALPIRG membership application profe ors responding to a today, " The current entire propo al was rejected was distributed to both graduate and undergraduate COMMENTARY poll conducted last year dilemma of pre sure and by the 1972 - 1973 A because It lacked a tudents. • de ided by UC~D ranked the current UCSD academic compet ition pius/ minUs clause Vince Schwent, a UCSD - graduate student and professors today in the la t grading policy number 1 among students" will either Or . Leonard Newmark member of the CALPIRG boartt of directots, said in an Academic enate (A S.) from seven various options. remain at its prespnt tate 1973 - 1974 CEP chairman interview Friday, "I was hoping for atound 50 to 60 meeting of the year. All College Deans and or Increase, reportedly " Inherited" the propo al percent." He ~plained hi6 .• Optimisrn by saying, " We Considered also will be a Provosts are adamantly "ali nating tudents and from former ChjlJrman , tried to make it ~ .easy as ~lbl, tAt ~ay ~ ." The mandatory P/ NP grade for opposed t4.the plu /minus, p~ofesson . '" in acldlt.. 0 members of The. outcome of the ?rofessor Thomas who , merobership • _i(;~ clTd wu. .. ,net '. . In the all 199 classes. j % of P.sychologi · :· Couit- lneeting will illustrate the recommended apprnate a ~ ttriPK if And 50 . ~~wartSa1. tNt 'the ClP 'thomas, current Iv on recomniltted ~ ~i' far the ~ of San Dieao (Committee Oft ~ucati~ academic leave, attitiDed to the CiP, ... ~ a,ave had no reaction," Cox Policy) • nl>t "Teco"'- :'aculty opinion on The issue to gain tudent Input: and ,.id. meACling ~roval of the through a poll onducted re ubmlt. the prOQ06,il '" "MefII~ ami heroin .pl .. S/mi.ws f,4fature la t year. . ·poll wt.i<:tl ~UM ' ' -. ..p"QbIenls cIont -"eet many ~ , the results of aJso deah w"'ltb " other iet en aft ...... ·It _ ~s,,'t ) poll were a grading issue ,I' re eiv~ ~and ~ . '" ': factor in the {;(P eecisiort 226 ~se from :I .. .J , . " " " - U C~ 0 ~ r a dtl a t fe" ~tMW ·~· fa((Jtty ~t 'l8ppro Imately ; ..~ ~~J~· ~· · .· ~he"~ Ol>part~r1t of P5ychiatry, ~oval. The Tnton T;me 5JO The poll revealed Public AHairs, and)Ghn has learned hOwever that ow<> Ition numLenng 111 , Moxley, dean of the the i s\le must stitt bf,' and support of the p5vctliatty -department, presented and voted upon plu / mIOu feature b 115 ~ to av nOthing on by the A today The CEP profe' lior " We've turned down th Union's ""pose ox IS appar.. ntly ,ust loining A.. the figure indicate, Inquiries from KNf)C (.Los 'idid th.t Public Affair~ may tht> group of OPPO Ition to only cl slight maJority of Angeles tl!4evision~) continuefl en ~e 1 the pili mlnll tho"f' \\ ho rp.,ponded WE're

I" • II' I I Isotol Mandeville Center: 10.-Year Dream Assorted Goings On Primary Summary by Chris Rauber classroom, and studio space The funding problem was St ewart ca lled him a continued from page 1 for the Departments of resolved, and Dr. Stewart's personal friend and a great formality. Alioto and Moretti were not even m n­ Ten years ago Dr. John Music, Visual Arts, and dream realized largely friend of UCSD, and of 'Local Ma ••age Parlor' tioned in his speech even though Alioto and Moretti Stewart h ad a dream. When Drama, as well as a 900-seat because of the generosity of higher education in general. Poker have personally attacked Brown for refUSing to the Mandeville Center auditorium. philanthropist Ernest W . The Center was designed Good, Good Burgers The UCSD Art Callery will present " The Local debate either of them again . Earlier In the campaign. officially opens in early The new multi-purpose by A . Quincy Jones and Mandeville. When the state Massage Parlor," a video and performance art show Brown debated with MorettI. The general consensus March next year that dream auditorium would also Associates of Los Angeles . I suppose it is better to display prejudice, if it has to would only provide funds compiled by femi('list artist Eileen Criffin. The show will was that Brown came off as the 10sf'r.Though Brown will be a reality. Ten years promote interaction in the It is being constructed exist, than to try to hide it. Therefore, I will admit that it for a 500 seat auditorium, be presented on Monday night, June 10 at 7:30 p.m. at has been hard hit by the events of the past few weeks of hard work, painstaking arts, Stewart said. It could under the supervision of offends me when the stuffed bell peppers I'd tried to M andeville contributed 1260 Humanities Library Building at Revelle. he has weathered the storm and continues to look planning, and frustrating serve as a major lecture hall UCSD architect Don avoid in the Muir cafeteria confront me 'on special' in more than S2SO,OOO to see A v ideo documentary, "Sitting on a Fortune," consists like the candidate to beat in the today's primary My and as a theater where M cCartey by the Nielson the Five and Dime twenty minutes after lunch ends delays will have paid off at to it that the auditorium of interviews with San Diego masseuses, clients, City prediction ' Brown will win In a squeaker though a musical or dramatic Construction Company of upstairs. would have the 900 seats Counc ilpeople and Vice Sguad. It explores the in­ low turnout may swing it to either Moretti or Alioto San D iego. The architect 's terdynamics of those directly and indirectly involved And furthermore, whether or not I believe what he ;:>roductions could be that were needed. Proposition 9 started out as a tame little Political whispered slyly to me about the fat and soy content of p e rformed . Stewart The Fine Arts Building designs were approved by with the massage parlor business. Th e show will also Reform measure but as more people read the the UCSD Food Services grade of ground beef, you can 't suggested that it would be was named after Man­ Stewart, representatives of include a presentation of massage as a sensu I art. measure more people deCided to vote against the get a better burger on campus than the ones Holly particuliarly appropriate for deville "because of the the three departments " This piece developed from the viewpoint of measure. As of now support and opposition to the masseuses," explains the artist. " The probe does not Holmes serves at his Coffee Hut. events tailored for the many gifts he gave to involved, the c ampus Reform initiative has crossed party lines There ha~ Holly, who has been in food services at UCSD since whole San Diego com­ UCSD, especially to the Planning Committee, pretend to offer a solution but merely to question the also been a lot of vacillation on the Issue as product of the interrelated socio-systems of sexis m and 1967, now runs the Hut, north of Revelle in the woods, munity, including the library and the med. Chancellor M cElroy, an d politicians and ci tizens alike can't deCide what the and the Scripps and Medical School snack bars, and Mandeville lectures. sc hool", Stewart said. the UC Board of Regents. capitalism." implication of the measure m ight be Two months runs them independently of Larry Barrett's food ser­ Planning for the Man­ TT Editor-in-chief David Buchbinder and the ago I would have thought that PropoSition 9 would vices. deville Center began in have won in a walk. Today I find that more and more Chancellor, their differfllces apparently resolved, In terms of food, Holly has a sc rapbook containing 1964, when Dr. Stewart played poker during the Gay Nineties weekend. people are deciding to vote agai nst the measure or nearly hysterical praisings of his cooking by everyone came to UCSD from Methadone Clinics According to Buchbinder, the Chancellor won won't vote at all. Prop. 9 could run Into the same from Navy general s t o Harold Urey. The food is good. Dartmouth College, where between two and four dollars, while, the editor won problem as the ill-fated tax reform initiative Prop 1 And no w, Holly tells me, they wa nt to close down the he had established the last November. People are fed up with haVing to read continued from page 1 advocates counseling and $].50. Coffee Hut as soon as Step " of the Student Center, and Hopkins Center for the Arts. long and poorly written laws that are found to have , But before serious re lease a statement this vocational training. Lettering on the Chancellor's visor read "Checks its snack bar, are complete. And. although Holly says payable to W.D McElroy." large loopholes the day after the election Predic­ planning could begin, a fine week. he's been told he would be in charge of the .student Co x believes that ob­ tion : Prop 9 will lose if there is a small turnout today. John Stewart arts program had to be Center facility, and he has no reason to doubt it at t his By that t ime, enough se rvations of a si ngle doctor A large turnout will help the passage of the initiative developed at UCSD. When point, he doesn't want to give the Hut up. ma n- power Cdn be are not enough to convince FOTT Banquet Some of the local races of interest include two last. first faculty arrived in 1966, County Supervisor races. The county Supervisor IS As he talked to me, whatever journ alistic instincts I orga ni zed to formulate a the profeSS ional community In an interview with t he planning began in earnest. The Triton Times' 1974-75 expended for various ac­ the most powerful political entity in any county In have nagged at me to get on the horn to the food ser­ rep ly, Cox stated . Several that UCSD is " blowing vices people to be overwhelmed by tales of horror and Triton Ti mes, Dr . Stewart, But as the faculty and the edit ors were installed tivit ies throughout the year. the North County, Lee Taylor IS running for re­ Chai rman of th e Fi ne Arts members of the p sychiatry m o ney" at the clinic. operating deficits. That was before Holly had his master student body grew and Sunday at a banquet at the This summer, he said election against six other candidates. Taylor, a Bui lding Comm ittee and departm ent are on leave of Cox d id not comment on Coffee Hut, sponsored by chef prepare a sample hamburger for my cohorts and chan ged, the building plan officers of the group will b~ conservative, will probably find hiS maiO, com­ the Provost of M ui r College, absence, inc luding Dr. two other crit icisms cited in the Fr iends of the Triton petition In Mickey Fredman, who IS consll' 'red a me to divvy up . It was amazing. had to be m odified. For chosen, bylaws written and spoke in glowing terms of Arnold M andell, professor the Union article. Times (FOTT) . liberal. So I told my inst incts to shut up and listen . example, the original plans The Mandeville Center a schedule planned for next his pet project . of Psyc hiatry. H e does continued on page 10 " Listen," said Ho lly. " W hy don't you ask the didn't allow enough space Joseph H . House, year's activities. I'm delighted that the arts Mandeville died in 1970, And, according to John resea rc h work o n heroin The new organizatior, professors where they ea t at this school? Right here, for graduate students, a supervIsing agent of the are going to have the "bu t he did see a fine scale Stewart, who has watched treatment for the clinic. held Its first gathering in that's where. And they sure aren't going to go to the problem which still hasn't D epar tm e nt of Jus t ice's model of the ce nt er and his dream gradually take honor of the new editors student center." faci lit ies they so deserve," been completely corrected . Bureau o f Narcot ics En­ Obviously, Holly's food would be just as good he said. W ith an eye M andevil le Center plans was very pleased that it shape, " they've done an and outgoing n editor-in­ Cox gave two reasons for forcement in San Diego, anywhere he had to cook it. The ques t ion is at­ towards t he future, he also had to be modified would carry his name ." excellent job." chief. the no- omment st and. stated that t he clinic " was mosphere. added that, " we recognize w hen it was d iscovered that not worki ng." QUALITY LIVING When you eat at the Coffee Hut, you ca n nestle under that th ey are so dynamic rirst, the state govern ­ .., Ians for a theatre and arts The TTs first editor and a speaker, or in a little nook with a floor-to-ceiling that they are goi ng to need ment and the coun ty have " Pus hers and dealers hide fo un dat i on 800-seat founder, Renney Senn, said window and a green, woodsy view. Or you can sit a lot more in the very near already sent investigating behind the program," he auditorium to be located o n the new group will seek AT AFFORDABLE PRICES outside. The eucalyptus trees surround the open end of future." teams to the clin ic. They stated. "But the law forbids a site just so uth of campus members from former staff the patio, and there are tables under them. The birds Stewart hopes to see the gave the clinic a slig htly a wholesa le bus!." had been scrapped. members, present students, hop lip, and almost eat the french fries out of your hand. fine arts program expand above average ranking. The major roadblock to Nor did Cox reply to faculty and staff, citizens in PLUS all the social adva ntages of being among friends, con\lenient for dating. And, after all, there is some value to having to walk and improve due to in­ the Center's co mp letion Lewis Judd, M D " acting the community and for five minutes to lunch after working in a laboratory teraction between the Gordon lester, o ne of the over the past ten years has chairman of the psychiatry members of the San Diego all morning. And not having to stand assembly-line various disciplines in the ~ tate ph armacists i nspect ing been funding. It has always department, who pointed media. style, watching your soggy BL T get slapped together. new central location . " The been low on t he UC's list of the eh nic, and o ne of the out difficulties addicts have EXCEPTIONAL recreational facilities: clubhouse, large cooed sauna, heated pool And just being able to sit outside and breath until your xcitement generated wi ll pacilie Ifmsle,n lou,s priorities, accordi ng to Dr. main sources for the Union in enrolling in the program and heated therapeutic whirlpool. Movies and transportation, too! meal is ready. be beneficial to t he whole Senn said the purpose of Stewart, and it's fu ndi ng stories, s nt a con fidential designed to help them , Although I can only list the advantages of the Hut campus," he said. He sees was cut off altogether from re port to the Board of FOn is to provide " moral ... over existing on-camplis alternatives, I suspect I would the interaction between SUMMER ADVENTURE Consumer Affairs on Dec In addition, county support" to the n , sponsor 1970 to 1973, as part of a All apartments and studios fully furnished including phone, T.V. , kitchen and still prefer It even if the Student Center snack bar were student artists, staff, and ' 14. 1973. In it he stated that auditors will soon submit a workshop to Improvp and UniverSity-wide cut off of A Historical Fun & Sun Fiesta! kitchen uten si ls . Private patios and spacious grounds. situated in a revolving tower, offering French Cuisine, a the campus community as a fu nding for cap ital the clinic was "a complete report to the Board of " professional ize"the paper commanding view of the Western , and very dynamic pro ess . " The development . failure ." Supervisors on the clinic's and hold periodic social those absurd little dinner mints. arts prosper in the presence Because of the fun ding operat ions. This inquiry was events, such as Sunday's As would, I report, about 1100 other people, the of an audience and students prf)blem, the o riginal target MEXICO'S But Cox feels that this sparked by Lester's con­ affair number thdt have signed a petiti n in the last week to gain immense l y f rom date for com pletion, 1970, lone report agai n t the fidential report. ke p the Coffee Hut and to hell with the Student Center. contact with t h e arts clinic. by a state pharmacist, He aid fund for the PRIVACY'QUIETNESS'RELAXATION had to be m oved up to Patrick D i llon, Union (That's more people than signed petitions to dump outside of class," according 1975, when t he build ing wi II will have little bearing on group will come from $10 MAYALAND reporter who wrote the DaVid Buchbind r, or that signed p titions to put David to Stewart. He pointed out officially open . However, the c l inic' s pro f essional annual m mberslps. The articles, made the following APPLY NOW FOR FALL RESER VATIO . 755-6666 Hu hbinder back again . Cood, good hamb urgers.) that students get va luable actual construct ion wi II be image . money will be kept separate And though Holly expects more signatures he feels he feedback from exhibiting or finished by next fall, and Departs Sat. June 22 & 29 I continued from page 3 from TT a caunts and be already has his mandate. perform ing t hei r wo rk, and faculty members wi ll begi n Second , Cox quest ioned " All I want to do is keep my places, feed the people, tha t t hey gain from having a moving in at that tim e. the sign ifica nce of and be competitjve." He said he suspects people in high chance to view o r hear t he Some pu bl ic activities wi ll TABASCO • CHIAPAS statements made by Dr. place~ are upset becau e the Coffee Hut might be creative work of t he staff. begin in January, and t he Donald Schwerdt feger, who drawing p ople away from the other facilities. The $5 .2 millio n Center's grand opening will take CAMPECHE • YUCATAN works with heroin addicts at " [veryone likes it here, because It's a little different." facilities will incl ude office, place in March. Vista Hill· Psych iatric Anatomy of a Root Ju st before we left, Holly told us about his new Ho pital in Chula V ista. ~andwirh , the Coodman Delight, dedicated to the II'~;~:~~~:;;;~:;~;Q~'I Fine Canadian Lea thers outgoing Reve lle provost (whose name, by the way, was • EDZNA • KABAH • UXMAL • The so n skinS are naturally chwerdtfeger stated in finished. so In Root~ ~'Ou'lI Ihp first on one of th e petitions. Holly showed everyone DZIBILCHALTUN " MAYAPAN • ACANCEH MAKE I I the Union article t hat the look as good as \d I\r h I\'(~'wd 111.',,1 LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE 100000U the r,ublic welfare" ... ,.nd eov." It \1 Ilk I .... t! d .md V~)lH hu.1 ..f.tyb ...... d ..... III" ,,!.~l.\.e lqhl ' ~ I hl' (It\'" "'ldl'\, ..1lk ( 111 h" 11'10\.')'" from 1 e fl'.ll (\feh 1'IH.'Il)\' .. \Ild 1.1It"',, \.\'" \ \\t.' p.ilt of Sch went summed up his feelings on the whole 238-1161 . OI'EIUATIJ:AO.A\' ht(·1 ',,10(;9' th,-' 4.h't',w,t Ih., oull'r "d~"f Ih\! fnol tlrdw~ hul1 HtH )I" .1h", on \"lHJlllMJlpUlll II 1l0tUJ~t4 funding situation by saying, 'A core of us have to run ~.- . Cau 233-5241 Now! .. Ihen c!lagnn~tl" .)(I1[1 11. ; • hn ':l·d ,ht:.·... 1i11,-" f( 1N. ..n I Wl'I'jhl. Ill, Iklllll ~"'I'\ /nol .... d Chall'll' \')\1' 0."1{ P<'" (ashier's o ffice. wh l h wants to tollect thC' CALPIRC fee CHAIILlS Vi i I O~r ot""" lore al S IEAT COVlII CIENTlII ,,"" IU~I , hll 'I"" linn,! lUI<' I" H"Oh U, th' I ,Ink, only once a y dr AM. ______CtIY ____ _ ------4410 u.mont PKlftc Booch 10909 Kinross Ave. Ifill)" i.lunft)rt.,t,l, " ...... On thE' futur('. Schwent said that " W f' are trying to ... Opening July 1st 111216 Prospect Sf. Ij1\1tl~~ )U d II.JlllJd ·,.I,k la. tw• • n G,.nd & 0.,.... 1 Westwood Village m ~IV(, Ihp ~tl l dl'n t ,oml'!hing for hi dollar." One im­ ,. T...... ______La lolla, Calif, [71 4 1459·3611 ,m, klllmbers PaRe 3 Triton Time , Jun .. 3, 1974 Palle 2 Triton Times, June ], 1974 , I " II ,'n,1l II II I OPINION UCSD Prof Letters Synthesizes Students The oPInione ..pNlMd on mle ..... do not --nty NfIect the Election At Muir: MCC and TUSC vIewa of .... Triton TI...... Sub- by Malcolm Smith m\tt.e! artie... and lette.. to the editor muat be typad, double speced. and preferebly uae a sixty Vote tomorrow and ThurSday, 10:00-3:00 p_m" in the Muir Plaza La lolla, Ca . (UFP) Dr meeting with the provost of character line. Lette .. longer than Urey, Emeritus professor at Revelle CollegE' four years 280 words .re lubject to editing. This full page advertisement was paid for by the Muir College Council in order to construction whil", a new plan, iocorporating more student-use are, IS drawn up Space limitation. prevent the ago when Revelle was in publicize the upcoming Muir College Elections. The election will be held Please indicate which of the two you prefer, or, if you feel that the presenl plan I~ UCSD. ha~ been ~uc­ prlntin~ of all article. and letters. ce~sfully synth~sillng urgent nt'ed of morE' tomorrow and Thursday from 10:00 A .M . to 3:00 P.M . in the Muir Plaza. good, indicated that you wish construction to continue as planned Revelle college ~llIdent~ for ~tudents I n order to t'cure Disenfranchise­ In addition to voting for members of the Muir College Council and The Un- The Muir College Council is charged with overseeing the quality of life, both the past four years. It was fed ral aid Rdther than dergraduate Student Council, Muir students will have their chance to express their social and academic, at Muir. It allocates funds to various ampus groups and revealed yesterday laun h an expensive drive ment opinion on two questions regarding the student center. The first question deals activities, and appoints students to the Muir Curriculum review and Developmt'nt "The Original Idea." said to gain more apph ants. we with the name-for the center. Numerous names have been proposed and the field Board and other campus-wide committees Dr. Urey, speaking to a decided to make our own Editor. has been narrowed down to those listed below. Please mark which of the three The Undergraduate Student Council allocates over S110,000 to campus-wldt' grou p of about 25 Home grown, as It were." The annual assault on names you prefer. or, if none seem right, mark " none of the above". activities and groups, such as Communications Board, Program Board, BSU . and newsmen, "came about The project was up- student voting rights is The second question deals with the construction of Step II of the center. There Debate Club. It serves as a central voice of student input to the administration and during an emergency ported by a grant from the under way again this year have been two proposals : 1) to halt construction completely or 2) to postpone appoints students to various campus-wide committees. 'YOU KNOW HOW WI OOT OUT Of VIITNAM' .•• WILL, WI'II ALSO OUT Of US Postal Service, who saw As em~ly Bill 3458 has been THI MIDDLI lAS'" r------, an enormous potential in introduced and sent to the .------Muir College Council ------, '------~------' Uruguay News the idea. The process, Elections and Reap­ described by Urey as "very portionment Committee. It Alan Kremen David Perkins si mple" involves making a would require students who , I am running for a position on the Muir College A major holdback to pleasant education IS a lack of [Reprinted from LA Times) paper-mac he mould and are claimed by their parents Vote No on 9 Council because t want to help the council serve the extra-curricular learning. The people around us have MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay filling it with organic wilste for income tax purposes to interests and needs of Muir students. That is the sole more to offer than competition If enloyable academiC (A P)--President Juan M . from the UCSD cafeterias register to vote at the reason that the council was created. Student govern­ groups could be formed, we could grow more Within the by Linda Paquette Bordaberry says the and dorms. This is allowed parents' address. ment must play an active, not a passive role in finding school environment. I have already formed several government plans to fire all to ferment for a few weeks This bill is an incredibly out the interests of students and serving them . This year groups and they have seeded for other people getting Editor's Note: judicial body of enormous power. It can university staff members in an amonia and methane obvious attempt to through my work with the Social Action Committee, I together, as well as the offering of a Frontiers of SCience Linda P.quette is the San Diego Director subpoena people and " any additional" who cannot prove disenfranchise students. atmosphere. "very much have begun to see some of those student needs dealt course next fall. PreViously, I have served on the Muir of FRONT IYtional youth group information necessary for its inquiries. It , " noteworthy democratic like that used in the syn­ Thousands of students are LASH, • with . In addition to concern with classes, I feel that the Residence l1all Council and the Executive and PoliCy organized to incruse voting par­ can force people to testify against affiliations." He called on thesis of amino acids. claimed by their parents council must move more assertedly into the area of Committee, Through Muir College Council I will try to ticipation of yopng p~ple, working themselves (Sec. in violation of un iversity officials to Dr. Urey refused to reveal throughout their un­ 83229) , student activities. Muir College can also be a place that spawn more such activities. Thus a closer knit college people and minorities. the Fifth Amendment. It is responsible cooperate with military and the identity of the 'students' dergraduate years . The students like to be in rather than a place from which community. police intelligence services or the exact number in­ for keeping track of a political in- effect would be to disperse they want to leave, I would like to expand student The influence of Big Money on our I formation data bank and "regulating" in an investigation of the volved. "They have a slight the student vote over the activities on Muir College. I seek your votes in order to George Parra political system will not end with Prop. 9. political activity in the state. Any group faculties and other staff odor," commented Dr. state so as to make serve your interests as students of Muir College. It in no way limits the amount of money spending over $250 " or more in value" in members. ' . Urey, " but they are virtually orgap i zationa I efforts My name is George Parra and I am a junior at MUIr that may be contributed to a candidate. any month to influence legislative or Observers assumed that indistinguishable from impossible . This would College. Ever since I transferred from San Diego City Common Cause, the major proponent of administrative action· including " urging Marxists are the target of other students at this mp"n an pnci to the college. I have been interested in becoming involved the purge. But Bordaberry with the student body. I believe that we can chan ge the Prop. 9, and the AFL-(IO can agree on other persons to enter into direct continued on page 10 continued on page 10 one thing: that public fl nancing is the communication with any elected state also outlawed a right-wing Michael Scott existing atmosphere at UCSD if enough students only way to effectively reduce the official, will be required to file organization named become involved with the Muir student council; I hope Tradition, Family and to see all of you at the ballot Wednesday and corrupting influence of Big Money over statements with the Commission con­ Perhaps the basic problem plaguing Muir College bo~ Propriety, charging that it Thursday. VOTE FOR GEORGE PARRA MUIR COLLEGE public policy. Yet Prop. 9 contains no taining among other things. membership revolves around the lack of communication between provisIOn for publiC financing. In arguing lists and financial records of the group " wa an extremist group triton times COUNCIL. Editor in Chief Sports Editor the students and their representatives. Few students at against an initiative for public financing, The detailed statement includes the '------1 Linda Malky David L. Buchbind r \:ric Rai~ter Muir are even aware of the existence of the Muir a Common Cause memo tated that " any purpose of the group and all mea ure College Council, what its functions are, or the power it Managing Editor Science The purpose of Muir College Council is to oversee the such proposal before the voters would be the group is supporting It Includes " any Special holds. Redi stribution of the funds controlled by the John Snod~iass quality of life at Muir in both the social and academic doomed to failure Explaining that. In the other Information" required by the rules Michael Sesma Council could result in more activities, ie. speakers, long run, publiC financing will save the Summer Tours arenas. The MCC uses our vending machine money to of the commiSSion . That means the City Editor I outdoor concerts and other enjoyable events. An in­ Photography Editor finance its projects. Certainly, more women should be taxpayer money IS too sophisticated an comml slon can noop Into the finances su fficient number of undergraduate advisors is a second To MEXICO'S John H Taylor Malcolm Smith represented politically on this campus If elected. I will argument for the public to understand .. of virtually every person that announces problem at Muir. I'm interested in getting involved in Secretary concentrate on coordinating more activities relative to Under Prop 9 anyone who is on salary a political opinion. That includes ad­ MAYAlAND Copy Editor student government in an attempt to alleviate some of and spends a " regular or substantial" Corrine Cacas Muir students-academically and SOCially-particularly vocates of such controverSial issues as lames G. Sot a these problems. I feel my presence on the Cou ncil portion of his time influencing legislative Associate City Editors women. My male constitut>ncy has already suggested a legalizing marijuana, abortion, gay would benefit the students. or administrative action IS considered a liberation, etc. This will inhibit, not YUCATAN Business Manager Rick Drom toosball machine in the Vacant Lot. Do I have a slogan? lobbyist. This person must register as a enhance, grassroots political par­ Rue Hinton Chris Rauber Of course: Linda Malky is the only feminist running for lobbyist and may not make or arrange for ticipation. Absolutely David Cassidy Muir College Council. You owe yourself an OL V!. Editorial Director any contributions to candidates. But an In withdrawing his previous en­ Asst. Managing Editor Ron Norman Fantastic! Philip Protter enormous loophole leaves "volunteer dorsement of Proposition 9, State Ed Simo[ls . lobbyists" unregistered, and free to lobby Senator George Moscone state: " The Arts Editor Asst. Business Manager The most critical areas of concern at Muir College Mark Sindler and contribute money without any Commission's ability to collect and ' seem to be a lack of student government cohesion and I, ' " ' Larry Deckel Cris Paltenghe limitations. A ';.volunteer lobbyist" would permanently maintain the names of each its failure to implement new student ideas and It is with a sense Qf accomplishment that I view the include the wealthy individual who owns private citizen who contributes to each The TRITON TIMES I. offlcle"y recognlud .. e .tudent n __... per present elections at Muir. Finally, a number of in­ by the Communication Boerd of the U nlv __1tv of Cellfornle. San ' decisions. These problems, stemming from the dividuals have taken it upon themselves to - enable a business and gains its profits. but is not campaign is frightening. Potential abuse 01"0. Building 210. Metthew. Cempu., I.e Jo .... Celifomlel2037, proponderance of student apathy and disillusionment " employed" by that business. He and his of such power and opportunity for PubNClltlon la twice w ..kly on Tueaava end Frtay• . OfflClle.re could be vastly improved through the reOrientation of elections to be held. I certainly hope that the students ' super-rich neighbors will still be free to misuse is less than comforting. It is clear loeet.e! In Room 117, Bleka Hell. Revelle Camp... For .""ertlalnll Muir's practices and procedures. To insure a redirection at Muir will not disappoint us in our belief that the contribute as much money as thev want II hone 4I3-87Z2. 0. -'2lIII0, X1017; for editorllli 0. n_ phone students truly desire a deciding role in the selection from experience that ahsolute control of Xf01I. of priorities. st udent involvement in · all student ~nd to any or all candidates since Prop. 9 the CommiSSion would be gained by administrative functions must be secured. The Im­ and in the decisions of their Student Government. With places no limits on campaign con­ politicians of one party and used . to provement of publicity methods to inf?rm all students, your vote, the right energetic and committed people tributions. harass or Intimidate members of another as well as more administrative responsiveness. must be who have had experience with Student Government on On the other hand. Cesar Chavez, the political party. That would be intolerable this campus can create a significant change at and for ,' i ' stressed in the Muir College Council. head of the Farmworkers Union, will be to a fair two-party system ." I\1uir. I am one. I ask for your vote sev rely restricted. As the elected representative of the farmworkers, he spends time trying to influence ad­ Already is Law ,-----'------T.U .S.C. ministrative and legislative action. Two thirds of Prop. 9 is now California iller concerning such things as the banning of law. This includes the Waxman-Dymally Muir College Election Ballot certain 'pesticides . As an employee of the Campaign Disclosure Act and the Donna Schwarzbach Farmworkers Union, Cesar Chavez will be Moscone Conflict of Interest Act, laws defined as a lobbyist and will be which Common Cause supported and M.C.C. T ,U ,S,c. prevented from making contributions to praised highly. Prop. 9 will add nothing It 's about lime that students tde care of Ivo. for .. xl (yot. for two) those legislators who have supported the to California Campaign Reform Laws themselves. The vehicles for decision-making are farmworkers Keep in mind these are except a lobby ist law with a big hole in WHAT'S available bUI are currently nol being used 10 their vol untary $1 and $2 contributions raised the middle, and an regulated 5 person, full potential. I have been at UCSD for Iwo years and Alan Kremen [ ) from thousands of farmworkers. Only by politically appointed commission which have recently participated in student government pooling their money together can farm­ both liberals and conservatives agree 25c activities. I CAN MlrKE THE SYS1BM WORK FOR Linda Mallty [] workers hop to match the economic could be the ce nter of political THE STUDENTS WE MUST AU WORK John Myers 1I power of the wealthy grower. Under corruption in the years ahead. The ACLU TOGETHER. Ron Norman [] Prop '1 th r;ch grow r can lobby has refused to come out in favor of Prop, WORTH , Steve Petach II " voluntlr'ly" all he likes and still give 9 because the bill rests on extremely George PaTTa [] ( ampal ~ ~ contributions of any amount. shakey constitutional grounds. George Donna Schwarzbach II It harn y seems fair to the poor farm­ Moscone and Willy Brown have spoken TO John Myers David Perkins [] worker whose only chance to effect out against it along with the Ca lifornia 'Of lety Iq through hiS union leaders Federation of Teachers. Michael Scott [] Frightening Who Spent More YOU? The first question that I am usually asked when I say that I am running for ow fOr the rally tngntellillg J ~ p<>rt The proponents of Prop 9 havp spent TUSC is " What is it?" I think this is a major problem oflegi#macy for any kind Mark Sindler [] ot Pror I The enforcement of the act $1 ,252,000 as compared to the $105,000 of studenl government and il is my opinion Ihat this is ~argely due 10 the Ii('s In dle hands of a five mpmber ~pent by the opponents One ~upporter madequacy ofthe Council. Studen' government can be an actIve force on campus (omm iJs lon, the Fair Political Prac.tice~ of Prop ') gavp $25 ,000 as compared 10 and I will Iry to mde it so by opening Ihe hght clique and trying to get things How about a bus ride to Sea World? Balboa Park and the Zoo? Which of the following names do you (f)mm ,sslon Th e Commiss ion IS ap­ the $4 3,000 Iclbor h"s ~pent d galn~t th· done. prefer for the Student Cenler? pOlnw d by 4 ('Iected offlC lals, With no InltldIIV(' Wllh ~o much mon!'y bing Across the Coronado Bridge? Or anywhere In San Diego for that matter. It's all only 25¢, Includmg any transfer. For two m rJr(' than 1 bplng of th(' sam£' pdrty ~ pe n t by II, ,upporters you wond'r who DiegenoHa/l IJ TOTTey Center [) Tnton U7Ilon II I hf'r!' " re Virtually n o qlJdllfl(atlon~ to b(' will f(· ally bf'npfit If Prop 9 pa~ s E'S bits these days, that's not bad! Steve Petsch on thiS ( om mltt(>(' an d tht'r£' IS no a d v l~(' MI( hac'l Wdl~h, ("llIo rnla Chairman of For quick rout. informati.. , call: None of the Above I') ,inri «()n~ l'nt o f thl' appolnt C'P s by an y ( ommrJn (dUW Wd~ r('«'ntly quoll'd 10 I'm running for TUSC because I feel Ihere are two major issues ~onfronting us. ot hf'r brtlill h fit ~Olif' r n m( ' nt I hI' (hp( b ~d n lJ ll'lir) M .I/.;d/lnf' d ~ 'dyln~, "Wl'll First, If no one is interestetl'in student government, tt ts because the .1I1d 1.11, nr l'~, whl! h IS thl' h,I~" (It our ( o n ll' filii " I I h I' ('ropo< I I IOn ') (,lmpd Ign 239·8161 organization is not doing anything meaningf,~1 for Ihe students. I would IIk~ to Which would )OU prefer regardl7lf!, politIC ,\1 W tl'lll, IS ITll'\1I11; It " \\I th a (atl'lll (JIg,lIl1,atlllll, 1<)( ally .lOcI a II of the , tudellt Center? r£"p(,fl ,nl,' t,) no On .. Ilwy \\ill,nl,'rpff·t see TUSC develop programs ofinterest to atl tudents Instead of small cl,que I 1('\0\ I( " '\rld hy it \ (oIr frun, nov, [TUSC members), ho I If' \ 11)1. tlOIl of I'rop 'I 'ildrt ng In (J'TlllO 1 ( ,Ill" auld bl'( OI1lP the 111 I SAN DIEGO TRANSIT econdlJ ijT(]SC is a Joke, It 'j a very expensive one. TV C has an annual on tl'!!!!.ng com,tructlOn a "'amn''; "( I \\ 1\ I I " I III d t I 'It

PaRe <; T.ito!', lime, June 1, 1.74 Greg Leonard Who Wrote the Book of Mormon? All Ears Fiction: R. Trout Final scenes of the latest church und r supervision of the rlrst Presiden y, movie, "The Coming Forth of the Book of and SCflpts must first be approved by the "To~e an artist, you've got to starve." How soon I'd Mormon," are being completed this weeK Correlation Commlttt>e txpenses then nCE RAS mUSIcians for the sessions, and whose first album received a wind up eating those words for lack of more nourishing at the BYU motion picture studio, ac­ com~ form the church expenditure OIC, SO I blew it. Last week this possibly even a Nashville producer. Rolling Stone rave review in which sentiment. Ever since I'd lost my G.1. status, I realized I cording to the BYU UNIVERSE . " People committee A typical half-hour hitherto reliable reporter wrote that George Harrison has formed his Randall's guitar play was compared was one joe who was unlikely to ever find a way back to from allover Utah have donated time production costs $25,000-$50,000 ex-Columbia Records president own record label, Dark Horse (ecstatically) to the best of Hen­ the rock and roll scene. and talents to the production," according " Movies are al so produced for Clivt· Davis was likely headed for Records, which, according to his drix. to Jesse Stay, assistant director of the educational use," Stay explained the newly vacated post as president distribution agreement with A & M It seems the "California Jam" Whatever happened to the Monkees, my rock and roll idols. Nothing seemed to matter much with Buddy studio. " Budgets for these com from a rotating of Bell Records. Well, that job he Records, will have Harrison himself (held April 6 at Ontario Motor fund prOVided by the university The co t didn't get, but during the past week as exclusive producer of all Speedway) has generated some Holly gone anyway. I decided to forget about dinner, The movie has been nearly a year In IS then returned to the fund from sales Davis was named "consultant for releases . The first two Dark Horse after-the-fact fallout. Reportedly, swallowed my pride instead, and went to visit Chatty Cathy, my childhood sweetheart. production . It uses local as well as Our most succ sful production of thiS the recording and music operations LP's wi II be a pop-rock album (by when Bill Graham recently ap­ professional ta lent . type was "Run Dick, Run Jan e," a movie an unnamed band) in August and proached Ontario city fathers with With no pretensions to sexism, I had to admit that of Columbia Pictures Industry, Movies produced for the church are on logging It has sold about 600 co oles " Inc." (Bell Records' parent com­ an album of the "Shankar family his plan to present Crosby, Stills, Chatty was quite a doll. This more than made up for her pany). As reported In the June 1st and friends" in September. Nash & Young, Mott the Hoople, limited interest as a conversationalist. Issue of Record World, Davis, in Do you believe it? Sly Stone will the Beach Boys, and the Allman The door responded to my every knock and finally addition to h is activities as con­ be married in Madison Square Brothers Band at Ontario, the said Concert Notes opened to revea l Chatty in all her girlish innocence still plan was soundly "nixed." Sup­ sultant, plans to "actively engage Carden in a pre-concert ceremony the ring on the string so prominently displayed. ' EAGUS in further negotiations with the attended by family and 20,000 fans. posedly the combination of traffic firm towards heading up an entirely Also in New York: When the tie-ups and massive after-jam "Hello, my name is Chatty Cathy" she quipped. new venture, broader than the Who come to town to play the publicity led to the rejection. "Hi Chat, what's cookin' ", I tried my best to seem to existing structure of Bell Records Garden this june, some special Graham will hold his concert In care. Oh, Elvis, he managed to corne-back, I shouldn't ... but it may take a few months for security procedures will be july in the 100,000 seat Los Angeles despair. I can still remember strains of " Heartbreak that to consummate." Davis has maintained. Separating the crowd Coliseum. Hotel" wrenching their way out of my mighty 6 tran­ sistor radio. written a book describing his from the stage wi II be a fi ve-foot The upcoming gala Crosby, Stills, experiences in the record industry fence and keeping order wi II be an Nash & Young concert tour will Chatty served root beer floats . And none too late I which New York publishers William estimated one security man for likely be filmed for future editing assure you. Morris & Company plan to release each forty in the audience. and release to your local theatre. The kids today just don't know what music is about. before the end of the year. And .. . Carlos Santana, with Ho-hum. One of Britain's founding fathers original Santana cast intact, is I'd like to see Tiny shed Tears over a Grand Funk love Loudon Wainwright, crazied of rock passed last week. Graham recording a new LP in San Fran­ ballad. New York DOLLSm That's positively insulting. songwriter of such unsung hits as Bond, leader of early-sixties groupS! cisco set for a july or August " Le.t's play bunny, Hop Hop Hop" suggested Chatty, whose members included a't' release . "Dead Skunk," " Dilated to Meet you," and "Suicide Song," has the pinnacle of innocence that she was. various times jack Bruce, johr All you "Nice" fans, a la Keith McLaughlin, Ginller Baker and Jon Emerson's band before the creation starred in a "M'A*S*H" segment to And they still dared to call it music ... Moog syn­ be shown next fall. Talk says Hiseman, died following an ac­ of EL & P, will be interested to thesizers, "funk", transvestite bands, heck, you put a Loudon may even become a cident in a London underground know that the originals have record on your hi-fi and you can't tell if it's warped or regular series star. railway station. reformed (less EmersO.n) and, not. And lastly : Warner Brothers has Paul and Linda McCartney, with recording under the name All I really want from life is to have The Drifters some majors on this month's " new their band Wings, are due to arrive "Refugee", have a new album due record one more album. Bring back "Mod" fashions, releases": how about jethro Tull in Nashville the first week in june in june. convince Barbie and Ken to finally get married and stop ('War Child"), Maria Muldaur, to begin preparation on their next Sha Na Na has a new member. shacking up together. album. McCartney is expected to He's Elliot Randall , one time leader Randy Newman and Michael Bruce use a number of "Nashville's finest" of hard rockers Randall's Island (Alice Cooper's guitarist)? It's the whole pattern, nobody gives a blue moon Preparing for summer music? Here's a june 16: Seals and Crofts (Did you about what's happening anymore. If Black Sabbath can glimpse of upcoming San Diego Con­ know Crofts first name was Dash?) at record "Fairies Wear Boots" and they'll play it on the air, certs. Balboa Stadium, then it's no wonder they're all shooting marijuana and june 6: Maria Muldaur at the EI Cortez. june 22. Jazz buffs rejoice .. Herbie streaking around with no clothes on . Arts Join Oceans More Music june 7: Eagles (pictured above), Hancock and Charles Lloyd, Fox Theatre. Golden Hall. june 30: War! perhaps at Balboa Tuesday, june 4, at 8:15 "Qual ity of Soft is Not I lifted Chatty's skirt high above her delicate thighs, june 8: Blue Oyster Cult (Holy hard­ Stadium we'rt> told. For Summer p.m . in 409 MC, the UCSD Straining," offered by and inserted my cherished 45 rpm of Dion's "Teenager rock batman!) and Nazareth at Golden Madrigal Singers will sing Kenneth Gaburo with in Love" into the slot running up her side . I pulled her Drama Workshops, a chamber music program and string and swooned in nostalgiac ecstacy for the night. Hall. And have a very musical summer courses on the oceans are special offerings scheduled works by Lasso, Wert, members of the com­ for the 1974 Summer Session of the University of Gabrieli, Tomkins, Bennet positional linguistics California, San Diego. and Wilbye from their seminar. The piece is standard repertory. As an considered an integrated · A regular six-week session will run june 24 through additional feature, com­ network, incorporating Aug. 2. Other special courses of two to 11 weeks are also positions for small choirs by much of the work done in plan-ned throughout the summer. Brahms and Stravinsky wi II the seminar. be sung. The choir, under The program, UCSD's fourth summer session, is open Both concerts are free to students in good standing, at any college or the direction of David off and open to the public. ao% university and adults who want to take university Guion, draws its mem­ courses. High school students who will be seniors next bership from all parts of the fall may get an early start on their college education by un iversity community. As turquoise (' nrolling in lower-division courses and selected special the name suggests, the programs . Madrigal Singers specialize in music of the 15th to 17th Tuition for summer session , a self-supporting centuries. program, is $30 per credit unit. Exceptions are physical education courses which are $20 per class and special programs which have varying fees . A d ifferen t kind of SAIILE TURDA Y AND According to Dr. Quelda M . Wilson, director of program will be presented SUNDAY summer session , "This year's session offers the public Thursday eve n ing june 6, at flexible scheduling With courses planned throughout the 8 : 15 p.m. in Music Gallery summer In addition to the regular six-week session 408. a premiere version of Some evening classes are also available." Kagel's SONANT (1960), The drama program will highlight comedy with with noted French per­ courses on the history of comic theater, comic masters cussionist Jean Charles of silent films and vaudeville and burlesque. the Francois, and Bertra m VIEW OUR MAGNIFICENT Turetzky, well known for tradition of street theater will be explored in an ex­ COLLECTION OF DAZZLING perimental workshop on comic theater and other his innovative techniques. courses will cover the prinCiples of transactional TURQUOISE,CORAL,AND analysis as a tool for the actor. SILVER JEWELRY •••••

A five-week chamber musIc Institute will be con­ FROM THE ducted by Rafael Druian, concertmaster of the ~ ·_ w RED EYE TRADING CO. York Philharmonic. An 'ntroductory course on the oceans will be taught at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The class is a unic ut opportunity for high school seniors and un­ dergrad ate students who normally cannot enroll in courst s at SIO where all instruction is on the graduate level. Als') offered is a nine-week session for intensive study of thE anish language whidl ir.c!ude~ ~f'ven weeks in Madrrp II d q ronJ,l dramatic Increase In wilderness benefi ts relat,on .. h,p f)(>tVl.f·pn non'u,.. dnd recreation usp is a basic desire for tht' 1M k 01 trpl'\, shrub., dnrllloVl.l'rs l pss nped to escape from Cit IPS lontact with vegetation," according POlslblr' (I'dut{lf"Jn 01 urban ( rllll\' Wilderness Class Just to pnJOy plant5 and grt't'n to Dr Se ym our M Cold, an urban dnd I.lolt'nu' bp( dUll ot t hI' la nd >capes, "With the pro~p('( t of plan ner In the Department of [n­ potpntla of plal1t~ to rl't:lut ( If>\ .,1, -Offers Explallltion vironmenta l Hort iculture at the prolon ged fuel rationing or ,I 0r­ of pnvlmnnwntal Cold ~ tages, It IS pssential to make ou r ,tn' s University of California, DaV IS ob~l'rv,·tlon .. ~h()\.. d 101\('[ rdtp 01 [ED . NOTE] The following able to use any tool to c l t l e~ and suburbs more enjoyable, Research by behaVioral SCientist s, vdndal ,)m In (omm!'rt ,al and letter. written by learn, The philosophy of the attractive and diverse p l"ce>," Cold Cold adds, indicates that the current recreation an'as that are \1\ pll Wilderness Studies co­ chool is that a faculty says. "For example, 30 percent of all ordinator Howard Kaplan. popularity of Indoor and outdoor de -8- that 'With the right climate, as in southern California, I source. Others don't rotate fast enough .------,I Spectacular Archaeological Areas: PLENQUE I Ticklers Leslie Peterson, Terri Duquette, means the team will have a female at believe we could maintain pools at a 75 degree tem­ and have half their surface too hot, half I • EDZNA • kABAH • UXMAL • Bev Lowe, Damon Delistraty, Matt catcher, second base, shortstop and perature by solar energy alone," says Buchberg. too cold. The probabilitv that life will I DZIBILCHALTUN· MAYAPAN • ACANCEH I Symmonds, Henry Vierra and Rick centerfield. There will be home run line begin and evolve on anyone planet is AND CHICHEN IlZA, plus Mexico's historic In the long run, many of the obstacles to large-scale I I Tinling. for. both guys and girls and everyone will slight. But, considering the vastness of cities of Villa hermosa, Campeche, Merida & use of solar energy ca n be solved, the UCLA engineer I I Hal and Kris Kierstead represented the bat every inning. Therefore, the the universe, there is certainty that other Valladolid - AND 2 GORGEOUS DAYS IN believes, but only if the technical and economic I I 1M tennis players and AI Hunter and Va l maximum number of runs in one inning planets harbor life. I THE CARIBBEAN HIDEAWAY ISLAND OF I problems are faced realistically. Cardiero were the raquetball contingent. continued on page 10 Lee Kronenberg sees the universe as I ISLA MUJERES! I DJJ~[§ many planets, each at different tages in " If we accept that so lar energy, which is pollution developing life. Some will never progress ~ ______J CREO,NION free and in unlimited supply, ha5 an intrinsic so" lal and past a certain stage , Others, such as I 10 DAYS $409 I na tional value, we must consider paying the economic Earth, support a wide variety of life. HI R () Roel( costs, " he says . THESE IUNE DEPARTURES ALSO FEATURE OUR B 1(; Ye/.,HS SPECIAL TOURS THAT CONCENTRATE ON IInilVArcitv and State Employees YUCATAN It's Outstanding Archaeological Credit Union Zones - PLUS MERIDA AND A CHOICE OF THE OfSANDIEOO NO W AVAlLABLE IN UCSD BOOKSTOR,E CARIBBEAN ISLES OF ISLA MUJERES & CONZUMEl, OR OUR FLY/DRIVE PACKAGE. SPORTS & 10REIGN CAR SE RVI CE FREDRICK'S 10 DAYS From $349 LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE AUTO UPHOLSTlRY MEMBER ACCOUNTS lor All ars Ski & Hike Call Now! INSUPED TO $20,000 oun ITTrRS Or Send Coupon t or Free Brochure

Call or visit one of CONSIDERATION ~-.------Pacific Western Tour< ,,')~ Jt' ~3~"------' >1 c: .. " nip!," ~?'n1 TO STUDENTS your convenient offices: Name ______------5555 Mildred SI . San Diego Featuring the Add. ______C.ty _ 76 IB I AY AVI NUl ) OW I{ I I'OR T<; Ph. 297-183. Zip _ Tel No ______5191 COllege Ave . San Diego 4')4 n'il Vf.t'/I finest for Ph. 211-4210 IN THE REAR Oestin.llon ______Trevel Del ___ UCSD CAMPUS. Lyman Ave at (' lIeli Nfl plrWWfe Miramar Rd , La Jolla Ph. 453-5120 77121 f\Y AVI NLJ I I " )011 A ("/\111 I" 1011 f\ ( Alii 'W1l7 11\ 7 J. 7 l _ Jell LA fiL VD A COMPI il'l1J WrAL 'j'ELrYJ~ IOl ·10,4 I') l() ,I '" '·Il() It. J O llA CAlif 'j.lOi7 f'Hf"" r 4'\11 0" J'l I'd!!' q Tritnn lime- , June- I. 1 7 Fredman for Assertive Training Clinics continued on .....e 10 by JlYnit~ Stodd~rd Aggresive, Assertive, and findings in his in- hero.n treatment alter- Supervisor Non-assertive Behavior. vestigations: natives; Have you ever ... -corruption and illegal - total costs (S1 .3 million THE WORK SHEET ... Felt yOU deserved a There will also be skills annually) exceeding the This paoe's paid for and presented through the Joint efforts of the Student Employment office and Career Planning and Placement Services. Editor : vironment a l is t~ in 'h!' ilrf'a activities, includJng better gradf'~ sessions to practice being dealings in money, drugs, national average for On Tuesdav, June4,North He has experience with land persistent, to learn to speak, COunl'f voters have another use planning and has favors, and sex; methadone clinic . Reen too shy to say to cope with fear of - county money operation; oppor'. unity to cast a vote demonstrated a concern for criticism and fear of error, SEO Employment Notes hello~ siphoned off for UCSD - few patients getting off CP&P Full Time for good land use policy. the welfare of all the and to control nervousness. residents of North County. research in heroin treat­ heroin addiction; ... Been afraid to say what ment alternatives; - drop in attendance to The most important local The goal of Assertive Taylor has no ettectlve you think~ county money siph,nep the clinic over a four-year politica l officer in North Training is to strengthen the period. SUPER TEMPORARY POSITIONS pol icy for growth control or off for UCSD research ih "What am I going to do after I leavp UCSD1 " or Complete des rrptlons of th S POSition, s tudents. a nd people from community inter.lted in Center for the area. N... d .lv... 1 clarlc.1 ,"I.tlnt. fo, .ummer; Mon-FrllI-li; more Info , County Board of Super­ Informal Lounge. The revised so that each team will pitch to its going to provide a few ac tivities for .veillble. lesser extent on the others) whic h ca n be obtained at Iberian and utin American Studies. Organize symposia. seminars , visors on June 4th. seminar is from 9:30 to 12 own players with each batter getting two them . This mea ns jobs for the early-bird SEO C GIl the CP&P Library on a se lf-help basis. Limited in­ commu nity event •. p,oposals and budgets. Bi·lingual . .. horth.nd. Of the seven candidates and 1 to on Thursday, and pitches, as is presently done in coed refs, and it also mea ns that the 1M offi e Som.on. with p ....lng personality; .ccu,.t, typl.t to fill p.rt-time formational walk-i n advising is also available. typing. and w riti ng. Three y.a .. e.p tSan Di.gol D.adline 6/10174 5 CPp·5315c runni ng agai nst Taylor we from 9 to 12 and 1 to 5 on games . This rule change is being made is open to suggestions on what activities rec.ptlonl.t pOiltlon - tz.OOlh,.• chedule e"lnged. Assistance in relating this information comes via self­ SE~ C I'D Laboratorv A ..is t.nt I; 13 p.m. - 11 p.m . • hiltl; p.rfo,m venipuncture feel that MickeV Fredman Friday. The en tire two-day because it is felt that this will generate to provide during this tim N... d production typllt full-tim.: 4:30 p.m. - 1:00 • . m.; ,130l wk plu• . instructional papers on various topics (studied and put on about 50 patient. each evening and ..ch Saturday morning represents the best com­ sess ion will include lectures more scoring, more innings of play (most No doubt there will be other hang s SE~ C 132 to use anytime, anywhere), through the workshops logging in the sampln. c.nt,ifuglng the b'ood .ampl•• to up.,.ta bination of experience and John Weare games should go the full nine innings), as well, and hopefully these will be th e Part· time .eerlt.ry for gen_1 offlc. work ' '2.25l hr. 3 d.V' p.r (group career assessment) , and through limited in­ pla.ma from c.II., removing pla.m. IImple•• nd trlnsferring th.m on Primary Coping Styles, to app,opriately I.bell.d contain.n. Con.idar.ble up. in drawing progressive positions on Del Mar Cou ncilman and more fun result of student suggestions. we.k. dividual counsel ing . Recognizing your Own SEO C 133 blood from human s ubje cts with expertl•• and experience In abo..,e land use and ocial reform Rights and the Rights of No doubt there wi II be some teams The Sports Staff of the TT would like to Sec,etaryIM.rIowng R_,chlr, - much opportunity fo, .d­ ..... of ...pon, ibility. ISan oi.go) Mickey has the support of Kent Wilson Others, and Learning to that prefer our current rul es that require thank Lee Joh nson, Harry Bloom, Bert vanc.m.nt; MCIO-tIOOl mo. to ltart; ful~tlml : MO'1 Info .YII.. bll. CPP·5320 Now, the corollarv to the first question is " How am I i.t. dflta ~ ,ost of the en- Chemistry Dept. pitching to the opposing team, and if SE~ C MIl Public Administrative Analvst II ; a •• in preparation of Discriminate Between Kobayashi and all of the oth er mem'b r going to do it?" One reaction is the "Ci nderella syn­ there is enough demand, the 1M of th e Intramural and Recreation N•• d p.non with int.... t In lIillng for offic. worlo in lIillng .chool - construction of specialized r",arch instruments; interviews end schaduling; phon'l; light typing; .2.00fhr. minimum - III .umm.,. drome" - waiting for something to happen - or to let questionnairel; administer. and analvz •• data on staff activities and department wi ll provide that as well. Departments who have worked so hard p.tient "'Nic ••. MA. in Soc. Sci. end si. months ' •••• rch upa,. or No on 9 SE~ C 180 someone else do the deciding A more effective Teams can participate In one league or this year to put on all the activities this Som.one who i. f.mili., with Bio-med Lib,ary on c.mpu. to look up an equivalent combination of education and axp . I Dav i.~ CA ) continued from page 4 response is doing something yourself Fo r instance, you the other, so the sluggers had better start medical pap.rs/ r.f.renc e articl•• for bibliovraphy; lome X.foxing; CPP-5321. yea r. We would also like to thank them can do re earch into information resources at Career We are not against Common Cause or thinking about it soon. $2.251 hr. Pollution Control Scientist; lab. development of fine particulate politics. Perhaps the real issue of Prop . 9 for all the help they have given us ir Planning and the campus libraries, have conver atlons 8erosol generation sYltems and measuring ins'truments to b. used in any other organization, having a political This summ r the department is again providing the material for all the 1M with friends, acquaintances, and people actually doing the evaluation of industrial particulate emislions control sVltems. voice, but not at the expense of crippling is Common Cause and not campaign goi ng to offer coed 1M softball and SALES Entry level pOliti on. Applicants should be a r.cent gred. In Ph'tilci or col umns that have appeared on the what you want to do. Additional CP&P assistance can grassroots participation in California reform at all. vo lleyball with ~.-tivities commencing Sports pages of the TT this year . Applied Sci. IRIverside, CAl be had in the form of self-ro trllctional papers, a job­ CPP-5321b SE~ D 94 preparation workshop, and counse ling Junior Engineer; IS silt in the installation. operation and evaluation I POLITICS: JAMES SOTO I Need perlon to I ••11 cand.l.br•• for private individual salary of state· of·the·art air pollution control equipment on a pilot Dlent Wilderness ... Synthesizing Disenfranchise- arrang.d ... r ••I. I .ehedula .rranged. scale. Participate in the performance evaluation of control equip­ SEO 'D 9!i Th purpose behind these activities I for students to ment for industria' emissions. Recent grad. in Chemical or continued from page 8 continued from page 3 continued from page 4 Mechanical Engin.ering. t R iv.~i de . CAl ment Need , ••1 estllt••• I •• person and fin8nci.1 consultantl . salary know their resources and appropriate techniques that arranged; houn fle.lbll; full or part· time. CPP-5323 continued from page 4 can be used over and over again 50 that more control his presence has been The other supervisors race pits incumbent Jim Bear SED 0 91 8 .5" M.S ., or M.A .. g,adu.t. with a form.1 educetion in some IIpeet against council man Jim Bates . Though both are campus." Need ener,.tlc peopl. to make appointments for .81 •• r.pr••• n ~ over one's own situation can be exercised now and in of physiology to loin a Blomedicll Rlle.rc h Group; .dlptabl. to • extremelv valuable to us, he tatiVII - $l.tIOl h,. + .ub.t.nti.1 bonue; houn fle.ible; could become the future. All CP&P activities will continue throughout large varietv of activiti •• within the r ••e.rch group. Knowledge of Democrats, charges have been leve lled against Bear ollective power of the c ompute,. and progremming i. not n.c•••• ry. but should b. willing Urey termed the project a permanlnt job fo, June Or September g,.du.te. the summer and are open to June graduates as well as i a very speCial person with which claim he is a tool of the special interests. What student vote In localities SE~ 0 183 to le.rn at 1•• lt Fonra" and computer operation. Work involve. it really boils down to is a conflict of perso nalities. an " unqualified succe s, " throughout the state. Person needed to ••11 fertililer to ,etailltor•• ; good commission. enrolled students. If you can get on ca mpus after classe preparing .nim.ls fo, studv (i. e., animel s urgery); a ..i. t in r.cordlng much t(\ offer. Hopefully Bates has a lot of enviromental support while Bear pointing out that " about O ne of the co-a uthors of SE~ D 41. are over, top bv and check us out. el.ctricII potential from the h •• rt. monitoring dati fiI... .nd has support from the major labor unions. 300" of these humanoids the bill is Assemblyman W Stone ware •• I.. man n... dld - sal.rv and schedule .rranged. pnp.ring data for public.tion. IDown.y. CAl next year we will be able to CPP 5328a are graduating with honors SEO 04liO Don M Gillivray, whose Ne.d . al •• penon. (15) to ••11 educational m.t"i.l. . p.id on Staff R..... 'ch ASloci.te I; a ..i.t Project L•• d.r in ell ph.... of bring Willi and other people Also to be decided today are the numerous this June. "Most of them," distri.ct in clu de U Santa cC' mmis.ion . 4-10 p.m . • apiculture r .... rch proiect. conduct studiel on p ... ticidal and legis lative and congressional districts in the county. says Urev. "are ore-med." SEO 0 457 SEO E 436 bacteri.1 effects on honeybee, and maintain all phas ... of University to UCSD in order to in­ Barbara . He is a con­ Need two mo,e J.P&n..... p •• king tou, guidll to give tours of S.n Need s omeone with nice app •• rance & aggr••• ive perlonality to apiary. Requir.. degree andl or comparable ex p.r. in entomologv The most interest has centered around the servative Republican and Di.go ci ty to touri.t. f,om Japen: mun b. able to d,iv •• nd have CA w ork es c.nv... er l .ppr.,... & .et up Ippolntmant. fo, ••II.man . and biology .nd ability to cl•• sifv immature .nd adult ins.cts. crease the reality of our Democratic nomination in the 41st Co ngressional Several of the others have lic."s.; .1.86-.2.50/ hr.; part· t im • . on,cllI. re eived a grand total 3.8 salary 5% of g,o.. sal ••f .chedule fle.ibl • . t R iv~rsi d. , CAl education. district where seven major democrats vie for the been awarded grants for perce nt of the student vote SEO 0463 privilege of running against long-time incumbent advanced work in at Santa Barbara in the 1972 Need person with good drive'-, record to make delive,i.. . $2.00/ hr.; SEO E466 Bob W ilson in November. c hemistry , a 5 davs pe, wk. 11 a .m .' 3 p.m. Native spe.ker or very fluent in Hawaiian or Spanish to teach election . Hi s opponent. language - no teaching experience reQuired; two openings; $6 per 1 Yr - " man ifestation" of their SE~ 0468 ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS POSITIONS Gary Hart, rece ived the hrs,; schedule arranged. ------Person with good driving record & sharp mind to d.liver flower• • viral nature." other 96 .2 percent of th e $l .8S/ hr.; 12·5 Mon-Foi ; .11 d.V Sat. SEO 0483 . SEO F 71 vote and came within 700 SE~ E 471 Several openings for t.1I girls IS"'" and ove,) to po .. cloth.d lor.rt Porson with ••perlence w orking with public to .erve c ustomer. In Dr. Urey was hesistant to votes of defeating Need f.m.la sports w,ite, to cove' sto,ie. a. a ..l gned: salarv & cI.. ... - f3.ODl h,.; 12 hra. per wk. liQuor store; salery & Ichedule .rrenged, achedu" arranged. C o mmuni ty LOW PRICES discuss future pJans, but McGillivray. These figur SEa 0501 HIGH TRADE-INS . appeared confident that he show the seamy political Sale.pe,son lor the summ.r: s.lary & sch.dule .rrengld. SE~ F 76 I R NTALS will succeed in creating life motives that Inspired thi s SEO 0516 SE~ E 4n Ne.d Jezz band; sallrv arranged; 5-6 nighn; 5 hrs. per night. Need two peopl. w ith math or .tati.tic.1 b.ckground to g8ther data i-'RorESSIONAL & " Within a few years ." The piece of legislation. Sevflral people needed to collect donations thru summer, Own tran.por.tion; sales 0' public ,.Iationo upe,i.nce h.lpful; t2.50l hr. & do.t.tl.tic.'."aIV.I" $2_91 und.rgr.d/U .tIO g,.d; Mon· F,i 8-6: 2-3 INDUSTRIAL process involved In creating Write to your legis latoT SEO F 306 Blood B ank + commiSlion. mOl. Need person to do odd jobs around the house; run errands. ect .. no and express your feelings on SEO 0519 mALrRSHIP life is a great deal more babysitting. Will b. lun( $25 par wk. this bi ll and any other that Need s,v,,"lartlcul.t. P.oP" to sail p,oducts oYer th. phone; Mon· NEW 8< USED complex, but even . the SE~ E 502 wou ld seek to destroy Fri 5:30-9:30 p.m.l.al.ry .rr.ngld. 327 F Street EQUIPMlNT creation of advanced forms SEO 056li Computar p,ogrammer; plrt·time now, full-tim. July 1; ..Iary op.n. SEO F 487 of Ii f e is " not out of the .students ' right to vote. Na.t & tidy penon fo, liquor no,. cllrIo; 32-40 hrl. per wk.; .2.tIOl hr. Need two flag football co.che. for 5, 6, " & 8 grid ..; previoul •• I , question." Mark Miller SEO D Ii03 SE~ E Ii22 oe,ience r.Quir.d: Sl.OD / h,. Mon-hi 3-5 p.m. thru Juna. Senior, Political Science Elect,onic./Ste.. o •• I..... non n.ed.d; .2.001 hr. + commi•• lon ; N ...d two Llc.n•• d Voc.tlon Nu ....: tl.60 to .tart; v.riou. ,hilt• . I .ch.dule arr.nged. SE~ F 488 U Berkplev SE~ Need piano In.tructor to t ... ch adv.ncld pi.no I... on. ; s.lary & Pays Donors Queried about the D_ SEO E 1>17 schedule .,rangld. I morality of the project, Dr. Need '.y.r.1 PIOple with Int~ in ..t.iI ...n to worlo In etud.nt Need one laboratory ...I.tant; .1.75l hr.; 20 hnl wk. 1I•• lble. t Urey was adamant. "Our Lee Burke internlhlP Poeltl_ tNlnlng In .-11 .....; $120 ...' wk.; .ummer; Soph -Student Lobbv fun-time. SEa F.'. creations are absolutely SEO D_ SEOE_ P"no 'nlltructor for blvinnars; all boolt. & nee_rv mete,ill will For Serviee I Director be .upplled; '1.10 "...... on plu. _ . t I moral," he declared. " Thev 20 .lIg...... 1 •• to ...... deductlllll ohotOll...... Need _ pIr'IOft to wrlta .rtle'" for • pape, in the ....; ....ry rt I I UCSD ,,1_11 fit in perfectly with I ife at ...... Cl; full or "rt-tl_: ,,.,,,,. atNIeht commlaalon ...... on I """"... "."..cI. I ..... _ hour. SlOFm Mon .-Sat. 8:45 am-5:30 pm closed Sun. I ' ,is campus. Llheuard • Inatruc10f '0' chilcl...,' thN 15; need WSI; '15 _ wit. + I RIDES FOR RIDERS SIDE .. _rtb-a Need ~ who II wall acluCItM RIDERS FOR DRIVERS PROFESSIONAL, ARTISTIC AND SCIENTIFIC verv In Me".,.n _ • crafta IncIudInI poedoua et_ to treveI with to ....0: ..... TO ANY CITY POSITIONS .UC1i_ I I ...... and Callfo,ni., US A , RESEARCH C.n.d., M •• lco, CUS IOM I!~W SlO'" Slor_ 233-5481 Thousands of Top iCS Cent,.1 America --.. fuII .... ~...... fer ___ ...... PRO( I ~SIN(' • klento ..... 2., ...... wltltll ••"",_tn --. .... rt fIIt:I ~ • I $2.75 per page FaraL ...... -."',. 0,'\1 I'IH MISIS M.mmoth, T.hoe, ..... weill...... puMe 18 ""' ...... It Del Mer ftIIr: JvM 21-JuIw 4: Due to ...-ce limits, aU Send for your up to date, 160 pagt, Colo,.do ..tw . + ...... not We would like to thank rpar! order catalol. Enclose $1.00 .01_ t to COlIer postage Idell,ery lime IS w ••I ••r rs" .. In". I ...... -'1;" • ""_...... " .. _ positions we,. printed. Vleh the I all those who donated I to 2 days). 10c.1 c.r pool...... ,.,.. ",. hI. _ I'" SIOI_ t · t . SIC). 117 "-... ani' ...... ,...,. tar ...... ___ ..-..: SEO place for more. RESEARCH ASstsTANCE, INC. OTTO CAR POOLS ...... ____ ...... /wIL fer J -. this year for their cooperation. I \1941 WILSH1RE BL VO • SUIlE "2 ...... 0..". aM ...... FREE VALIDATED PARKING LOS ANGElES, CALIf 90025 CALL TODAY 1l1l/I ____ ....., • ..,....,..u I' II I I 12 13) 4778474 or 4775493 612-1_ 110 I 411 • Our AStarOt m.l.rJ,lls uJ4 for IiIi4I EL CAJON IJLVD , ___ ...... ~ ...... , ...... n ..... " I 1ft 235-6564 laO I 'UfltCh ".III,I.u onl, 0 •• "'111 fw ftw ...... "-'. •• I"C'" __ willi ..... -- - -II1II: •• II...... lUll"'.: "-- __ ...... + ._..... na: MOt·It_. - - - -- "-IIIIa. PAlle 11 Triton Times, June ], 1974 .---...... ------~------announcements---...... DEAOLINE FOR CALPIRO ALL INTERESTED WOMEN: ATTENTION PREMEDS AP· IUBJECT A PROFICIE BALLOTS Ie Wed. afternoon. June thursday ASSUTION TRAINING PLYING TO MEDICAL SCHOOL EXAM: Anybody who 11111 haa I. P'- drop your beUo. In the SEMINAR. June Ith .nd 7th.... THIS IUMMER: A ..miner on "IUBJ A REOO" on .... tranacrlpt bOIl .. In the libra"'. cet...... to I. C.II Rac:ce or Alice. X271I. for "How to FIll Out the AMCAS AMES F< SERIES- SPRINO ahould t.lI. the Subl.ct A J. or 8tudent C1r.. or mell the Final m ..t. of the CLINICAL 'mora Info. 1114' Appllcetlon" will be held FrI .. QUARnll '- 1m JUNE 4. profIoI~ .um .Iven .t the and p08ta.. peld beHot to u.. W. PSYCHOLOGY group Thura.. Juna June 7. 1174. ~ p.m. In Rm. 1. of thle TN ._ I.n PlACE: 1':0& UH. TIME : 12:00 · 1:00. q..--. muat h.v. tham b¥ then to .n· I .t 7:30 p. m. In the R.".... Formal BSB. F.cllltatora wiN be M,.. Jean DAY: TUES. 1114' ...,. wrt ..... In FellI'" to .n nounc. the _Ita In the leat TT Lou,..•. Plena for nut year will b. general P.rII•• Premed Adviaor. .nd Dr. .rtlcl. "".n out et the ...m' will leeu •. 11141. dItc. With • little .uppOft, thII Chartea Spooner. o.n ot Ad· be Gffwed June 7th In Rm ZIIO Floyd Geffney'a clMa "Stud" In group cen ...nv do • lot of lood ml •• lon.. UCSD School ot H.... You mey come any tim. D.nce Forma" will parfcwm tfIeIr thlntI•. Further Info .• c.N Bred .. Medicine. ThI. very Informetlve fln.1 d.nc. compoaltlona on How wi. you vot.ln the June 4th ~ 2:CII end 7''' 111ft lind -.1114' _Iner I. • one-tim. only of· have untl ... pm to write. For Tuea .• June 4 .t 1 p.m. In the INtmerv ~7 Co- to Cluater underg...... HINery to checll ferI,.. ._red by the Premed more Info. IubJect A requirement UCSD Th ..tr. . Th. ump~a PoIy ...... n D.nc.: TN H. NoeIanl Club. 11171 community ia Invited - no .d· Co. Invltea you to loin .u.. _ the election Info otI the can­ com. toHIt" all or ceH X1l44 dide•• nd propoaItIona befcwe 11171 mi.lon cher... . 11141 c...... Wed. eve. 1:30. Int'l. THE ASIAN · AMERICAN you ceat that bellot. 11/4' Center. D.ncea of .....11 T.hItI. STUDENT ALUANCE: AASA will A H8t of aprIntI 1174 .,..... June 4. TuNd.y. "Humen Health: Samoa. M.orI. ez . month tor 7 heve ••hort but Important meat. from Muir College wilt be poeted WRITING TUTORS NEEOEO: The A P.rapectiv. on M.n" - . lectur. I.. aonl . T.u.ht by H.w.1I co_nln. thli pe8t y.. r·1 IUrn­ ou.. de the Muir Col.... Provoat Llt/Entl 10 Compoeltion Program CAL·PIRG ELECTIONS V.lldllted by Dr. Jona S.lk. R.. ldent ....dent. former PoIynu"n en­ UP . • nd next year'a ac:tlvltl ... I OffIce. need. :'311 eddltlonel tutora for t .. c.rdl .nd ballota for the CAL· Fellow. The S.lk Inltltut• . 7·10 t.rtalner. 11m p.m. Thura. June I ••tthe Inform.1 Muir eu.. mer .....on .raduatlon F.IL 1174. OuellfICIItiona .... 3.0 PIRG Board of Dlrect_ election p.m. in the L.r.. S.mlner Room. Lou.,.•. Any_ that .. Inter.. ted cendIdetN: P..... contact M • . GPA. upperdlvlelon _ndln•• nd heve been melled. Studenll .r. South Bldg .. M.in Fl.. of Th. S.lk II Invited. com. .nd .Iv. your W.mer In the Muir Provet OffIce wrltln•• blllty. Tutora receive 4 Inltltut•. 101)10 North Torrey Pln.a though.. 11141 ur•• d to vote promptly .nd to .n .ppolntm.nt for unl. of credit ILit/Gen 1M1 the ballotl m.y b. dropped off In the .rra,... Rd .. L. Jol ... Admililon: $7. 11141 your final ...... chac:1I .nd to fI .. flrat qu.rter thay tutor.• nd .110 Would you lik. to grow your own bellot box.. loc.ted In .11 the your c.ndldacy c.rd. 11/71 or credit In .ubeeQuent querta,.. NOTICE . The D.b.te Soci.ty will VEGETABLES thle lumm.r or lib...... nd the Muir .nd R.v.lI. Inqulr•• t the Lit 10 office. 2ID24 m ••t at 4 PM TU'I Jun. 4 for a next y •• r? Th. ORGANIC GAR· Jun. I. Thu ... "P.rfect Llnle cefeterie.. EI.ctlon .nd. June 7th HItSS or cell x1'" If you .,. dilc of ita .ctiviti.. for the DEN SOCIETY will hold two P"c•• - Cultu,. G.ner.ton of the (1m Int.... ted In applvlntl. 11/71 org.niz.tlonel mHtlngl. N.w World?"-.n urb.n .n· Jun. I. S.t. "Nutrition Up· coming y•• r. The mHt will be dated" - R08lyn AIfIn·SI.ter. Ph.· 1. TODAY .t 4:00 In USB 3Q2D. thrapoloel8t·. vIIIon. Richard D. h.ld In the 2nd floor conf rm by D.. UCLA Prof_or of Nutrition. the Itud.nt offlc ... And .nyon. 2. Wed. June 5 .t 7:30 P.M. In USB J_. urban .nthropologlat. 7·10 Greduetilltl 8tuden. or atudantl WRITING CLINIC - If you hev. .nd Dr. Derrick B. Jelllff•• Prof. of who il int.r.lt.d in In· 3Il10. C.II Michael SulUvan for p.m.. Room 1310. HS&S Bldg. not plennlng to return to UCSD difficulty gettln. your IdeM down Ped ..trica .nd Pubic Health. t ...cho ... tic for.nllc .ctlvlty or furth.r Info: 412·1. 11/41 Muir C.mpul. UCSD. La JoI ... for the fa. 1174 querter beelnnlng Adml.. lon: ... 11/4, on pepar or you limply w.nt to UCLA School of Public H.. th ... .. Sept 11. 1P4. .nd who have d .. matic int.rp il invited to com• . a.m.·1 p.m .• ROOM 2100 .....c 11141 Improve your wrttllll .111... the out.t.ndln. N.tlon.1 Dlr.ct. Writing Clinic cen _Iat you. TN Scl.nc. eulldlng. School of National Def_. Educetl_1 Fea The ORGANIC GARDEN SOCIETY Thu,.. June I. 4:00. SLOAN IN· Writing Clinic I. not • cl .... but. Medlcln.. MC. UCSD. La Jolla. Def.rment. H.. lth Profeallonl, wednesday ANNOUNCES It I I.cond FORMAL SEMINAR "Chen_ In ' fr.. ..rYlce. Writing advlc. I. AdmlMlon: ... Includ.. refr.. h · R... ntl· or other type loana. organlzatlon.1 meet for .nyon. Rat C.... .nd Synep... In the off.red on • on.to-\"M beel. on m.nta. 11171 .hould cont.ct the Lo.n Int.r.at.d In growing their own Cort.x ... R.ult of Exp.rI.nc .... cou.... papen. lob .ppHcetion•• ColI.ctlon Offlc.. 204 MC. SEX CLINIC • Wade U pm. VEGETABLES. FRUITS end Dr. M.r"n D"mond. Aeaoc. Prof. proPoMI••• chol.rly .rtlcl •• - r ••• rdlng .n .xlt Int.rvl.w. Revel.. CounMI_ OffIc. IN.1It FLOWERS. PI.nty of good I.nd of Phy.lology .nd Anetomy. Unlv. . whallnr tha need. If w. can Third ColI.g. ,..Id.nt .dvl.or D.fNm.nt of p.ym.nt. .nd to the Provoet 0ffIc.1. Ext. zztI. .nd tooll .v.lI. Wed .• June 5. 7:30 of C.IIf.• B.,....,. lopen to the .....t you In .ny w.y. pi.... po.ltion op.n to .11 Third Colleg. pertlal canc.l.. tlon of loana m.y Info and Couneellntl on ..xual p.m. In USB 3OIiO. C.II Mlcha" public,. Room 110&. B•• lc Sclenc. com. In to our .-loc.tlon: Bldg. nud.nt. with • 3.0 GPA. Pl .... b ••v.ll to you. C.II SUMn or Flo. probl.m• . Judy Jorgenaon M.D. Sulllv.n for furthar Infl!. 412·1" Bldg. U.C. San DI.go School of 20. Rm. m4 IMuir C.mpu.' or I.. the etud.nt .mployment .xt 211 •. for your .xlt Interview Hugh P.tM. Ph.D. IEII 1114, Medicine. 11/41 cell our new ••tenelon : 1... . 11/71 office for. r.f.".1 .lIp. 11/41 .ppolnt. 11m

3 Sdrm. for r.nt in P.B. for Girls t.n 'PHd blcycl. for Hie. S.moved pur. brHd mal. fre. to TENNIS LESSONS· St.v. S ....n JJ - Did you have • H.ppy wanted lumm.r. 2 peopl. t200 3 ppl. • 250. Needl work. 21.00. C.II .ft.r 6 It good lOlling homl w / y.rd (Unlt.d St.t.. Prof ...lon.1 y.. t.rd.y? With lov. from your Call 270-1130. 18/7) m·53n. Ok.y?17 11/4' bNutlful .ffectlonate c.1I Nina T.nnl. A"oc"tlonl __3lI5 11/71 luv · SJ 11/4) Nationel Geogr.ph,cs 1.. · 74. Ski 46~ 7110 or -'7800. 11171 pol .. for h.ight 5'7" to 6'2" . C.II Rmmt. w.nted own rm. unfur. Ev.ning Tribune Rout. Op.n at La SAS: no m_ge. I just thought 463-4914. 16/4' GARRARD SL 72B with B ••• and Joli. Vill.g. Ap.rtm.nt. on you might Ilk. to _ your inltl.l, aliaU June 15 Ya blk to b.lch non· H.rdly uled high Flange 31 hoi. amkr Abby 753-1594 ev./ wknd. DUltcover .75. <452·11535. 18/7' Gillm.n Drive. C.II ~141 11/71 In print. Luv B.b. O·RI ..y (1 /4) Phllwood r.. r Hub Eng. Thr•• d, Driller Want.d- going to Pho.nlx 1617' Jun. 24. Help w Ig .. and drilling. .15. 462·8463. 16/ 71 GARAGE SALE : GOODIES L.. B. No gut.? Okl It', flnl.hed 271 ·Q2J2. 16/7) Seach cottage .t ocean for rent travel GALORE Kitchenwar. furniture Porecha carbo Z.nlth rbt. t40. but 10 .re you · I' ll vl,lt you und.r from 9·74 to ~75 compl.t.ly cloth.. 8960 Camlnlto 0.1 Vida K ••tinger hik. bootl, Ilze 7Ya .•15 . cob.lt tr.tm.nt. PL03 18141 furnlsh.d·d.luxa apply at 1702 S. - TELESCOPE In r.ng. of PI8ymor • . 16171 462·0196. 16/71 or f / 7 n.wtonian. Call 563· Pacific. Oc.aneld. 729... 746 . 1p6/71 11th ANNUAL JET FLIGHTS To m.'. nude on 7th floor m.ln lib Europ.: from .336 round trip ellIM. (6 /71 TV color conlol• . • 70. exc.llent ~2I : Shekeapear. II more in· Jap.n: From ..... round trip C.II. Two bedroom apt. for rent. condo H.... n lana. 1666 or 156- t.reatlng than your .natomy. 11/4, lost Bill. Stud.nt R.p. 1lD-1287 Gel Wanted: Lugg.g. reck for VW. 8D07. Ip6/71 & found G.n.... HIgh"nd. ,t.rtl.,. mid· Ov.rl.nd Av... D.pt. B. Culver Kethy 276·0030. 16/7' To LCM .lIea The O ...t White June. C.II 463-7156 or 276 ..... City. (Ftm 11/71 SURFBOARD 7'4" patch.d but The followi,.. ertlct.. _ In the Whal.: Good Lucll on YOUr Chern. WANTED: Rid .... to gO North •• .ood .hllpe. t30. c.1I M.rk 4&3- TT lcet .nd found: ~11."'_kar. · -SSW TRAVEL OFFlCE ON Teat. Captain A¥b. II/~' f.r ., tha B.y Area on June 17th. M." or Fem." Room",at. for P S .. or xt. 1146 1114' .w •• tlhlrt. 3 not.booll.. In· MATTHEWS CAMPUS In· CIII Rick at 412· 1747. 11m Apt Avail 5-10 '272...".. J .J .: D"-, our velocity curv. .'lnon. lIert"" ZooI".. CiIIM. _1I.t. _"onal C,,-.c~ 10-12 18m .,.. _.3 ..t of kwfI. alide rul•. _m deliv. 2-1 Dm MW~ . Chan.. my...... hN """ "'e.G­ Ride n ••d.d to Walhington D.C. ' ''23'' wi... cer r~on. 3 10'.... rnn •• '*'u.a.1v Jlne. I met you. T. '1/4' • ttar finel. · 453-0701 Jim Rightl. Int'I tD CerdIa. Eurall• ApI. for lent. IN!euUfplly fl4!' ram_bIe fin. good c~ . • mllWt watch. ".... ce.-....'# you 'Tripping. O...,hountt. ,... elrtItIe ...... I SINot,.,.. 1& / 71 nl.had. Pool. Bay view. •• mo...... off • . 1M. Chri• . 11/7' .re ml"'l11 one of theM tJ:Mn ... tlcIwta•• tc . IPl/7' JrYRI In yOU t.v.... xy...,1 41/4' AIIeM JUM~""" ____.... -'·'1W1 " ," ;'- • \...... WANTED: V'fI/ Sug roof luggag. ipll7l -' " EUROPE . ISRAEL . AF~;CA " ~ . " .." .•. METAL CABINET- I ' tall with Student FII.h. .11 YNr round WIDENED "Hi...I·m Rocll.t J . r.ck. also a bike ..ck for ••m • . locking doo,.; or off. call Jim Found·Sued. Jeck-' Frl. M.y 31 In H.lpl F. gred need 'OWn rm. cl... m HL12O&. Daecrlbe It. Itl youra. C.II CONTACT: ISCA .... Unlve,.lty Squirrel .. (114' Pl .... cIIi 462·1058. 16/71 _5471. 11/71 to UCSD atartlne 1/24/74. M.H.n. 683·· I263eIl.". 11/71 Av • . • " S.n Diego. Calif. 12111 ,,3010. 11171 TlOHTlUNS- W. think that we . 28mm l.nI for :'fimm Dilhwuh.r .40/ off.r 453·3804. TEL: 1714, 287·3010 (213' .... . Paul x 2 498 or 274-4IMII. 11/71 . I111m lhall nev.r ..e tight.rbuna than 111/71 thoe. on th.. . B.O.M.A. (114, Fern. Rmmte w.nted to sh.r. serviCes place in downtown LJ. Aug 1·Sap. Jim: how can I thank you for our D' Gals for bach. party " Rallaigh" .Ingle IPd .• light·wt .• .. personals 16 C.II Lindl. 463-1187. 18/71 y ..r toglther? Hop. you ... my Free booz • . food. good men'l 19" . Vinyl. fo.m. comfort Portr.ita. color or B&W. Cr.. tiv • . lova thru my amll ... Lou . (1/41 time. Craig m ·6787. 16/ 71 Roomm.te n"d.d for Summ.r ,e.t; g.n.·lt.; full I.g·.xt.; Ex. If not ..tilfi.d. don't pay. ChNPI condo H.gg". 452-«110. 11/7' 463-8721 11/4' FANTASY? REALITY? Tomy Bird Rock. L.J . Oc.. n VI.w Own L.E.W.: W.II. thl. Ie it. Don't STEREO - I am looking for. lI.ry Room·.1oo mo. • . ,.,.. 1117' .I.v.tor friend of 2A-t. M.y 28: low priced tuner' lmp and 3 Ipd.. 7Ya " r ••1 at ... o MONEY · nlHUl .om.1 Will p.y for Pl •••• r.turn. Let UI .her. good b.lI.v. wh.t they tell you. Kinky. Bo.co. 11/41 sp ..k ...· cali 463-2586. 16/7) 1 or 2 f.m. no-.mok. w.nt to tap.recorder wI Ipk... p.tch h.lp In writing Blo term pep.r • new.. b.d n_l. f.nta.I... & cordi. mlk.. . tep... + .... mOl . pop ,tudy Call Toni 15I3-37JO (1171 r.allti... Adv.nture i. the k.y. • her. W VIII.g ••pt. In f ..1 with 2 Dear John: ..II GI.gl- ha know. old . • 1.. 412·_ Eu.-., 11m Wayn • . 2011 Ya Alb.tros. 11/71 IIOCHEMISTRY by l.hning.r; of Mm.? Laa&Ie 412·_. 11m m.(butenlv In tha BlbHc .. ·.en.. ' . GENETICS by SI.ckb.rg.r. PROBLEM PREONANCY HELP Abortion or K.'pln, Fre. To the aspiring tock .ta.. of N.3: (1/4' ORGANIC CHEMISTRY by L.rg. badrm .. fum. w/w.ter bed. SURFBOARD: \IIar!)on4 tall. T1 " in Sol. Such.""'ld JQM to mid pNgn.ncy t.ltl"" .nd con· W. reallz. your undenl.bl. n.. d M.,rieon. Boyd l3Ed.,; L.ur. /IOdine..... Marll.4I2-1tGI.(II7' JAMES WHITMAN . I'Yl GOT Sept .., 10 .1 penon. '.121 for • fldent.. 1 COUIIHI'ne on ..I the to llrac:lice. !MIt not 'On u.. (1/4' 411.1M. .~/7I YOU PINNED It PIANO WIRE c ...... ff.w ...d ,...,. I'm .hern.tlVM. Birth _ .... ctlnlc. " .OSE ~, . Dlrectlftefl.ctln, alRTH CONTROl. •...mu" __ WAITING. NO ~ORE ~S ...... ,~ .... Wrlta Johll .., "n) ... 'J I .m .atout ready to .Iv. up. RAPER. 11/4' ...... WInlhrOtl St.. 58. Water mel_ won't be ..... 0"", ~ Wantwd f_ .(". euor ...... "'.t. t:m7. ~1ItI . DRIVEAW~Y ;., ';"on ... ~ ...... 1IoIne .lat nut wMII. 11/41 ATTN "Ucao": Au ~ '._. Own Rm. 11\' N. Clrmnt, mlmo. + ut. R___ ·1141 or Ictloql'l out. Atl .JIpen... peld. 10 .... fIIhtInI cheno4! '" H.rl.n I.afte * ,... or -..007. DAN - I. thll what It taliea to dl","ll8Ot()Ntllltll,* '. , !IH leuba ....., .: tlnk. pack. J ·valve Ipl/71 f • '.... JII7I. mlk. yoU happy? Hello from MJ. ,, < ~. • \ .• ....I __ ~ ,ll8u,,: xlnt. condo " K.,.., I ..,.. tNtt ..... _.-.... . ~AT! WJotnte: »bdrm .1...... I¥)leelar. 413·. "'"ng , ...,. II ••'...... , la' It'" b ...... ~ tn lnai.... ."..., It u". " ,'": .. '::JO oe.. n ..car O'eI ... "','An J . T. Tha Or. of 'MuclVile "V- "HIt ~.IIt1 _ 01 ...... ~ 11/71 ...;... • _ old ... Pioneer 712·1170. 11/41 • . am ••0 get .m•• nd elide to the ,. . "', .... · ...,./~O .4 'P.: '. '. " , ... on Frtdey.~· (II. . ·.·· ~ · 710 4U- "~·"'1Ine ~ Iearft. MW. .... "'...... 1_ ''' ' ; . •.. 1• . ltlJ' "' ..nd""' · ~..,. ;..;It,IDMEN: ..... been...... , ....t ...... U~ ...". ""'.. ·. !Jj(1I --... t

• au¥8Oo'1D. <:.me ...... TI...... ,..- ...... _J·.c: ..... ~I1...... - IU"lt•• kIIUl• . " .....Dn.1 ""X ''II . ~ • ...... ,....7 We +' ..iii cell BiU .. __ ,.... Ii i71 T.nnl. AMeetltl... , _a,... w_ hOtllne 'or • n.tI aM 1JIMd' l1li171 .. num...... THY 1• . 1114t . ~ . Indealt Refrig.6 w . It. elIIIMt _ ~ortrelta. oeIer ...... c..tive. Joel Z1mmbelmen • Oon't 80 R1'O - UttII ...... ,..."" .. aac:eI. cotlll. 1ft_ ..... MeI!. off. If not ...... dDWt .... CMePI ~. We .N lowe yeu. • ...... ~ ...... " ...... ·ma. 1t/7) 4IU7a. lII7I Derek . (1/41 O8n't ell lie --.. c:IK. 11141

, ' •• l" 11 Trilon Tim" .. . ,unt' I. 1974