R e m e m b e r REMEMBER T h e f i f t h o f N o v e m b e r . L i g h t a c a n d l e o r E l ( S a u c b o FIRECRACKER I n m e m o r y o f Associated Students, University of California, Santa Barbara G u y F a u k e s ,

Friday, November 4, 1966 Foreign students notice Fiat Lux obscenities room for 'improvement1

cause of prejudice. His father courage this. "It’s too ex­ land student in jail By JAMI STRAUSS Staff Writer was an ambassador. He went pensive here, that's why I have "W e love the States but there to Belgium where he was more to leave.” are a few things which could welcom e.'* He feels also that "only a Munch spends night in cell be improved,*’ agreed a group Joao Braganza, a junior certain class can come—not the middle class, which would of foreign students in a recent mechanical engineering major By JOHN MAYBURY which makes it an offense to really be the most important. informal discussion. Among from Portugal, dislikes the dis­ News Editor exhibit obscene writing, and You are supposed to come here the things they disliked were crimination against Jews and Fred Munch is out on " r e ­ mugged. without having to work, and if the quarter system, prejudice, Negroes. He said that "this cognizance,” having done 24 you do—you’ve had it.” and the expense involved in should not be; Americans were hours in the county jail for TROUBLE IN JAIL Braganza stated that "You attending UCSB. all foreigners once.” what he termed a "trumped up” Due to a typographical erro r, can’t get a scholarship unless Wingred Bauer, a junior bus» obscenity charge. the citation came out reading you’re here one year, and if iness economics major from MONEY—CLASS A Fiat belonging to the UCSB 311.2, which makes it an of­ you can’t afford to come in Germany, feels that **lf you Bauer suggested thatthe prob­ freshman was spotted over Un­ fense to produce lewd shows. the first place—well, what's are blue-eyed and blonde you lem of prejudice against cer­ iversity Day by a visitor who the point.” Nevertheless, Munch took his are treated very well. I have tain foreigners might be sol­ later complained to authorities It does not seem to him that, mattress into his cramped cell, an advantage being a Northern ved through education, but that about wordspaintedonii: " V ir ­ the University is "really inter­ divested of his "New Republic” European. I knew a student the high tuition for foreign stu­ gins of the World Unite, You ested in having foreign students. magazine which an officer ob­ from the Congo who left be- dents does not seem to en- Have Nothing to Lose But Your They should make it less ex­ jected to on the grounds that V irginity,” and "Fornicate pensive.” it was "inflammatory.” "We Now.” BUI Radley, junior math have had enough trouble with the Consequently, a campus Davis president major from England, added niggers,” Munch reports the policeman instructed Munch to that he thinks ’ fit’s curious officer said. appear at police headquarters. that people with job limitations, When he complied, he was met A freshman reporter for EL who don’t have the right to vote by detective Gauthier’s ques­ GAUCHO, thenewpr isonerfound who are not citizens, are still not ’clean -cut’? tions, was told that the Dean his cell "d irtie r than h ell,” subject to the draft.” Cal Aggie, called the idea of of Men might be notified, and and dating from the 1920’s. In­ By GARY HANAUER NO TIME a student poll absurd because that meantime all he had to do mates claimed the jail had been Staff Writer Chung Hon San, a junior phy- it centers on the appearance was wash the slogans off the condemned by a Federal prison Bob Black, Davis AS P re s ­ sics major from Hong Kong, and dress of one per son, rafEer" car. study. ident, was strongly critlzed this feels that "in the quarter sys­ than the actions and leadership week for "misrepresenting the tem there's no time to improve qualities which Black posses­ FAISE SECURITY CHILD MOLESTER campus.*' Objections lie a- your grade like on the semes­ A s such, Munch feels he was Munch’ s bunk mate was an 80 round Black's change in dress ses. ter system.” " I ’m just me and not up to given a "false sense of se­ year old child m olester and to­ style from the "clean-cut** ap­ Bauer stated that in his o - making judgements,’’’ com­ curity” and pressured into test­ gether they lived on stew, pow­ pearance he presented during pinion, "The quarter system mented Black. At Davis'week- ifying against himself. last year’s elections. is a step backward—everything dered eggs, and cold 't o t ly "Friday Forum,” the AS Also, it was confirmed by RA Leader of the latest action, is pushed so fast—the student cerea l.” president announced that as a Claude George that the Dean a proposed student poll of Davis doesn’t have time to digest personal protest to the pro­ had not been notified of the Wednesday morning after the students "on Black’ s appear­ it. It aids only the tax payer posed poll he would 1) every case. student’s release, his lawyer ance,” is Bruce Richards. not the students and profes­ Monday wear a madras shirt, Then, several days after the entered a plea of not guilty. so rs.” stay press trousers, and wing- firs t hearing, Munch received Richards, a member of AGR To Chung time was alsoa fac­ The defendant has agreed to tip shoes, and 2 ) each Sunday a second summons and this tim e fraternity (Alpha Gamma RHO) tor in making friends. "When appear on request, although he shower and wash his hair with when he arrived at the station expects a scheduled jury trial presented his proposal last Sun­ one is in school he cares more Head and Shoulders. a citation was being written day before inter-fraternity about studying—he may not have December 14 to dismiss He warned students by com­ out fo r him. Gauthier infor­ Council. tim e to reaUy care about his charges. menting, if you sign the peti­ med the student that he wasn’t Although the Council was friendships.” tion, don’t expect any results.” going to get away with anything Munch him self did not paint widely-split over the matter, Braganza stated, "It’s easy Black has a beard, mustache, like *4iis friends at Berkeley” the words, rather it was his they refused to conduct such a to make friends if you know and long hair. He is a junior, had. friends who were decorating poll because of its lack of "con­ the language— if not, then it’ s majoring in political science. On Nov. 1, at Goleta Mun­ the vehicle for a sports rally, nection with IFC.” Three fra­ really hard,” while Bauer was Richards contends that "Black icipal Court, Munch entered and who, he says, Intended to ternities voiced support of the •Amazed at the personal treat­ deceived voters who believed no plea.. The Court designated wash the paint off. idea, while four others were ment I ’ ve received at such a in him last year when he was $330 bail bond. The suspect Futhermore, no official com­ "fla t out against it.” large University.” Terry Smith, editor of the clean-cut.” was taken downtown, booked on plaint is cm file, while Munch a charge of violating Section insists he wasn't aware his 311.3 of the State Penal Code, action was illegal. Berkeley radicals hit microphone transfer

Student radicals at the B er­ into the Council of Campus Or­ keley Campus may have the be­ ganizations, formed Monday, to ginnings of a new fre e speech protest the possible moving of controversy. The problem car­ the instrument. The CCO will ters around an administration’s present a rally today, using the attempt to change the location microphone in question, featur­ of the microphone from its pos­ ing Mario Savlo, leader of ition at the top of the Sproul the Free Speech Movement in Hall steps and move it about 1964-65. The OCC claims that 100 yards to the end of the plaza. the microphone is the only re­ maining symbol of the victories The administration claims gained in the original movement that the present location pro­ and that changing its location duces captive audiences and will represent a setback to blocks the traffic flow. Chan­ the entire movement. The OCC cellor Heyns is expected to is also circulating a petition make a decision on the matter that they hope w ill have 5,000 soon. The mike would not be signatures. Several professors removed until the end of the have also petitioned the chan­ Campus radicals invited Marine Corps representatives to participate in a stared own quarter. cellors requesting "more Tuesday in front of the Library, but the military representatives went out for coffee Meanwhile, the radical o r­ study” before a decision is whUe the protesters gave sUent notice of their view of the Viet Nam war. —Strahler photo ganizations have joined forces made. pgge 2—EL GAUCHO—Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 Views on Proposal 14 AFTER DEADLINE Leg Council decision viewed as unfair

By NINA PINSKY senting their views through the rationally determine what mea­ Managing Editor board chairman or through any sures should or should not be and member of Leg Council. presented to Leg Council. TERRY OLESON It would seem then, as im­ It is our opinion that these Staff W riter plied in the amended form , that board chairmen are capable and How Leg Council members if a board passed decision on a effective leaders, and that EDITORIAL could sit through almost two committee member's request, Council not only appeal to them hours of debate, hearing far and if the committee chairman to resume their positions, but more arguments In support of did not approve of this deci­ also reconsider its decision on a proposal than against it, yet sion, he could go directly to Proposal #14. proceeding to defeat that very Council and have that body re­ Doucas: Apathy Antidote proposal is beyond all compre­ consider a board's decision. If such is the case, why have There lived in a magical seashore land an im­ hension. However, such was the Chitd legislators action taken when Leg Council boards? pressive population of bright and pretty people, all of amended all purposeful sub­ Boards were established to them quite impressive, the way it looked from the out­ stance out of Proposal #14. cut the work of Council by fun- side. The board chairmen drew up neling material through boards 'stifle creativity’ So im pressive, indeed, that their sunny community this proposal in order to ex­ with the eventual result be­ was labeled world-wide as a vacation spot, where pretty plicitly deliniate the structure ing that the chairmen would girls lounged on beaches and around swimming pools, of AS government. They were then convey the material to the of committees trying to define their duties as respective bodies they sit on. where carefree young men drove hotrods, where spirits implicit in the AS By- Laws what Council did on Tuesday T o the Editor: flowed like water and fun was as dense as the morning and the AS Legal Code. night was to, in effect, reverse I would like to thank M r. fog. As is stated in section four the implicit laws of the By- Horn and Mr. Glaeser for re­ Indeed, they were caught up with society's games, of the By-Laws, Boards "shall Laws and Legal Code and thus signing as AS board chairmen nature's callings, fun's pure recklessness. So caught up through the chairman, evalu­ allow the committees to act and at the same time I would that the wiser members of the community were forced ate the effectiveness of the without consulting their boards. like to urge anyone thinking programs of the member com­ It seems then that the duty that they might like to have to view some of the situation with alarm. mittees and make recommenda­ of board chairman has been a try at the board positions "Indeed," one wise leader said, "I have studied tions to the Associated Stu­ reduced to that of information to forget it. our population and found that a sizeable proportion of dents President." disseminator. He still must do them are suffering from something the experts call This they did by stating that all the lay work with no force­ Until the child legislators of apathy." L eg Council should consider ful cooperation from his com­ the Associated Students realize that they should not concern Indeed, he had the statistics to prove it. Ninety- committee matters only at the mittee heads, as they know themselves with problems percent of this bright and pretty population suffered request of the board chairman they can go directly to Coun­ or of a member of Leg Coun­ cil fo r anything they want. of power and control and be­ from some communicable ailment called apathy. c il. Board chairmen tried to make gin to act pragmatically in the The community considered this finding and shook Some members of Council Proposal #14 as wide-ranging Interests of students, board their heads, for most of them did not really understand felt that by giving sole author­ as possible and were willing chairmen and committee chair­ the meaning of this word, and it remained an enigma ity to the board chairmen, com­ to compromise, but com­ men will be quite ineffective in completing programs. to them. mittee chairmen would no long­ prom ise does not mean elimin­ Some of the more literary members of the community er have the right to appeal to ating the *4ieart and sou l" of the matter, something Council The kids (legislators) seem pretended to understand the implications of this term, Council any conflicting action taken by the board. obviously did by rejecting the to think that they should, no and wrote editorials and compiled polls on the grave However, it was quite clear implicit powers and duties of matter how much thought com­ situation. But they were seen standing around and shaking in the original proposal that the board chairmen. mittee people have put into on their heads too, as though it w ere indeed the most puz­ committee chairmen could ap­ Leg Council showed no faith programs, be able to tell com­ zling problem to ever arise in the magical seashore peal action of the board by pre­ in their board chairmen to mittees If they can give pro­ grams to the students. Be­ community. cause they are so childish they, And then one day, as if from nowhere, an elfish the "le g is la to rs ," cannot see creature appeared on the scene: he was as tiny as a Amended Proposal 14 that they are stifling the creat­ pinhead, gayer than a sprite, and he sparkled and tumble- ivity that lies in the commit­ salted before he spoke. The wise leaders of the community tees. loved him from the start. retains Board power The kids (legislators) hon­ He mentioned not a word about the strange ailment estly feel that they, in five min­ that puzzled the community, but went straight to work, T o the Editor: utes, can with few facts judge calling up the population, promising magical happenings, On Tuesday night, November 2, Doug Glaeser, Community Aid whether a proposal that a com­ tinging the air with a spirit of excitement that had never Board Chairman, and Gary Horn, UCen Program Board Chair­ mittee has worked over for a man, resigned following adoption by Council of Legislative Coun­ been there before. month has m erit or not. cil Proposal #14, as amended. And suddenly there was music springing up in the (Judy Frost, Government A ffairs Board Chairman, also p re­ strangest places, conversation with the strangest under­ When student government sented her resignation to Council, but she later reconsidered is no longer a game it may tones, and pretty people going about the strangest tasks. and withdrew it.) be worthwhile and truly effec­ Suddenly 11,000 faces brightened. And with the The amended proposal is now AS Policy #9, binding on the tive. The committeeand boards brightening there came, indeed, strange revelations: Association. It is essentially a delineation and explication, based need power. Come on Jeff- it seemed, suddenly, as though nobody had time to puzzle on the Constitution and By-Laws, of the- role and function of the coat, get it for them. NOW I Administrative Boards, and of their relationship to Council. Had over the enigmatic ailment, that curious thing called FORREST STAMPER the proposal, drafted by the Board Chairmen, been adopted in its Senior, Cellular Biology apathy. entirety and without change, the Chairmen would not have resigned. It was almost a s though it had disappeared a l­ The amendment which precipitated the action of Mssrs. Glae­ together. ser and Horn allows committee chairmen to appeal to Council Indeed, it was a s though nobody really cared if it decisions of the Board under which the committee functions. Headline writer had disappeared or not. The Boards, under the proposal and as im plicit in the Constitution SUZY CARTER and By-Laws, "pass on all necessary matters of committee... business, including proposed activities, programs, and budgets." Managing Editor distorts intent As the proposal was drafted by the Board Chairmen, any ‘Spatter of committee business" could be considered by Council "only at the request of the board or of a member of Council." EL GAUCHO editorials do not necessarily represent the views Leg Council, in amending the proposal, was following the same of Fisher letter of other staff members, the Associated Students, or the Uni­ principle utilized by the Board Chairmen in drafting it: that is, versity of California. making explicit what is implicit in the status quo. T o the editor; Since Council may consider and act on matters only if they are Please make it clear to your brought up in the form of a motion, the sense of the original draft is readers that the words above retained. For a committee chairman to appeal a board decision, the my ‘ le tte r to the e d ito r" which appeal must be moved and seconded by a member of Council, follow­ appeared October 28 reading, ing introduction by a voting member or Board Chairman. "Communism not so bankrupt", This procedure seems to be, and is, of no significant differ­ were the words of the ELGAU- ence from that originally proposed. The reason for Council's CHO and not mine. Ibelieveyour decision to amend the proposal, making appeals an explicit pos­ *4itle” was a distortion of what sibility, was tbedesiretoavoidpotentialobstructionby board chair­ I said , and a good of men of appeals; such obstruction, while not necessarily likely, either yellow journalism or could have been implemented by misconstruction, no longer pos­ careless journalism. The Intent sible, of the procedural rules established by Proposal #14. of my letter was not a defense It is indeed unfortunate that a question of semantics should be . of "communism" as a poli­ considered adequate reason by two board chairmen for their tical philosophy. My intent was resignations from positions of high responsibility in and service to point out that people who use to the Associated Students. Their evident attitude seems com­ the word "com m unism " should pletely to have precluded even attempting to work within the struc­ be specific as to what they ture as Council envisioned it under the amended proposal. mean, instead of using the word TONY RAIRDEN as a synonym for "e te rn a le v il" Administrative Vice-President and thus confusing or over­ GREG ST AMOS simplifying complex and im­ Executive Vice-President portant issues. JOHN CAVERH ILL LARRY FISHER Representative-at-Large Grad., Biology and Education LSA -Friday, Nov. 4, —EL GAUCHO—Page 3 Lutheran Student Association will discuss “ God Is Dead” at their Sun­ Announcements day meeting. Members who desire to go to Taco formation Office in the Administra­ Bell for dinner before the meeting tion Building, in the AS Office, and ABORTION HOOTENANNY should arrive at Taco Bell at 4 p.m. from past teem members. "Don't Labor with Misconcep­ Guitars and other musical Instru­ The actual meeting will be from Student tions— legalize Abortion” will be ments provide entertainment at the 5:30 - 7 p.m. at the University Re­ the topic of discussion at a meet­ ligious Conference. weekly Friday night Hootenanny at UNIVERSITY BAHA’I Workers ing of the Abortion Club at 7:30 St. Mark's University Parish, 934 Sunday at 807 Embarcaderodel Norte, Embarcadero del Norte, at 8; free NO CONCERTS? Bob Dylan will be informally dis­ #19. refreshments are served until mid­ Concerts Committee will not meet cussed by Dr. Richard Comstock of Needed for night. Sunday. the Religious Studies Department, at E G E D IT O R the University Bahai’s Forum, tonight Editor Jan Shelton la now accepting P H O T O C L U B at 7:30 in UCen 2284. applications for editorship of EL IV SPECIAL EVENTS Photography Club members will at­ Democratic H. Q's GAUC HO, winter quarter. Publica­ Isla Vista League Special Events tend a field trip to Brooks Institute tions Board votes on election or re - Committee will meet today at 4 p.m. of Photography today. NOV. 5 - 8 election to the post every quarter. in UCen 2284. Participants should meet at 2 p.m. YOUNG DEMOCRATS Deadline for applications will be at the Bank of America parking lot In State Senator Alvin Welngand, As­ Nov. 18. JOINT Isla Vista. semblyman Winfred Shoemaker, and PRECINCT-MAILING House of Lords will host El Dor­ Departure will be at 2:15 sharp. Democratic State Central Committee C a l l D e m H . Q . GERMAN CLUB ado East and West at an informal Chairman Charles Warren will par­ German Club will meet tonight in joint to be held In the House of Lords PROJECT P-STAN ticipate In a University Young Demo­ 9 6 3 - 1 6 0 4 East Hall, C It O #3, 1425 at 5:15. lobby tomorrow night from 7 - 12:30 Applications for Project Pakistan crats symposium this afternoon at 4 Refreshments will be served. p.m. are now available in the Public In- in SH 1004. Fight YOUR textbook FAVORITE squint. BOOKSTORE Get a Tensor* high-intensity lamp. IS ALWAYS THE BEST PLACE TO BUY FOR SERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY. Want a clean, white, bright light ? Want to tee words etched on the page sharp and clear? Want to come away from those heavy assignments without squinting and eyestrain ? Want a lamp that gets in dose without getting in your way? Want to bum the midnight oil without burning up your roommate? Want a concentrated light that lets you concentrate? u c s B s ...... V Then what you need is a Tensor high-intensity lamp. What do you mean you can’t afford our $12.95 or $14.95 or $17.50 or $19.95 prices ? Didn’t you know you can get aTensor for $9.95 ? So stop squinting. Get a Tensor high-intensity lamp. And who knows, your grades might even get a little better this term. CAMPUS BOOKSTORE t ie n s o n It helps you see better»* Newsweek t *ejajs, how to get into fa ^ « w s lc business, S2 weeks Sor only $4*50 and how to cope with your par- DID YOU MISS THESE prejudice is the only prejudice NEWSWEEK STORIES??? now considered socially accept­ ents. There's a able.” THE LITTLE MAGAZINES OF special Super- BRITAIN’S WITH-IT SOCIETY. Are THE NEW LEFT. Youth, militancy, man c o m ic they “ switched-on” or just "a energy and naivete provide the coffin of tarted-up people” ? THE bounce. BLACK POWER. How deep book insert in DRAFT, 1966. Who’s going, what the split in the civil rights move­ liying color. they face, how they feel about it. ment? AUTO RACING. The Year of And never- LSD AND THE MIND DRUGS. A trip the Ford. VIETNAM. The polls and with the acid heads and an ap­ before-pub. the war. SCIENCE. Shattering the praisal of the perils. HOP__ IT’S antimatter mirror. '¡shed photos. WHAT’S HAPPENING. "The great­ On and on it goes, week after est pop-art object in the world is week—page after page of reward­ the planet Earth." WHAT ROLE ing reading like this. Start enjoy­ FOR THE EDUCATED WOMAN? “Sex ing it now.

Special Offer for Students Only: Newsweek, 6SA21 117 East Third Street, Dayton, Ohio 45402 rj R m $2 w eeks lo r only $4.50 I want Newsweek to keep me in the know for the next 52 weeks for $4.50 with the understanding that you thek Nam* guarantee full satisfaction or a prompt refund on any unfulfilled portion of my Mariti m in u te subscription after three issues. City Stata Zip I This offer: I Newsstand is. Baby I $4.50 cost: I « □ I am a member of the faculty. I will taka advantage et year - less than $20.80 special aducatar’t rata: 3 years for $14. Samt refund gaaraatee. 9* a copy I - 4 0c « copy . Regular subscription: $9 00 BRING THIS COUPON TO THE BOOKSTORE FOR SPECIAL CAMPUS RATE - less than 18* a copy j Page 4—EL GAUCHO—Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 ■REVULSION' Polanski creates lusty horror

By STEVE SHANE The story concerns the fascination for the sounds of Guest Reviewer complete psychological degen­ her sister’s frenzied love- Newsweek has said of "Re­ eration of a mentally im­ making in the next room. pulsion” that ” . . . it makes balanced London manicurist, Her sister and friend take «Psycho* look like a children’s played by Catherine Deneuve. a trip; and what happens to fairy tale.” It does this and At the beginning she appears to Catherine literally must be seen more. Not only is it a film be merely a shy, beautiful girl, to be believed, as she goes with exceptional shock power, then her sexualambivalencebe- deeper and deeper into the fan­ but it is also outstanding in comes apparent in her repulsion tasy world of her own mind. direction and photography, if at the advances made to her by It is an interesting story, but these may be separated. a would-be admirer, and her might have turned out to be another David and Lisa psycho­ drama if it weren’t directed by the right person. THE RIGHT DIRECTOR Roman Polanski is the right director. Although only in his late twenties, he has directed HOODLUMS LOOT—Sterling Hayden, Louis Calhern, and Sam three films which have been Jaffe drool in John Huston’s film classic, THE ASPHALT JUNGLE, released in the UJ3.A.. all of showing with BEAT THE DEVIL Sunday night in Campbell Hall which have been experimental as part of the University Film Society Series. and also totally different from ' f i r e s i d e p o o l 1 each other in both theme and method. THURSDAY&FR I DAY & SAT. NIGHTS «K n ife in The W ater” was his previous film. It received very good reviews and won LIVE BAND numerous awards, but was too slow and symbolic for many people. Dancing • Go-Go Girl "Repulsion” is anything but slow. Polanski uses all the tricks that a director has to draw the audience into the film. What distinguishes his job from that of a less talented direct­ or is that he has no special effects or wild camera angles for their own sake, but instead T h £ uses these techniques to make Don't Forget Sunday Night Dinners the breakdown of Catherine NEW TRADITION m ore real. As the film progresses, more ALSO-Beginning at 9:30 p.m. tricks and camera angles ap­ Every Sunday, BEER 15$ per glass pear without the audience rea­ lizing what is happening. The ______f o o d ■ ------net effect is exactly what Pol­ anski wants. The viewer is not 1UÜS3C sure in the latter part of the picture whether the living room in Catherine’sapartment is dis­ OMBTET torted, as he senses it is, or whether it is just the same liv­ * 5TUN0 D£K JRVEftCfl IHUSIC fam IflMMCh * ing room that was shown at musift or Th£ TR0W£R£5 AU> 1tunn£5Th6£R, the beginning of the picture The iiflUfm TRetenro , FRitnce firw BVR&unpy, but seems distorted be­ UC.SB srrnn. ceRTn/m^ Am erteiAW rnom 1200 -1500 ad. cause something has happened Opel*a 'W.rKsli-D 'm'l to him . Commiffrr ,-Vn \k ! JurLie-. '¡re*-?.:.: w o i u u m & w m The viewer must participate Vt Cahicciv Hitt, //ysic Vj, or else close his eyes. w X m p z A' p.t ' O/uOel« c-fiittm ett m tt SOUND TRACK nWiA-W K fQtni'.i Cnqvc Even if the viewer does close iJflOr>S or else to the gradually increas­ 1 ¿c f»o "F.- 1 W h a t do you s e e ? ” ing ' noise of flies buzzing a- a A Aviv * i round a putrifying rabbit, which, t h ? S e m S lM ..s 0r“<-- if the viewer so desires, grad­ ually assumes the shape of a human fetus. The sound track serves nBM&6IC to calm the viewer about as much as would the sound of the entire population of China scratching their collective l O l i UTHEATRE fingernails across all the black­ boards in the world at the same tim e. ISLA VISTA 986-1811 OVERALL EFFECT Actually the effect of the sound track is only characteris­ Friday and Saturday tic of the total impression left by "Repulsion” on the viewer’s mind. As I have said before the film must be seen to be believed. I am sure nobody can sit through it without feeling stark terror on at least two occasions. Don’t miss it I

g— FLASH GORDON Postmaster wins MARS ATTACKS [THE WORLD triviality notice The St. Louis Post-Dispatch 75

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JOHN CASKEN attempts uselessly to reach the Father, the GEORGIA SCHEEL as Laura, the Father's estranged spouse, title role of August Strindberg's "The Father," enacted by in the UCSB Department of Dramatic Art's Production of "The Hob Thrasher. Father.” MELINA MERCOURI JULES P A S É rlMEVEIfff- • ..-t * n i v i » % # - y Markus’ cast prepares for 'The Father’ SUNDAY' Opening night is approaching for a group of hard-working "The Father,” which opens Tuesday for a two-week run, actors, as the UCSB Department of Dramatic Art's production considers the destruction of a man -whose only concept of dealing iH iiiiii'™ of August Strindberg's "The Father" continues now in its fifth with life is one of rationality. Dr. Thomas B.Markus, who is D Ü ir FROM 6 PM* SAT. SUN. HOI. I week of rehearsals. directing his own version of the Strindberg tragedy, feels the style and interpretation chosen for this particular production are unique. "Ifetn rn ofd ie "The play is not the example of naturalism it was too long SANTA BARBARA SYMPHONY thought to be,” he emphasizes, *4>ut rather a violent personal Seven" ERMO DANIEL, MUSIC DIRECTOR vision of the struggles inherent in our domestic lives that vi­ [psirinssn nuuvtswr UNITED ARTBTS brate up through all levels of experience.” ‘«EVEN DAYS IN MAY” Ronald Ondrejka Consequently, the production w ill be an new attempt to do Kirk Douglas, justice to Strindberg's Innovations of style and theme. Markus Burt Lancaster, GUEST CONDUCTOR further revealed that the production will be presented on two WEBER levels representing the conscious and the subconscious, the real DER FRE1 SCHÜTZ OVERTURE and the unreal in the mind of the Father. SCHUBERT In order to do so, however, the talents of a number of In­ SYMPHONY NO. 4 IN C MINOR dividuals have been devoted unhesitatingly toward this goal. DAHL Richard Baschky, who has designed what he considers to be the «NONI TOWER OF SAINT BARBARA first set to "really tap the potential of the Studio Theatre,” j i w m w V 942.34771 ENESCO has also embarked upon an attempt to utilize lighting to greater Nightly at 6:13 . Sunday 7:30 ROUMANIAN RHAPSODY NO. 1 effect in emphasizing mood and color. • .^Ik. "T h e Father, not only artistically calls for such unusual tech­ nical attention toward detail,” he noted, "it philosophically STUDENT SPECIALS and thematically demands it.” SEASON - TICKETS - SINGLE Costumer Leon Brauner, a recent addition to the Dramatic Art Staff , has done much careful research into the period to ac­ DOLCI $4.25 NOV. 17 $1.25 hieve maximum authenticity of dress, both in style and detail. WRITE BOX 637 C A L L 962-1416 Enacting the lead figure of the Captain will be Rob Thrasher, who appeared in UCSB productions of "T h e Crucible,” "D esire Under The Elms,” and, most recently, the Campus Ministry. Cast with him In the lead role of Laura is Georgia Scheel, a 'graduate student, who earlier this year starred in a production AND of Strindberg's "The Stronger” in London, Canada. Richard Benner, a graduate of Xavier University in Clncln- "CARRY ON UOARDLBSS” “ W h a t do you s e e ? ” atti, who has acted in Saroyan's "H ello Out There” and Anouilh's "Antigone,” will play the Pastor. * 4 i Kathy Huber, also fam iliar to Santa Barbara audiences fo r DAILY FROM 6 P.M. PHONfL her performances in "The Crucible'' and "Gallows Humor,” SAT. SUN. HOL. 1 P.M. 966 6 Í5 Í will portray the Nurse. Junina O'Brian, remembered for her performance as Mrs. * ™«AGIC Tiffany in last year's production of "Fashion,” plays the role ean onnery of the Daughter. S v ANC JAMES BONO IN « Also to appear are Dave Schmlllen, as Smug; Mary MicheU THEATRE as the Grandmother; and Don E. Laughridge as the Orderly. kGQLDFDÍEEK' LANTERN “The Father” will be presented Nov. 8-12 and 15-19, In the UCSB Studio Theatre. For further information call A rts and Lectures Box Office (968-3415), open daily from 10 a.m. to ISLA VISTA 966-1911 4 p.m.

New through Saturday -^"DeSO'M SANTA BARBARA DRIVE-IN [ncwcíiorj 5*ÍíÉo® sts fn ß jfi ROMAN POLANSKI'S TAKE HOLLISTER TO KELLOGG PH. 967-2715 TZITF iE 1 A I ÍNSTATE ÍT K P U I S i O FREE HEATERS KIDDIES PLAYGROUND f im e 2-73Z4- ‘ MAT. OA/LVIPM CATHERINE D E N E U V E H HSHOW ^ N H A T 8 25 Henri-Georges Qouzot's "DIABOLIQUE" AND sterne« SIMONE SIGNORET

’THE DEFIANT ONES” ALSO THIS CO-HIT wiWt !» tonv curtis and Sidney poitier "MY UNCLE SHOWN AT 6 45 AND 10 15

Sunday through W ednesday AIRPORT DRIVE-IN Colat««0pp.S. B.Airport.Ph.7-1219 t THIS IS ANTONIONI’S •PEN 5:00 • CHILDREN FREE < o t SHOW N A T 8 20 “ »Hoi T in Hoof

AND “THE ALSO THIS CO-HIT LA DOLCE VITA OF THE M ______1700s! w u m - ; > BUTTERFIELD SHOWN AT 6 45 AND 10 20 ELIZABETH S TAYLOR Page 6—EL GAUCHO—Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 The Arts Kramer’s film worthwhile Hatlen chooses No theatre By DALE LUCIANO ience whose members feel al­ bound into one, and the film Arts Editor most as though they'd done makers end up either neglect­ on campus The difficulty with most their *4>it" for society by sit­ ing features that should have final cast for ting glassy-eyed for two hours been integral components of '^serious” American motion A program of No theatre will at a well-meaning "message” their theses, or ultimately dri­ pictures, when they are indeed be presented by actors of the ving home a simple-minded mo­ serious, is confusion. film . Hosho No School in Japan when They've accomplished some­ ral point with intolerable vig- December play The sincerity of artistic pur­ the^r perform two plays in UCSB thing 1 They've sweated along ilence. pose which presumably inspires Campbell Hall at 8:30p.m. Fri­ with Sidney Poitier and his Final casting has been an­ a serious production is slowly day (Nov. 4). dissipated and gradually lost dramatically overblown frus­ A film like Stanley Kramer's nounced by Director Theodore somewhere in the shuffle trations as a Negro, they're "T h e Defiant Ones” now scre­ W . Hatlen, Professor of Drama­ The troupe will perform the for conviction, or merely u- laughed unhesitatingly at ening at the Magic lantern, tic Art, fpr his production of 14th century tragedy, ‘ Gumida- surped by dreams of new finan­ Strangelove's preversive beha­ o ffers a black man, and white "Green Grow The Lilacs,” a gawa,” and the second portion cial horizons. Fellini makes vior. man, shackled together, who "folk drama” of the early of the powerful war play, the same painful comment in This basic insincerity, a de­ must resolve their racial dif­ American West. The popular "Ebira.” Musical accompan­ “ 8 1/2.»» sire to be "socially conscious,” ferences or face death at the musical, 'Oklahoma” by Rod­ iment will be by fluteand a var­ as Pauline Kael would say, is hands o t a lynch mob. gers and Hammer stein, was iety of drums. Commercial artists obvious­ a sad characteristic of the adapted from Riggs' play. ly are not willing to dismiss American "intelligensia” aud­ Heading the company is Fusao Ken Trotter, who most re­ prospects for commercial gain ience; and, of course, the pro­ DEHONEST PREMISES Hosho, son of the head of the cently appeared in the Campus (Nobody expects them to); they ducers who foot the bill are All Kramer's post-"High entire school, who traces his Christian Ministry Production examine or exploit a topic for willing to provide the product. Noon” films, those directed by ancestry through many gene­ o f "M urder In The Cathedral,” what it is worth. himself, share similarity dis­ rations of actors. The school under the direction of Maniti CHAOTIC PATTERNS honest prem ises; when a film itself was founded in the 14th Achanta, will enact the role of MESSAGE FILMS Directors and writers, rarely boils down a serious and com­ century. "The Pawnbroker,“ however sure of their grasp upon the plex social problem to what Jeeter, the ‘4ieavy” of the good or bad a film it may have genre, move in bewildered, of­ seem to be the most "vital” piece. Three of the actors in the been, really sold tickets at the ten chaotic patterns. All too considerations, but which are Nora Delaney, who last ap­ touring company, Hosho, Tada- box office. Nothing is more frequently, commercial and purely the most thrilling and peared in UCSB's Production hlro Matsumoto and Izumi profitable, in fact, than an aud­ artistic considerations become suspenseful (w ill - White and of Arthur Miller's "The Cru­ Mikawa, have been designated Blackle live or die?), it falls cible,” will contribute comic by the Japanese government as by virtue of its insincerity. relief as Ado Annie, as will '4iuman cultural assets” of the Peddler, portrayed by Joel their native country. The By slicing a bigger piece E ls. honorees are in their 30's and of pie than the authentic real­ Jeff Leon, who bas acted in 40*s, though No actors are gene­ ist is able to digest, the best "A r ia Da Capo” and "T h e Cru­ rally not considered to have such message film s can offer cible,” will play Card Epam; reached their peak until they him isAlka-Seltzerasa remedy Gene Borio, who last played in are past 60. for all social ills. Eugene O 'N eill's “ D esire Un­ Actors appearing in No plays, der the Elm s” and Murray all men and boys, are known by REALITY Schlsgal's "The Tiger,” will The problem lies, as it did the category of their roles. The appear as Peck. with audiences, at a basic in­ principal part is the "shite,” sincerity. Film makers cannot The lead figure of Curly will and the secondary role, the provide Mmswers” . They can't be played by John McMlllin, a "wakl.” Cast as Hosho No paternally tell us what's wrong relative newcomer to UCSB "shites” are Hosho, Mat­ with reality; it's hard enough Theatre, as is Katherine Rlnd- sumoto, Mikawa, Akira Taka- to simply reflect reality. laub, who is cast as Aunt E ller. hashl, Fusataka Homma and Laurie Walters will portray Atsuo Mikawa. Kan Hosho takes There is no recent American Laurey, the romantic interest the "w aki” role. film that I know of, with the o f Curly and the play. exception of Michael Roemer's Supporting them all will be The Japan Society of New ''Nothing But A Man” , that a high-spirited group of folk- York and Tokyo's Cultural Re­ deals intelligently with the singers and dancers, many of lations Society are co-sponsors question of racial difficulties in whom are well-known by UCSB o f the UCSB performance. T ic ­ the United States today. and Santa Barbara audiences kets may be obtained at the cam­ alike. pus boxoffice and the Lobero WORTHWHILE FILM "Green Grow The Lilacs” Theatre. Now let me negate almost w ill begin a two-week run in the bulk of what I'v e said and the UCSB New Theatre on Dec. indicate that "T h e Defiant 1. For ticket details, con­ Patronize EL GAUCHO Ones” is a worthwhile film. tact the UCSB A rts and L ec­ tures Box Office at 968-3415. Advertisers The two stars, Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier, deliver ex­ cellent performances as the two escapees, making their way through rugged, Southern swamp territory.

Kramer's direction, while only superfically inspired, is interesting throughout. The film has a much greater visual appeal than, say Kram er's 'Snip of Fools” or "Judgment A t Nuremberg,” and its met­ aphorical implications operate more successfully, certainly, than in "On The Beach” or "Inherit The Wind.”

Do your share for American Beauty. Try this "The Defiant Ones” contin­ shift with the flirtatious look. Flutter of ruffling ues through Saturday at the Magic Lantern. accents shoulders^and hem. More feminine fillip .. . acetate satin piping at neckline and gleam­ ing rose appliques. Made of dual-layered Cel- anese nylon tricot in aurora pink, deb blue, wV a n\i m i cherry, tangerine, violet, willow, marigold; IM P-S-M-L. $9.00

TONE-MATES Our clothes are made by Gossard-Artemis to make friends ¡oil and influence professors! 1303-A STATE ST. Bi PHONE 966-6953 Si Free Customer Parking 808 STATE STREETr SANTA BARBARA - PHONE 962-3111 m ’Arlington Theatre Lot — a.: Intim ate Apparel Enter from Sola Street t o m m s m m s s w i s i 'CUP RUNNETH OVER' Friday, Nov. 4, 1966—EL GAUCHO—Page 7 Drug sold in UCen Charter flight Automatic profs fills seats Students who used to get high had fo r the taking in a dose of on LSD, but have been forced 150 to 250 milligrams of caffein, Travel Committee reports either to give it up or to do it the amount of drug present in that the seats for the New York illegally under the new laws, one or two cups of coffee. teach at Irvine Charter Flight over Christmas can take heart. There exists vacation are being sold very a psychedelic drug so safe that A university campus with He revealed that 14 courses quickly. Although the dead­ even doctors recommend its thousands of computer term ­ in the areas of the humanities, line for signing up is Nov. 15 use. Debaters inals or keyboards being used social, physical and biological the flight will be filled up much In fact, its use is so wide­ slmutaneously by undergrad­ sciences, and information and sooner. spread among doctors and lay­ win at S.D. uates might well be a common communication wlU be taught men alike that laws to control fact within a decade, according during the coming year at the it would be unenforceable. Debating Society gained a to Lewis E. Leeburg, a lec­ Irvine campus through use of The drug causes many of the number of awards at San Diego Hillel meets turer at the Irvine campus of the computer-magnetic tape same reactions as LSD, but State College tournament last UCSB Hillel w ill hold a the University of California and system. weekend. without the harmful side effect > a national consultant to colleges hayride for members only Those who take it have com­ UCSB CENTER tomorrow night at 7:00. The In upper-di vision debate, and universities on information mented on their ability to think group w ill travel to Rancho Mike and Jim Crawford got an and decision system. Dr. Culler, using colored clearly, and their decrease in Speaking October 16 at the slides, related the history, cur­ Oso, where they will en­ fatigue. excellent certificate. In lower gage in a marshmallow roast division the excellent certifi­ Affiliates dinner-meeting at rent status and probable future, Outside stimuli to all parts UCSB, he envisioned a class as well as problems and pos­ and hootenanny. of the body, especially to the cates went to Steve Lucas and The cost for the stag-or - Mike Welty, Patricia Ruebeand in any one of a wide selec­ sibilities, of on-line computing, senses, result in quicker re­ drag affair is $1.00 per per­ Sue Powell, and Mike G reelis tion of subject fields being the system used at the UCSB sponses. Mental alertness and son, and everyone should and Gary Hoarg. The superior taught by means of a magnet­ Computing Center. sharpened motor activity are On-line computing, he said, bring a wire coathanger for rating was won by Martin van - ic tape prepared and pre-tested especially noticed by typists. aUows the operator to “ talk” the marshmallows. derlan and Lou G eiser. for teaching effectiveness by a Students can thus use the drug master -teacher. directly with the digital for at least two purposes. First, In impromptu speaking Gary computer, give it instructions, they can use it to get their Gray achieved an excellent rat­ SOPHISTICATED TAPES program it, observe the com­ “ kicks” , if they need new ways ing. in extemporaneous speak­ The tape, which could be used puted results immediately on a to get them. ing, Mike Greelis and Gary nationally by thousands of four- display tube, and, if necessary, Second, and more Important, Hoarg. The superior rating was year institutions, could be de­ modify his program. they can use it to help them won by Martin vanderlan and signed with such sophistication Trial and error,Culler cont­ study for finals, since they w ill Lou Geiser. that it wold anticipate a wide inued, is part and parcel of on­ be able to study more e ffi­ possibility of student questions line computation. ciently and concentrate better. In Impromptu speaking Gary and difficulties. Commenting that “ computers This is especially important Gray achieved an excellent rat­ The computer expert, who are better listeners than now that there isn’t as much ing. In extemporaneous speak­ shared the speaker’s platform people,” he said that the build­ tim e for ’ Sticks” under the ing, Mike G reelis and Gary with Dr. Glen J. Culler, direct­ ing of a useable communication quarter system. Hoarg got an excellent certi­ or of UCSB’s Computer Center, language for computers is the All this greater awareness ficate. Caty Edwards received said that each student’ s key­ most difficult and exciting part and mental capacity can be a superior rating. board would be connected to a of computer research. central computer which would work at such high speed that each of its thousands at users 'Meditation’ topic HURT SALE would have the impression that he was the sole operator. Leeburg, who is associated of Yogi lecturer New Harper & Row with IBM’s Scientific Center in Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, dis­ Los Angeles and is a doctoral coverer of transcendental med­ candidate at UCLA in business itation, a system by which he administration, said that such says, ’«deeper levels of con­ Pape rbacks instructional use of computers sciousness are attained in the would solve two of the major human mind,” w ill speak in problems now confronting high­ the UCen program lounge this er education: lack of indivi­ Sunday at 8 p.m. dual attention, and rapid obsol­ Maharishi’s appearance is 50 % off escence of teaching material. sponsored by the AS lecture committee, although he w ill be SOCRATIC DIALOGUE speaking prim arily to the stu­ "Courses can be developed dents International Meditation which w ill enable the student Society. USED BOOKS to engage in a give- and-take In its first meeting last week, discourse with the machine—a the Society had Walter Koch as Socratic dialogue.’’ speaker. Koch, an aeronauti­ Unlike textbooks, he said, cal engineer who has practiced 50 to 75% off the computer material can be updated quickly and cheaply. Leeburg predicted that if such a system is given wide use each dollar spent for educa­ tion would buy more in term s of more efficient teaching and CAMPUS BOOKSTORE reduction of learning time.

úioten f^MwaUu.

CARATS FOR DIAMOND WEIGHT

MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI One Carat weighs 1/142 of an ounce. meditation for several years, There’s a difference of only 1/10,000 NV* spoke of how meditation tran­ oz. between the weight of a carob seed scends the relative levels of thought to ’ iMire being.” Pure and the metric carat. The pods are being takes precedence over ground into a sweet, chocolate-tasting 7 thought because “ in order to think, man has to be.” flour. Maharishi '«found pure be­ ing” after thirteen years of TRIVIA? study in the Himalayas with his masters. Hebegan,inl957, No Such Thing When Dealing ’4o emancipate this gene­ ration.” He has taken a world With Crown Jewelers lecture tour every year since, and has just completed a one month tour in South and Central Am erica. At future Meditation Society meetings, which w ill be held every Thursday night at 8 p.m. in PS 1100, details of the phases 1101 State Street Downtown Santa Barbara of meditation will be gone into. Later the actual “ life suppor­ ting process” will begin. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Page 8—EL GAUCHO— Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 x HOMECOMING DINNER DANCE The buffet The Righteous dinner will start Brother’s at 6:30 at Jazz Band Earl Warren will play Showgrounds during this and ... dinner!

.... at 8 p.m. The Righteous Brothers will entertain until 9:30. At 10:30 the dance w ill continue with The ’Knickerbockers’ and the ’Druids/until 1:30 a.tn.

Tickets for this show are on sale now in front of the University Center or at the Cashier's Office for only $4 per person. Those desiring to come to just the "Knickerbocker" and "Druid" Dance may purchase their tickets for $1 per person. These are only a limited number of tickets so buy now___ !

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER . . . says...

of their opener in complete darkness. falsetto and when he reached the up­ and name TV shows, as well as night clubs, etc. A s tunesmiths, their first Great credit should go to Bill Baker per registers he was in the sublime for his wonderful arrangements, in ad­ spiritual class. He has a lot of spunk, joint effort. “Little Latin Lupe Lu,” W£((kttfubKeview was a big hit; now it's “Soul and In­ dition to conducting Dick Stabile’s mu- the infectious kind that gets under sicmen. His treatment of individual your skin, and he cut capers with his spiration." COCOANUT CROVE numbers was an outstanding job and partner to the delight of the jam- They not only gave out melodiously (The Righteous Brothers) with both numbers but for almost an responsible for much of the singers packed audience. Bill, the tall dark success, for without this styling Bob C. David Schine changed the pace one, on the other hand, leaned more hour grouped their tunes in medleys Hatfield and Bill Medley would be just Tuesday night when Bobby Hatfied, to the serious type, accentuating his such as the opener "Love Lights" and another pair of songsters. Baker had the Blond Bomber, and Bill Medley, deliveries with basso-baritone unctu­ "Love Feeling” followed by the Shin­ Art Munson on guitar, Bill Perry on better known as Billy the Snake, bowed ousness. Their harmony is heaven on a dig Croup of "M y Babe,” “It's Hard bass, M ike Patterson on the keys and in the sedate Cocoanut Grove to one happiness cloud. to Find Another Man,” "Little Latin of the most tumultous opening nights Lupe Lu," "Once in My Life" and Rich Frost on the skins for an addi­ tional assist, complementing Stabile s seen by this reviewer. It was the Their records and are always "Justine.” followed by more Swinging Set paying tribute by their high on the charts. Verve (M G M ) has 18 men, who prefaced the show with appearance to two clearvcut singers in them. It wouldn't be surprising to see Another medley kicked off with snips of five swinging songs. their mid-20's, a pair of unshaggy per­ these two in one or more films of "Bye Bye Blackbird,” "W h e n You're Everybody left happy as a lark. The formers who knew how to take a song Leo the Lion, what with producers Joe Smiling,” “Up A Lazy River" and "One applause was tremendous. There was and give it a styling with zip and More Time." with snatches of each Pasternak and Pandro Berman on hand even a spontaneous, hand clapping mucho feeling, sometimes singing low with Peter Shaw, talent man at Culver before going into the windup with join-in; it was The Younger Genera­ and more often belting a harmony City, not to forget Jessie Kaye, head of "Soul and Inspiration" and "Let the tion that swarmed the Grove which, that's hard to beat these days in the the studio’s music activities. They Good Times Roll.” it was said, is sold out for the entire stiff competition among r&r groups. have made two films for independents, Henry Mancini introed the Right­ engagement — Bill Of irate in. Bobby, the short blond, has a tenor- appeared on any number of variety eous Ones, who preferred to sing part Friday, Nov. 4, 1966—EL GAUCHO--Page 9

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THESE FINES WILL BE STRICTLY ENFORCED. Pqge 10—EL GAUCHO--Friday, Nov. 4, 1966

High-altitude effect on man their engagement. No date for the BROWN-THOMPSON June wedding plans are being for* wedding ha s been set, mutated by Lynne Thompson and SPENCER—PHILLIPS George Brown, who announced their Maureen Phillips, sophomore his­ engagement Oct, 3 by passing a fill­ tory major, announced her engage­ studied in stress institute ed loving cup at the Alpha Delta Pi ment to Nick Spencer, graduate stu­ house. dent in electrical engineering and High living proved to be too the Institute of Environmental relationships with his environ­ CAREY-THOMAS an Alpha Delta Phi. much for an Argentine medical Stress under simulated high- ment. Joyce Thomas, graduate student STRONG-TANZY researcher who is now with altitude conditions. He also Chiodi and the Institute’s di­ In music, and Stanton Carey, junior in music, announced their engage­ Ellen Tanzy was pinned to Harold UCSB*s Institute of Environ­ studies him self, his own body rector, Dr. Steven Horvath, are Strong at a candlelight ceremony at being a valuable research old friends, and both share an ment last June. mental Stress. The couple plans summer wedding. Chi Omega House on Oct, 2, Miss Banished forever from the source. interest in the cardio-respira- Tanzy is a physical education major rarefied atmosphere of high tory systems of men living or CLARK-GRISANTI and Strong is a quantitative methods major at SFVS, altitude under penalty of severe MINERS venturing far above and below Nancy Grisanti, sophomore socio­ One revealing observation sea level. logy major, announced her engage­ LODAS-DITRICH illness, Dr. tiugo Pablo Chiodi ment to Douglas Clark, sophomore is continuing his research on resulting from his study of the economics major, at a housewarm­ Biology major Jane Ditrich was the effects of such environ­ miners, one which has led to a ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ing party October 15, pinned to Jim Lodas, UCSB graduate redirection of high - altitude Chiodi, whose research con­ The couple plans to be married and member of Kappa Sigma, at a ment on the physiology of man ceremony Oct, 16 at Chi Omega house, April 22. respiration research, was that tributions in various medical Lodas is now In the Army and is those miners who had been liv­ areas have been acknowledged E MR ICH—FLETC H ER stationed in Texas, ing at high altitudes for many by Guggenheim fellowships, the Sue Fletcher, senior sociology maj­ years, and whom one would Weissmann Award in Medicine or, announced her engagement to Don expect to be more sensitive to and other honors, came to UC­ Emrich, senior economics major at low oxygen pressures, are in SB this fall from Columbia the Kappa Alpha Theta house. Miss Housewives hit Fletcher, the Kappa A lpharheta presi­ fact less sensitive than the new­ University’s College of Physi­ dent, is from Pacific Palisades. Em- LOS ANGEl ES— Most house­ com ers. cians and Surgeons. He and his rich is Lambda Chi Alpha president, wives work harder than they Another finding by Chiodi is wife, Delia, and daughter, Olga, need to in cleaning their home HARRISON—WEI LLER that newborn rats living in are now Santa Barbara resi­ and spend about 35 per cent high-altitude conditions soon Ruth Weiller, sophomore at UCLA more than necessary for clean­ dents, with Olga enrolled at announced her engagement to Don die from fatty liver degenera­ UCSB as a Spanish major. Harrison, senior political science ing supplies. tion. In Argentina, the newcomer major at UCLA at an E L GAUCHO Such is the contention of Ralph Altitude sickness. Chiodi ex­ held research or teachingposi- gathering on Oct, 14, Harrison, form­ Carlson, whose job it is to keep plains, goes by many names in er E L GAUCHO news editor and 18-mlllion square feet ofbuild- tions with a number of respect­ Pulitzer Prize winning reporter, stat­ various parts of the world. The ed institutions. He was the or­ ed no wedding date has been set, lng space clean. Argentines and Bolivians call ganizer of the Institute of High Carlson is production mana­ it *l>una,” after a high plateau Altitude Biology located in the LAMBERT-ANDERSON ger for a west coast mainten­ region in the Andes, and the Argentinean pre - Andean pla­ In a candlelight ceremony held at ance company. the Alpha Chi Omega house Septem­ Peruvians call it “soroche,” teau, and served as its direc­ ber 21, Kitty Anderson, a junior Speaking in Los Angeles, he DR. HUGO CHIODI after a mineral which the in­ tor for 15 years. sociology major, announced her en­ said special cleaners and tim e- habitants of the high country In this country he has serv­ gagement to Chris Lambert, a sen­ savers don’t make housework and animals here at Santa Bar­ believe causes the disease. ed with medical faculties at ior analytical biology major, Lam­ faster or easier--just more Columbia University, the Uni­ bert is a member of Phi Kappa P si expensive. bara, safely at sea level. fraternity, Chiodi, who holds an MJD. MOUNTAIN SEA SICKNESS versity of Califonia at San According to Carlson, the degree as well as a Ph.D in Chronic mountain sickness Francisco, the University of MAGNUSON-ASTOR whole job of cleaning can be public health, contracted his was also called “ mountain sea Pennsylvania, and Harvard Uni­ Keith Ann Actor, sophomore art done with soap, vinegar and sickness” because of the sim i­ versity’s Fatigue Laboratory. major, and Robert Magnuson, jun­ elbow grease. rare malady, chronic altitude ior zoology major, have announced sickness, while conducting phy­ larity of certain symptoms, siological studies on the such as nausea and dizziness. miners who live and work at an Chiodi’s reasearch has elici­ Soldiers gain altitude of 14,760 feet in the ted the interest of many coun­ Swedish army draftees will mountains of northern Argen­ tries whose borders encompass be allowed to grow shoulder- Natural Shoulder Shops tina. inhabited regions at high alti­ No longer able to carry out tudes, such as India. length hair in the future, ac­ cording to a ruling yesterday. field research because of his The medical researcher was body’s acquired sensitivity to a attracted to UCSB because of low amount of oxygen, Cniodi the strong research interest compensates by studying ani­ held by its Institute of Environ­ Patronize EL GAUCHO mals which live in chambers at mental Stress in all of man’ s Advertisers

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"OFEN FRIDAY EVENINGS T1UL 9" RADICALS Friday, Nov. 4, 1966—EL GAUCHO—Page N Students discuss campus radical left

Student Forum question: What sense. Those that would be part cal thought here under which fo r radical political thought. kind of upbringing don’t come do you think of the radical left of the Radical Left are prob­ leftists can unite. HUBERT JESSUP to this campus. on campus? ably the most exciting people Nation-wide, there are people Junior, Poli Sci The few that are here are **•* They’re entitled to their own here. who are giving some serious lost because there is no tradi­ opinion, but they’ re in a min­ The “ Radical L eft” at UCSB thought on the development of The Radical Left on big cam­ tion of radical organization at ority here. I don’t think they’re is in a rather immature stage a new theory of social and puses is generally composed of UCSB. There are a lot of per­ enhancing their cause by their of development compared to political change. graduate students and others sonal radicals around, but they overall way-out appearance. Berkeley’s, which is a very As the campus expands, be­ reared in Marxist families. aren’t part of the Left because I don’t see the point in their sad thing for this campus, the comes more cosmopolitan, and Here there are very few stu­ they aren’t political. dressing like slobs. Their world' reason for immaturity being the fraternity system erodes, dents with that kind of back­ ROBB HARDING consists of long hair, bare feet, that there is no theoreti- there will arise- new channels ground. Those who do have that Graduate, History and ragged clothes. They’ve lost a basic desire for keeping clean. Often they do not know the bases of the issues which they a re protesting. They’re just seeking an identity by joining these radical groups. Those big lofty ideas which they pursue in their closed col­ lege community will have to be discarded when they seek employment in the real world. s u e McDo n o u g h Sophomore, Undeclared **** s u e McDo n o u g h 2. They have a right to be LESLIE WILLIAMS HUBERT JESSUP ROB HARDING here. If they’ re justified then their actions will show it. Some of their ideas about change could have a good effect on the campus, but change without a purpose would defeat their pur­ pose. LESLIE WILLIAMS Junior, Zoology **** There is no radical left on this campus, in an organized Roadrunner cast begins auditioning Unlike the robin which re­ turns faithfully to greet the Even When She Answers, He Still Gets the Busy Signal. Spring, or the swallow that comes back to Capistrano with D EA R REB: predictable regularity, the Lately, every time I call my girl, she’s either "not in" or "not inter­ Roadrunner has upset his sche­ dule for this year. ested." Last week I called her 23 times and couldn't even make a The former mascot of this coffee date. The trouble started when she started dating a guy campus has been returning once every spring for many years who owns a Dodge Coronet. Now she goes to parties with him, to head his own musical comedy dances, football games, etc. Do you think I should call her again, revue. Because of the change to the quarter system, he will run or should I forget her and break her heart? a little faster this year and ar­ BAD CONNECTIONS riv e in Campbell Hall on Jan. 25 through 28. DEAR BAD CONNECTIONS:

NEAR AUDITIONS I think your next call should be to your Dodge Dealer. Then make The selection of a student a date-to see the '67 Coronet, the car that’s breaking hearts all cast and staff to present the 1967 Roadrunner Revue must over America. You’ll find that its good looks are pretty hard to begin in the near future. Audi­ resist. Now, before you break your girl's heart, give her another tion and information sessions have been scheduled fo r Mon­ break. Ask her to go for a ride in your new Coronet. I think she’ll day, Nov. 14, 2-2:30 p.m., and get the signal. Wednesday, November 16, 7 « until at least 9 p.m., all in Campbell Hall. During those hours questions w ill be answered, and informal auditions will be held. RR needs the talents of sing­ ers, dancers, comedians, writ­ ers, and technical workers. While it is not necessary to have prepared material for the audition, the staff is very in­ terested in seeing new material fo r possible inclusion in the show.

DIFFERENT FORMAT There is no need to be a part o f a group that prepares its own material which is put together with other groups to make up the show. This fact, plus cur­ rent plans for this year’s re­ Here s the heartbreaker. . . '67 Dodge Coronet 500. A campus favorite with its great new looks, ride, vue material, gives the members of the general chorus and list of extras that are standard. Like bucket seats with either a companion seat in the middle or a much more opportunity to con­ center console. Plush carpeting. Padded instrument panel. Padded sun visors. Seat belts, front and tribute to the show and per­ form individually. rear. A choice of Six or V8 models. And lots more. So get with '67 Dodge Coronet and get busy. Any interested students who cannot come to Campbell Hall OOOOE DIVISION CHRYSLER sometime during the times out­ MOTORS CORPORATION lined above are urged to con­ tact the production staff through Hal Brendle (UCen 3167, 968- 3627) as soon as possible. Any M IN E IIKBH1MR OPERATIOii '6/ persons interested in joining the production staff are urged to contact Brendle immediately. Page 12—EL GAUCHO-Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 Gauchos, Broncos clash in season's spectacular Cal and Stanford, UCLA and USC, Texas and Texas A & M all have another couple of weeks before meeting, but for the Santa Barbara and Santa Clara, the .climax of the season is tomor­ row. Homecoming here is still a week away, but for the team, the one to win is the Bronco Homecoming in San Jose in 24 hours. The two teams have met only three previous tim es, but the games is already the highlight of each’s schedule. In the first meetings, the winners have al­ ternated—UCSB first, then Santa Clara, UCSB again last year—and if the Gauchos r e ­ turning to their home towns around the peninsula area have anything to say about it, this string will end in 1966.

Playing in the shadows of their high school gymnasiums are Bart Weitzenberg, Bruce Hitchcock, Preston Hensley, Gary Bianchini, Tom Dlmmitt, and Mike Hitchman and Jim Priest. There could be more noise for the Gauchos than the Homecoming-spirited Santa BREAKING AWAY—Dick Burrill, starting running halfback, cracks through Hawaii defense earlier this season, Strahler photo Clarans. MORE THAN CHEERS Priest and Hitchman come home But it w ill take more than I t ' Ó Gk v U a Pat*. yelling to beat the Broncos, who enter with a 5-1 record for the man’s antics placed him ahead Quarterback Mike Hitchman year and went through 1965 • Bowling pf UCLA’ s Gary Beban (then and end Jim P riest w ill be with an 8-1 count. • Billiards returning to the San Jose area of Sequoia High), as the areas • Coffee Shop They have a fine passer in for the first time since grad­ top QG. Ron Calcagno, a speedy half­ • Banquet Facilities Thai they temporarily split, uating from Saratoga High in back in Bow Rodgers, a sure­ with Hitchman coming here to 1964. handed end in Tony Orlandini, O p e n 14 HouAi - pace freshmen to an undefeated The pass-and-catch combo and all around fine size and season and P riest traveling to terrorized neighborhood gram­ personnel. Washington to play for the ORCHID mar schools since the fourth Santa Barbara is not hurting. Huskie frosh. BOWL grade, through junior high, and Coming into the contest they C O C K T A ILS a. DINING After a season up there, how­ HWY lOI » FAIR VIEW AVE. into high school, where Hitch- boast a 5-2 mark and are well ever, Jim returned to Califor­ ENTERTAINMENT ■ DANCING GOLETA. CAfcIF. on their way to a statistically Phone 967-0128 _ nia and picked up where he left — spectacular year as well as a off back at Saratoga. After highly successful season. sitting out the required one faU he now leads the Gaucho recei­ Mike Hitchman must average This is your chance, GAUCHO vers with 20 grabs for 310 barely over 200 yards per game WRAP-UP yards, including one 58-yarder, in total offense to break the and three touchdowns. school record of 198 yards, Student #7026941. ON More than a few in the stands, which stood for 17 years. As which should be filled at Buck of right now, Hitchman has Shaw Stadium tom orrow, will 1207, which added to his 857 Drink Sprite and be remember these kids from their total last year puts him on his prep days, spent in Santa way to a school career re­ somebody. MR.BIG KTMS C lara’ s backyard. cord. Take heart. Take a dime. 1250 Then take a bottle of Sprite m “ You always buy for less from the nearest pop ...... at the low overhead address! m achine. FOLLOWING EACH • SALES — NEW and USED CARS Suddenly it's in • SERVICE — FACTORY AUTHORIZED your hand. Cold. UCSB GAME • PARTS and BODY SHOP Biting. Tart and m t in g lin g . You cackle fiendishly SPO N SO RED "Seeth” MOF T ITT - Phone- and rub your hands by your 684-4115 together. (You TORD should; they're probably chilled to 5292 Carpintería Avenue the bone by now.) ISLA VISTA You tear off to a MARKET CARPINTERIA corner, alone, but within earshot of your fellows.

V i h ° \ \ c o P

cat taC'nO' ^menofV.aceNNaY- '- a. g . L Canadian úonai pac and i J in p in « And then? And then? And then you unleash i t . SPRITE! It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with le v a d a on ^ coSxs onW* s* e good cheer I Heads turn. Whisperings. "Who's that strangely fascinating student with the arch smile. And what's in that curious green bottle that's making such po^Jkma. **Lflen >aV.eP'“'_-. P a r a c k e t? " And you've arrived! The distinctive taste and

ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart. ------aalten«? C p You're somebody. uh...uh, whoever-you-are. bo can \ S S 5 * \ 0 J L KW V f? SPRITE. SO TART AND Tot»' TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T Stardust International Raceway \ 3 0 « ------KEEP IT QUIET. IC ****"® _ Las Vegas. Nevada Sand check and aalf-addrasaad. «tamped envelope. Friday, Nov. 4, 1966—EL GAUCHO—Page 13 Gauchos host water polo tournament, Anteaters on hand By RICH UPRIGHT Sports Writer Water polo along the West Coast will focus its attention on Santa Barbara this weekend when the Gauchos host the Second Annual West Coast Invitational Water Polo Tournament. A top notch field will be on hand for a full day of polo tomorrow, with games being played hourly from 8:30 to 3:45, when the championship game will climax the For 2nd place in SCSA day's activities. Eight top teams comprise this By Chris Farrow football program, and as a re­ y ea r’ s tourney headed by UJC, Ass*t Sports Editor sult many of their better ath­ Irvine, seeded first, who enter UCSB’ s Soccer Club journeys letes participate in soccer. We as the fifth rated squad in the across town tomorrow to take know they’ ll be sky high for u s." nation, having suffered defeats on the rival Westmont Warriors On paper it looks like a close only at the hands of the country’ s in a 2 P.M. contest which will game. The Gauchos were edged top two collegiate contingents, close out Santa Barbara's 1966 1-0 by the W arriors in an in­ UCLA and USC. league play and determine whe­ formal scrimmage earlier this Seeded right behind the ther the Gauchos clinch second season before league play powerful Anteaters are coach place in the Southern C alifor­ began, and Santa Barbara w ill Rick Rowland's Gauchos, vic­ nia Soccer Association or drop be out to avenge that loss. torious in eleven of fifteen to third in the league's stand­ Mike Nickoloff will be back games this year, potent Univer­ ings. in action as goalie this week­ sity of Pacific, and small col­ UCSB and Westmont are cur­ end after missing last Sat- lege power Cal Poly at Pomona. rently at rest with identical turday's Loyola match due to Rounding out the field are mar­ 3-1 marks in the six-team lea­ injuries he picked up while in iners from Occidental College, gue, with USC on top with an San Jose trying out fo r the U S . Cal State at Fullerton, Clare- unblemished 4-0 record. Both Olympic team. Bud Keeley, mont-Mudd, and the UCSB frosh the Gauchos and the W arriors whose two goals in the fourth squad, placed in at the last have lost to the strong Southern quarter defeated Loyola last minute as a substitue for Long Cal team. The Gauchos dropped week, should see more action Beach State, who were unable a 5-1 decision to Troy October fo r the Gauchos against West­ to attend. 22nd with half of player -coach mont. Keeley had not played Concerning the freshmen, Steve Arnold's team injured in league play prior to the Lion who will be spotting their op­ after the rugged inter sectional encounter. ponents a great deal of ex­ trip to Berkeley and San Jose. Trailing the Gauchos in the perience, frosh mentor Bob Westmont lost to USC by the SCSA are Loyola, Occidental, Gary insisted "we have been respectable score of 5-3. and Cal Tech. Loyola is 2-2 playing good polo and should Arnold describes the War­ in league and by winning this be tough," but the Gauchitos riors as ''a good team with a weekend could gain a tie for appear to be in for a rough lot of enthusiasm andaggreslve third with the loser of the Gau- (Continued on p. 14, col. 3) play. Westmont has no winter cho-Warrior clash. FOREIGN FLASH—Joao Braganea, UCSB right wing from Por­ tugal bursts through two Loyola Lions in last weekend’s 6-3 7-game varsity statistics victory. RUSHING Thomas •. . 0 -16 — 0 Volleyballers meet Matadors Player TCB NYG AVG. TD UCSB Tot . 72 1013 14.1 7 Thomas ...1 2 3 504 4.1 6 Oppon. . . . 97 1231 12.7 12 Shubin . . . . 4 9 333 6.8 0 TOTAL OFFENSE Hitchman . . 63 271 4.3 7 Player Ptys. NYR NYP Net Avg. In night R.G. deubleheader Burlili . . . . . 3 1 132 4.3 0 Hitchman 204 271 936 1207 5.9 Almond • . . . 20 121 6.1 0 Thomas . .123 504 0 504 4.1 Coach Dennis Berg's female The "A 's” frontline consists Walker . . 82 3.9 2 Shubin . . 49 333 0 333 6.8 volleyballers hit the Robertson of Cindy Minnie, Kathy Bulmer, Kovalcheck . 6 32 5.3 0 Burrlll . . . 31 132 0 132 4.3 Forrest . . 31 4.4 0 Almond . . 20 121 0 121 6.1 Gym hardwood for the second Sue Purdon, Linda Llssy, Jane Vallerga , . . . 3 23 7.7 1 Walker . . . 30 80 38 120 4.0 consecutive week this Friday Cowell, and Jan Beaumeister. 3 3.0 0 Kovalcheck 6 32 0 32 5.3 Wages . . 3 3.0 0 Olson . . .1 1 -7 39 32 2.9 night, with the San Fernando Littlepohn . . 1 2 2.0 Q Forrest . 7 31 0 31 4.4 Valley State Matadors pose as San Fernando's " A " squad Olson . . . -7 -0.9 0 Vallerga . 3 23 0 23 7.7 contains two Olympic players UCSB To . .334 1530 4.6 16 Blower . . 1 3 0 3 3.0 UCSB's second intercollegiate Oppon. . ...2 9 0 1084 3.7 6 Wages . 1 3 0 3 3-0 foe of the young season. and has a victory over Long PASSING Littlejohn . 1 2 0 2 2.0 Beach to its credit thus far. Player PA PC Int. Pet. Yds. TD UCSB Tol . 487 1530 1013 2534 5.2 The Gaucho " A " team,which Hitchman 141 64 5 454 936 6 Oppon. .478 1084 1231 231b 4.8 will compete at 8 p.m. will UCSB's "B " team will per­ Walker . . . 9 5 2 556 38 0 form at 7 p.m. against the Mata­ Olson . . 3 3 0 LOO 39 1 TEAM STATISTICS be trying to record its first UCSB Tot 153 72 7 471 1013 7 UCSB OPP. win of 1966, after losing to dor "B 's" in a preliminary to Oppon. 188 97 14 516 1231 12 134 First Downs 115 Long Beach State last weekend. the 8 o’clock game. PASS RECEIVING 85 Rushing 54 Player Ree. Yds. Avg. TD 36 Passing 63 Priest . . . . . 20 310 15.5 3 13 Penalties 8 Vallerga . . 12 231 19.3 1 1530 Rushing Yardage 1084 Blower . . . 10 144 14.4 1 218.6 Avg. Per Game 154.9 Keever . .» 10 117 11.7 1 1013 Passing Yardage 1231 Burrlll . .. 6 81 13.5 à 144.7 Avg. Per Game 177.3 Shubin . . . . 6 42 7.0 4 2543 Tot. Offensive Yardage 2315 Burnett . . . 3 22 7.3 0 363.3 Avg. Per Game S30.7 AVAILABLE NOW! Barker . . 2 2* 12.0 1 512 Yards Penalized 525 Smith • . . 2 21 10.5 0 73.1 Avg. Per Game 75.0 Almond . . 1 5 5.0 0 11 No. of Own Fumbles Lost 8 in SANTA BARBARA Introducing .., to Santa Barbara STEREO TAPE SYSTEMS FOREIGN and RACE CAR For Your SPECIALISTS CAR, HOME, BOAT, or PLANE LARGEST TAPE LIBRARY in the TRI-COUNTIES CO M PLETE CUSTO M R EC O R D IN G • Alla Romeo • Lancia SERVICE • BMC • Mercedes • Datsun • Porsche ÊAOKTZ y STEREO-PAK- • Ferrari e Toyota TMi OffIGINAl EARL “ MADMAN" MUNTZ • Flat • Triumph NOT AFFILIATED WITH MUNTZ TV • Jaguar e Volvo • VW • & Others CAR-TUNES IN FREE PICK-UP 6c DELIVERY east/west motors, ltd. t e n c a • # 2908 De La Vina Open Daily 9:30 - 6:30 307 E. GUTIERREZ PH. 965-4115 Fri- Till 9:00 MMMMMMWMMMMMlMWRMWMWMMMMWMMNMaS Page 14—EL GAUCHO—Friday, Nov. 4, 1966 ^SÊÊÊÊÊÊBHMÊ Yearlings bome- Harriers to face Fresno Clasli with Colts The Gaucho freshmen football­ On campus course ers will host the Cal Poly (¡S LO) Colts tomorrow afternoon Sam Adams and his cross out the presence of RichSchan- at 2:30 behind Robertson Gym countrymen return to the cam­ kel, the Gaucho’ s number two in UCSB’s first home tilt of pus^ course for the second time man. Schankel has a thigh 1966. The game with the Colts this year, hosting the Fresno injury which forced him to miss two weeks ago resulted in a State Bulldogs at 11 A.M. to­ last week’s win over Nevada spectacular 48-14 victory for morrow. Southern University in I^as Ve­ the Gauchos. UCSB w ill be led by Jeff gas. Oddly enough, Schankel A forceful, driving offense Rawlings, the Gauchos most also missed last year’s Fresno and a strong-holding defense consistent performer of 1966. encounter, due to a sore heel. should be exhibited tomorrow, The last time Rawlings set in accord with Gaucho past foot on the lagoon course here The Gauchos (6-2) will be performances. The Frosh are he broke a UCSB record by out to avenge 1965’ s 23-32 loss now 3-1 and have outscorred traversing the grassy lanes in to the Bulldogs in Fresno, their opponents 86-51. 20:40. which saw Fresno State runners The 1966 freshmen football Santa Barbara w ill run with­ sweep to the first three places. season could be completed with new Gaucho records in all as­ pects of the game. In the first LETTING ONE F L Y — Chuck Spink spots an open Fresno goal showdown with the Colts this TELL IT TO THE GAUCHOS WI1H in last weekend’s 13-3 win over the Bulldogs. season, Coach G orrle and his V footballers broke two records. In the fourth quarter of the Poloists seeded second in tourney game with Cal Poly in a 3rd EL GAUCHO classifieds are 25? per line, payable in advance and three situation, defensive .Continued from p. 13) sity against the Tigers from halfback Greg Weiner intercep­ beginning as they open against Pacific and the freshmen bat­ ted a San Luis aerial on his ANNOUNCEMENTS-1 YAM AHA 80, 1964, exc. condition, Irvine. tling Pasadena City College. own eight yard line and r e ­ runs good, Rich M eyer, 968-3846 a f­ Regarding the tournament turned it the remaining 92 yards ter 5 or 3211 Chem Bldg. THE turkeys are bitingt 5 big ones that he has worked so hard to ar­ VARSITY (11-4) fo r UCSB’ s final touchdown. daily! Turkey Shoot Nov* 16, 17, 18 65 Suzuki 150 exc. cond. “ must sell** range, Coach Rowland first PLAYER GAG The previous record was 71 968-6338 spoke of the Irvine squad who Dave Gray 59 29 .492 yards credited to Doug Mar­ MAYS Says “Hey!” Hlllel says edged his Gauchos 8-5 in the C . Hendrickson 20 8 .400 shall against Cal Lutheran in “ Hay I” Rancho Oso Nov* 5, 7 p.m., *64 G reeves 250 Scram bler $485, has semi-finals of the All-Cal tour­ John Mortenson 31 12 .388 1965. URC Bldg. street equip, low m ileage, 968-4376 ney, stating, "they have their Dave Laskey 19 7 ,368 In the second quarter Les Discount is only a word. Bryant- entire team back from last year Joe Coe 50 18 .360 Hamaguchi, halfback, returned Ortale Jewelers - El Paseo. and present a very solid squad.’ ’ Jim Simpson 36 12 .360 a Colt punt 87 yards for a PERSONAL- and then looking at the entire Chuck Spink 59 14 .238 touchdown making the score Honor s-at-entrance students will have yearbook picture taken Fri., field commented, "T h is should John Melin 26 6 .231 34-0. Hamaguchi’s return e- IMPORTANT Announcement coming, Nov. 4th at noon sharp at the above be a real exciting day of polo, clipsed Paul Vallerga’s old look for something new & unusual location and the championship game GK. Att. Saves Saves frosh record of 72 yards in DADDY, cat and I think you*re great! should be one of the most ex­ Russ Dember 91 1964, also against Cal Lutheran. Student Health Insurance deadline is 84 Nov. 4th. F or only $13 a person is citing on the coast this year.*’ Greg Lauer For the Frosh, tomorrow’s ARE you Gross enough to be a H ell's covered 24 hrs a day the full school Concluding, Rowland added, Cal Poly contest will be the Angel? SCFC year "Adm ission is free and I would FROSH (8-2) last football game played be­ NORMA, is it hot or cold this week? like to urge everyone to come PLAYER GA GM & hind Robertson Gym. The AUTOS FOR SALE-3 Mike out.*’ McGuire 22 10 .454 Gauchos host San Fernando in As preliminaries to to­ Smith 21 8 .380 the new Campus Stadium next Starving students' garage sale-cloth­ *56 BUICK low mileage; mech good; m orrow’ s activities both the Cornell 12 4 .333 week. new tires, battery, trans; $100, 968- ing, shoes, jewelery, 12:30-4:30 Fri & Sat, 6712 Del Playa, A 968-5854. Santa Barbara varsity and Clark 40 12 .300 5395 frosh will swim today, the var- Tom Honig 34 9 .264 *66 SUNBEAM Tiger, V-8, 4 barrel Lonely? Joe Rents TVs, Ph 965-5555, carb $3400, call 965-0031 after 6 pm 3001 State St. Ç j i u d *62 CORVAIR Monza 4 dr., mtr. re­ IM activities set for Fall cently ovhl.,. good tire s, $675, 968- \sm es 5951, 6510 Madrid #4. S e r v i c e s O f f e r e d - 15 Intramural wrestling and four Nov. 19th 9 A.M .; cross coun­ other activities—badminton, try , Dec. 3rd 1 P.M .; and 2- ONLY *51 FORD P.U. Reblt. Chrysl Hemi. ALTERATIONS, REWEAVING, 6686 cross country, 2-man volley­ man volleyball, Dec. 3rd 9 A.M . AT Eng., radio, new tire s , $300, 5975 Del Plays, Ph. 968-1822 UNIVERSITY Daley St., Goleta ball, and tug-o-war —round out -5 P Jvl. and Dec. 4th 9 A .M .- the Fall IM agenda offered to 5 P .M . CENTER CARS Opened, keys made, Goleta v a l­ CAFETERIA Sacrifice ‘61 Ford Galaxie: radio, ley Locksmith, 298-R Orange Ave., those males able to find time All sports managers will re­ heater, power, auto, beaut, cond., 964-2883 in the final four weeks before ceive entry blanks two weeks GRILL reasonable, 966-5134 after 5 dead week. prior to each activity. FOUNTAIN Fascinating Van-Cumper, sleeps 3 sink, stove, o ffer 968-6096 Norm Wrestling is off and grap­ TRAVEL with the H ell's Angel's Sat. nlte Nov. 5 SCFC pling next week. All teams and Must sell at wholesale price-66 Chev individuals weigh-in November SS and 66 Ford XL call Fred or CHRISTMAS Charter Flight to N .Y. 7th from 3-5 P.M. in the Old • CHARBURGERS Chuck 963-2021 or 967-6011 o r eves. $180 RT apply AJ5. Office 12-1, Gym Locker Room. Weight 965-1383« M- F Hurry divisions are set at 123, 130,

and unlimited poundage. • CHARDOGS T Y r I N V ï " " — TI fl 1 U\\ WINTER Qtr need 1 male rmmt. for Matches will be held from duplex own room, fireplace, $60, ___ "1 1 K N 968-3450 EXCELLENT typing IBM electric fast 7-9 P.M ., November 7th, in service, M rs. Hughes 968-6385 the Old Gym. •SHAKES Housing In Francisco Torres for Unofficial dates for the re­ 2nd and 3rd quarters, Ph 968-2672 TYPIST, 9 years exp; term papers, maining Fall sports are: Bad­ eves. theses, dissertations, Mrs. Gibson 968-1984 minton, Nov. 17th 7-11 P.M. 140 NO. FAIRVIEW AVE Ph. 964-3000 GIRLS beach apt. furnished,fireplace Nov. 19th 2-5 P.M ., and Nov. 968-8383. Experienced Typist 50C/pg Reports, 20th 9 A .M .- 2P.M.; tug-0-war, etc 9677430 wkdays eves; anytime FOR SALE- wkends Phi Phi’s edge 9* 8” ROTH-designed for local con­ TYPING - expert, fast,35«? page, CAN’T FIND ANYBODY ditions $65 Pete 968-3450 call M rs. G rosser at 965-5831 Sigma Chi 14-7 Y A T E R Spoon 9* 10** month old no Phi Kappa P s l, scoring on TO FEED YOU ON a 40-yard pass play with four minutes to go, defeated Sigma Chi, 14-7, this Wednesday. The SUNDAY AFTERNOON... win established the Phi Psi’s as the fifth best team in fra­ ternity football as the lower WE WILL! division teams continue to jug­ gle behind the four frontrun­ ners. s*™ !"*» * SWEDEN HOUSE Trailing 7-6, - Casagrande - 2710 L’E LA VINA connected with - on third down SANTA BARB AK ALIF. to jump the Phi P s i’ s into lead at 12-7, Sigma Chi, rat­ 5 M□ ROA9Ur 0:30 for yourself and qualified dependents Phi Psl lead to 14-7. will close Fri. Broad coverage offer­ ing hospital, accidental death, surgi­ In other Wednesday football *62 HONDA 150 new engine *65,clean, cal, ambulance and o;i patient bene­ play, the Sig Eps (5-1) rolled runs smooth, extras, 968-7860, $230 fits on a world-wide basis in one over last place Phi Delta Thel- P'-iaNE 9 6 S -9 D D Î CLHCEO MONDAYS convenient policy. Get information ta, 28-0, after building upa *66 HONDA 450 Exc. $850 or best L application forms at AS UCSB Busi­ o ffe r, 966-5407 after 6 p.m. ness Office, 3rd floor, UCEN. 21-0 halftime edge. Friday, Nov. 4, 1966—EL GAUCHO—Page 15 Placement interviews COLE'S COLUMN Date Company interviewing M ajor Bus Bond N ov. 8 U .S. Naval Missile Center EE, ME & The 'Miller Sound’ The passage of Proposition B Physics A s most record companies know, it is next to impossible to on the November ballot to es­ Nov • 8 Aetna Life and Casualty Company Liberal determine in advance what is to become a hit and what is not. Com­ tablish a Metropolitan Transit Arts petent artists can churn out record after record without managing District would provide much- to “ make it.** needed expansion of public 8 Carnation Reasearch Laboratories Chemistry transportation to and from the & Bio-Sci» A very good example of this would be the Modern Folk Quar­ tet, who finally broke up after years (and albums) o f trying to make University campus and Santa 8 General Telephone Company Econ. it as a group. Barbara to serve the commun­ And then along comes the “ M iller Sound" (not Glen — Elva). ity as well as the campus fam­ 8 Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. Chem ., EE, M rs. M iller seems to get at the very heart of a song and brings what ily, UCSB Chancellor Vernon I. CE, ME, Math, used to be its potential qualities out into the open. Cheadle said today. Physics, Bio- “We have many inquir­ Sciences Good examples of this are found in tracks off her brand new , “ Will Success Spoil Mrs. M iller?” ies from Santa Barbaran s about 9 American Cyancmic Company Chem. Elva gets to the real nitty gritty of Tommy Roe's delicate bus service for the hundreds of composition of ‘Gweetpea." And Frank Sinatra suffers no less a cultural events held on the cam­ 10 International Business Machines (IBM) EE, Math, fate in «Strangers in the N igh t" A la Miller. pus each year which the present ME, Physics, transportation schedule does Bus» Econ», ULTIMATE WEAPON not satisfy, especially in the Econ., Liberal evening hours," he explained. Arts. Be keeping this album in mind if your neighbors uDstairs suddenly decide to form their own jug band at three in tne morn­ “ Many people cannot, or pre­ 1J Security First National Bank Econ., Liberal ing, or if you're in the dorms around four in the afternoon and you fe r not to, drive to the campus, Arts have a midterm the next day. Once you have given your neighbors and also the availability of cam­ a taste of Mrs. Miller, complete silence is almost guaranteed. pus parking space has become 11 Bank of America Econ., Math, As Gary Owens (the real discoverer of Mrs. Miller via Mrs. a serious problem. It would also Liberal Art; Earl C . Festoon) says, "M rs . M iller owns a vibrato that has shaken be of direct benefit to many stu­ 11 Insurance Company of North America Econ., Lib­ several continents." Take a listen to her version of “Groovy dents who need transportation eral Arts Kind of L o v e " and see for yourself. for part time jobs in Santa Bar­ b a ra ." 11 Schlumberger Wei 1 Services EE, ME, CE, MEXICAN BAG An improved bus schedule Physics, & However if Mrs. Miller isn't your bag, try spinning off a few would also find a much greater Math tracks from the excellent new Gerald Wilson Album, "The Golden use to and from Santa Barbara by the 15,000 persons who make 14 Office of Naval Intelligence A ll Sword.” You’ ll find that he has switched around the beans in his bean bag and come up with a true, non-top-forty, Mexican sound. up our student body, faculty, 14 Philco Corporation Econ. As Leonard Feather (noted jazz critic) comments on the al­ and staff, and their fam ilies, bum; “ He has succeeded in combining the vivid colors of the the Chancellor feels. “The 15 Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) A ll country, and sometimes of the bullring, without sacrificing the built- transit district would go a long in jazz essence, both in writing and in freedom of improvisation, way to keep the campus from 15 H .J . Heinz Company Eco n ., & that has been associated with his music since his earliest band­ being isolated from its nearest Liberal Arts leading days." major city.” 16 Proctor & Gamble A ll The flamenco guitar of Laurindo Almeida is featured on the old standard “ The Breeze and I,” aptly adapted by the unbelievably ST. MICHAEL AND 16 U .S . Atomic Energy Commission A ll Engrg. talented Gerald Wilson. This is one of the top jazz albums of the ALL ANGELS* Eco n., year, as his always are. (EPISCOPAL) Physical SINGLE OF THE WEEK; 'Stephanie Knows Who” by LOVE. CAMINO PESCADERO Sciences On the strength of the reputation that they have built up both here AND PICASSO and in England, plus the acquisition of two new members (and 16 U .S . Ngval Ordinance Test Station EE, MW, CE, SUNDAY five new instruments including an electric flute and harpsichord), Physics & Math 7 ; 3 0 A the single can only be a hit. (I think). . M . 1 o : 00 A. M . 17 State Compensation Insurance Fund All

18 Xerox Corporation A ll Everyone love» the Menmt end Physics building the popular price» et thit 18 Boeing Company ME & EE Fanout Family Re Hour ant 18 RexaJ 1 Drug Company Econ. requires passage EN JO Y OUR 21 Transport Indemnity Company A ll SUPERB BANQUET 21 Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance C o. All of Proposition 2 A damaging, if not fatal,blow FACILITIES 22 Raytheon Company \ EE * to the future teaching and re­ 6 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. 29 Pacific Telephone & Telegraph C o. A ll search plans of the UCSB phys­ 7 days a week ics department would be struck Free Parking For further information, contact the Placement Office if Proposition 2 fails to carry in the Administration Bldg. on the November 8 ballot. Highway 101 at Fair view Ave. So predicts Dr. Harold W. 967-1618 Lewis, chairman of the depart­ ment and a specialist in solid state, nuclear and medical physics. He said the con­ struction of the six-story Phys­ DON'T WANT TO BE TIED TO A DESK ics Building is entirely depend­ ent upon the passage of Propos­ DAY INLAND DAY OUT ition 2. “ We are initiating several FOR EIGHT HOURS? new experimental research programs this year," he said, '%nd will be introducing still THEN HERE'S AN INTERESTING ENGINEERING JOB others in the years to come. FOR YOUm m These programs will have tobe severely curtailed, if not elim­ Field Junior Engineer positions available for B ^ . candi­ inated, if we do not receive the dates in Electrical, Mechanical, Petroleum Engineering well - designed space pro­ and in Physics. The leading world-wide oil field service grammed in the new building." company offers: Proposition 2, a $230 million bond issue for contructlon of • A ll the fringe benefits including company car. buildings and facilities for higher education, would provide • Your own boss. $4,296,000 for the projected physics structure. Passage of • Irregular hours - but scheduled days-off. the proposition would make the Physics Building project elig­ • Technically challenging - you utilize electronic ible for supplemental funds instrumentation to help the oil companies evaluate under the Federal Higher Edu­ their wells. cation Act. The structure will have con­ • All promotions from within. Management training. crete fram e and slab with a one-story lecture hall complex • Comprehensive training on-the-job. connected to the six-story tow­ er. | SEE YOUR PLACEMENT DIRECTOR FOR FURTHER Designed to accommodate 674 DETAILS. students, it will provide facili­ ties for instruction and re­ We w ill conduct interviews on your campus: search and will contain general assignment research labora­ tories for the natural sciences FRIDAY, and general assignment class­ rooms. Charles Luckman is the NOVEMBER 11, 19*6 executive architect. A construction contract could be awarded by February of this year, with completion of the SCHLUMBERGER WELL SERVICES structure expected by Septem­ Pacific Coast Area ber, 1967, provided Proposition 612 South Flower Street Los Angeles, California 90017 2 is passed. Page 16—EL GAUCHO—Friday, Nov. 4, 1966

GRASS Tri-county girls ¡S ,™ Pot is 'in,' w ay out’ set Sports Days BiflGame Last year Community Aid By PAUL DOUGLAS Known as “ grass'*, “ w eeds", One thousand girls, the non- prospective physical education Board incorporated a new event Staff Writer "roaches” and "p o t” , five of sedentary types, are scheduled teachers at UCSB experience in into the Homecoming festivi­ It’ s green rather than brown it can be had in Isla Vista for to participate in the 37th annual organizing large-scale pro­ ties—the GGP (Great Gaucho like tobacco. It is commonly about $15. Possibly because Tri-County Sports Day here to­ grams. P ro f). The Great Gaucho Prof rolled in double wheat straw it is hallucenogenic, supposedly morrow. The event w ill be held in led cheers at the Homecoming paper, tucked at the ends and safe to use, and socially taboo, Representing high schools Robertson Gymnasium and on game, and some faculty member smoked like a cigarette. It marijuana seems to have come from throughout the Tri-Coun­ the surrounding playing fields will be elected to do the same burns hotter and brighter than into its own as the "in ” way ties, the girls will participate and couts starting at 8:30a.m. this year. tobacco and smells like alfalfa. “ out” for an unknowable num­ in archery,basketball, gymnas­ Tours of the campus will be Any Dean, Professor, or T.A . ber of students. tics, modern dance, softball, held and the girls be briefed is eligible to run as a candi­ tennis, track and field, volley­ on the academic programs and date, sponsored by any organi­ “ Pot has received a great ball and folk dance. activities of the sponsoring de­ zed group. Applications, avail­ Research award deal of attention in recent Dr. Barbara Drinkwater, as­ partments. able in the AS office, must be months, possibly more than it sistant professor of physical signed and turned in by 4 to­ deserves, for the controversy education at UCSB, said her de­ day. announced today it has created among medical Typist dances partment and the physical ac­ Voting w ill be Monday through people, las enforcement of­ A $1,200 fellowship award for tivities department are co­ The British Civil Servants Friday. One vote wiU cost one ficers and the public as to its personnel research in the fields sponsoring Sports Day not only Clerical Association says pay is penny. After two days of voting, true nature. of college recruitment and to foster competition and tun so low that one shapely civil the contest will be limited to placement was announced today for the participants but to give State law classifies it as servant had to work as a belly- five finalists. by E . L . Chalberg, campus dancer at night after her daily The contest w ill then con­ placement office manager. a narcotic, like heroin or opium. But some doctors, such as Dr. grind at the office. tinue through Friday. A s well The Vera Christie Graduate The association's secretary as leading cheers at the Home­ Fellowship, sponsored annually N eil Karp, county chief of men­ Fraternity tal health services, states that says - - “ I've been told the coming game, the winner, GGP, by the Western College Place­ bellydancer - typist has now will receive a trophy; the group ment Association for graduate there is no medical evidence that this is so. Most author­ left the service all together for that sponsors the winner will students in member colleges re-activated show business.” also receive a trophy. and universities, or qualified ities do agree that marijuana faculty members, has been es­ is hallucinogenic, intoxicating The world's largest frater­ tablished to encourage research and mildly havit-forming (like nity, Alpha Phi Omega, has -GDI's-Greeks-Seeds cigarettes or alcohol). in the philosophy, standards, recently re-established its cha­ Take Notice! practices and objectives of re­ pter on campus. Its mem­ But unlike other "narcotics” cruitment and placement. bers are any past or present The Papas and Mamas Of the user of marijuana can stop Interested persons may without phusical withdrawl suf­ members of the Boy Scouts obtain full details by contacting of Am erica and take part in THE HELLS ANGELS fering, Karp says, and it ap­ Earl F . Jensen in the UCSB Ad­ campus services, community parently causes no physical W i l l M a k e a R u n o n I.V. S a t . N i t e ! ministration Building, Room chest activities, charity work, damage. 1325, 968-1511, Ext. 4152. The and Peace Corps work. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MISSION award carries no restrictions Bishop James Pike and others Says Fraternity President on holding other fellowships, have said they see no reason Mike Aquino, "The fraternity NOVEMBER 6, 1 966 assistantships or other employ­ why marijuana should not be has no house and is not so­ 11 : 30 A . M . ment. made legal, taxed, regulated cially inclined, its activities Final date for application is and sold like alcohol. But being concerned with the com­ HOLY COMMUNION Dec, 7. others take a more serious munity.” The organization was S t .M i c h a e l a n d A l l A n g e l s ' C h u r c h view of the drug. re-activated by student re - C a m in o P e s c a d e r o a n d P i c a s s o R o a d s "Most marijuana trips,” sponce to local posters describ­ T h e R e v . O t t o B r e m e r , C a m p u s P a s t o r TODAY IS warns Dr. Edward R. Bloom- ing the fraternity's purpose. EVERYONE WELCOME quist of the Narcotics Institute Meeting for the fraternity -o - (Problem s and Controls),” officers w ill be Monday, at 7:30 5 Í 3 0 p . m . D i s c u s s i o n o f " G o d i s D e a d " THE LAST are reported to be seemingly p.m ., UCen 2272. Starting the U R C B l d g . 6518 E l G r e c o R d . following Monday, membership The Lutheran Student Association innocuous affairs which are meetings will be held for all invites all students to come to this discussion. Those indulged in with less total des­ those who are interested, same wishing to have supper should meet at Taco Bell at 5 00 p.m. truction effect than one would tim e and place. experience from an alcoholic binge. For this reason a grow­ ing number of persons fail to TO BUY! recognize the true dangers of the drug.” Studant Health Insurance deadline is Nov. 4th. For only $13 a person Is “ With increased doses,” Dr. covered 24 hrs a day the full school Bloomquist continues, ‘4iallu- year cinatlons may appear. If they are pleasent the user "trips” STUDENT on them and remains high. If they are unpleasent he may HEALTH become so upset and afraid INSURANCE that if the proper ingredients for the experience are present he may develop a true psycho­ s is .”

Since marijuana is an “ un­ predictable” drug, he concludes there is no way to judge if ( 2 blocks North of Francisco Torres ) the user will trip “up” or '«down” .

Marijuana is not a serious problem on this campus, say OUR REGULAR 19* Dee Burger police, but it is a problem. Though no arrests have been made for illicit drugs this year, “ things are very tight now” , says campus police de­ tective Gauthier. Five arrests were made last year.

In subsequent articles, a ( With Every Food Purchase closer look will be given med­ ical studies, legal and juris­ dictional aspects and university policy related to “the grass” at UCSB.

ERNIE and THE EMPERORS