"All the News Orange County That's Fit to Print" $eUr $xmt$ Edition Wtit ftork SE CT ION ONE

10 CENTS VOL.11....No.21.000 NEW YORK.THURSDAY.JANUARY 15,1970 Famous Actress Slain SHARON HATE MURDERED Drugs Suspected in Bizarre Slaying of Movie Queen and Friends

£*0f Hv CLARK KENT Special to the New York Ti me s

IRVINE - Three notablemem- use baggies to carry their mari- His mens' hair styles have be- bers of the Irvine community juana. come famous throughout the were savagely and brutelymur- Sharon Hate who in her last world and his business nowmak- dered early this morning in the movie, "Rosary's Beads," also es well over a million dollars 2nd floor commons. They are: died a tragic death, has left per year. No family could be Sharon Hate, star of "Rosary's Hollywood in the same violence. reached for comment but Mr. Beads," AbigailChoice, heiress Sharon's closest friend,Melanie Bruce's partner, Ralph Sport, to the Tasters Choice coffee dy- Haber, told reporters that Sha- said, "Mr. Bruce wouldn't hurt nasty and Mr. Bruce,notedNew- ron had no enemies and that a fly," and also, "America has port Beach hair stylies and bon "the lights have gone out on a lost one of its truly great hair vivant. A spokesman for UCI po- great career." stylists." Mr. Bruce's death lice said "at this time there are Sharon came to Newport from comes at a time immediately no clues to the tragic murder. El Paso two years ago to be a before he was to go into wo- waitress at the famous Denny's men's styles. Morning Discovery Coffee Shop chain. It was there Mayor Sam has calledthe mur- Cafeteria employees discover- that she was discovered by fam- ders tragic and blamed them on ed the body upon opening the ed director, Sam "Dirty Mind" student militants. He also said Commons doors this morning. Smith. He starred Sharon inhis he is receiving telegramsto run Their first sight was of Sharon Oscar winning movie, "Valley for Governor and protect the Hate who had been stripednaked. people of California from all Her body had been stabbed 40 evils. times and her intestines were Later this afternoon a group stretched out andused to strangle called TIRED (Taxpayers Indig- Mr. Bruce. Abigail Choice was Continued on Page A -1 found nearby decapitated. What appeared to be the bloodyhandle of an ax was found near her Wayne Student Papers body.Her eyes were used as a Makes topping to a day-old plate of Wrong Lack Eptitude cottage cheese and her brain Turn was found cooked on the grill By DENNIS ANTHONY between two Slater food ham- By MOTT SCORE A burger buns. cafeteria em- - The Regents of the University then provide "suggestions" as ployee said his first words af- NEWPORT BEACH Veteran how could be improved. allegedlymade of California have issued a re- to it ter seeing thebodies were"What actor John Wayne The general tone of the entire illegal today from a port concerning student news- an uglymess." an left turn campus- report is set on its first page: specially marked for that papers at the nine UC Suspect lane "While the mature generation Shot purpose at the intersection of es. The 152-page study, which thismorn- was released on January 5,ex- of Americans has been uneasy, In a news conference Dover and Coast Highway. Wit- perplexed ing Police Will amined not onlyUC publications, and torn, much of the UCI Chief of nesses estimated the time of the youth erupted into Sleezy stated that, their only approximately but also student newspapers all nation's has incident to be disorder. .The evidence indi- suspect was shotby Officer Mo- York Times Itis known over the nation,concluding "that . The New 12:48 p.m. not whether cates many students loyalto suspect's brains were b don Co Ie ) occupants the University of California's that ran. The ( y Gor there were any other orderlyprocesseshave because he sneezed studentpress constitutesasmall, accepted, blown out of the Molls." From then on of the Wayne vehicle. joinged in supporting the indict- after being told not to move. of only witnesses,CraigCur- but valid, cross-section of the Sharon was the queen mov- The range ment drawn by a vocally shrill The suspect, a student at UCI of 2601 Dr.,New- problems, uncertainties, ies. Smith was not available for tis Crestview of minority." was later cleared. port Beach, and TerranceSkot- of guidance, and degrees fa- comment. culty neglect Throughout its body, the re- Choice, body Heliotrope,Co- indifference or Abigail whose was nes of 711-1/2 characterizing so much of the port refers to the "ineptitude" mutilated, was the long rona del Mar, claim Wayne did most college journalism across the and lack of "teamwork" and time best friend of Sharon Hate. not see them. Curtis, who to- "training" as the cause of the They met two years ago while gether withSkotnes (both former nation." problems press. University of The report, which contains 17 of the student Abigail was delivering coffee students of the The assumption seems to be Denny's Shops. Calif, Irvine), were driving pages of "guidelines" for stu- samples to Coffee at newspapers follow, that because theUC studentnews- apparently taking a small foreign-made car, in- dent to is a type Abigail was result of proposal by papers do not employ the Bruce the sists they were within fifty feet a made profes- Sharon and Mr. to Regent Canaday on March 20, of daily, commercial, to show them some of Wayne's pale green Chevro- journalism which we see Commons Waynepre- 1969. In his proposal, Canaday sional new freeze dried coffee beans, let stationwagonwhen in the more "traditional" news- place. sumably disregarded a red sig- expressed his opinion that UC when the murder took campus newspapers have papers, somethingis wrongwith Abigail's father, Taster's nal, turning into Bayshores. Ac- "tak- pair en on the character of media them. Choice, commented to reporters cording toSkotnes, the con- Although the Regents' study is refrainedbe- for the propagation of radical "Abigail was a typical girl with sidered pursuit;but often critical of the campus cause of the red signal, which politicaland social philosophies, a typical background." He went anarchy andlaw- press, the guidelines suggested offering checked them. For this reason the advocacyof on to say that "I'm a lessness, indoctrination of their are, for the most part,positive typical reward of $100,000 to they did not attempt a citizen's ones. The guidelines are listed leading readers with standards of human anyone with information arrest. generallyun- in eight categories and are fair- of At this time there is little in- conduct which are to an arrest and conviction acceptable, promoting to- ly detailed, but can be simply Abigail's dication of a police investiga- and the the murderers." mo- disrespect authority." summarized as follows: although in shock, didmake tion into the incident. Neither tal for all ther, Canaday on further to state 1. Clarification of the fact that in which she said, Curtis nor Skotnes has filed a went one statement that "there has been acontinuing student newspapers are not offi- "What is America coming to." complaint. organs University, to this degeneration of the character of cial of the Mr. Bruce, famed hair stylist Curtis, appearing re- and therefore administrators do porter frustrated and gaunt, said these publications beyond the of Newport Beach, who has done point not bear "inherent responsibi- Sharon Hate such notables he could "no longer stomach of toleration..." the hair styles of seems fairly obvious to as- lity" for their publication. The New York Times Tiny kind of lawlessness," and It as Wayne Cochran and Tim, this the 2. Suggestions that the UCLA ( b y Gor don Co Ie ) his intention of sup- sume that , from the outset, was also a close friend of Sha- announced report was and UC Berkeley papers should They porting Sam Yorty in theforth- purpose of the to An empty baggie was foundnear ron Hate. met while Bruce "objectively" begin to work toward financial Denny's. comingmayorality campaign, examine the state the bodies which has led tospec- took coffee breaks at campus independence, and should serve grew up without a presumably in 1972. It is re- of the press, and con- ulation that drugs played a part Mr. Bruce it is a poor con- as models for the other cam- and went into hair styles ported that Wayne himselfisalso clude that in in the murders. It is an estab- father dition. The next step was to Continued on Page 8 lished fact that manydrugfreaks after giving up sewing in 1967. an avid Yorty supporter. Page 2 NEW UNIVERSITY January 13, 1970

INTERVIEWS OF INTEREST: January 15: sort is urged to contact this office for help the Peace Corps; January 20: Kaiser Steel and information.******** Corp.; January 21: Bank of America; Jan- TO- uary 22: Security Pacific National Bank. Any- Men's Intramural BasketDall begins Hall. one wishing more information about these in- NIGHT at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m. in Crawford two start- terviews should see Lorraine O'Donnell in Despite the confusion over having basket- the Placement Center. Make her feel wanted ing times (two games perhaps), all and loved. ball buffs should shine their tennies and ********** dribble over to the gym tonight. There will be a quasi-organizational (?!) Life fo- meeting of the Photography Club today, Jan- The weekly Innovation in Student Monday night at in the uary 15, at 4 p.m. the first floor lounge rum will be held 5:30 in Gateway Commons, of Gateway Commons. All persons interested first floor Lounge in happens around here. (See are to feel compelled to attend. where everything the Photography Club notice.) All students UCI Extension is having some interesting are urged to attend. ISL is where a student lectures this week, costing UCI students and can do things he feels are worthwhile, and staff $1.25 ea., and the general public $4.00. not have to depend on what the University On Tues.,Jan. 20, John C. Kramer,M.D., will thinks is worthwhile.******** speak on the "Treatment of Narcotic Addic- tion" in PS 101. Funds for nonconventional educational "Self-Acceptance and Sex" is the arrest- uses of computers by students have been ing (only if you're caught) title of Dr. Earl made available for the Winter Quarter 1970 organized violence Marsh's lecture in PS 101. by the Assistant Chancellor for Computing Finally, for you Orange County buffs, Hen- Julian Feldman. These funds are to be ad- ry Panian will speak about the "Spanish Dis- ministered by the UC Irvine Student Chapter In- The UCI Karate Club will sponsor its third annualKarate covery and Colonization of California" in of the Association for Computing Machinery. January at There will vitational Tournament 17 Crawford Hall. PS 104. In the words of Lucille Van Pelt: money must be spent for computer time three Green Belt, Brown Belt,and Black Belt. Eli- The be divisions: "Be Educated." on either the PDP-10 or SIGMA 7 available minations will begin at 1:00 and continue through the afternoon. ******** begin at 7 p.m., along with a program of judo,kendo on campus. Any student or group of students Finals will lacrosse? The UCI submit and karate demonstrations. Admission is $2.00 for adults,$1.50 Interested in Recrea- interested in obtaining money should for students, faculty, and staff. Proceeds go to the club's opera- tion SportsOffice is trying to locate students, a brief description of their proposed use of ting expenses. faculty and staff who are interested in or- the computer along with the amount of money Tournament fighting is rather new to karate. It had been felt ganizing a Lacrosse Club. No experience is requested to: ACM Student Chapter, c/o De- that the punching and kicking techniques were to dangerous to use necessary. Contact the Recreation Sports partment of Information and Computer Science the in free sparring. However, with the upsurge of interest in Office, 1114 Crawford Hall, or call 5346. University of California, Irvine. For further Japan world war, martial arts in after the second tournaments Anyone wishing to form a sports club of any information contact Larry Rowe at 833-5517. began to be held, and free fighting, or kumite, is now an impor- tant part of karate training. Before a person is allowed to practice kumite, he has usually had a year of training in order to properlylearn the basic pun- ches, kicks, and blocks. Even more important is learningto social ecology begins control them so that he doesn't injure his opponent in a kumite match. Points are given only to a technique that would have sev- Here's some more information Course and field work started methods of counseling,communi- erely injured the opponent if allowed to land with full force. How- about the new interdisciplinary with the winter quarter on Jan- cation of problems in ecology, ever, the attack must be stopped before hard contact is made. program in social ecologyini- uary 5. Director of theprogram individual study and field work. If the attack is stopped too soon, no point is given; if too late, tiated at the Universityof Cali- is Arnold Binder, professor of In the springquarter,classeswill the attacker maybe disqualified. fornia, Irvine to provide aca- psychology and formerly be added inbehavioral effects of The instructor of the UCI Karate Club is Fumio Demura, head demic support for the growing director of theprograminmathe- the air environment,publicpolicy of the Japan Karate Federation in the United States, 5th degree concern of students, faculty, and matical and computer models in decisions on community pro- black belt, and winner of the 1961 All-Japan Karate Tournament. the general public over the en- the behavioral sciences within grams, methods ofbehavior mod- Mr. Demura is a noted expert on ancient Okinawan hand wea- vironment. the School of Social Sciences. ification, and behavorial pathol- pons,and will demonstrate their use at the tournament. Community and environmental Cooperation in the formation ogy. problems will be the focus of and implementationof the inter- Additional information may be both class and field work in the disciplinary program has been obtained by contacting Dr.Bin- Sunday 10 & 11:30 program being developed to fill providedby facultyand staff from der's office HSS 324 (5911). Irvine Town center three main functions: the Schools of Social Sciences, —Provide training for those Biological Sciences,Engineering who will serve asprofessionals and Medicine, the Graduate — MASS in community-oriented pro- School of Administration, the help wanted FOR CATHOLIC grams. Office of Co-curricular Learning —Prepare students for graduate and the Public Policy Research STUDENTS work in administration, medi- Organization(PPRO). again cine,biologicalsciences and so- Enrollment in the program ini- — ALL ARE WELCOME cial sciences. tially is restricted to about 30 "We need people who care" —Provide education for alert students. this appeal by the career has beenissued Fr. Bud Powers 0891 citizenry, regardless of Classes available in the winter operated community objectives. quarter student include introduction to house in Santa Ana, known as Pan-C.R.0. (All Color Resource 7th ANNUAL EUROPE JET FLIGHTS Organization). (F or students, faculty and staff only) - ii£l2 — Socially concerned adults wo- fp*?5 Los Angeles — London (Round tripi men who care askeenlyasdothe \>~y COLLEGE STUDENT INSURANCE SERVICE students and faculty Grove, Spring Quarter Special volunteers 13169 Brookhurst Street. Garden who operate the center - are California 92 64 0 — March 29 June 16 11 W a e k s $255 needed for a varietyof projects Summer F-lights which are coordinated from the June 15 September 22 14 Weeks 9295 store-front center at 1431 West SPECIAL June 21—- August 21 9Weeks S295 FourthStreet. June 22— S e pte.-n b er 9 ,, W eeks $295 September July 5 3 p w ,. >. u ■ s?4R September LA-tondon (One-way) 8 weeks Volunteers are needed to staff STUDENT AUTO 28 »f|| a free health INSURANCE I or application write or call: clinic for children LTS TRAVE L: 4246 Overland Ave. Dept A each Monday through Thursday Culver City. 903 2 0 7 help An average of 43% savings on all auto in- (714) 525-6933 or 1213) 839-7591 from to 10 p.m., to in- Spanish surance is realized by participating qual- terpret for the volun- teer doctors, to tutor children ified students. EUROPE FLIGHTS and young adults in job skills, EXAMPLE Jet Charter Flights Spring 1970 such as typing, and subjectssuch (21 year old single male student Orange LONDON $145 as English, or just to serve as a County. State required minimum limits of oneway sympathetic receptionist at the liability.) center. Leave March 22 Contributions are also being Company "A" $189. yearly LONDON $249 sought of a variety of equipment CSIS Student Program $127. yearly round trip and supplies, such as medical = equipment and supplies for the Savings $62 Leave March 21/Return April 5 clinic, typewriters for skill games EVEN T hese flights are open to students training, and recreational GREATER SAVINGS FOR MARRIED facu Itv.s ta ff employees and immadiate family equipment, children's and teen- AND FEMALE STUDENTS. For information phone/write ager's clothing and shoes ingood Phone (415) 392-8513 condition, furniture and books. Placement GUARANTEED regardless of driving record. Mail today for free flight information "The center is inrealneed for a "woman's touch" to make it Payment Plans to fit YOUR budget. the warm, inviting refugeitisin- liability charge CHARTER FLIGHTS ,, NO Additional for SPORTS CARS. 995 MARKET ST. SANFRANCISCO Ca. 94103 tended to be," according to NO MEMBERSHIP FEE required. Mail me information on flight ~ Martha Burela, an adult advisor N ame ■ by California Dept. of Insurance. s "" * to the center. Volunteers Licensed the State of *» - h should Ci.ya^TT-ip Antp^onV contact Jim West, center direc- tor, at 835-1159. Page 3 Thursday, January 15, 1970 NEW UNIVERSITY senate snppprts CHANCEL1OR'S 1 sds regional '1±JIwIEjI«TTS to STA 1 Under the idea that Chancellor Senate strongly recommend seeking student opi- the Chancellor that he grant the versity Police Officer Frank Doran. Doran Aldrich was (Ed. note: Following are two statements nion on the possibility of hold- request." read by Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich at the is the officer who held two black members ing the WestCoastNational Coun- The SDS National Council for- SDS sponsored rally held Tuesday in the of the Irvine Community at gunpoint in a cil meeting of the Students for merly sought the UCLA campus Fifth Floor of the Administration Building. speeding charge-) a Democratic Society (SDS) at as a site for the meeting but turned About 50 students assembled to express their Irvine, the Associated Students' was down. Meet- passed Chancellor Aldrich (see state- grievances to the Chancellor over refusal RE: The SDS Request to Hold a Regional Senate a resolution Mon- his February night right of ment this page) has decided to to allow the SDS West Coast National Coun- ingat UCI onJanuary 30-31 and 1, 1970 day supporting the SDS to hold that meeting. deny the campus as a meeting cil at Irvine and also his refusal to fire Uni- The University of California ia a publicinsti- A resolution proposed bySena- place. Nicolson, Larry Lott, senator for fine RE: Request of SDS tution which depends upon the support and under- tor Norm senator-at- standing of the people of the community for its large, was passed by the senate arts and a supporter of the se- ontheChan- respond to you existence. How it conducts its affairs and fulfills 15-3. The resolution stated: natebill,commented You have asked me to con- duly recognized decision, "I think Iun- cerning which Ihave recently its purposes influencespublic attitudes andaffects "Whereas the cellor's two actions taken. its operation campus organization, SDS Chancellor's rea- The involves request to fire the allocation of resources for and has derstand the first a OfficerDoran requested UCI campus soning,knowing that the Univer- and the second to permit SDS to hold a regional development. that the In recognitionof this relationshipbetween in- be the location of the West Coast sity is the obvious scapegoat in meeting on the campus January 30 to February1. knowing stitution and public support, decisions concerning National Counciland whereasthis Sacramento and that In response to the request that Officer Doran tight. is forced in- for the conduct of campus affairs, both curricular body believes that such a re- money is He be fired the manner in which he handled the playing same game as speeding early and extracurricular, are not made without re- quest is reasonable and should to the arrest of the occupants of a car expressions. grounds, Regents because he is an in the morning of November 14, Iimmediately ference to public attitudes and not bedeniedonpolitical the provide de- At the present time, grave questions have be it resolved that the ASUCI administrator." contacted Vice Chancellor Cox to me goals tails about the incidentand suggested that,pend- been raised across the country about the ing the outcomeof discussions between adminis- and purposes of the Students for a Democratic of Humanities. Adams, methods exployedforachiev- Dean tration, students, and campus police, Officer Society and aboutthe was Chairman of the English be assigned to ing its goals. Many of these questions are now it Doran office duties. this organiza- Department at Irvine since Personal discussions with Officer Doran's su- being raised by members within ago until amongthem. opened five years periors indicated to me that Officer Doran had tion and are the cause for division end of last year. He re- consequence, public understandingand sup- the conducted himself on the morning of November As a that position soon af- port for the SDS is limited, fearful, and anta- signed 14 in accordance withhis instructions and train- of SDS ter the controversial Kent, ing police Further, in discussion gonistic. Until the goals and operations as a officer. supported, its Brannan, Shapiro movement, with Officer Doran and his superiors,Icould not are more widely understood and presence on campuses will be a source of con- in which he, along with the conclude that the manner in which Officer Doran Henry Meyer, on November 14 was the result tinuing public criticism and a reason for re- Chancellor, Cord made the arrest of the History, who of fundamentalpersonalantipathytoblackpeople. duced public crnfidence in the function past Chairman of my University. also has since resigned, and It is belief that he acted in accordance with staff, students in which he found himself and At a time when faculty, and Sam McCulloch, past Dean of the circumstances to improve pub- not because of the color of the occupants of the are making a thoughtful effort Humanities, were the main tar- lic understanding of the University and support car. meetingof gets of student criticism. Bran- Representatives of the BSU with whom Ihave for it,a decision to accommodate a were profes- representatives from throughout nan and Shapiro met to discuss this matter have not accepted SDS chapter English Department, United States is not likely to in- sorsin the my findings «and continue to demand that Officer the western in History. crease public confidence in the University. Kent Doran be fired. California, Irvine, Adams' position will not be At my last meeting with representatives of Since the University of to lack until approved by the the BSU, Iindicated in response to their rejec- can ill afford to contribute further the Hazard Adams is now locat- official particular, and of the at their meeting to- tion of my decision that Iam' prepared to pro- of public confidence in UCI, in ed on the Fifth Floor Regents hearing charges against in the University, in general, Ihave denied Humanities/Social Science morrow. According to the Vice vide for a formal of the meeting Officer Doran in accordance with established the request of SDS to hold the regional Building. The NEW UNIVER- Chancellor of Academic Af- personnelpolicies. on this campus January 30-February 1. learned late Tuesday of fairs office, however, trouble Daniel G. Aldrich,Jr. SITY Daniel G. Aldrich,Jr. his appointment as the new is not anticipated.

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* I^^^^^^B *! HB h M IIf 1IR m. J a a January 16, 1970 Page4 NEW UNIVERSITY ace survey results cafeteria boycott at UCLA man from the "grievance committee" to stop by leslie lincoln chairingit.Mexican and Chicano workers,a ma- expect to have more jority in cafeteria, took leadership, fight- (Ed. year the students the note: Earlier this polarized political preferences: ing the administration's attempts to split the the NEW UNIVERSITY carried liberal-left, per- A boycott at UCLA last age lines. The concerning the pos- 39 percent 29 successful cafeteria workers along race, sex, and an article middle-of-the-road, and 32 Thursday the first large-scale to students from nature of the cent demonstrated administration wanted exclude sibly incidious percent conservative. student support for food service workers' de- the meeting, but the workers voted to admit American Council on Education — and there's promise more up turning the survey ques- These annual surveys are part mands a of action them. The workers ended session (ACE) freshmen program to organizingmeeting,electingacom- There spec- of a of research on the come. into their own tionnaire. has been college experience Workers and students called the boycott over of ten representativeswhich included two these questionnaires effects of the mittee ulation that It under the di- the immediate issue of the firing of four mem- membersof SDS. against those who com- on students. is are used of bers of Students for a Democratic Society and drew up a series of demands, plete and sign them, and that rection Dr. Alexander W. As- The committee tin, of Office a member of the AsianRadical Movement (ARM) including a $3.00 per hour minimum wage,a 10% they are useful to college ad- director the ACE of Research. The research staff from their jobs in the cafeteria. A.T. Brugger, per year cost of living increase, and a paid ministrators in weeding out ra- $25,000 year head of the cafeteria and - Decem- unsavory plans to conduct mail follow-up a other unemployment Christmas vacation dical and other ele- services, conceded that he had fired the five,not - SDS and ARMmem- college community. studies of these students after ber 29 and then fired the ments in the experience for unsatisfactory work, but for their participa- bers, warning and no chance these reasons that a they have had some with no advance It was for tion in a demonstration in his office on Novem- The added rehiring the five students con- in college.The ultimate purpose of appeal. workers' group of Irvine follow-up ber 19, 1969. Twenty-nine people face felony Registrar John Brownto of the will be to deter- to their list of demands. vinced mine how the charges growing out of that demonstration, which Lunch hour lines were noticeablyshort in the destroy the Irvine freshmen ACE students' achieve- ments, attitudes, and plans are was held to demand the rehiringof a black work- cafeteria last Thursday, while outside ARM, questionnaires. er and to protest the low pay and bad working coffee,rice,stew, Following affected by the types of colleges SDS, and some workers served are the nationwide says. conditions in the cafeteria. and apples. organizers hoped that the of this year's survey.) they attend, Astin Student results The study has come under cri- Right after the November sit-in, called by boycott would gain a lot of student support for ticism by the National Student ARM, there was more support for the student the cafeteria workers and hurt the profits of (CPS) - Large Association which has charged action from the workers than from the mass the cafeteria. SDS said it was "effective" in WASHINGTON the student body. Forty regular food service of nation's 1.64 that the answers by incoming of doingboth. majorities the workers wrote a letter to the student news- called another million freshmen who entered freshmen could be used against Now the administration has them. NSA also questions the paper, the DAILY BRUIN, that confirmed the workers' meeting for January 23 to "discuss colleges and universities last lousy in the ended, in- accuracy of the survey since conditions cafeteria and grievances" and try to cool things down. But fall favor increased federal for on our side! Victory volvement, including the initia- students may be afraid to an- "Good the students few expect it to succeed. ARM and SDS intend for the workers." to more support by the tion of crash programs, for a swer honestly some questions to work build student such as those concerning drug Afraid of the growing militancy, the adminis- January 23 meeting. number of America's most conjured up a previously non-functional pressing problems,ac- use and campus disruption. ACE tration SDS predicts its program of a worker-student domestic "grievance committee" and called a meeting spread. cording to the controversial maintains all answers are strict- alliance will Taus told the NEW U: ly confidential and would not be December 5 to try to cool things down. But "The boss, A.T. Brugger, doesn't want any fourth annual American Council people up for the meetingand (ACE) released even if they were sub- about 140 showed students at the meeting. He'll be in for a sur- on Education freshman took over, eventuallyforcing survey. poenaedinto court. the workers it the prise." This kind of urgency was ex- pressed by the students with respect to pollution control (90 percent), crime prevention (88 percent), elimination of poverty (78 percent), consumer protec- tion (72 percent), and compen- satory education for the disad- vantaged (70 percent). On most of these issues, fur- ther analysis showed even stronger majorities among wo- men students and Blackstudents. Among questions that wereask- ed the year before, there were marked increases in the per- centages of students agreeing ' - ' that "marijuana should be le- 'S^^^^^l r' '-^^i&^'^iiflM^H*- ■'■■■ 'dflwfe^&SStoBtf'' >■:■■■■■■■■ :!!:::::iv&s39H^^I: ' galized" (an increase from 19 Jx H^^Hs«s§8«9ii^$^

Like it or not, money is what makes things business to hire the best people we canfind to runit. happen in this world.Inbusiness. In government. a Bank of Americapersonnelrepresentative will In all the worldly affairs of man. be interviewingon your campus soon. If you It takes money to discover medicines, to rebuild want to make a career of making the world turn, ghettos, toeducate children,to feed, clothe, and make an appointment. house humanity. Money is an essential ingredient . . in solving man's day to day problems and in \/2\ /70 H^jT^ Also— In Color- promoting his century to centuryprogress. DAMI/ r\V AKjIUDI/^A ■*■ Kirk Douglas Inshort, moneymakes the world turn. We're the BAINIXOr /\|VItl\lV*#\ I world's largest bank and putting money to work is Eli Wallach ANEQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER, , "Lovely Way to Die" ourbusiness. We think it's an important enough MNMOr .-t..« n»t,on»l nun.«» >..»«" ..

by rick teplitz at the fact that tickets went on sale at outside agen- they to students at Ir- The sound comes through the speakers, at first cies before were available piano voice, vine. There were many reasons for this occurance. soft and low, only and a woman's filled did beauty pain. Then, come a sudden crash of The ASUCI Concert and Dance Committee not vote with and try get Nyro until 25 of last year. piano chords and the voice and piano become vi- to and Miss Nov. powerful, spouting love witha strong,un- On Dec. 2, a tenative contract was received and its' brant and agreedupon Nyro's gospel is the music of form was not untilDec. 9. Miss mistakable, beat. This page (other Laura Nyro. contracts have four riders on them Nyro be Irvine tomorrow eveningfor groups, such as Neil Young and Crazy Horse have Miss will at page). A gives specifica- an 8:30 p.m. concert in Crawford Hall. Until re- only one rider certain cently, well known, but onlyas a com- tions under which the contract is validand the light- she had been piano, equipment, etc., very spe- poser, not as a performer. TheFifthDimension have ing, sound were recorded four hits withLaura Nyromaterial: "Stone cific in this rider. Soul Picnic," "California Soul," "Sweet Blind- Since the contract was useless unless the condi- ness", "Wedding BellBlues" andthecurrent,"Blow- tions specified in the rider were conformed with, ing Away". BloodSweat and Tears' last hit was her ASUCI had to be certain that all the equipmentwould IDie", and "Eli's Comin'," by Three be available on the night of the concert and it wasn't "And When days began, Dog Night is threatening to be the biggest of them until Dec. 18, two after finals that the contract was signed and finalized. all. hassling, attempt All of these songs gave Miss Nyro a gooddeal As a result of all this and in an on composer royalties, but little recogni- to be fiar to all students who arrived during the week of cash before began, the tickets didnot tion performer. Her first two albumshit the the Winter Quarter as a go Friday market withless than shocking impact although much on sale until the ninth. However,UCI were not aced out by outsiders as the Hall of the above material was included. But then,Top students 40 mentioningher name because of her was split in half, with the seats from one side going D.J.'s started public at prices of profusion of songs, and when her thirdalbum, NEW on sale to the the $4.50, 3.50 and The seats on other were for YORK TENDABERRY, came out sales startedto im- 2.75. the side reserved prove. the students at prices of $2.50, 2.00 and 1.50. Although her best known (and probably most popu- The reason for selling tickets is that even with lar) style is that strong gospel beat,another charac- the prices the way they are, ASUCI will lose money teristic of her music, and one that is extremely on a full-house. But this difference is take care of effective, is her use of tempo and volume chan- by the part of the student fee that the Senate ear- ges. This is obvious in "And When IDie" and marks as the Concert and Dance Committee sub- also many cuts on her new album (i.e. "Tom Cat sidy. Therefore, the greaterprices paidby the com- Goodby" and "Time and Love"). munity willallowan extrashare of this subsidy to be Other songs on that album include: "Mercy on used for more free noon concerts thatarein the plan- Broadway", "" and the title song, ningstages. "New York Tendaberry." Reviewers from New York to Los Angeles say that Recorded music is only a part (albeit a large Laura Nyro is top entertainment. The prices for top one) of Miss Nyro's recent success. In a concert entertainment at the Forum, the Anaheim Conven- at Carnegie Hall in New York, on Nov. 29,1969, she in both BILLBOARD MAGAZINE and the NEW YORK tion Center and The Troubador are,. ..well YOU proved a tremendous hit, greeting a full house of TIMES. know what they are. So save yourself some cash this admirerers with stunning recitals of her music. This brings us to the concert tomorrow evening. Friday and come get entertained by one of the pop She was exciting enough to get impressive reviews Many UCI students have been angry and/or curious world'spremier entertainers. Page Thursday. January 16, 1970 NEW UNIVERSITY 7

jHHfife i fl -l^fl

by marjorie bertram cidentally, isdistinctly different sion became somewhat tiresome from "commonness") tends to by intermission. As Mitch, Ed- sink into a sortofimbecilicmun- ward Grover is excellent,always The reason whythePeter-Cook- danity that is disappointinginthe maintainingthe imageof theself- son-Charles Bowden production hero of a play.Rather than the conscious, dancing-bear-likeand of Tennessee Williams' "A proud, disdainful and perceptive yet agonizingly lonelymanwhois Streetcar Named Desire," now young man of the play— he comes waiting abjectly for his mother playingat Las off as merely angry a gross to die. Darlene Conley as the Palmas Thea- gave ter in Hollywood, made for a understatement of his character. Eunice, however, the most night The lack of refinement in the well-roundedly gratifying per- mediocre of entertainment perfect (or whateverone goes to thethe- character of Stanley contributed formance. She was the for) explain/ to the difficulty that was had in Williams blowsy SouthernBelle, 11 IHIII ater is difficult to onlypeople in that the material for a fine sustaining the sexual tensionbe- and one of the in the productionis there.Unfortunate- tween he and Blanche that exists play who seemed to have mas- ly this material is offered to throughout the play. Thus, in tered the Southern dialect soim- public viewing in a fairly un- the mutual seduction scene the portant in a rendition of thisWil- impres- sense of culmination is replaced liams play. hewn state. The main explicity upon by a sort of off-hand gesture, so The acting was not sionIcarried withme leav- merelydisappoint- ing was one ofgnaw- that when Stanley says "We've poor, it was the theater ing. ing dissatisfaction, somewhat had this date witheachother from Characters came off as feeling exper- the beginning"it isalmost asur- being much shallower than they akin to the one and next to iences a half and hour after a prise. deserve to be, this soup. filling Lanna Saunders protraysStella the fairly well-done plastic ele- dinner of It is while - costuming, in the process of consuming it capably,although the deficiency ments sets, etc.— but its effectiveness wanes with in her repertoryoffacial expres- were diminished in quality. time and reflection.

Physically, Beatrice Straightis the perfect Blanche DuBois, the middle-aging shadow of a South- ern Belle, still willowy and attractive in her shade-too- youthful attire. In her picture hat and gauzey dress she is the remnant of acrushable crea- ture crushed once too often. As the play progresses, however, she loses theimpact of her first, DOG butterfly appearance when it is - /THREE drowned in the torrent of un- SKI June Mountain niGHT| remittingly shrilldeliveryofvir- \/^i/>r AND SPECIAL I" /DV^D^TlCk tuallyall the dialogueassignedto EXCELLENT RUNS FOR GUEST STARS Vfl M\ MLr'Yr her. The neurasthenic nature of EVERY KIND OF SKIER: NOVICE, her personality could certainly have been better, or at least INTERMEDIATE & ADVANCED. more subtly, emphasized if YtoifF^kHE/m CENTER she had bee n allowed to lapse SUN.,JAM.18 7:30 PM occasionally normality. For June Mtn. Reservations intocalm Call or Write: Allseats reserved at $5.50, 4.50,3.50 Her neuroticism could have been Availableat all Computicketand TicketronOutlets. made sufficiently evident to the JUNE LAKE RESERVATION SERVICE Available at AnaheimConvention Center Box Office, audience without this painfully P.O. Box 123, June Lake, Calif., 93529 Mutual Agencies, AllWallich's Music Stores, and grating overplay. Another pro- or Phone (714) 648-7794 United Calif.Banks inOrange County.Mail OrdersAccepted. blem with— the interpretationof -j For informationcall (714) 635-5000 Blanche althoughit was by no For further information call 833-6077. means restricted—to her charac- terization alone was the in- consistency ofaccent, One ofthecharacteris- " tic imprints of Williams onaplay, is the feeling a decadent Southernness which issadlymis- sing here,probably in great part ASUCI PRESENTS IN CONCERT due to faulty and failingaccents that afflicted most of the cast. Michael Witney as Stanley is good but somehow lackingin the combined sensitivity and animal cunning that Williams instills in him in the play and that makes him as a character: "Animal joy in his beingis implicit inallhis with special guest star movements and attitudes. Since i^^V^fl earliest manhoodthecenterofhis life has been pleasure with women, the givingand takingofit, BROOKS not with weak indulgence,depen- DENNY dently, but with the power and pride of a richlyfeathered male bird among hens. Branchingout CRAWFORD HALL from this completeand satisfying JAN. 16 8:30 PM auxiliary center are all the chan- sale in the ASUCI Offices: nels of his life, such as his UCI student tickets on heartiness with men, his appre- $2.50.2.00,1.50. ciation of rough humor,his love 1^ of good drink and foodandgames, To allow all UCI students an opportunity to take advantage of car, hisradio, everythingthat his the reduced student prices, tickets will be sold only to UCI stud- is his, that bears his emblem of registration will limited gaudy Hesizes ents with Winter Quarter cards. Sales be the seed-bearer. may be pur- women up at aglance,withsesual to two tickets per student. Tickets for non-students j^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H classification, crude images chased at any TICKETRON outlet for $4.50, 3.50, 2.75. i flashing into his mind and de- termining the way he smiles at them." Stanley Kowalski is shrewd, a king of beasts while being at the same time human. On the other hand, Witney in his attempt toportraythegeneral earthiness of Stanley,(whichin- Pages NEW UNIVB1SITY January 16, 1970 volunteer army far away HZ process, COMMISSION In announcing the random selection that his group would openextensive hearings on President Nixon said, "I would say that looking the draft in mid-February. to the future ... we shall not be satisfied until Stennis gave the promise in exchange for a we finally can have the system which Iadvo- pledge from Senate draft critics, includingSen. REPORT cated during the campaign of a completely vol- Edward Kennedy, that they would approve a re- armedforces." permit unteer vision in the Selective Service Act to the page But Nixon has also said institution of a vol- lottery without debatingother aspects of themat- cont'd from 1 unteer army is not feasible until the Vietnam ter. The administration desiredquick approval War is ended, and, at the current rate of troop of the lottery so it could be put in effect for 1970. pus newspapers who should be- implications. Should the recom- withdrawal, that isn't likelyto happen very soon. So the lottery, approved 382-13 in the House, come independent in the more mendations made by the com- And though the president has made the volun- was passed by a voice vote in the Senate largely distant future. The publications mission bedeemed worthy bythe teer army one of his principal issues, negative because it seemed probably more far-reaching of other campuses should be fi- 'Regents, it is conceivable that reports fromaspecialpresidentialcommissionon reforms couldbe debated fully this year. nanced through the ASUC, but on they might instruct the president the —armed forces or the NationalSecurity Coun- Reforms to be contemplated include abolish- a yearly contract basis. This of the University of California cil both of which— are studying the concept of a ment of the student deferments, establishment of measure would lessen the pos- to implement them. If this oc- voluntary army could postpone further any alternative service in social work for those who sibility of the various bodies of curs it seems quite possible executive action on the plan. oppose military service of a particular war, the ASUC withholding funds for that in the future the admin- So the burden for any quick change rests with forbidding the assignment of a non-volunteer to politicalreasons. istrations of the various UC Congress. Sen. John Stennis, chairman of the Vietnam, and establishment of a volunteer army 3. Establishment of editorial campuses might be forced to in- Armed Services Committee, promised last fall except when Congress declares war. policies which would include a fluence the editorial policies of clear distinction between news the student newspapers. And,of columns and editorials, faithful course, the recommendations of coverage of both sides in con- the report are open to adminis- teaching for troversies, "competentcoverage trative interpretation. credit UC davis important editors of the cam- of administrative The by lynn odneal to offer a course on existen- Last fall, several UCLA stu- statements," confining "opi- pus newspapers also seemed to UCLA students will receive full tailism in the spring. dents and professors filed a tax- nion" to the editorial page or be more concerned with the im- for philoso- payers' suit against Regents opinioncolumns. plications of the report rather credit this quarter Her case now waits for the the phy instructor Angela Davis's when they fired Angela Davis 4. Establishment of means of than with the report itself. California SupremeCourt tosup- circulating news Steve Landau, Editor of the courses. A Los Angeles Su- port either the originalSuperior and suspended course credit statements and handed down dismissal by the administration. (The UC1 UC San Diego TRITON TIMES, perior Court order, Court decision or the Appellate while was pending.Su- December fourth, instructs the perior Court Judge Patch called REVIEW is the latest example remarked, "It'simportant to let Court decision. The Court of suggestion.) campus know that while the Regents to take no action for Appeals the Regent's more unconstitu- of this the concluded that the Su- University sponsorship report is fairly innocuous we forty days in the black assistant perior tional and ruled that the instruc- 5. of a Court had erred in not yearly wouldpro- will not stand for any crack- professors case. granting a changeof venue. tor could not be fired because of seminar which Although time runs out on Jan- her politicalaffiliation. vide professionaljournalisticad- down on our editorial content." uary 13, the UCLA Philosophy If the Supreme Court agrees, The judge also invalidated the vice to student editors. While Martin Rips, Managing Department Chairman predicts the entire issue must be re- 1949 Regentalresolutions against Editor of the UCLA BRUIN stat- 6. Establishment of faculty ed, "Well, too that Miss Davis, fired last fall hashed in Alameda County Su- hiringCommunists and reminded newspapers I'm not worried counsel for student about — what they do? for belonging to the Communist perior Court. The L.A.County the board of their "No Political go it can to which students could to They that we sell Party, will maintain full status Court decision that delcared the Test" clause in the UC Standing seek advice inmatters concern- recommend for the quarter. She is teaching Regent's actnn unconstitutional Order. This clause states that ing the publication. ad- our INTRO section but we're Regents These not going to do that, we'd just two classes this winter, "Kant would be revoked. The "No political test shall ever be visors should be available to, and Idealism" and "Dialectical could then fire Miss Davis and appliedintheappointmentorpro- have to fill our paper up with but not forced upon, the news- something Materialism." Miss Davisplans course credits couldbe removed. motion" of faculty. paper else." staffs. Amanda Spake, Editor of the - 7. Realization that "there is NEW UNIVERSITY, one of the little point in dwellingnervous- student publications which Re- FETTI Grl^-AJPH ly over how to control the use gent Canaday probablyhad fore- ■ . ASUCLA of foul language," and that the most in mind when heproposed JET CHARTERS official university occasional use of this type of the study, had this to say of Several flights from Wanted: 2 students- to JET CHARTER FLIGHTS 1970 language is a "relatively minor the report: L.A. & Oakland to take over reserv sts. la.-iondon issue." The commission found "The thing Iprobably object London, Amsterdam, on charter fit. to Eur- ionoon-la. only "sporadic" use of words to most about the report is the * " ~ considered unacceptable, but patronizing attitude taken on the ,::i"'.L „,..„. "" confesses that "members were part of the commission. When *■ more concerned with instances I say patronizing, Imean an Coordinator: Prof Frank Paol sSruSSFfr,n r< ou nnc itco 2 ♥/" 6 $263 7/23 of biased reporting and writ- attitude, that prevailed in our Roycrod , Long "ip. L.ail 77b-d7b«. 247 Avo Beach ing." with the commis- pobot Tel 438-2179 | * discussions 6 7 VW Sedan.perfect *^"/» '/" 8/5 * $aM by using "patience and under- ing our endeavors as poor at- week for $15.00 per Lost-Siamese cat in 8 8/3 »/i 4 $263 standing." "...It seems clear tempts to publish the LOUIS- $243 evening. Verano Place. Very dark » »/u 10/3 3 that student fees now apportion- VILLE COURIER JOURNAL and $14° ed to campus Call 714^530-6220. female. If you've seen I0