, ,Volume I, Number 2 17 February, 1965

SAN DIEGO: OFFICE OF THE CHANr~-I-Oi , CALIFORNIA

February 11, 1965

MARK HINDERAKER

SUBJECT: Comments for SANDSCRIPT

As a fellow freshman at UCSD: I have taken particular interest in the class of 1968. We began our life on this campus together at a barbecue last fall. On that occasion the mood approached euphoria. Since then members of the class have, perhaps, experienced frustrations and disappointments; in some respects realities may not have measured up to expectations. It is inevitable that this should be the case; it would be true of the transition from high school to any university, and the creation of a new university involves some growing pains for all con- cerned. But my impression is that you continue to share with the administration and faculty the sense that you are involved in the beginnings of a great university, and we value your advice on how to improve the quality of the environment, both intellectually and socially. I hope, individually or through your representatives, that you will give us your views. We cannot provide junior boys for freshman girls, at least not yet, but will do the best we can to make this both an exciting and an enjoyable campus.

albraith i’C..... ,,)gy at the University of Toronto,and Claudlb Guil- RecruitingofTop-Rate Professors len,a professorof compara- Ti!E PROBLEm< OF PARTICIPA2iON tivelltsrmture, described by CHANCELLOR’S STUDENT ADVI$O2Y COFTIT~E A F~nulne problem exists at U.C.S.D. AwardedTop Billing at SanDiego The Chancellor’s Student Advisory Prof.Pearce as "Princeton’s It is tre problem of brlncin~ the BY WILLIAM TROMBLEY,i[Sf,~n~h’~,~NI~[. SUN.,JAN.31oIO~k~ bestyoung full professor." fre hman students to t~e full aware- Committee is a vehicle of co mmunlcatlon Ttmes a4vclltkm writer " ...... "Wearen’t interested in ness that they will determine how much between Chancellor Galbralth and the SAN DIEGO -- The ’ 5- Perhaps most impor- drivesout good.Our idea’ startinga lot of departments I withone good man at thetop ~hey get out of their university Student body. There are five underrrad- Universityof Californiaat~ I the people of.Celia fromthe first has been that uate members; Janet Albln, Larry Baker, ’ ,lornia,as representedby- ifyou pick the right 15 phy- anda lotof mediocrepeople experience. Education is many things San Diego,newest of the state governmentor the siciata,you can have the best beneathhim," said Keith for man:; different people. ~ome people Fredrlca Felcyn, Mark Hinderaker and university’sseven branches, statewideadministration of universityphysics depart- Brueckner,who is deanof take more advantage of the social Steve Lewis. The graduate student body seemslike an unlikelyplace theuniversity, grant UCSD mentin thecountry, even if graduatestudies. "We want to Jump from opportunities at U.C.S.D. t},an of the is represented by Elizabeth Venrlck and forstrqggle ofany sort. ,timeand money to trythe ypudon’t have, another.de- leducatanal exI~erimen’t.~? l:~fftrnenton campus." 1 nothingat allto an excellent educational opportunitles--others be- Bob "alkan. Dean Forbes meets with the The campust)uildings doctoralprogram in one restatop Torrev Pines Mesa, Thesearch car answers to Goes to Harvard- come so Involved with themes and math Adglsory Committee andthe Chancellor. the~equesUons has involved To do thatwe needat overlookingthe Pacific, on So recruitingbegan, with [estV’aear"fivesuperior appoint- problems that they never stop dealing The C.S.A.O. serves to acquaint whatmust be oneof themost t CSDin a continuingseries of batUes,and it is fartoo Brueckner,Arnold and bio- mentsin eachdepartment." with thiDFs instead of peoole. Sor~e Chancellor Galbralth with the student !beautifulcampus sites in the logistDavid Banner as chief’ Thelevels of excellence workl. earlyto pronounceany ver- ~birddogs.Their success is students live for brldve or surfing, point of view on issues involving dict.The first freshman class whichBrue/’kner seeks have Studentsand professors, shownby thepresence on to- now beenattained, he be- others for art and music. This is not student activities and affairs. Cbancellc~ of181 students has just e0m- da3~’sUCSD faculty of 12 glancingout the windows of etedits first semester on li~ves~in the basic sciences bad, but it does show limited tastes. Galbralth is especially interested in classroomsor offices or la- membersof the National --physics,chemistry, biolo- One ofthe most Improtant contributions improving the social and recreational boratories,seethe ocean on ~.,~mpus. Academyof .Sciencesand gy,mathematics and earth e Butit is nottoo early to twoNobel laureates--Ure.y that a university can pa~s on to its activities at U.C.S.D. But he is waltln~ [oneside, the roiling foothills ~escribesome of thebattles sciences;in twohumanities ¯ of theLaguna Mountains on and Dr. Maria Goeppert fmlds--hterature¯ . andphtlo- ¯ I students is a taste for many things. for STUDENT INITIATIVE to acquaint the gndto tryto determinewhe- Mayer,the physicist¯ Balance must be ar leved if a person admln---l~-~ion w-’n w-~ type of activities theother. fleerthe UCSD ideals are ad-~ sophy,and one field of ap- Only an occasional Fora varietyof reasons, Ipliedscience -- aerospace is to be fully able to appreciate llfe. that the students want. For example, i ~;ancingorare in retreat,i mostof themhaving to do swooshingjet from the near-! "’ UCSDhas built from the] randmechanical engineering The "Jack of all trades and master of if a group of students wamt to form a Iby MiramarNaval Air Sta- withuniversity politics, Dr. sciences. tionreminds them of theout- /~p down,using the Scripps Rbvellenever became chan- one" should be the goal of education. football class in the P.E. program, or ltmtitutionof ,] cellorat UCSD.He conti-: By 1967 Bruecknerex- I%ideworld. La Jolla,5 mi. t~neof the world’s great oeea- pectsUCSD to be ableto of- We should have literate mathematicians a bowling lea~e or class, all they need ~away,is scarcelyknown forJ / nuedto serveas directorob an~ s,’ientifically aware humanists if do is organize to make their wishes ri~graphicresearch centers,’, Scrippsand put in a hitchas fera Ph.D.in history,fine ;a longhistory of combat.1 Ka.aroof for the structure of arts,economics, lX~’chology, we ~.,ant a ,.,ell integrated society. known. Possibilities include record Yetstruggles are indeed statewidedean of research I a:university. beforeleaving this year to politicalscience, sociology, This applies to our activities at U.G.S.D dances in the T.U.B. on weekend nights, takingplace In thelovely :? Scrippshas been part of appliedelectro-physics, an- newbuildings atop the mesa, becomedirector of theCen- thropology,linguistics and It is crucial that we become continually music and art work using unlve~sity I t~teuniversity since 1912..In terfor Population Studies at Iand theiroutcome may be e 1950sDr. Roger Revelle, iseveralother areas of ap- exposed to many new experiences, that facilities (this is already a reality), importantnot only to U~CSD Harvard. pliedscience. ~crippsdirector, began tto :ButHerbert York, UCSD’s we may be able to derlvc the most val~e student rates for golf and bowling, andto theentire University addchemists, physicists andl Acquisitionof thebest! of California,but to ma~s firstofficial chancellor, and from each experience. Therefore it is and many other opportunities. All the 15’iologiststohis collection of[ JohnS. Galbraith,who took peoplehas been difficult and highereducation across the ~p-flightoceanographers.- I becomesmore ~o eachyear. im ortc.nt that U.C.S.D. freshmen students need to do is organize the land. overthe job last December, broaden tl,eir interests, make new as~ activities. The effectiveness of tie UreyFrom Chicago [ havemaintained this high IUCSD already has many WantSense of Identity qualityin facultyappoint- rofessorsat the "Prof. sociation, and take advantage of the Honor Spirit and llvlng-group problems ~-HaroldUrey, who won a[ ~ice"pay level of $19000 a Brieflystated, these are NobelPrize for his discovery ments,both in the~iences . . ’ . I full r:nce of social, c~ltural, and are also points of concern to Chancellor someof theimportant issues 6fI heavy hydrogen,came andia thesocial sciences year,htghest the unlvermty intellectual activities w ich the uni- Galbralth. The Chancellor is ~ery beingthreshed out: f~0mthe University ofChics-’ andhumanities. canoffer. versity provides. The more success eager to receive student suggestlons 1--Cana universitysuc- ~o; chemistJames Arnold Thus, SeymourHarris, tThe university’scampus cessfullyset up shopby hir- well-knownHarvard econ- at Riverside,on theother, we acl:i~ve in sampling many things, about the U.C.S.D. proyram. Construct- fromPrinceton; physicist ingonly first-rate men, most KeithBrueckner from the ,omistwho served as an advi- hand,recently made its very the better we will do at each indlvid- ive student criticism coupled with of themat thelevel of full ser to PresidentJohn F. firstProf. Five appointment. l~tiversityof Pennsylvania. Naturally,Riverside resents ual Job we ~ndertake. student initiative and in~ere~t will professor,before hiring large :’.At the time, Revelle Kennedy,has been named numbersof associateand chairmanof the UCSDeco- theappointment ofstill more help "iron out" some of therou~h p.lannedan instituteof high-salariedpeople at San assistantprofessors and be- ~cienceand technology, nomicsdepartment. Mark llinderaker-Edltor spots in this program. foreadmitting any signifi- s~methingon theorder of Roy Harvey Pearce, a Diego. Any C.S.A.C. member may be approach- cantnumber of students? t~aeInstitute for Advanced widely-publishedcritic and Thestate’s budget balan- 2--Cana hugeuniversity commentatoron Americam cers,struggling to keepup ed to carry student ideas to tbe next ~tudyat Princeton. withcosts of educatingCali- The Experiment meeting, February 26. TAKE ADVANTAGE (UCSD will have 27,500 But by 1958it was ap- fictionand poetry., heads the studentsby I,r~5,dhe num- 1~.rent to regentsof the literaturedepartment. fornia’ssoaring population, OF ThIS OPPORTUNITY! ber Berkeleyhas now and Leonard Newmark, re- are inclinedto view the Because of the unique nature of the aca- I ~niversityof California that largenumber of high-sala- UCLAwill reach in a yearor a: generalcampus would be gardedas one of thebest demic experiment at UCSD, this first col- To the students- I riedprofessors at UCSDas two),by dividinginto I~nal- rleededin the San Diego younglinguists in the United umn will deal with one specific facet of ler-coUegeunits, provide[ area.After much debate, it! States,ischaltlman ofthe lin- profligatewaste. guisticsdepa#tment at the Thecombination of Jealou-, our educational program. Stn~ent commenteAs part of the intended newspaper policy studentswith the sense of was decidedto turn Re- sy withinthe university and on this editorial are solicited (remarks to make the Sandscript Sruly a student identitya n d community velle’s"institute" intoa full- ageof 35. scaleuniversity. Notedmathematician Sto- budgetpressure from out- by the faculty are welcome although they publication, representative of student theyseem to lackat moIzt side the universityform largeI,~S. schools today?: ButRevelle continued to len Warschawskiis chair- may not be appreciated). Submit all sucnideas, the staff editors have decided to recruitfaculty as he w~uld manof themathematics de- powerfularguments for UC 3---Caninstruction in-the havefor a selectresearch in- partment. PresidentClark Kerr and hi~ comments to su~7 member of the editorial devote this column to the expression of sciencesand the humanities aidesto orderUCSD to cease s~aff or take them to room 2116 in Bldg. your ideas. We invite all stuadents to stitute-nonebut the very Need5 Top Men be joinedtogether meaning- bestwould do. its buildingfrom the top express their criticisms, comments, and Amongfirst-rate additions downand to lookaround for Eds. fully? "Iwill not hire men just to suggestions concerning the problems that 4---Cangood researchers forthe coming year are Her- moreordinary building m~- fillbillets," Revelle said once bert Marcuse,Brandeis we the students face here at UCgD. andscholars be pe:suadedto inan interview."I have seen terials,like $7,000-$8,000 as- 2 University philOsopher;sistantnrMesmrs. teachundergraduates and Gresham’slaw of faculty 3 .canthey do it well? worktoo often--bad faculty GeorgeMandler, professor of, (More, over) Morethan that,there Is out whathe’s thinking, for ligentlyand responsibly as a citizenof theworld. Not yet what ChancellorGalbraith the expre~ionof affection STUDENTS SEE ENSENADA Hot Ar|ument !called"the excitementof and of concernfor his prob- a specialist,he willnone- UCSD PRES’ Corner, continued from page 1. Within PresidentKerr’s lhelpingto shapea umversi- lems.This is disappearing thelessbe ready to become It is through communication between students and staffthe argumentabout the] ty" from the large university one,and alsoto understand Enscnada will never be the same. Saturday administration that most problems are ironed out virtues of the UCSD ap-] "I’d rather not mention campus like Berkeleyand and appreciatethe special- preachhas waxedhot, but a[ lthe weatheror the whales! Westwood,and I think we, tiesof othersN afternoon, February 6, over 30 freshmen, inc- and action can be taken. The problem of commu- ~when"I I’m talkingto a man, allsuffer." EdwardGoldberg. a chem- ItopSan Diego off i, ialreport-[ istry professor who was luding the Sociedad Hispdnica de UCSD and mem- nication has existed since the beginning of the ed: I’saidProf. Newmark, linguis- Revelle’swords, spoken a school year. The establishment of this first news- "When Kerr has taken Itic~department chairman. I yearago. took on addedrele-] named provost of Revelle bers of Kappa Sigma Delta, and 12:5 graduate timeto sit downand study ’, ’Thething that will make a vancewhen the Free Speech[ Colege last week, put it this students and faculty invaded the Mexican pueblo, paper is a major move forward. As wellas keeping o~r proposals,he has always !gnodman turndown a better way: "In those first two i Movementemerged last fall years everystudent in the about 40 miles south of Tijuana. The occasion all students informed of what’s going on, this news- !supportedthe basic UCSD offerto comehere is theex-[ at Berkeley. [ position." ’citementof ourprogram. If collegeshoifld gain a viewof was a soccer game to be held at 2:00 that after- paper will allow all students the opportunity of Nevertheless.San Diego IRevelleCollege, the first of the spectrumof knowledge, Iwe lose that excitement, the12, includes380 graduate noon between our graduate students and the Span- "sounding off" their ideas for improving the enviror~ facesincreasing difficulty in thenall the sunshinein the] beforedeciding on his major making t0p-levelappoint- students, most of them field of interest.And he ish students of Escuela Superior de Ciencias ment and curriculum of the university. It is hoped word won’t help." 1 science,and 181 freshmen, shouldlearn that every field ments becauseof two defi- Partof the excitementof Marinas, Universidad Autonoma de Baja Calif. that many students will contribute by analyzin~ ciencies:the lack of a good the firstundergraduates at nvadcsevery other field." which Prof. Newmark UL~D. criticizing, and recommending solutions to all libraryand the declining speaksis theidea of dividing StandardsAltered I Upon arriving, however, everyone was informed competitiveposition of UC Nextfall l~evelle College issues concerningUCSD. This isoneway all needs IUCSDinto 12 separatecolic- enrollmentwill jump to 1,- The RevelleCollege curri] that the soccer game had been cancelled because salaries. ges,each with its own pro- "The first questionany I 300 to 1.400:600freshmen, ’.ulumwith its heavydoses of the rain. So students checked into their rooms can be recognized and evaluated. gram.q 150-175sophomores (depend- !of math and sciencein the good hi~t0rianasks you is So farthere is onecollege, firsttwo years, naturally ap- at the Hotel Plaza and other hotels (some packed aboutthe quality of yourli- newly named Revelle Col- ing upofl how many survive the freshmancurriculum}, pealsto science-mindedhigh in: 8 boys slept in Doug Tower’s room with one In addition to the newspaper, students may express brary."reported Chancellor lege.In 1967the second col- schoolgraduates. Galbraith,a historianhim- legewill open, in theearly 150junior college transfers double bed). Then many set out to see the st:~res; themselves in a number of ways. Beginning Wed- and 400 to 500 graduate Mostof thisyear’s fresh- self 1970scolleges three and four men are so inclined butl liquor stores were especially crowded at first. nesday, Feb. 10, class assemblies will be held "If thatwasn’t the first twillstart, unt I by1995 all 12 students. questionhe asked,I would The undergraduatecurri- ChancellorGalbraith, Pro- A few hours later, freshman parties were going regularly for the purpose of informing all fresh- collegeswill be operating, culumis a novelattempt to vost Goldberg and other] wonderabout the qualityof fillingan areaof 1.000acres on in rooms 6, 2.1 and 32...... men about the policies of the university and soliciting his work. We don’t have a providea solidgrounding in UCSDofficials point out en- first- ratelibrary and it’s ~with27.500 students and a math,science and the huma-I ergetlcaly that Revelle Col- student sentiment and opinion on these issues. The facultyand staff of 10.000to nitiesfor all students,whe- legeis notjus*. for scientlsts effectiveness of this type of student-administration no goodmy claimingwe do. 1~.o0o. ] It was finally decided to hold the soccer game INordoes it do any goodto Eachcollege will have be- Itherthey intend to be me- and mathematlcians. despite the muddy field and the two teams tied, communication was felt very strongly by those who ,tell such peoplethat the I rinebiologists novelists or For one thing,admi~lons tween 2,000 and 2,500’ insurancesalesmen.. ’ I 2-2:. At 6:00, after the game, the Sociedad attended the Cal Club Convention in Riverside. ,UCLA libraryis only a 2~ students-- 60% undergra- standards have been ~hourride by bus." duates and 40% graduate IEvery freshmanhas Just changed,lowering the ’math HispdnicaWs madrina, Barbara Beasley and the These assemblies will not be mandatory, yet it Pay Scale Problem completed a semester of requirements , i students.An undergraduate Imath~ ’{calculusl,language madrina of Ensenada were presented, exchanged is hoped that all students will support them. As a result,UCSD has yet studentwill take about two- The math programhad to and, a course in combined be changed because not bouquets of flowers, good will, and drank cham- Ito makeits first appointment thirdsof hisinstruction in literature,philosophy and in history. ] hisown college. enoughliberal arts students pagn at a reception at the Ensenada University. In the near future several suggestion boxes will A moreserious problem is historycalled humanities wereapplying to UCSD, I Students,will live in small one.Next semester each will F, venso, the basic curricu- Here the Mexican and UCSD students had a chance be placed throughout the campus area for un- the UC pay scale.In recom-I dormswith 60 to 65 in a unit mending-* to the regentsre add a course in physical lum remainsthe same. to talk with each other. censored comments and ideas from students. clusteredaround a central science. "We have modified our ,centlythat they ask the ~quadrangle.The provostof These suggestions will be used or at least con- governorand the Legisla- As sophomoresthey will math requirement,but we ~eachcollege will live within have not weakenedour pro- sidered in improving campus life. ture for a substantialpay thatcbllege. continuewith humanities, Dinner was held at the Pasadena cafe at 8:00. ,boostfor UC faculty,Pres- One advantageof thiscol- studyingthe Middle Ages, gram,"Chancellor Galbraith Most of the freshmen had been served their lobster ,identKerr pointed out that lege.within- the ° university the Renaissance and the insisted. the universityhas slipped modem world. They will Despitethe modifications, or steak by 11:00. Everyone knows that Mexicans Another effective, yet less direct, method of !Idea,It ishope, d, will be flexi-~ explanationsand disclaim- fromfourth to 23rdplace in Ibility.Roger Revelle bnce completethe course in physi- i like to spend a lot of time at dinner, but this was communication is through the Chancellor’s Stu- thelast five years in faculty cal science,which began’ ers,it is likelythat Revelle! put it thisway: "We wantto with classicalphysics, by Collegewill continue to ap- too much for us. We americanos were getting dent Advisory Committee. This group consists of ipay ratingsissued by the keep the colleges small takingquantum physics and peallargely to science-or- five freshmen representatives, two graduate American Association o! enough so the facultycan hungry. To pass the time from 8:00-11:00 there UniversityProfessors. chemistry. iented students.To take changeits mind and then act someof the pressureoff Re- were drinks, drinks, and more drinks. Also students, Dr. Forbes, and Chancellor Galbraith. ChancellorGalbraith has on its ideas. At Berkeley SocialSciences, Too maneuveredcleverly within relic,therefore, Chancellor dancing. UCSD students put on quite a show with Its purpose is to advise the Chancellor on all changesare made only un- And theywill study a ge- Galbraithhas speeded up existingregulations to offer der greatpressure and then neralsocial science course, the latest dances. matters of importance regarding the university, the most money possibleto plansto openthe SecondCol- oftenthe wrongchanges are whichwill include econom-; lege. its policy, and environment. Meetings are held excellentmen but sometimes made." ics,political science, soclolo-I Insteadofwaiting to open Later on that night (and well into Sunday morning) twice a month at whichtime members of the com- his effortssimp!y have not In the sameinterview Re- gyflndpsychology. in permanentbuildings in beenenouRh. vellesaid, "We hope the col- ’It is doubtfulthat any UCSD students could be found in night clubs; mittee express their views and make recommen- "We havelost several high 1969, Second Collegewill legeswill enable us to avoid group of sophomoresin the nowopen in thefall of 1967,’ dancing, etc. and generally enjoying themselves. dations to the Chancellor. It has been suggested qualitypeople becausewe ¯ the senseof impersonality countrywill be betterpre-. utilizng Camp Matthews, couldn’toffer them enough you get at Berkeleyand at paredfor upper-divisioncol- that members of the freshman class take certain money,"the chancellor said. an abandonedMarine base UCLA, There they ~ke the lege work than the UCSD~ acro~the highwayfrom the Sunday, everyone was free to buy firecrackers, matters of business to one of the freshman com- Despite.these problems, attitudethat if the student studentswho completethisi UCSDhas continuedto gath- main campus, until per- mittee members and he can represent his opinion can’tcut it, that’s his tough program.The RevelleCol- manentbuildings are readyt get his car reupholstered, sleep or just look a- er togethera superbfaculty, luck.I don’tobject to that-- secondto nonein qualityin legeannouncen%nt rises to a DifferentCarriculum round. By 5:00 most everybody was back home, at the meeting. Freshman representatives are: that’sthe way life is--but I point of eloquencerarely Janet Albin, Larry Baker, Freddie Felcyn, Mark theUC system.There are, af- do objectto theinability to foundin collegecatalogues Provostof SecondCollege’ looking back on a truly interesting weekend. terall, other reasons to teach communicatewith a student in describingsuch a sopho- is John L. Stewart, who IMPORTANT MEETING Hinderaker, and Steve Lewis. Consult them and in La Jolla besidesmoney. I or evena colleaguethat you more: came to UCSD six months let them represent your views. Thereis thesun and thesea, i findat Berkeley. ago fromDartmouth College, There will be a short but very important meet- the whalesto watchas they " ... He will have be- CloserContacts comeincreasingly a member wherehe was directorof the ing of the Sociedad Hispdnica on Thursday, Feb.- movesouth through the late HopkinsCenter for theArts. fall and early winter and "Thereis no substitutefor of a community of young 11 in room B 2126. Elections will be held and Who knows? With a bit of interest and spirit we scholarsand wilt be allthe Mexico to visit on summer personalcontact, for meeting (Continued p. 9) 4 a new meeting time be decided upon. Everyone students might even get to "like" UCSD next vacation. a personface to faceto find more ready to live intel- interested please attend. Time: 1:00. semester. Larry Baker, AS President 5 EDWARD D. GOLDBERG THE 1965 CAL-CLUB CONVENTION The skit our Cal-Club did on the evening of ON FLUNKING A NICE BOY b’~, the twenty-ninth was unforgetable. With Fred OUT OF SCHOOL ~ The eleven charter members of the new UCSD Longworth narrating, and the rest of the club I wishI couldteach you how ugly Named Provost of Revelle (First) College chapter of tile California Club joined with the playing Camp Matthews residents (and/or their decencyand humilitycan be when Cal-Clubs from six other UC campuses in a con- mistresses), the UCSD Cal-Clubbers made a "col- theyare not Dr. Edward D. Goldberg was born in Sacramento, the electionof a containedmind vention at {TC Riverside January 28 - 30. lective ass" out of themselves. Freddie Felcyn, in 1921o He received his B. S. from the Univer- The new UCSD chapter, eventually to expand butonly in a bedroom scene asked Larry Baker -- ’~hat thedefenses of an incompetent. sity of California, Berkeley, in 1942, his Ph.D. to twenty-five members, presently consists of do I do now?" Larry’s reply, "If you don’t know Were you taught in Chemistry from the University of Chicago in Janet Albin, Larry Baker, Terry Barker, Kathy by now, you’d better give up," brought down the meeknessas a weapon?Or did you Bower, Freddie Felcyn, John Freeman, AI Green, house (viler). The whole mess was so ridicu- discover, 1949. He joined the Scripps staff in that year as Rodney Hurst, Fred Longworth, Marilyn Martin, lous, however, that it was by far the funniest by chancemaybe, that it workedon l’d Gol,lbcrg,the an Assistant Professor of Chemistry. and Marsha Penner. I)ean Forbes (viler) is of all six skits. mother IIl,lnl%gt.tltlincl~,’ ftltlny]..~cD- visor. and wasgenerally a goodthing- ,_hemist at page wp, tun The final evening, Fred Longworth gave a at leastwhen all else failed-to got +, His scientific interests include the geochemistry Cal-Club, in existence since 1914, attempts st,u,tlyIll’~ tilt ntw p,ltt} speech thanking Clark Kerr for the S. D. charter. you over ,~amcs ~hkh no ,+nc plass of marine waters and sediments andradiochemistry. to improve student-faculty and student-adminis- "The speech went over beautifully," Fred explain- the worstof whatwas coming,ll (Latestt’x,tlnplc: +,,trl)c the He has publishedanm’nberof papers in these fields. tration relations end to promote a spirit of thatwhy you bring ]M.[~t+’ktIll.l r r i d ,~c Ill,ticS ed, "but not on account of its quality. I just At present he is acting as co-editor of a technical unity among the UC campuses. To accomplish thesesheepfaces to Tuesday? Sample M a d a m c Nhu happened to be in the right place in the right Theywon’t do. seriesonoceanography, " The Sea: Ideas and Obser- this, every year the various clubs }]old a con- time. The audience was in a jovial mood; and and James H(lfl,t It’sthree months work I want,and vations", which summarizes recent studies in the vention at one of the UC campuses. The site what’s more, I wasn’t nervous. My narrating l’dsooner have it (Quoled from the alternates between a southern university, such the night before had broken the ice." fromthe brassiest lumpkin tn Apr. 64 San Di- entire field of oceanography. as Riverside, and a northern campus, such as On a more serious vein, the UCSD Cal-Club pimpledom,but have it, ego Magazine.) next year’s site, the San Francisco Medical learned a large number of ways to help liven the thanall these martyred repentanee~ In 1961, Dr. Goldberg completed work on a device fromyou. School. Since we are a southern school, it is social and academic life here at UCSD. With designed to carry out x-ray diffraction analyses of possible that {!CSD may host the statewide con- SRlJanuary16, 196S -JotmCIalml. eleven students dedicated to this end, the pros- mineral samples onthe moon’s surface. He was vention in 1967. pects look mighty good. DOLLAE AMERICANAE also elected Vice-President of the Section of Vol- The business of the convention consists of Perhaps "(viler)" needs some explaining. The canology in the American Geophysical Union in conferences, panel discussions, and audience UCSB (Santa Barbara) skit had a villain, and uv BRENDAN GALVIN debate, and culminates in a final general busi- every time he appeared on stage the audience was TIlEA’I’i.’~%’I’I(] MI,’,,’FIII~. F,.hr,t,,r~. 1’~3. 1961. ness meeting. There, non-controversial issues directed to yell something "vile". Now any Properlyfinished dependingon the season, are settled and resolutions are offered for obscenity would have been ... well, obscene, but A MESSAGE FROM THE NEW PROVOST later consideration. These resolutions will "vile" (just like that) was perfect. And from at juniorcollege to inescapableabductors: the lifeguardsor eventually go to the individual clubs; each club that moment on, any disapproval in the minds of you seek for Beauty This first issue of the student newspaper initiates will hold discussion and make its won indepen- the delegates climaxed in a loud wave of "vile~ theski instructors. and for Knowledge another advance in the educational experinaent in dent decision. A sign of the importance of vile~ viler" Cat-Club is that all the decisions -- of the . The student body now has an among the curly- So lovely dumb individual chapters and of the convention as a added facility to which it can communicate to both so stupidsly whole -- play a major role in influencing ad- headed Byrons the academic community and to the town. In add- you’vetrapped yourself ministrative policy. ~OBLEMAT/CA L RECREATION$I~£VI61TED whose frowns and woes ition to providing a record of student life at U.C. and can’t see why? This year the FSM, the quarter system, the serveas the Sirens S.D., it is extremely important that a free ex- redirection of students, political action on change of ideas of all types be accommodated. campus, the relation between teaching and re- that wreck you Take comfort search, the image of the university, programs on the Isleof Bed. thatyou’re in the fashion.The educational experinaent being carried out in for the underpriviledged, and sex (viler) were Insteadof heart Remember, dear? Revelle College is closely watched by other Univ- topics of serious consideration. These issues, you’velost yourhead You had compassion. ersities throughout the . The respon- all highly controversial, show the kind of ses of the students to our progra,n are of great stuff that Cal-C1ub must deal with. And the (The above two poems are dedicated to the significance and clearly will carry weight as mod- Cal-Clubbers don’t consider themselves uniquely Guys and Gals of the Freshman class, ’08) This paper qualified for these tasks. As Carol Childs, ifications and changes take place. a Berkeley junior commenting on the FSM, stated, \ provides a vehicle for discussion. ¢ / \ BACK TO SCttOOL DANCE THIS FRIDAY "I’m right in the middle of the FSM turmoil ... We plan other ways to foster a continuing inter- and yet I feel less certain than most outsiders Do you want the chance to really rock-out? action between the students and staff. A series about the issues at hand~" Well here it is: of hmch-time informal discussions will be initia- The way our own chapter fared at Riverside DATE: February 12 ted in the next few weeks. More frequent student was one of the highlights of the convention. TIME: 8:00 p.m. --- 12:00 p.m. assemblies will be held during the forthcoming Now the UCSD chapter is the newest addition PLACE: La Jolla Community Center A truckwhen fully loaded can carry enough fuel Io takeit semester. As I ent(,r the position of Provost, it to Cal-Club and is the only chapter that con- half-wayacross a barrendesert. If thetruck can return to PRICE: $1 .50 per cot,ple (tickets on sale tains freshmen. Consequently our members were itsItarting point as oftenas is necessary,what is themini- at the UCS1) bookstore) is very important that my office maintain constant open to constant ribbing by the other Cal-C1ub- mumamount of fuelrequired to takeit allthe way across? This dance is open to the freshmen, grads, fac- conamunieation with the students. I hope to see bers who were all juniors, seniors, or grads. Assumethat any amount of fuelcan be takenfrom the truck ulty, and administration of ITCSD and tlw studentSeac of you during the forthcoming semester to But the good spirits we showed during the h at anypoint in the desertand thisamount ,+ill remain of Cal-Western University. Music will bc provi- discuss both individual accomplishments and to goings-on and the admirable way the UCSD Cal- undiminisheduntil subsequently collected. ded by the Eyecutives. With a little ,mired hear appraisals of our programs. C1ubbers accepted all the jabs brought our support and spirit on the p.qrt of the freshman chapter a great deal of friendship and respect. A/~WEzqNE~T WEEK- r^. ~.,~.,..,,..l ,;..~,,. t’2.D. Goldbcrg class, this could bc our first financial sllccess. 7 The UCSD Honor Spirit nistsprnduced the curricu- .Allfreshmen2 study a lan A MESSAGE TO THE STUDENTS (Cont,nued from page 4) legewhich will differ radi- The effectiw.mess of the Honor Spirit is de- cally from the programin lum for the freshmanand so- gusge. Before graduating phs’~moreyear~ in Revelle ,theymust demonstrate abili~. pendent upon the students. It will not work un- "ProfStewart is a professor RevelleCollege. ¯ No one connected with education needs to be told of American literature,’ "There are various ap- College.first nf the12 colle- ’tyto usethis languageia the less every student at UCSD makes it a part of ges that will eventually majorfield, another new de- of the overwhelming number of applicants whowill aboutto publisha majorstu- proachesto Heaven"Chan- his academic life. There is a marked lack of dy of the SouthernAmerican cellorGalbraith said recent- make up the complete part,re. soon besiege U.C.S.D. as well as other American school spirit at UCSD, and the Honor Spirit is writersknown as the ’Nash- ly."The Rewelle College pro- university. In the freshmanyear they colleg,:s and universities, nor of Sine suddenness an excellent wav to introduce some into the villeAgrarians." He paints,l gramIs a soundone and clln ]BasicCurriculum spendthree hours a weekin playsthe oboe and pianoand be defended.I expect the Se- with which their impact will be felt in the next few school. At the Davis campus, school spirit re- A studentat UC Berkeley intensetutorial sessions with lovesthe theater.And early condCollege program to be who thinkshe wantsto be a nativespeakers. They work years. In facing these fa~ts, it is essential to volves about their ttonor Spirit, resulting in in his careerhe almostbe-i soundand that It willbe able scientistbegins to concen- with tape recorders,using tremendous pride of their school. Itobe defended.I am obvlous~ recognize the historical uniqueness of the tremen- camean electronicengineer.q trateon sciencecourses In .programmedmaterials for To protect your own honor and t’le honor of ThoughStewart, too, be- ly biased,but I considerthis his sophomoreyear. By con-I anothersix to ninehours a dous task the Co,~rdinating Council for Higher Ed- UCSD, it may be necessary,for .v°uto reporta lievesfirmly that today’s col- multi-college,concept to be trast, the curriculumfor week.They also spend three ucation in Califor~a has undertaken. As a part of legestudent must study and themost exciting Idea in thlb eachstudent at San Diegois hoursa weekon linguistics, violation ,~f the Honor Spirit which you have understandscience, he and Universityof Californias~ the same for the first two studyingthe structure of lan- this xast undertaking, U. C.S.D. has embarked witnessed. In an effort to make this as con- hisstaff are likely to produce’ ternand perhaps In thecour~ years,whether he Intendsto waagesand the relationships upon one of the most remarkable experiments of venient as possible, the Judicial Council will a curriculumfor SecondCol- try.’ becomea professorof mathe- betweenlanguages. undergraduate education in the United States. put a box in the [h,an of Student Affairs Offi- maticsor a di~cjockey. Unique Approach ce, in which complaints may be placed. The com- ¯ Each freshman takes ’. ThisIs a unqiueapproachl math, a language(French, to languageinstruction. Se-! "I’oda~ you are in the midst of social transforma- plaint may also be given directly to a judge. Spanish. German or Rus- ~cond CollegeProvost John Complaints must be written, stating the accused ENTHUSIASM,AT SAN DIEGO / sian),a humanitie~course tions t.tking place at a pace far greater than they IStewartcalls it "oneof the and the circumstances (time, place, etc.) thatincludes history, philn- ~phyand literature,and, in greattriumphs" of the first did in the past quarter century. American society which the violation took place, and must be year of under#laduatein- is increasingly using science and technology for its the secondsemester, classi- structionat IJCSD. signed. calphysics, as thebeginning "Theknowledge of linguis- major basis for development. The facts of social The Judicial Council will initiate an investi- NovelGoals Setf of a two-semestercourse in tic~and the ability really to c}lange have many implications for college educa- gation to determine the validity of the complai- baslephysical science. use a languagebffectix:ely, As a sophomore he con- whichthe student.~get from tion. They create the need for U.C.S.D. and other nt and a trial, if necessary, will be held. At tinueswith the humanities their nativespeakers, are universities to emphasizelearningwhich is not like- no time will th~ accused be confronted with the courseand takesa secondIn- rarelyI found, = saidStewart. I accuser. Further details concerning tri,~l pro- at NewCollege tegratedcourse in thesoci~al Tl~e "humanities se- ly to become obsolescent and which will contr~)ute I cedures will be in ;,ppear in subsequent articles sciences,including econom* quence"has been a shaker positively to your capacity as college graduates to of this paper, and tlw complete set of trial BY WILLIAM TROMBLEY ice,political scmnce, sociolo- Ifor many UCSD students,l deal constructively with new conditions and new procedures will be, publisht,d by the Judicial TlmllSllllf WrN gy and psychology. He ~who came to the univer~ty SAN DIE~"What hath Snow wrought?" read the ’~use they were intereat- problems. It means that the task of our faculty in Co, .c~ " hen the procedures are formalized. windstip his basicphysical ed in math or scienceand developing the U. C. S. D. curriculum should be The Honor Spirit is a great privilege which noteone professorpassed to anotherduring delibera. science work by studying auddenlyfound themselves tionsof a facultycommitt~ last year at UC San Diego. viewed as your future development which you will few schools have. Unless each student makes it quantum physics and che- Ireading everything from work, it will soon expire. Terry Barker The professorswere meet- mistryand he also studies Dostoievskyto the modern, continue throughout life and hence the emphasis is theologianMartin Ruber, Judge, ASUCSD ingto determinethe curricu. Of Like Mind basicbiology¯ upon encouraging and creating your interest in "We only came here be- In a month’sstudy of the Associated Men Students lum for UCSD’sfirst under- Not onlydoes the overall "Searchfor Meaning,"for in- graduates-the 181 fresh- causeof thekind of scientistsorganizationof the material learning, developing your ability to learn in the If an anonymous student were to overhear a who are here,"said Prof. ’stance,freshmen read e,~.aays I ’differwidely from freshman broadest sense, teaching you to value flexibility, men who enteredlast Octo- RichardPopkln, chairman of and sophomoreinstruction i by the Spanishphilosopher conversation in which someone mentioned "ANS", ber. OrtegaY Gasset,poems by T. and helping you to acquire confidence in your the philosophydepartment, at most universities,but I would not be surprised if his first reaction expressinga vlew held by S. Eliotand novelsbv Albert would be to say: "What’s that?" It is my Thetalk had turned,as it withineach course there are ability to deal constructively with change. is veryrlkely to do at UCSD, many other UCSD huma- startlinginnovations. )Camus, E. M. Forster and , WilliamFaulkner. greatest hope that the new semester will bring to the need for combining nists. IAll freshmenstudycalcu- about a change in this "what’s that?" feeling. "Theseare men of broad lus and analyticgeometry. "Thiswas a mistake,"ad-; Just as vigilance is the price of liberty, attention knowledgein the sciences ’,mittedBoy HarveyPearte, The movement to get the ANS rolling began Interests.It wasclear they [(Orat leastthey do thisyear. to our national goals is essential as you continue aMd the humanities.And the had Wen a lotofthought to dNext year a new course literaturedepartment chair- with the belated arrival of AMS constitutions professor’sreference, of man. "The readingload was with this unique educational experience. the non~scieoJ~rrffprogram, ’titledelements of mathema- from VC Riverside, Los Angeles, and Santa Bar- ¯ course,was to Britishnov@ Theydidn’t want this to be ticalanalysis will be offered toostiff. The kids didn’t have bara. There was a major difficulty, however, listC. P. Snow,who has writ- anotherMIT whereonly the for thoseless proficient In enough time to understand In his play, Barefoot in Athens, Maxwell Anderson ten so oftenof the widening pooreststudents major in =~math.) their readingor to write caused by the lack of attendance at the AHS gap betweentoday’s scien- anythinghut the sciences, or good papers.Next semester has a statement worth pondering. Socrates has meeting just before finals. I am sure this was tistsand humanists. anotherCaltech, where lip f Devise ScienceCourse been accused of being a false teacher. In the due to insufficient publicity and a poor meet- From UCSD’s earliest I serviceis paid and where ,i Scienceplanners have de- we’relightening the r~ding days an Intenseeffort has theyhave a few goodliberal vised a basic physical lo~d." course of his defense, Anderson has Socrates say ing time. Cor~nendations (or, perhaps, thanks) sciencecourse which, they are in order, though, for Jeff Greenhill.,Mark been made to avoid such a artsmen, but in verysubor- Such wlllingneas to the following: "This is a city drenched with light. division.Dr. RogerRevelle, dinateroles to the scien- .hope,will eliminate the repe- changea courseor a curricu- Hoffman, Roy Dimon, and Bob Raines who did tition now found when a And this light has flooded every corner of our lives; who recruitedmany of the tists." lum is rareindeed in Ameri- show up. firstscience faculty mem-] UCSDis stillsmall enough studentstudies elementary canuniversities. our courts, our theatres, our athletic games, our Finals brought on a period of stagnancy dur- hers,Is a manof variednon-[ for most profes~rsto know physicsand elementaryche- These new ideasin huma- scientificinterests, and he ~achother, resulting in more mistryseparately. ¯ nities,language instruction, markets -- even the open architecture of our tem- ing which not ~oo many people, I’m sure, could I , "We want to ride the Ilookedfor thisquality in socialcontact between scien. scienceand mathconstitute ples. This has been our genius -- a genius for find time to devote to the efficient organiza- men he hired.Many of thesel Slatsand non-scientists than :wholething throughas one a verytough freshman curd- light! Shut our the light and close our minds and tion of an AMS constitution. men -- chemists Haroldl might be found on other course,which we thinkit is," eu]um,too toughin the opi. But now dawns the new semester. With the Urey, James Arnold andJ universitycampuses. Said chemistJames Arnold, .’~ionof manySan Diego area we shall be like a million cities of the past that ,whowill teach the second se- election of subordinate AMS officers, I am cer- IMartin Kamen; physicists "We don’tinstitutionalize highschool counselors, who came out of the mud, and worshipped darkness a Carl ~..ckartand Normanl It." said one professor. mesterof thecourse. have been advisingtheir tain it will be no time at all before the stu- r "Studentswill learn the little while, and wentbackforgotten, into darkness." Kroll:biologists David B.] "There’sno annualphys ca- studentsagainst applying all dents of UCSD will be attending many AMS acti- Bonnerand JonathanSinger~ philosophy~ftball game.’ basic atomicand molecular UCSD. vities. Steve Lewis --wereintensely interested But we do keep in pretty structure~In the physics Ted Forbes in politicsand workl affairs. closetouch." part of the course,which (More, Over.) AMS President they get first.Then they. Dean of Student Affairs Many were accomplished Moreformalh’, the toint ef- 8 paintersand musicians. fortsof scienti,~ts’and huma- Won’t have to relearnthem ~whenthey.get to chemmtry../. netshave been troubledby cellorGalbraith has devel- UniversityBoard of Regents, (Continued from page 9) the tendencyin American oped an unusualsystem for higher educationfor re- [in the StateDepartment off ChancellorJohn S. IGaL ,the appointmentof new fa- braithrecently directed thisj searchersto draw farther culty and the promotionof IIFinance,in the Legislature Speaks From Experience mal problems of adjusting Maybe. But studcnt opl- ’ mee~ageto them: ¯ and fartheraway from stu- facultymembers ¯lready at l--kesp¯ close and suspl- (Continued from p. 10) Prof. Goldberg speaks fromhigh schoolto collegenion lists madrigal singing I studyhabits, fardown the listof desirable "An educationworthy of dents. UCSD. [ciouseve on San Diego and’ Theresult is ¯ stiffdot~ of[ from experience.He went to real" theI name should be challeng-] ] Department recommenda- rSanta(:ruz, the two radical college(UC, Berkeley)with Each of these studentsr°ff-h°uractiviti~.Theg Revelleonce described re- departures from what has Imathematics, languages, Ins to the student,¯nd we[ search"as a teacherand ¯ [tionswill go bothto thepro- science and humanities the idea~ becominga physi-was immediatelybombarded er needis for beerjoints, or expectour students to sweat. [vestof the collegeinvolved ;be.en thenorm in theUniver- tliterature,history and phi- cist,switched to chemistry,withadvice and counsel from at leastcoffee houses. I studentworking together on l(Goldbergfor RevelleCol- mtv of Californiasystem. as an undergraduate,then to faculty members,who are al- "I wish span swinging But everyone of our fresh-; a problemfor whichneither ! go far,for the mostpart, losophy),a curriculumthat m~m with whom I have dis- lege, John Stewartfor Se- mighthave staggeredyoung geocheanistryin graduatemost desperatelyanxious Voting capitalist, would come tyet has an answer."While cond College)and .to Dr. ¯ UCSD has had the es~ntial school(University of Chica-that the UCSD curriculumto town and set up a couple cussed the curriculumhas thisis an idealizedconcept Robert Oppenheimer¯ expressedenthusiasm--they KetCh Brueckner, dean of !support of UC President go) and finallywound up an,be proveda success.Be¯chef of placesfor us,"said Fred- for a universitywhich w II Clark Kerr and the regents LoudestComplaints oceanographer. said he expected most die F’elcyn. ¯ re excited,they are anxiou.< someday number 27fg)0 igraduatestudies. From them to learn, and they feel, the recommendationwill go[ whencrucial matters of poli- IMost of the freshmen UCSDfreshmen also differ studentsto emerge with sa- Such is the life of the students,it stilLserves as ¯. cy were decided. So far, thoughtthey wantedto be, in appraisalof the languagetisfactorygrades for the firstUCSD pioneer ~ inadequate caughtup in a greatintellec- guidingprinciple. I;o the appropriatefaculty tualexperience " [ committeesand then to the neitherthe State Depart- scientistsor mathematicians.courses,which includenot semester,which has justhousing, had food,limited so- Perhapsthe mootstriking chanceor, mentof Financenor the le- Their loudestcomplaints,! onlyforeiga language trai~t- ended, ciallife. But thereare com- Different]~eqtJiremrnls i Iapplicationof thisprinciple The new elementis the InJ gislaturehas mterterease- therefore,are reservedfor ing but instructionin lin- If freshmanopinion Is pensations~ surfing,scuba ChancellorGalhraith alsol Ihas beenthe involvementof troductionof thecollege pro- !rim=slywith the develop- 1the humanities course, guistlcs,the relationships be-mixed about the curriculum,diving and whalewatching. UCSD’sbest scientists in the ~Oumintedout that the currlcu- I vostinto the procedure.Dr. Iment’ofUCSD accordingto whichyields only three cre- tween languages. it is almostunanimous in dis-And, just possi, bly, the best ] discussedabove applies preparationand teachingof] Bruekner comments on the itsbasic ideals. I ditspar semesterbut which Terry Barkerof San Die- approvalo1’ campussocial undergraduate~raining at onlyto RevelleCollege and the basle physicalscience .man’sresearch capabilities. The climate of oplnion; Idemands,many ~ay, half or go, who wantsto be an ocea-life. Thereare no dormito-any universityin the coun- that.qecond College, when it course for freshmen and atopI beautiful Torrey Pines moreof theirstudy time.[ nographer,said he thought rtesfor the 3o girlsand 25 txy. sophomores. Swanson[ "1no prm,~stsI(’met con. The readingrequirements linguisticswas impractical:boys who do not live at Last of Three Articles. Iopensin thefall of 1967,is corn in these appointments Mesais stillone of enthu- likelyto have¯ different~t Prof. Robert. ,: siasmand excitement,as ex- for humamtiesare indeed "I warS. to learn something’home.There are no sorori- who hasdone significant re- or promotionswill he the rugged.In s two-weektreat- useful." Iof courserequirements for pressed,hy John Stewart, I’ticsor fraternitiesand the freshmenand sophomores.[ searchin highenergy phys- qua ty of the man’s under- provostof SecondCollege: ment of the generaltopic But RodneyHurst, anoth-I cafeteriais inadequate. John L. Stewart,provost ics,will teach classical phys- "Retreatfrom Reason"last er San Diegofreshman, disa- I I graduateteaching." said "Forthe next25 yearsall IFreshmangirls live in at- of Second College, is a ics to freshmennext semes- ChancellorGalhraith. "Wel the criticalissues of higher semester,freshmen read so- greed: "It makes you more tractiveapartments near] professorof Americanliter- ter.In the fallProf..lames have picked provostswho education’will be raised lid chunks of Nietzsche, aware.It’s exciting." campus but they regard[ Arnold,a memberof the Na- aturew~o has ¯ deepinter- havea strongcommitment Ito again and again in this Freud. Kafka and Thomas ProfessorsCo.operate their neighbors,graduate In the finearts. He came tionalAcademy of Sciences good undergraduateteach- university.We will have ¯ Mann,listened to 18ctureson studentsand their wivesin willteach the chemistry sec- S ¯ v e r a 1 studentscom- to UCSD from Dartmouth, ing." continuousopportunity to these authorsand wrote ¯ mentedon the willingness6f theirlate 20s and early30el wherehe was directorof the tionof thecourse! Some facultymembers ex- paper. as ancients. Dr. EdwardGoldberg, pro- examinethe natureof educa- professorsto listento their HopkinsCenter for the Arts.] Ipressedskepticism that such tion. And if we see soma- Larry Baker of El Cajon gripesand, often, to change Someboys lived for a time SecondCollege will open vost.ofRevelle College, said" ia plan would truly encour- said he did not get enough he expectsthat most, if not thing that needs to be a course if the need is in motels,a pleasantexper- In old Marine camp build-[ age researchmen to teach. lchanged,we’ll be al~e to outof thecourse to meritthe proved. For example, the ,iencefor those who found ingsacross the road from theJ all, of UCSD’s12 National timehe investedin it.Allan Academy members will do "Thehard core of theanti- lmake the changes immedl,J readingload for the secondthat airlinestewardesses main UCSD campus, and,| ~teachng crowdwon’t be af- ,I Green of San Diego eom-: semesterof humanitieshas sometimes used the same Prof.Stewart is alreadybub- some undergraduate’teach- fectedby thatidea," said one l’te~’..., . plainedabout the amountof! ing in the nextfew years,t reading."I justRot intoa been lightened,so studentsmotels.But the rents were Iblingwith ideas for trans- I: man. IH ~nltlta ~fmtJl will havemore timeto read high--S50to $60 a month-- formingquonset huts intol LaboratoryLeaders ’ Buta moregeneral faculty bookand getinterested in it eachbook and to preparepa- so most of themhave moved artists’studios and ¯ decre- i Another problem in the ~.opinionwas expressedby~ when the paper is due, and pers. Iinto Camp Mathe~s, an Ipitbowling alley’into a con- teachingof scienceto under- ,Prof Walter Kohn’.aprom- STIFFR_. OUTINE then I’m workingon some- "Everybody is so plea- abandoned Marine camp perthall. Under such a man graduatesis findingcompe- Iinentphysicist: "I tendto sant,"said attractive Kathy across the highway from the ~mpheaiaat SecondCol- thingelse." -I tentpeople to runthe labora- [take ¯ dim view of peoplej Bower¯"You get in the ele- UCSD. lege~ notlikely to be sclen But Fredrica Felcyn, a vator and some professor torysections. At mostgood ~[Who come_ to aunivers,it pretty-! La Jollagirl,, disa BarracksLife Hit I Uric. universitiesthese lab section Withtoe view that their only CoursesHard startstalking to youand the YetProf. Siewart, too, be- leaderstend to be morein- responsibilityIs to theirown greed. next thing you know you’re Life at Camp Matthews, lievesthat "one must under- ridingup and downand stilltheysay, is lifein anybar- terestedin researchthan in work and that the sole re- "When I came here I standscience to be m fully teaching.As ¯ result,they of- thought1’ wantedto go into talking.They all seem to racks--muchhorseplay, lit- educated man." He quoted sponsibilityof the university atUCSD, think,’oh, there’s a youngt.le work. "If you want to eat, tenteach very badly, i medicine,"said Freddie. I from poet and criticAllen , However,seven or eight is to supporttheir work." I mind.’I likethat.’ /~lesp or study,you do not Tote,who saidthe literary Allof theseefforka to make "Butthis humanities course MissBower is apt to find liveat Camp Matthews,de-t I~post-doctoralfellows have 1 arts are those "without volunteeredto teachlab sec- the UCSD a truly great StudentsSay has switchedmy point lof herelevator rides less st mu- tieredAllan Green. Whichmen can livebut with- university--therecruitment lating next year, when 6001 "The sex life is lousy," tionsin class cal physics Iview.I wasnever interested out which theycannot live nextsemester, without pay.I of a first-ratefaculty, with BY WILLIAM TBOMBLEY in books like thisbefore. new freshmenand 150 ju- ~id one girl, candidly.’l;he well,or liveas men." no roomfor mediocrity;thel I nior collegetransfer i problemis not lack °f p°ten" Theywant to gainthe teach- TIS~IllhJtltl@ Wfl1~ Now I’m fascinated,and I m~ Stewartadded, "Scie.,ace ins experienceanti undoub- divisionof the university more confused than ever studentswiLl join this year’sltial dates--there are three has so alteredour imageof into12 colleges,each with a SAN DIEGO---When Uni- 1 fresh on the San Diego cam- boys for every gwl m the tedlythey have also been in- versityof California~ents about wht I want to do." i freshmanclack--but famili- the universeand our sense fectedby thephysics depart- separateeducational philoso-! Most UCSD faculty mem- pUS. of whatit meansto fulfill phy and program;the wed- arrived on the San Diego But probablyno freshmanarity,contempt and all that.] ment’sgeneral concern that bers would regard Freddie "Yousee these boys all the ourselvesas men thatit is thisfirst semester of under- dingof scienceand humani- campus for last month’s Felcyns cool-stunas a victo-classin any universityhas t now necessaryto applythat hadcloser attention than the time,"said the samesocial raduateinstruction go well. ties;close association be- ,m~edng they were gnmt~ ry. The th¢~.’ybehind the commentator.I "They’re your samestatement to sciences." Nextyear the problemwil tweenstudents, undergrad- by a sign,etched by ~.tsdtm~, freshman- sophomorecurri- UCSD Classof 1968.For the uateas wellas graduate,and 181 freshmenthere are 112 friends.You certainlydon’t Guiding Theory be greater.There will be 600 hand, which read: "Th~ culumis thatall students’, wantto go out withthem!" freshmen then Instead of eminent researeher~ and’ plods is damnedbard." shouldbe exposedto thefun- faculty members (though A fundamentalprinciple scholar’s--allare subject to mostof theseprofessors also ProvostGoldberg is aware In UCSD planninghas been thisyear’e 181. So a larger This perennial student damentalfields of knowl- of the problem,at leastto number of lab sectionmen tremendouspressure.~, from complaintseems more Valid edge beforedeciding where work with graduate thatable scientific research- students,of whomthere aresomedegree. ere end humanisticscholars willbe needed.But for this within and outside the when voiced by the UCSD theywant to specialize. ’ "We need a bettercommu- ’ university. Classof 1.968.’thousands of Prof. Edward Goldberg, about380 this year.) would also teach undergra- semester,at least,lab in- 1 The UCSD freshmen were nitylife," said the provost. du&tes.Beginning with Dr. structionat the freshman Other campusesare jral- hours of planningby high- recentlynamed provostof[ level shouldbe as good at ¯ powerededucational brains RevelleCollege, first of ’the,bright to start their grade-"We’regoing to do more RogerRevelle, whose acade- 3us Of IUL’.SDsmgn percen- "I don’t care WILAT that mic visionmade UCSD po~i- UCSD as it Is anywhereIn tageof top-payfaculty ap- have goneinto plotting the 12 collegeswhich will even- l~fiintII,30 average to 35was were a highhaving 3.5. turps, with concerts,social activities, clubs. Maybe lec- ble in it4 presentform, and thecountry. pointments.Budget balan- courseof studybeing offered tually make up the total T.A. savs, This paper In an attemptto insure I academicproblems at mid-Iwe needfraternities ann sor- continuingthrough John S. cers -- in the statewide to the 181 freehmenwho are university,put it thisway:[ term accordmg to Ward’,orities.We’ll try ¯ lot of is at LEAST worth a D." Gslbraith,the presentchan- th~it good undergraduate UCSD’s first undergradu. =When a studentis not exJ Beecher,assistant dean of’thingsand see what works. teachingis rewarded,Chan- universityadministrative of- ates. 10 posedto a subject,you are cellor,the university’s plan- ’fleesI in Berkeley,on the / studentaffairs, who attribut-Who knows, maybe it willbe 11 (Continued on page 1i) playingunfairly w’ith his p~er~tialskills." ed theirtroubles to thenor- madrigal singing or ohe.~?* STUDENT SPONSORED PROGRAMS FO BE 3/18 "Don Ju, an in Hell, " (sliRhtky cut to 45- a Russian film based on Tolstoi and dir- HELD EVERY THURSDAY AT NOON AND minutes), the mid~tle- a’~t dream sequence LALENDAR OF EVENTS ected by Mihall Schweister. 7 P.M. Uni- IP.M. from G. B. Sha~v’s Man and Superman, by corn. the First Drama Quartet (Laughton, Boyer, Lectures 2/12 "This Spo~ting Life~ a drama about the Hardwicke and Moorhead. Not in connect- 2/i0 "Physical Problems in High-Speed Plane- English working middle class written by Beginning this Thursday, 11 February, a student tary Entry" by S.S.Pemner, Chairman of L;:,dsay Anderson. Stars Richard Harris sponsored noon program of r~.corded music, ion with anything.) the Department of A.-rospace Engineering and Rachel Roberts. 7&9 P.M. Sumner spoken arts, or experimental theaterwillbe held at UCSD. 8 P.M. Sherwood Hall 2/17 "Hamlet" Stars Lawrence Olivier and Claire in room C-2414 (where Humanities lectures were 3/25 A Preview of the Albeneri Trio Program, "The Unity of Mathematics," an inauguaral 2/II Bloom. 7 P.M. Unicorn held). The programs will start promptly at 17:05 featuring Beethoven’s Archduke Trio. {The lecture b~ Jacob Korevaar, Professor of and will generally last forty-five minutes. The Albeneri will play the Beethoven plus Haydn Mathematics at UCSD. 4:15 P.M. Sumner Meetings program will be repeated in its entirety starting and Ravel at Sherwood Hall on 27 March.) 2/17 "Publish or Perish", a panel discussion 2/10 ASUCSD Senate. Discussion of by-laws, li- sponsored by the [Iniversity Internation- brary talking situation, and student eval- at 1:05 for those unable to attend at noon. al Association. 8:30 P.M. IGPP uations. 7 P.M. C2430 4/1 April Fool’s Day Special. (A program 2Ill AWS. Council members and all interested The programs are designed to present material made up entirely of musical jokes, featuring women. Discussion of newly written AWS of special or unusual interest via the best sound Haydn, Beethoven, Shastakovich, et al.) a comedy by Ira Wal- 2/10 "Absence of a Cello," constitution. 12:00 P.M. equipment available, and will try to achieve top- [ach, writer of the "Wheeler Dealers," a- 2/12 Meeting of interested freshmen. Discus- Additional information concerning each program bout a distinguished scientist who has icality and timeliness wherever possible. For sion of extra-curricular program in mus- will come out weekly in the Sandscrip_t, and pro- fallen into debt and decides to apply for exampl~ the first eight programs planned are: ic and visual arts led by Dr. John L. Ste- gram notes will be issued at the performance a job with a big electronics f;rm, even if wart. 4 P.M. it means submerging his individuality. 2/11 A Preview of the Vegh Quartet Program, where appropriate. Stars Hans Conreid. 8:30 P.M. Sat. mat. Entertainment featuring Bartok’s String Quartet #5. (the at 2:30 P.M. Circle Arts 2/11 Recorded preview of Vegh Quartet. Pro- Vegh Quartet will perform the Bartok plus ’No admission will be charged, and anyone con- 2/10 "The Hostage," a boisterous comedy by Bren- gram features Bartok’s String Quartet No. Beethoven Op. 18#3 and Mozart K. 465 at nected with UCSD who is interested is welcome dan Behan, "Ireland’s talented wild van of 5. 12e, l P.M. C2414 & C2420 Sherwood Hall on 16 February. This pre- to attend. l~tters." 8:30 P.M. Sat. at 6&9 P.M. ASUCSD Dance. Features music by the"Exe- 2/ 12 view performance is intended to enable stu- Old Globe Falstaff Tavarn. cutives." Faculty, grad students, fresh- recommendations, requests, and 2/13 "The Cilver Cord" bu Pulitzer Prize winner men and Cal Western Students. 8-12 P.M. dents to get more out of the live performance. )Suggestions, materials for future programs are welcome. Sidney Howard. 8:30 P.M. S.D. State La Jolla Community Center. 75¢ Sta~ $1.50 Theatre drag Z/18 Prologue and exerpts from Archibald Mac (Send to Mike Boylson, % Student Affairs Office.) 2/15 "Three Men on a Horse," a farce by George 2/12 Ski trip to Big Bear with Aztec Ski Club Leish’s modern play of the Book of Job, Abbot and Cecil Holm, produced by the "J. B. " (Relative to the current Humanities LOW ATTENDANCE OF FRESHMAN AT C. A. L. Berkeley University Theatre. 8:30 P.M. Folk Music reading assignment. It is presently plan- FUNCTIONS HURTING FUTURE PROGRAMMING Sherwood Hall 2/10 Land of Oden. Program features "Quasi", 2/16 "Come Blow Your Horn," a delightful com- ned to produce the Prologue as "an experi- African drum player, Tony Sleber and the The Committee for Arts and Lectures has been edy about a New York playboy’s attemts to ment in theater. " If there is sufficient New Appalations, a folk group, and the spending enormous sums to sponsor plays, per- introduce his more conservative brother Deep Six, another kolk group. interest, the entire 100-minute play willbe to life’s pleasures. ~tars Rex May. 7:30 scheduled for a later time in the day or formers, films and lecturers. Since the justi- P.M. Old Globe Theatre. evening. ) fication for these expenditures is the undergrad- NOTICE Anyone interested in having an activity uate program, the C.A.L. is not concerned with Concert lited in "Calendar", please contact Freddie Fel- 2/25 The Greatest Music of Mexico’s two Great- the size of the audience, but in how many fresh- 2/11 Ballet Folklorico of Mexico, world re- cyn at least 2 weeks ahead of time. men are present, and a rough head-count is taken. nowned dance company. Program features est Composers, Chavez and Revueltas: Being the guinea-pig class, estimates and pro- colorful presentations of Mexican folk Sinfonia India, Sensamaya, and Tocatta for gramming for the future are based on our tastes dances. 8:30 P.M. Civic Theatre C-2414 SOUND SYSTEM SPITS, SPUTTERS Percussion, in new, stunning performances. 2/13 Bach Aria G~oup of La Jolla. Program fea- (In connection with the Spanish Club investi- as reflected in our attendance. When, as has tures vocal selections from Bach cantatas happened so often in the past, freshmen fail to Why, in the name of Clerk-Maxwell, does gation into Spanish music.) with musical acconN~animent. 8:30 P.M. attend, C. A. L. loses its justification and the the newest school in the c?untry, with the finest Sherwood Hall 3/4 The Stratford-Ontario’s brilliant film ver- budget is cut proportionally. 2/16 Vegh Quartet, Chamber Music Series. Pro- physics department in the world, have to suffer sionofSophoeles"Oedipus Rex." (Originally gram features Beethovan Quartet in D maj- with a sound system in the main lecture hall Continued low attendance will not only hurt our or, Opus 18, No.3, Bartok Quartet No. 5, that spits, sputters, shorts, squawks, sque.al~ scheduled as a recording of the sound-track own class in future years, but will also penalize and Mozart Quartet in C major. 8:30 P.M. stops, and in general stinks? Please, some- of the film, the C.A.L. has now provided us subsequent classes and do a disservice to the many Sherwood Hall body, fix it. with the film itself. The Humanities read- 2/17 Lawrence Moe, organist from Berkeley Uni- other UCSD people who do attend and enjoy the And while you’re at it, raise those touch-but- ing assignment of Oedipus is due 8 March. ) versity. Program Features selections from Note: The fih.n will be run from 12:05 to programs. Bach fuges, preludes and sonatas. 8:30 ton light switches to a height where they can’t be accidently bumped and brushed by late-com- 1:35 and again at 3:05 if needed. P.M. La Jolla Presbyterian Church Besides, you are missing some fine shows. ers and wall-leaners , wl.ich invariably sends 3/11 Pre-Columbian Aztec, Mayan, Toltec and Films the room into total darkness, peals of laughter, 2/10 "Shadows," an American film directed ’y and general pandemonium. ~’aqul Indian music of Mexico: X~chipilli, John Cassavertes, and "Resurection, " a 12 E1 Venado. (In connection with the Spanish 13 Club investiuation into Soanish music. FROM THE ANNUAL STAFF : The Cal CONCH-ence More than 80 UCSD yearbooks, the first pictorial We hope all the residents in the btSA are settled record of academic life on Torrey Pines Mesa, after their change of roommates. Mary Ellen have been sold in the past three weeks with little Sounders lost her roommate to the ranks of the or no advertising. However, the book may have employed. She gained Kathy Bower who said of her old roomie, "Oh, she just liked mv friends the shortest publishing run in educational history ’too’ much." Susan Emerich, formerly Susan La unless preprir-ting sales are doubled. Grange, found it necessary to seek solitude in a studio apartment, making it possible for The yearbook, as yet unnamed, is currently on btarilvn blartin to move in with Sheila Crissom. sale in the campus book store. Annual staff mem- Wonder what happened? bers are also designated to sell the book at the predelivery price of $5.00. A big stink was made at the Cal Club Convention when Rodney Hurst removed his shoes.

Apublishing runof300 of the history making books The Cal Club was certainly impressed with our has b~.n planned but slow sales, due in part to a boy Fred who fell in love with two girls in the lowkey campaing, have become a concern. Staff same week. But that’s O.K., Fred kept it in the members are worried that unless current sales are family. at least doubled, the book will be in financial trouble before it is even published. Marsha Rach and Sheila Grissom entertained friends this week. "Anchors away~"

All is not gloom and doom however. A person- The frat had a "smashing" good party. to - person sales campaign by members of the staff aimed at U. C. S. D. students and academic HOTLINE: Prat and the boys have been misquoted. and administrative offices is being planned. Also in the works are campaigns aimed at the Honorary Mr. Clean and his invisible friend, the white Alumni, La Jolla merchants, and the public and tornado, rode through Barbara Beasley’s apart- other interested groups. ment, but tromped through Kay Ketcham’s. After Kay returned Barbara’s furniture it took Karen Moe and her mother Jll morning to rearrange the The ’picture scrapbook" will dl~pict the history, apartment. The big question this poses is: the activities and the events, past and present, "Can Mr. Clean and the white tornado really be that have led to the prominent educational plateau stronger than dirt-e-locks?" uponwhich U.C.S.D. now sits. It will also include the future, outlining the dreams and plans being Gay Farmer and Liz Heller had what they called developed for the new university campus. a "Mad Tea Party". Emily Post would refer to it as: A SOCIAL FLOP.

Campus events of the current academic year will Please save those plastic zip-openers on cigaret, be the main theme of the book. Yearbook photo- cigar, and pipe tobacco packets and turn them graphers are currently scanning the campus for over to A1 Green. When we have 3,942,862 of action shots. Don’t be surprised to find yourself them, we can turn them in for a free copy of the suddenly eye-to-eye with a camera lens. Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking, which we plan to donate to Fred Longworth -- if he doesn’t ATTENTION BOYS: have enough of his own already. UCSD is getting its first taste of intercollegiate FOR SALE: 1 portable stereo, radio, phono athletics this semester with the formation of two combination, l Spanish Speak kit {2 LP records, active teams; swimming and tennis. Dr. Forbes !book and pocket dictionary. Zenit AM-FM radio, has given us the go signal and promises us a RCA stereo tape recorder, Bongo’s, Book case, series of scheduled meets with other freshman Steam iron. Phone: Ext. 1339 Ask for: squads in the area. Organization is the only re- M. Taylor maining obstacle. Yes, we will even have our very own coaches. Who should we have for a swimming coach, what’s his name? or, what’s FOR RENT: Large 1 bedroom duplex, furnished. her name? Carpets and drapes, open-beamed ceilings, storage space in garage, porch. 7140 La Jolla *Sign-up sheets are posted on all bulletin boards. Blvd., La Jolla. Phone Ext. 1301 days and Sign-up now. 459-6495evenings. Ask for: S. Huszar 14