UPB^ppw^^^^^^^^^^"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^' -^jfikp^Hl SJfctfc.^*^" ■'""—

photo by CraigPatton

velopments withinthe City have similiar 10% moderate income Against City Of housing provisions. CONGRESSMAN Suit Thelawsuit againsttheCityat- tempted to provide one type of solution to the low-cost hous- TO SPEAK AT UCI Irvine*On Housing ing conflict. The City, through its zoning powers,providedan- by Lance Robbins by Rob Corley ment low and moderate in- other in the Town Center in- United States Congressman Alphonzo Bell (Rep. Calif. 27th Although Irvine is an expen- come housing.- Congressional District),whoischallenging V. stance. The future will bring SenatorJohn Tun- sive and. somewhat exclusive In an informal statement, Ray many changes housing ney post year's speak to the for the Senate in this elections will at UCI r.nmmunlty,some residents be- Watson, President of the Irvine change January scene, and is all thatis 27th. lieve that persons of low and Company, acknowledged the certain. Sponsoredby the Committee on Lectures, Bell willaddress the moderate income should be need for housingassistancebut UCI community and respond to questions beginning at 11.00 abletoafford homesinthe City. rejected the plantiff's solution from GatewayPlaza. It is expectedthat Bell willdeliver a major A group, headed by the Orange as placing the burden in the City Council campaignspeechand detail what directions his strategywiMtake County- Fair Housing Council, wrong place. "The appropriate in hismove to unseat Tunney,whois alreadyfeelingpressureon sued the City of Irvine some agencies are the state and the the left from former activist Tom Hayden. months ago to force action on federal government," he offer- Candidates the issue ofproviding less-cost- ed. Congressman Bell, a gray-haired, athletic and distinguished- ly dwelling units. In his summary he empha- Speak looking politician won re-election in 1974 with the second high- the Irvine Company To Republican At issue was the massive Ir- sized that est percentageof any candidate for statewide or fed- vine Complex-East. supports the basic conceptofa office, Republi- Industrial Sixteen candidatesforthreeIr- eral in a district where Democrats outnumber plantiffs sought Housing Pro- constituency The to link the rental Assistance vine City Council seats will be cans. His ability to get votes and hold a is a factor of lower priced to gram, "along with any other Tunney, creation units speaking at UCI on January 28 that worries even thoughhe holds a strong lead in the the developmentof the indus- program that would effectively latest polls over any possible opponent. in the Commons. trial park, with the goal of al- and meaningfully increase the The appeararice is beingspon- In 1964, Bell wasfe-elected withthe largest totalvote and mar- lowing workers tofindhomes in opportunities for peopleof all sored by the Irvine Student ginof victory of any Republicanmember in the House of Repre- the city. incomes to live in Irvine," but Coalition, asocial ecologyfield sentatives. In1966his total voteand victorymarginexceededthat The City and the Irvine Com- could not accept this plan due study group formed two years of any House member in the nation of either politicalparty. pany fought the suit, denying to the many problemsof imple- ago to monitor the activities of menting politicallife, the connection between hous- and funding. city councils, boardsandcom- . A man who from the start could afford to go into essence, rejection pioneer family,which ing units and industrial de- In the of the missions. Bell is amember of a California had exten- the sive ranching and real velopment, and claiming that offer by thecityreturns mat- Arlene Sontag, spokesperson estate interests in East Los Angeles and court, willpro- Diego beginning century. the City was already "doing ter tothe whereit for the student coalition, says San counties beforethe turn of the The though cities of more than its share" to in- ceed as no offer was the candidates willbe speaking Southern California Bell and Bell Gardens are named practice, the his family. developed crease the supply of viable low- made. In settle- at noon and answering stu- after Bell's father also the wealthyarea of the goals Bel Air. cost housing. ment offer defined of dent's questions about city is- A settlementproposalwaspre- the housingadvocatesand pro- sues in the March 2 election. An eight-term member of the House of Representatives,Bell sented by attorneysfor the Fair vides a basis for future negotia- However, the coalition's acti- has been active in state-wide RepublicanParty affairs since leav- Housing Council in December, tions betweenthe parties. in will Corps vities the election con- ing the Army Air after World War II. In the late 1940's he and rejected by the City. Call- UCIstudents would have been tinue beyond the January 28 was one of the founders of the Young Republicans. He entered ing for a rent subsidy program, largelyunaffected by the settle- appearance. "There will be a elective politics as a CongressionalCandidate in 1960 following funded one-third by the City ment proposal, as the sub- selection group composed of serviceasChairman of the RepublicanState CentralCommittee. and two-thirds by the Irvine sidies would have been com- campus political Bell, organizations For more than20years, whoisregardedasamoderate in the Company,it beganwith an ini- petitively awarded, with pref- who will interview andendorse GOP, was President of tfife of Bell Petroleum Compariy, tial installment of slightly over erence going to workers in the three of *he sixteen candi- which /hesoldin 1974. $70,000, increasingannuallyby industrial complex and fami- dates," explainsSontag. i lies. The City mandated in the is the recipientof numerous awards,honors,citations from that amount for nine additional The selection group will bein- He years year's install- TownCenter developmentthat 1, educational, scientific, and public service organizations. He is to a final terviewing each candidate fo- ment of $728,821. 20% of the dwelling units be cusing on student issues. "We the rankingminoritymemberof the Subcommittee on SelectEdu- affordable by persons of mod- cation; Fuels; Elementary,Secondary, Vocational The City and the Irvine Com- have isolated five student is- and Educa- pany, up the erate income, and further, that tion; Energy Research; and Labor Standards. anxious to clear sues including low cost hous- court case, considered the half of these be within th.e ing, transportation, environ- Bellhascomeunder fire recentlywhenit wasdiscoveredhehad settlement offer, but neither means of low income indivi- mental plans, city policeand Ir- the worst voting record among California politicians. Bell was would accept the terms of the duals and families. This in- vine town center plans," says waybelow the Houseaverageof 91% withadismal68%. Hemiss- proposal. The City Council clusionary requirement wjll Sontag. eda lot of votes while campaigning,but also continuedhis prac- stressed the efforts the'y have providea number of rental units The three candidates who tice of spending long weekends with his family. taken to plan for and imple- near the University. Other de- continued on page 9 PAGE 2 NEW UNIVERSITY fHIOAY. JANUARY 23, 1976

Country Ski trip. Basic tech- niques willbediscussed. 7:3© p.m.in the Anlrap. FINE Computer Science.Club ARTS CALENDAR Meeting. 4th floor Lounge of CS.12:30p.m Call Don at552 3437 for info. TrieUCIGalleryis currently showing"Printsand Drawingsby Verano Place Poiluck Din- Jacques The will lastthroughJanu- Friday, sharp ner, VHton andHisCircle." show Jan. 23 lot 9 at 8 a.m. for 2 hr. 6 p.m. at the Rec£enier. ary 31. "Lets Go to the Mountains" tour. Bring binocs & For info call Liz Dignam at Master Paintings From the Hermijageand The State Russian fun weekend at Big Bear. cameras. SignupinCOS.Rm 833-7320. Museum, Leningrad,are onexhibition at the LA County Museum Bringsleepingbag.$7per day. Gateway , Play, Liar," 106. "Dear HH178 at for the first time in America. The 43 paintingscan beseen seven Sign up trap Z6 in the An Monday, Jan. 7:38 p.m. Admission free. days week fee of 50« (withID). The Saturday, 24 a for the nominal student Jan. BridgetournamentintheAn- Comedy about the affairs of show is closing January27, never to be seen again. "TheEnergizer" Workshop. trap. 7-9 p.m. GeorgeBernard Shaw. Art HistoryMajors interested to notethat the LA County p.m. help willbe ft 30-4 Motivation in German Colloquium: "The General Annourfcemenis recently installed a Collection of Islamic Art. This installa- Laguna. Sign up p.m. has South S3. in Fortunes of Tieck." 2 The Hindenburg Exhibit in- tionincludes paintings,calligraphy, glass,brpnzes,ceramics and COS Rm. 106. Gateway Com- HOB 400 D. cluding shooting scripts for Palevesky-Heeramaneck Collection, oneof the Tuesday, textiles from the mons. Jan. 27 the new film will continue in most importantcoflecttonsof Islamic art, in the world; The works COP Ouling San Joaquin Bridge to for Fun in the An- the Main Library Lobby until are in view in the AhmansonGallery(fourth floor). Admission is Freshwater Marsh Reserve. trap, 12:30-3 p.m. Jan. 25. Allareinvited toview in May parking lot on Wilshire. It's free and tour parking free. Park the Co. Guided Meet in Pre-OutingMeetingfor Cross this unique presentation. close by.

FOR SALE: Men's 10-speed Schwinn. Dance $80. King-size aquarest waterbed IDEA presents Envirqnment/Performance called Musical Classifieds w/frame & pedestal.$100. Call 960- Chairs. The work is presented as a combined effort of an artist — 2902. and chpreographer ina series of 3 Chair Environment/Perform- FOR SALE: 25 Nishtki semi-pro, tionsasked Return tocageor call673- ances. Admission is $1.00 at the IDEA studio,522Santa Monica perfectly maintained. 2 sets wheels. 0287. Thanks. FOR SALE: 63 Chevy station wagon Blvd., Santa Monica. The performance will be held Jan. 25 at 3 $175/offer. Also., round trip rideoffer- PR0BLEH7 Gay Students Union Of- New tires,brakes,smog device.All this p.m. for more info pleasecall (213) 395-0456. ed toCosta Rica Leavmgbetween Jan. fice, T-304.833-7229. Allkindsofpam- and more. Call Bob at833-6325 days. z6-3r Spirtgas 3 ways.Call644-0767 545-4405 eves. priiets& talk avail. Theatre LOST:Pair of glasses w/brown &aqua "A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams is being FOR SALE: Good motorcycle, 2 stroke presentedon Thursday, Jan.29-Sun. Jan.31. The playis being plastic frames, right lens scratched. Honda MT-125 street dirt w/extras. Gurdjieff Ouspensky Center accept- Lost last Fn. If found, pleasecontact $500 ing students. Call 644-5990 directedby Ashley Carr a UCI Assistant Drama Professor. .Stu- Runmn fine or best offer. Call dent admissionwillbe $1.50 and generaladmission$3.00. Allper- Tern at 833-5161 orSH 216. Reward. Scott at 548-8201 Personal Problems? NeedHelp?Free formances will be at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village Theatre. telephone counciling. Helpline Don't miss,"When LastISaw theLemmings,"acomedyof fears FOR SALE: 72 VW 411 Wagon. Good FOR SALE:Men'sskiparka.-Extra large, ABC cond. Auto, trans., fuel Weil taken Call 645-2222. no one should be without.For more information call 653-9725. mi. goose down, red-orange. $25 or best The all new Matrix Theatre is located in LA at 7657 Melrose Ave. care of. (1900 orbest offer. Call April offer. Call 675-8540 or 675-7952. $5.00. McLean at work at 833-5216. The show closes the 25th of January,and tickets are LOST:KingspotntCalculator on1-16-76 "Raisin," the awardwinningmusical isstill playingat the Shu- For Sale: Good cond. 17" Stubben — rt CenturyCity. andperform- 2.8 MILLION DOLLARS:Reg.FeeCom- in Soc: Sci.Lee. Hall. Please help I be Theatre in For ticket information jumping saddle w/fittings & pad. ance timesplease call(213) 553-9000. mittee needs a grad.student to serve $250. can't afford another. Call June at 752- Call BryanorDonna at714-962- p.m. on committee that controls ail this 1511 or 213-322-5390. 6649 after 3 money. Apply wrtti AGS at the ASUCI Office, types Gateway Commons. For Sale: Typewriter, portable PHOTOGRAPHY: For all art & Royal in commercial portfolios,color andB& W goodcond.$35. Call494-6473 earlyor Mitch, SHARE HOUSE:Large oceanfront in N. late. CompleteB& W lab service. Call Law School Insight Laguna. Own room & bath for only eves,at 552-7237. $125/mo.Call 494-2696 eves. Insights into law school This informative discussion LOST: Wilson-Kramer Wooden tennis Anyone Interested in forminga UCI FORSALE:Car8-trackw/FM stereo 15 will*' power.New, in $55 be presented by Mike is one of several planned by & shoe? Geology/lapidary club' call Steve at watts still box Call Camp- racket tennis from.Women's bell, year at College Legal to return, ques- 833-8426 Mark at 751-4585. third law student the Clinic locker #387 Please no USC. during an informal help students to make edu- orary oriental prints, meetingsponsoredby the Col- cated decisions regarding graphics., lege Legal Clinic on Friday, their careers. andcultural. Prices January 23. range from $5.00 to $5,000. but Trappers most are under $100. (Start The rap session is aimed at Therapsessionwillbeheldin Events From pre-law particu- saving your pennies now) students. Of Trailer 601 at 3 p.m. on Janu- . Camp- Has Repair For allof you anxious to lar interest will be ary 23. Further information school become a drag? Bike Workshop." cele-' bell's may out Mon., 2 to 2 brate Valentine's day you will first hand report on the beobtained in Trailer 305 Then check some of the Feb. from noon by calling special events the Trappers p.m. in the Antrap. be relieved to know, that the LSAT review courses that are or 833-5400 between available. 10 4 p.m. have plannedfor you. If youhavea love for art (and Trap is having a formal Pre- a.m. and Wed.. Jan. 28 at noon in the some money) come to Jerdi- Valentine's Day Dance" on Antrap. visiting professorDr. nand Roten Galleries, Inc. Thurs., Feb. 12 at 8-12. William Needles, from "Exhibition andSale." Tues.. Thinking about traveling? Canada, will present a selec- Feb. 10 from 9-4:30 in the An- Europe perhaps? Then don't, TRIP OUT LEGALLY tion of Shakespeare readings. trap. On sale will be printsby- miss the European Travel Jan. 29 from 5-9 p.m., in the great artists like: Durer, ExpoonFeb.18 fromnoon to 5 FLY Antrap, is the long-awaited Rembrandt, Callot, Pironesi. p.m.inthe Antrap. LOS ANGELES TO PARIS Trappers' Introductory Goya,and Picasso. They will Everyoneis welcome toallof Gaming Experience!!" LOS ANGELES TO TAHITI A also have old and contemp- these events * group effort Pillow Stuffing SUMMER CHARTER PRICES FROM $375 will start the eveningoff, fol- by pizza dinner, f^i*litrnt *\t*m\mmmttt*t< mietm^tt**tnuto TMtorn ti*rmi*t/k*fIgoiCtmmm lowed a and \)mrmn*iof CaM«M. IniM. Cr tf**4 CM 133SMC f« 133 5M3 tor Ml concluding MtUfH. ASUCI Travel Office, Floor, with the fierce and VOL INO 25/FJIDAT. JAMMtT 23, 1976 CONTACT: 1st Gate- competitive sports Backgam- way Commons — 12-4 p.m. Tiw Urn Unntmtjrs utliiMi tmct wttUfn TatUty —4 fnfey itarutf F*N. tfartw. miS*n*f Tue/Wed/Thur. mon and chess. Come andex- wnw»t «■ C|— itilim U*4ttt»hn»ca**1»Mtmu»ticiifb»M: J100Cptf jmt. 13 SO pm inJfic —rut AHwtKln nptwat*« 8331. Call Collect EACH° GRAND OPENING SALE sa,i,& V N UP TO 50% OFF - Motors -, 'Thousands of Topics MINIMUM |T * Available Send for your up-to-date, 160- *4 5^H*£*/ BSSliS*'* 2VA Each per of One Original page, order catalog. Enclose 3 to4 mm. Sff£.4i^* , 3J*Hundred mail tea. ■-j*jfi&^l f\ M * $1.00 to cover postage and V 7 mm. lea.50.00 L.24 fc^Wj^^ handling. / UCI R UNIVERSITY RESEARCH ASSISTANCE,INC. / T\S & SPORTINGVS*§^"~ . IDAHO AVE., 206 - BOOK STORE 11322 # GOODS C0 4211 Campus Dr., LOSANGELES, CALIF.90025 tj^L\ »aP Irvine" (213)477-8474 \&^% fefefei 829 S Knott Avenue "IN TOWN CENTER for (714) - - Our rmMrchpapersantold 761-2262 MONDAY' 8:30 7:00 TUESDAY-FRIDAY ' N53 ■jJSfAnaheim * 8 30 5 30 researchpurpo—f only. |^ibm(^^J^H MB^E^^^^^^— Guarmnttmd Factory Stconds CLOSED SATURDAY & SUNDAY FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1976 NEW UNIVERSITY PAGE 3

tempt — feelings which have been inbred andreinforced by Culture Deprivation a humanity as a whole. But, No Reg Fee with this social and profes- sional achievements and & Social Industry recognitions minority groups are making today, there Increase by Kathe Brockman Tracy " Two other tests pertaining to arises a demand for another UC Student Lobby has beeninformed byUniversityofficials Thesecond sessionofthe UCI the Mexican American com- "nigger," evenifitbe a white that for the upcoming school year there will be no increase in Personnel Workshop entitled, munity ("A gabacho is :.., a one. Thecircle of viciouslyun- student registration fees. This decision was reached by Uni- "Discrimination, The Act pachucois ....amayateis...") ending. versity PresidentDavid Saxonafter meetingwith theCouncil Thereof," introduced the test- and to the women's move- The objective of this volun- of Chancellors. ing process, a method used ment ("A writer who's con- tary workshop, sponsored by Prior tothis decisiona sub-committee of theCouncilofChan- widely bymany employersfor sidered to be a sexistof the lit- the Personnel Department of cellors appointed by President Saxonhad met to review long the selection of potentialper- erary world is countries UCI, is to heighten a sense of range solutions to pressures on Hie registration fee. Com- sonnel. Federal law requires which have had.... a woman awareness of the various posedof Chancellors,Albert Bowker (Berkeley),Daniel Aid- that tests, if used, have con- Prime Minister include ...,") guises of discrimination. rich (Irvine), and James Meyer (Davis), the sub-committee tent or criterion validity. To are equally demonstrative of Though it encourages attend- recommended a possible thirtydollar increase inthe RegFee insure this, the Fair Employ- testing discrimination. While a'nce from all'levelsof the fac- for the 1976-77 academic year. This was determined by ad- ment Practice Commission to- the above examples areexag- ulty and staff,.there'is a per- justing the RegFee to an inflationaryindex. gether with the Equal Em- gerated versions, many tests sistent lack of administrative Thismethod was unanimouslyrejectedby the Student Body. ployment Opportunities Com- administered today may be participation. Presidents' Council and student registration fee committee mission have written, and subtle renderings in favor of members. Together they presenteda position paper to Presi- periodically update, testing the dominant social class. dent Saxonoutlining theirobjections totheproposal. Fiverea- guidelines based on ex- The next workshop exercise sons— were given: emplary court decisions. In revealed the uniting and con- Tutorial the proposal would cause the most accelerated fee in- addition,employers may con- flicting values assigned to the crease— pattern. sult private testing develop- three minoritygroups andthe the proposal wouldcause uncertainityfrom yeartoyearas ment firms. The resultant Anglo male. In the analysis, Service Offered to— the cost of the student's education. questions must be job-related positive traitsinthemen were there would beno incentive forcampuses tocarefully eval- and/or predict potential job negativetraits for women (i.e. uate present programs since funding would be insured. success, determined by a ambition, aggression), and The Cross Cultural Center is — asystemwide feeincreasemay resultin several surpluses thorough jobanalysis foreach the Anglo male is viewed as presently offeringtutorialser- on somecampuses. Thismay cause these campuses to spend position. lacking the emotional ma- vices to all students in many the surpluses on programs and buildings, which arenot need- But, in reality, it appears turity found in blacks, chi- subject areas, announced ed— on the campuses. most tests are developed to canos, and women. Thenega- Ronald Hudson, coordinator the formula may putstudentsinanadversaryrelationship people out. To illus- tiveattributesbestowedonthe of Tutorial Services. with the employees paid from the registration fee. Tyingfee trate this point,a test was de- twoethnic groupsappear tobe Particular strengths of the increases directly tosalary increasescouldcause seriouscon- velopedby AdrianDove, a so- character developments tutorial service are in the flicts between employees and students. cial worker inWatts, which is necessary for mere* survival physical and computer Thestudent registrationfee iscurrently 100 dollars perquar- designed to measure intelli- (i.e. toughness, gang-run- sciences. Tutortials in Hu- ter on each UC campus. The fee is used to fund student ser- gence as the concept pertains ners),and as results of a sys- manities and other areas are vices that benefit the basic educational program. The Chan- to lower-class Black Ameri- tem of denial (i.e. uneduca- being developed extensively cellor of each campus has sole discretion on how themoney is cans. Examples include: "A ted, always living off of wel- as well. to be spent. On each campus there is a RegFee Committee gas head is a person whohas a fare). While the women's and The Cross Cultural Center which advises the Chancellor on how the money should i>e ... Cheap chittlings will taste the Anglo male's negative was founded on the premise spent, this enhances student involvement concerning regis- rubbery unless they are cook- qualities were unique to their that allstudentsareentitled to tration fee spending. ed long enough. How soon can roles, chicanos and blafcks equitable resources for aca- you quit cooking them To eat shared the less favorable ele- demic support. The tutorial and enjoy them?" ments of personality. program is just one of the A group of ghetto residents Themajority ofAmericanso- many servicesprovidedby the Physical who took the test achieved a ciety has had to be forced to Center. ..977 accuracy (29 percent face the problem of preju- Tutors will be available dur- correctanswers outof30ques- dice, often through govern- ing drop-in hours in the Cen- " ter Sciences tions) and by appointment. For Week A score of under 20 in- ment intervention. Thereare dicates a victim of "cultural many whostillstruggle todeal information and assistance, UCI's first ever Physical Sciences Week is slated to deprivation." with their feelings of con- phone 833-7215. begin on Monday, Jan. 26 with a free movie, "The Thing," followed by an analysis by Professor Gregory Benford. -In an effort to reveal what the School of Physical Sciences has to offer andhow the physical sciencesre- late to other disciplines, student organizers Ron Sawl HOW A and Scott Lipman have planned a variety of lectures, TO BE tours, games and other activities for the week. . A speciallecture byDerek de Solla Price,a renowned science historian from Yale University, will highlight the week. He willdiscuss whatgoesonbehindthescenes inscientific research. Thispresentationissponsoredby the Student-Faculty Colloquim Series. Informal get-togethers with Physical Sciences fac- REGENT complete STUDENT ulty The sched- members are alsoscheduled. ule for Physical Sciences faculty,members are also scheduled Applications are now being taken in the ASUCI Office, Informal get-togethers with Physical Sciences fac- Gateway Commons, for the position of student regent. The ulty members are also scheduled. The complete- sched- person chosen will become a member of the Board of Re- ule for Physical Sciences Week 1976 follows. gents. MONDAY,— JANUARY 26 FREE MOVIE "The Thing" 7-9 p.m. in SSH. Analysisby Professor GregBenford. TUESDAY, JANUARY 27 Allcurrently enrolledstudents,who willattenda UCcam- (Ion Cyclotron 9-11 a.m. PS- B-33. Tour of ICR pus next year,are encouraged to apply. Time commitment Resonance) conducted by Professor Mclver. and expertise in statewide University issues affecting stu- 1:30-2 p.m. PS 481. Professor Larry Overman will dents willbe amajorcriterion. These issuesinclude,but are give a tour of his organic chemistry lab your PUZZLESOLVINGability. not limited to, financial aid, instructional improvement, stu- 2-3p.m.PS534. Test Prizes will be given. . dent services, affirmative action and legislation and/orcam- 3-4p.m.PS220. MEET WITHTHEDEAN. Coffee and pus regulations concerning student rights. refreshments. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28 on 1-2 p.m. PS 152 Professor Alfred Bork lectures Future Education." Application deadline is February 20th. Applicants willbe "Computers and the of 2-3 p m PS 534 More PUZZLES, more prizes. screened by two regional nominating commissions, com- 4-5 p.m. PS 488 Student-faculty interaction. Coffee posed of an undergraduate and graduate student chosenby and doughnuts. each senate or legislativecouncil. 5-6 p'm.-PS 104 Derek de Solla Price, science histor- Studentsinterestedinser- Political Arithmetic of Science ving these commissionsshould pick up ian, to lecture on "The on also applications Policy." at the Associated Students office. The deadline for commis- THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 sion applications is February 21st. 12-2 p.m. PS 332 Tour of Professor Rynn's Plasma Physcis Lab. 2-3 p m. PS 534 Last chance at the PUZZLES. 3-4 p.m. PS 48aStudent-faculty interaction. Refresh- Apply now also for the Student Regent Ad Hoc Com- ments served'. .. mittee. The deadline for applications is February 2nd, at 4-5 p.m. PS 158 Professor Fred Reines,discoverer— of Commons, the neutrino,to lectureon "Searchfor theNeutrino A ASUCI, First Floor x5547. Retrospective View." FRIDAY, JANUARY 30 4-5 p.m. PS 114 Professor Rowland to lecture on "Man's Threat to Stratospheric Ozone." PAGE 4 NEW UNIVERSITY FRIDAY. JANUARY 23. 1976 MIW UNIVERSITY 'M Off To See The Wizard - Again

Dv Meve Bretzius J.F.: Melt, hah! You CIAguyscomeupwith Vicki lanzafiines Another civil war in a remoteregion of the someof the darndest methods. Thistops theex- EDITOR world threatens to drag America into battle. ploding seashell you had planned for Castro. With the.nightmare of Vietnam still firmly en- What three agents do you have in mind? LVooke Gunning Lance Kobbins trenched in theminds of many Americans,op- MANAGING EDITOR ASSOCIATEEDITOR position toUnitedStatesparticipation isgreat. W.C.: Icanonlygiveyou their code names: Despitethis opposition, the President,theSec- the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Lion. Leslie'iHjnell retaryof State, and the director of the CIA are — " CITY DESK all involved in a top level conference to form a J.F.: Theysound like goodmen full of in- Unsigned "drtorvts npimm majority optruonof th» New Umversrry Ednontl Board plan of action. telligence, compassion, and courage. You Rsapowiibfci ndmdueis or group* may submrt tatters end article* contrary to (he New editors know, these plans sound really good. l)m»e»ait»aditofl portion However,the reserve therighttousethew discretion President, «i pubkehangletters Atotherarticles rspresanttheopm»ons oftheindividual wrrter(sl»iv) H.K.: Mr. I've got some good notnecessanrv those of rtie Hew University Edrtonel Board, the ASUCI or the Untversity news and some bad news. Firstof all. the CIA W.C.: There's one problem Jerry. Idon't of Catrtorrw informs me that the Great and Powerful Wiz- think Congresswillsupport U.S.interventionin ard of Oz is leaving the Land of Oz by balloon Oz. and a violent civil warover controlof the coun- tryis about tobegin. Itsbetween supportersof J.F.: What makes you think that? the Wicked Witch of the North, and the Good Witch of the South. W.C.: First of all. they consider Oz too SRFP faf away to be of any significance to Amer- J.Ford: Fine. Now giveme the bad news. ica. The New University wouldlike to express its concern about J.F.: They're calling somewhere over the thepossible demiseof the StudentRecommended FacultyPro- H.K.: Jerry, thatis the badnews.Mr. Presi- rainbow too far? Idon't believe it. Ijust don't gram. Thestudents have finallygottenthe opportunityto havea dent,are you sure youhaven't beenfighting too believe it. voicein theselectionoffacultyfortheIrvinecampus,only to see many wars with your helmet off? it slipthrough theirfingers. It is our hopethatthis programwill continue and expandin scope, not be dropped. J.F.: Youcall thatbadnews? Wehaven't had W.C.: And that's not all. Liberals in Con- The programitself has been wellreceived by students Dur- in al- gress are calling the Land of Oz another Viet- a good war in witch to get involved for them, ing the Fall quarter several of the Student AppointedFaculty most three months. This country needs some- nam. To the yellow brick road issynono- have given openlectures,andhave giventhe campusin general new teeth into. Mr. Colby, mous to the Ho Chi Min trail. It's the Wicked thing to sink it's again. a new look. Diversity is importantfor the developmentof the you're big in the CIA you? North vs. the Good South all over Be- aYen't cause this, wemay students,and we are sure that manyof the present facultymem- of have to launch Alternate bers have benefited as well. W.C.: Ihead it. Plan Thfee. opportunity to meet and work The with NobelLaureatesisn't 9 somethingthat happenseveryday,and thefactthat wehavefive J.F.: Imagine that! You're just the man I J.F.: What's that on campus indicates that students are not misusing their want to talk to. Boy.is thismy lucky day. As choices, but are realtyinterested in"serious study underthefac- you know, we've got to get going in Oz if we \V.C: Well, according to plan three, our top ulty membersthey choose. want to counter the gains alreadymade by the agentin Oz, Dorothy, issupposedtohide 50mil- secretly Let's hope that the programdoesn't meet an early death. If Soviet Union there. What have youboys in the lion dollars in Toto's puppy chow and you want tohave avoice then letitbeheardnow,andto thepeo- CIA got planned? give it to the MLO. ple count most, be robbed that the Academic Senate. Don't of 9 this "golden"opportunity- W.C.: Ithink you'll be pleased with what J.F.: MLO we'redoingMr. President. Firstofall. weplan W.C.: to mine the Munchkins for the liberation of Oz. poppy field surrounding Oz. Come to think of it, we might have to launch plans one, two, and three J.F.: Like the Hai Phongharbor 0 simultaneously with or without Congress' permission.As you VOTE know, Mr. President, the Soviet W.C.: Exactly. Then, saturationbombingof Union and the land of the Wicked Witch North — Cuba are already backing the Wicked Witchof City of the the Please get out andregisterto vote. The Irvine Council only,instead of bombs, we drop houses. North. electionsare comingup March 2, and thestudents at UCI have the opportunity to vote in a Council that will support them. J.F.: Hmmm. Thingsare gettingratherhot. Forthose of you concernedabouthousing,transportation,de- J.F.: Hmmm! What it those winged mon- velopmentof Town Center,etc., get outand letthe community keys I'vebeenreading— aboutlaunch amassive H.K.: Funny. Iwas just thinking they were know how YOU feel. Reportsthatonly 700 of the 2,000 regis- counter offense similar to Tet? getting rather Chile. Oh. what a mess we're tered students voted in the last election are alarming. If you getting into. IwishIcould wake up right now aren'tinterested in who getselected,whyshould theCity Coun- W.C.: Then we begin alternate plan two; and find out this whole thing has been a bad cil be concerned about your needs. The covert infiltration of the Wicked Witch of dream. After all. your support could be an important factor in this the North. By disguising three top agents as election,andyou shouldrightly expectrepresentationof YOUR palace guards, we plan to melt the Wicked J.F.: No way, Henry That only happens in problems from those you elect. Witch. the movies. Spectre Over Nigerian Oil-Land by Jeff Schmidt sky Umaru Abubakar walks to work as the be- Kennedy making it on illegal liquor; etc. In the" able to rescue their capitalist friends fromthese gins to lighten before sunrise. Father of five,and U.S., most of the graft, payoffs, "contributions, strikes. Thisis a likely causeof the coupwhich in- he speaks four languages, Umaru will work many, and corruption now takes place at the higher stalled new military laces six months ago. hours for his daily 80 cent income. This peasant level. — The Near Future raisesand shakes aclenched fist at" a passingmil- In Nigeria there is corruption at all levels A big question in the third world which is very lionaire, shouting "Ran kadede! What does it from the cashier at the store who demands a rapidly demanding more and more attention in mean? Down with the rich pigs? Power to the "dash" (gift or bribe; for selling up an item in .Nigeria is "socialism or capitalism?" Of course people? No, supply, government Nigerians fact, he has greeted his" "superior" in short to the officials who most favor socialism. In al- Hausa, wishinghim "a longlife. Umaru and his award contractsinreturn formillions of dollarsin though the rulers favor capitalism and have estimated 80 million fellow citizens make this bribes. No big American (or other) corporation strong ties with U.S. and British- corporations, country the largest in Black Africa. This is the does business in Nigeria without a heavy partici- they do not dare say so explicitly. The first gov- country which recently passedCanada andVene- pation in the payoffs. * ernment announcement following the latest zuela to become the largest supplier of oil to the TheNigerian ruling elite consistsof traditional assured the security of foreign interests in Ni- United States. nobility (feudallords),business tycoons, andoffi- geria. The so-called "indigenization" decree ex- Yet how much has the media told us about the cers in the military dictatorship. empts the big foreign interests. economic and social situation inside Nigeria? By hook and by crook this elite extort outof the The Nigerianpeople have a different attitude: What is happening to the eleven million dollar restofsociety themoney, the capital, Which turns This month demonstrators burned USIS exhibit annual oilrevenue'.' What are theNigeriangovern- them into capitalists. While the wheeling and booths in Ibadan.— The U.S. consulate in Kaduna ment policies which,in spite of its verbal sup- dealing goes on, the country sees thousands of was stormed the U.S. flag andportraitsof Kis- port for the MPLA in Angola, are bringing it poor people, children, lepers, and cripples beg- singer and Nixon (! ) were burned. In Lagos, the such strong United States government support? ginginthe streets. Possibly betteroff arethepea- capital,demonstratorsdemandedto beallowed to Lets look at exactly what the U.S. is supporting. sants with their average daily incomes of less join the MPLA in Angola. Although Nigeria and the U.S. are bothcapital- than a dollar. Thelureof threedollar perdayjobs As the struggle in Nigeria sharpens we can ex- istcountries there aresomedifferences inthe two as wage-workers is attracting many peasants to pect tosee the appearance of acapitalist govern- societies due totheir different stagesof capitalist the cities and creating a smallbutgrowingwork- ment calling itself "socialist" but (like in Bri- development.Most Nigerians are rural peasants ing class. tain) the rich will still have poftver, workers will whereas most Americans are wage workers. Ni- From;an overview of modem Nigeria, We see a stillhave tostrike. Whenthe Nigeriansystemfal- geria is now passing thru the stage of initial rising capitalist class and a declining feudal ters, American corporateinterests will demand accumulation of capital whereas the American (emir) class. What isespeciallyinterestingonthe increased U.S. government "adyice" and sup- "ruling port ' ' economic 'superpowers, the handful of Nigerian scene is the increasing boldness and for Nigerian capitalism. families,1 have been around for some time. militancy of the working class. In spite of their TheU.S.isalready trainingsome,Nigerianmili- Our very own distinguished U.C. Regents, for 'numbers the Nigerianworkershavebeen theonly tary personnel. As further preparationthe State example, aresuch people. As variousmembers of force against run-away exploitation. Last year, Departments first-string Africanist, Donald the Nigerian elite fight to consolidate their own workers struckalmost everyindustryin thecoun- Easum, has just been installed as ambassador to day Nigeria. power" the rule of the becomes "anything trydemanding,amongother things, tenmonth re- Easum is a far cry from what Washing- goes. During America's analogous period we troactive payincreasesof upto200% for thepoor- ton sent to nearby Ghana: Shirley Temple. saw the process by which leadingcapitalist fami- est workers! Inanycase,nomatter how extensivetheir prep- lies are established: saw the process by which The workers wonmostof thestrikesinspiteof a arations, the Nigerian exploitingelite and their leadingcapitalist families are established: J.D. decree from the military dictatorship outlawing foreign corporate partners are fighting a losing Rockefeller withhisbriberyandgoonsquads; Joe all strikes. The dictatorship was helplessly un- battle to perpetuate their vicious class system. FRIDAY,JANUARY 23.1976 NEW UNIVERSITY PAGE 5

I.

! , _ . i . pp^^pTHE STEREO DISCOUNTERS fe^S,

MODEL 222OB OMIT MODEL 2235 ONLY 20 watts RMS per channel from 20 to -«» jr flS/Afe 3S *«"* RMS per channel from 20 to j^ ■■V■■£A 20,000 cycles into 8 ohms at 0.5% |MflA^f|| 20,000 cycles into 8 ohms at 0.5% S""B IIvH f T.H.D. Was fair- traded last month for ▼ T.H.D. Was fiar traded last month for .^K 4w £31 $299.95 JBI^^^IP $399.95 JKMM W

..-■.■■^^^^p^p^ WmN YOU BUY THISI TWO DWD ROCK MONITORS AT *239 EACH L YOU MT FREE OF ANY ADDITIONAL CHASS^I m^^^SISS^mmSmm a siiperscope (the makers of marantzi aoe STElliO RECEIVER and a full size Imnoarrard 440 AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE PS^BB These huge speakers from DWD have 2 'active 12" J< ■ SlP^y! A|||V 6j^ "IP' Sf/«B Kb ■ flH 3l .-ilp?' . |f ■ M E? {IB w°o' ers tna< 9ive you a *rue since of realism and all Vli"' ''&*& :M^ of performance. These a terrific J^C ' Weim W- W$*Ur mj!r* the imPacf a live are ,^^B^^V A MONTH ; JKlr value at $239 each but you also get FREE of any JBRii^Pr . » r^^PV OR " 1 additional charge a Superscope receiver and a full J| M . «** $506 68 Price wuti t^x Illl "- -- ' SizeGarrard turntable. $100^2 Financecharge W"" JWfc nirfEWW^^ ' *«HF8 $607 payments p( H^^k^^^P'JP'^.-^o^IbmP' r^: 92 Total

* ' "' — J v ■ Wj^ ■ o^flflfl a- ■&■ y SB '-^^'ft*fo^^hff^flflMa»^''"' ■■' > ■■i:i? ■■^■1 J ,J|B Ott LSflSHHHSBP^^flH^flH^^ 1^ * — pPI^^ EASY FINANCING NO DOWN* . _ (^)|^IC3M£CJR! /i- 3^iivieimsio»ms n bhb hbbhJ| sx 838 ' 1 HHHBP SBHh.■■i^fe;- ! vfV^^flH*MFalWafllflTIE EflMLUMvl .'^S^S^m^^ft. H SBHRHHflHNBR I you've : ■ iil If ever wanted a ;|<^^BpSfa|ga8^PMWW^^|^W Mlll "■*"?¥#» Bliiiif- super sound nows your S AM-FM stereo receiver with all the It^^^tk AST ;^^ chance to buy a column |i features and power you'll ever need speaker with a sound very 1 was fair traded inJune for $499.95 f^UAJfc^BF"4P ■■r7«Sf to a|^i' real and true life. We IMPERIAL 8 IMPERIAL9 with the pruchaseof any speakersfrom $18ea on up HH bought hundreds of these WAS FA|R TRADED 2o WAS FAW TRADED 20 liiVl speakers to be able to offer MONTHS AGO FOR MONTHS AGO FOR ■ you this price So if you §§§§ $319-95 $499.95 At\ nanm>»*=:em ****** W nt ' G M and NOW $■MLg± NOW$AlA PtO^^ ■ now's the opportunity to ea turntable withbase ■IIllll S9P^flflF jtmS9^0 Manual '%JV£ ?S^%!|^!^

I . #^fl^p flkfl 113^ ~ i^^v

; b i^^^""*^ v Tgtf^ft^ — ; f x B^ flfljj^^d "^\ \j SBFv— v^^^^^^^^S BflF !■

MONTETeTo^^vrBirerly 721-0207 M ANAHEIM 2711W. Lincoln 1(714)821-8070 PAGE 8 NEW UNIVERSITY FRIDAY,JANUARY 23, 1976 CELEBRITY AT PATOGH Now You See It

by Vlckl Tamoush AM snappy hit,they just don't into his sets whenperforming: Peter Alsop is a singer,song- have time to talk to you." "I found that by doing some by Vtekl Tamoush writer, and as fine ahuman be- Alsop is perhaps most famous serious songs, I'm not saying On January 16, amost extraordinarymagic show was present- ing as music can hope to pro- for hisrenditions of "Junk Food 'I'm just here to make you edin Crawford Hal|l. Andre Kole's "World of Illusion" dazzled the duce. With roots infolk, ballad; Junkie," "Garbage," and the laugh.' This is what Ido, just audience withsomeof the mostbafflingillusionsever performed. and comic songs, he leaves his "Barnyard Suites," often heard say, 'I'dlike toshare some time Manyof tne illusions (as opposedto tricks) weredevelopedby audiences with the distinct im- on Dr. Demento's show. The with you and listen to some Kole himself,fromhisrepertoireof over1,000.Kole isalsofamous pression that he is not simply latter is a delightful managerie songs..." for his studies and investigations in the field of unusual stage makingthem laugh,butlaughat of songs amongst the beasts. Peter Alsop is also a Con- effects and spiritual and psychic phenomena. something or themselves.He is Alsop has a way of bringing a scientious Objector. He spoke The show, sponsoredby the Campus Crusade for Christ,als'p artful at incorporating comedy seemingly insane idea for a of his legal hassles in gaining contained a spiritual section,illustrated by the well-known Five and music as wellas an overall songintoactual musicthat isin- this title,and of 'his experience Magic Rings. message. fectious as well as fun. He in working with emotionally Audience participation drew the crowdinto the show,andeven Inaninterview January19, Al- hopes to direct his music into handicappedchildren. Peace- the participants were baffled as tohow Koleaccomplished many sop explainedthe obstacles in- more topical comedy, and his able Records seems a proper of his feats. volved in distributing an album first, album, Peter Alsop con- table for him: itrefleptshisstate Kole stressed repeatedly that he used nothing but skill and alone, sans label publicity,and tains his belt so far. Italsohas of mind and outlook. slight of hand, although he could easily have claimed extra hisenthusiastic approachtothe some tracks thatareverystrong Peter Alsop will be at Patogh sensory powers or.communication with the spirit world. He music business: "Itlooks likeI'll lyrically,owing to his fresh ap- January 30-31. His previous related several anecdotes and jokes during the performance, bedistributingmy records... It's proach to trite situations. shows there were -great suc- which added to the light, enjoyable show. a real problem for someone in He is not all laughs,however. cesses,sobe sure tocatchhim. Kole's interest in the unusual has led him toa deeprespect for my situation. If you don't have Alsop realizes the importance He is guaranteedtosurpass ex- truth, especially spiritual truth. He allows his audience a 10- something that sounds like an of melding serious numbers pectations! minute intermission at which point theymay leaveif they feel,as he says, that they may be offended or annoyed at spiritual matters. Kole was,incidentally, most tasteful and considerate in every respect. His approach was calm, not fire and brimstone. The World of Illusions will be at various Southern California locations in the near future. Kole performedat UCLA January19 and at Cal Poly Pomona January 22. F*or those interested in 'w& jJm j| fi[ I ▲ ,J^1 magic, mystique, or an eveningof complete amazement, Andre n^^KI Kole's Worldof Illusions ishere, for ashort timeonly.Contact the chapter Campus Crusade, — local of for Christ for more info. Hot Tuna/Yellow Fever (RCA) They'vebeen by Vickl Tamouth around long enough, all right. This release is Earth, Wind & Fire/Gratitude (Columbia) — good, but not thatgood.For Hot Tuna,it is <*on- This is much more than a disco album; it is a sistent, andcontains someprettyfine cuts("Jelly " Blues," *3B£ffli=^ collection of someof the finest black music since Ro "Sunrise Dance With The Devil")but the very hot days of Stevie Wonder. This LPcon- is weak, especially— for all itspublicity. They can tains "Sing A Song," and the title track, both dobetter. let's hope they do. There is no place strong on their own. There is also a supertight f° r a group living in the past, Head East Young Man double— package.E, W&Fdon'tneedtoplaydisco Tne Leslie West Band (RCA) and Mountain by Vickl Tamoush they'vecreateda niche for themselves thatisas begat West, Bruce & Laihg and they begat the January 18 found PauleyPavilion,UCLA, teemingwith J.Geils danceable as any jukebox junk, and twice as Leslie West Band. Who wouldn't have been bad, fans. They played their usual superb sets with confidence and refined. — back inthedaysofMountain.The best thatcan be finess. The twist of the evening, however, was the openingact: American Graffiti,Vol. Ill (MCA) Here is a said for this LP is that they do a goodversion of Head East. Basedinthe mid-west,thefive-man grouphavecome third collection of sock hopoldies for those who "We Gotta Get Out Of This Place," but it's all in along wayfrom the bar circuitof Champagne,Illinois. Theirper- didn't get their fillfrom themovie. Includes:"Let's tne timing. It's ashame,butmusic has moved too formance^onrecordis just as aynamicas theirstageact, which is Dance," "Kansas City," "Lucille," and "Surfer far for this heavy rock sound to be anythingbut quitea feat for such a band. Thethrustof theenergy producedis Girl." They'llprobablycontinue tocash inaslong outdated, from lead singer John Schlitt, supported by keyboardist Roger as they can. — JimGrady/EverythingIs AsItShouldBe(RCA) Boyd's strong vocals and forceful moog. Their sound is saved Michael Murphey/Swans— Against The Sun Thisalbum isapleasantsurprise.Grady,longa from being sucked under with a dying era of rock (heavy metal) (Columbia) He'scome along wayfrom the AM singer/songwriter, is successful on his debut only through itsartful use ofsynthesizertechnique.Boyd'seffec- novelty hit syndrome.Murphey shines as never album.Perhaps a bit over-produced,it is never- tive and selective sound reflect the bands constant stress on im- before on this release, his golden voice in top theless evident that this is a singer close to his provement. form. The two best cuts are also thefirst two: the songs. He puts them across with conviction and Ina recent interview,they expressedtheir own surprise at the title track, followed by "Renegade." The songs candor, sampling various styles, — overwhelmingaudience reaction to the UCLA concert: "Youget are soft, easy-listening, b\it still spirited in a Isaac Hayes/DiscoMovement (ABC) Thisal- up on the stageand there's this excitement ... Rock n roll is ex- vibrant way. It is obvious that these are not bum could only be improved by running the citement." Theyare firm in their trust in audience acceptance, stereotyped tracks; there is too much stirring stylus perpendicular to the grooves. It doesn't and the crowd at this most recent performance proved them- herefor that.His musichasfirmed into astyle that even need to be listened toin order to know ex- selves ina clapping,stomping,singingcrescendo through each borders oil thebaroqueof popmusic. Thisalbum actly how every song sounds.— Such a catas- song from the album. Jheir sales, too,are strong,and their dy- is one of the best in its class. trophe from the Shaft man but everybody's namic performancecan only support them. Their next album, Kenny—Starr/The Blind Man In TheBleachers gotta get into the act. due in the first half of March, should prove even stronger, and (MCA) Starr broke into the charts with a Dave— Edmunds/Subtle As A Flying Mallet their followingbuilds with each concert date. novelty hit,and this enticed many critics to look (RCA) This isalmost tooincredible:a wholeLP They spoke too, of their near-overnightsuccess in the South, more closely at the album,rather than the usual of classics ("Da Doo RonRon,""LetIt BeMe," "A followinga highlysuccessful tour there. Head East is much too opposite effect. These songs stem from C/W in Shot Of Rhythym and Blues") done just like the dynamic to stay small. style and content,and thealbum islikely tokeep originalartists by aguy whoplaysvirtuallyallin- him locked in there. — struments and vocals.tracks. He can sound like Peter Alsop (Peaceable) From the man who any° ne from the Everly Bros, to the Ronnettes. Cooks At Royce will perform at Patogh Jan. 30-31 comes an al- The album 'S fun, slashy, and refreshing, Jarrett bum of comedy,wit,andtender love lyrics.-Alsop Edmunds,himself— amajorrock figure,hasmadea by Jeff Marder is much more accomplished than most musi- wise move backwards, — Sunday evening's sold-out performance of the Keith Jarrett cians on a debut album, and far more com- O'Jays/Famlly Reunion (Columbia) A sig- Quartet (Jarrett, acoustic piano and soprano sax; Dewey Red- fortable with his distinctive style.The best of the nificantly weakerrelease. This LP has only two man, tenor sax;Charlie Haden, bass; Paul Motian,drums & per- serious songs is "It's Gonna Be Okay," a highly- worthwhile songs, "ILove Music,"and "Livin' For cussion) demonstrated the eclecticism of oneof the world'sfore- identifyable song of hangingon and loving. This The Weekend." Not exactly heavy— material ... most improvisationalensembles. The first set was initiated by live album is only available through Peaceable Patti Smith/Horses (Arista) This is a risky Jarrett's woodenflute passages andRedman's reed statements. Records, Box 77038, LA 90007, or Licorice Pizza statement, but this is NOT a rave review of AsJarrettbegan hiskeyboardexcursions,Redmancontinuedhis stores. Horses. "Birdland,"is a series ofscreeches,as is Middle Eastern influenced blowing. Theensemble progressedin Supertramp/Crisis? What Crisis? (A&M) — much of the rest of thealbum."Gloria" has possi- an experimentalvein throughout the set, although an up- bllities but not any more than any changeof pacesaw good by Supertramp may be the unheralded heroes of . ' other artist bass work Haden anda high energy jt- their time, simply because they are consistently could have 9iven- lf"this is the direction that drum sold byMotian. Jarrett and Redman then elicited a two- superb on record and musicallymuch more to- mL|slc IS to take !t sha no longerbemusic, but saxophone flourish to end the first half. Because the set was getherthan any group recording. "Sister Moon- noise. — largely experimental,the musicians were often dissonant and shine" is a well wrought bouncy number that TanyaTucker/Lovln'andLearnln1 (MCA) So didn't always appear together. In spite of this, Jarrett laid down holds an exceptionally crisp guitar track. No shes only sixteen. The important part is that some excellent piano work. aspect of their music The she IS a mediocre country/western singer, and After intermission,however,theensemble reallybegan tocom- is overlooked. LP also "an* houses heavilyplayed "Ain'tNobodyButMe," stations are allowing C/W to infiltrate municate. Jarrett began with apiano solo thatrivaled hisbestre- the |ay||S - which turns out to be one of the weakest cuts. theJr.P js The only way she can prove her- corded work. Redman entered, and ihe two painted a lyrical Compared to, for example, "Another Mans selt IS on the cnarts, and she'll be high on the scenario that drew much applause. Following this, Jarrett radi- Woman,"the "hif'fadesconsiderably.Theirclear country ones for sure, — cally changed styles; upto this poirit,his playing had been light vocalsand taut manner make for a cohesive LP. Rita Coolidge(lt's- Only Love (A&M) Always and classical. Now, he initiated an R&B clash calypso number the lady 8oft ballads, Coolidge whichfeaturedblue galore! B.B.King/Lucille TalksBack (ABQ-Theonly . . countrified Ms. notes Poundingonthelow basskeys, shows °"°J her 1*"* v0lce- competence at-all he complemented Haden's walking, strutting bottom. Redman living father of blues still high on the charts pro- t ' P. c exceptional styles and completeness.She branches out here began to loosen up and really blow. It was hard to sit still: the duces the most music in his genre. ' * ~ King here what he's always done: good, mt0 ja z p°?:and ea y 1"?,-She dOesanex band was reaHy cooking. Shifting gears, the quartet slid into a dols celle ltfre"dlt ° . ''f^"' medium-tempo,quasi-bossa drippy blues, both with and without lyrics The ! !?" f ■?"! ?'Ue> and handleS the novagroove that servedas themost R&B, funk, rock captured Mean ToMe with grace-andclas melodic aspect of Jarrett's playing. To endthe performanceethe basis of andsolid is on fW"^accomplished LP.King forthe70's- mustbe Her ful vocals build thisgroupofS< musicians entered into a "free jazz"coda in which Redman blew this slick cooks he songs !' heard to be into more than an album: they become a harda laCbltraneandJarrettbangedthekey/boardinaCecilTay- believed lor imitation. The responded Oldfleldl/Ommadawn (Columbia) '- audience with a well deserved Mike This Pomeranz/lfs In Every One Of Us standing ovation which drew a shprt encore. is another concept album. Oldfield would rather — ' (Arista) Another surprisingly goodalbum this UCLA's RoyceHallis attempting toshowcasemusicians often by known as a composer than song-writer,but is an LPof upliftedmusic,happy tohear without overlooked or ignoredtoy the LA jazzclubs or the conservative' this album qualifies him as neither. He does beingbubblegum. "Thea"isasongaboutachild- World Jazz Association. Some of the Winter a talent for arranging, Over- and SpringQuarter show however. like relationship, and the wondrous quality per- offerings include theGary Burton QuintetandOregon (Feb 27) all, boring except the Muzak the album is to " meates the whole album. A nice release with theCecilTaylor Quartet (Mar.30>^and theOliverNelson Orches- crowd. enoughdepth to carry itself. ._ tra (Apr. 11). FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1976 NEW UNIVERSITY PAG1I

practicedat home. The work- Learning shop is short, pleasant and Skills Center does reduce examination an- The Advantages Of The xietyin most cases. Time Management focuses Aids Learning Process on understanding theneed for ASUCI Travel Service TheLearningSkills Centeris given on study ■ practices efficient organization of time Some of the many advan- Besides the charters, tfte designed to provide students which will improre compre- and on developing an indivi- tagesyou, asastudent atUCI, EuraU and BritRail passes, with the skills necessary, to hensionof material to beused dual specific planof action for have are the services of the available only in theU.S.,can take advantage of the educa- before, during and after the the student. General time ASUCI Travel Service, lo- be obtained at theTravelSer- tional opportunities offered at lecture. Inaddition, students management principles are cated just inside first floor vice. ThesepassesprovideUn- UCI. To accomplish thisgoal, are provided with the oppor- discussed, and the student is Gateway Commons. The1 Tra- limited use of European rail- learning difficulties in sub- tunity to listen toandpractice requested to apply them to vel Service is a branch of the roads, buses, ferryboat^, and ject areas or in overall taking notes for an actual his/her own situation. InternationalEducational Ex- steameps, all for just one pur- approaches to learning are classroom lecture. Quiz ques- Writing Skills focuses onthe change (CIEE),a non-profit chase price. diagnosed and programs de- tions are provided so students structure of writing at the organizationthatoffers many Also available here is theIn- veloped to, help students can check their accuracy and level of the paragraph. Tech- discounts and privileges to ternational Student Identity acquire necessary skills. comprehension. niquesondevelopment areex- student travelers. Card, which enables you to The programs are not dupli- Study Readingis designed to amined .and named. Other Available at the ASUCI book onto intra-Europeandis- cations of material offered in help students become active- areas touched upon are spell- Travel Service are reserva- count charter flights, stay in the classroom andare offered ly and purposefully involved ing (mnemonicdevices,choos- tions on charter flights to student hostels, eatin student in addition tohelpprovidedby with the material to be learn- ing a dictionary, the use of Europeorintra-Europeanstu- restaurants,or getsavings on faculty members. To insure ed. It is a method of study transitional expressions, and dent flights, student railpass- travel by train andboat. that the programs are meet- whichanyone canlearn, prac- approaches to the field study. es, International Student ID, Right now the travel service ing students' needs in various tice and master. The basic American Youth Hostel Card is offering 2 "super economy Study gives subject areas, staff members processleads students tocom- Skills hints on and Hostel Handbook, plus student tours" — 3 weeks this continuously consult with fac- prehend thematerial tobestu- how to set up a notebook, lots of information helpful in summer in Central America ulty members for their input died, recall that material; re- listening and notetaking,gen- travel planning. foronly$479, day habits, and a9 mini- and ask students to evaluate tain the material for future eral study relation- Elizabeth Klein, the CIEE bus tour to Mazatlan for $139. the programs they attend. utilization, to understand its ships with teachers and cour- representative at the ASUCI For more information on TheCenterfacilitates the stu- significance and to be able to ses, organization of effort, Travel Service, says that the these tours,or anyof theother dent's learning processes pri- generalize from the data memory techniques, SQ4R charter flights are "the only services previously mention- marilythrough thedeliveryof learned. The workshop in- reading method, concentra- way to go" to Europe. They ed contact Elizabeth Klein, workshops. Students attend a cludes a short lecture and a tion and motivation. areinexpensive,andyoudon't first floor Gateway Commons particular workshoponlyonce chance to practice the tech- Test Taking focuses on the have to stay with a tour group (833-5373) or come Feb. 18 for a one-to two-hour period. niques described. preparation and taking both once you are over there, and from noon to5 p.m. to theAn- Currently the following work- Test Anxiety Reductionisde- essay and objective exams. you get the chance to be on trap for a TravelFair presen- shops are being offered. signedfor the student who be- Participants are asked to your own. tation. Notetaking covers four dif- comes excessivelytense when actually take an objective ferent procedures for note- preparing for or taking examduring the workshop for taking,eachof whichis appro- exams. To reduce this ten- demonstration purposes. priate for a different type or sion, a simple visualimagery Topics include the.structureof style of lecturer. Hints are techniqueis taught thatcanbe continuedon page 11 Irvine City Council continued^rom page1 election registered," explains Final Plans For Takeover Of most closel' approximate stu- Davis. Plans tosecureon-cam- dent concerns wilt receive the pus polling places are also be- endorsement of the selection ing considered by the registra- OCMC Discussed By Dean committee she added. The tion drive group. three coalition endorsed can- Sontag, member of the stu- coalition, by Lance Robbins to the malpractice insurance that it was the University's didates will then appear at UCI dent is also hopeful erisis affecting most doctors responsibility instead. on Feb. 18. that there willbe pollingplaces Dr. Stanley van den Noort, throughout the state. "That is arguable," said van Additionally, the UC Student on campus. "Wehad2,000stu- Dean of the UCI School of The Dean, who has been in den Noort. "What the County Lobby is sponsoringa registra- dents registeredfor the lastcity Medicine,discussed in a spe- charge of the UCI medical paysfor,is more thanoffsetby tion drive on campus in con- council election, but only 700 cial interview this week the facilities since 1970, express- the quality care and treat- junction withthe student coali- voted," she asserts. final plans for the acquisition ed relief that bitter negotia- ment that is provided for the tion's activities. She blamedthe lowturnouton polling places of the Orange County Medical tions between the University patients by these young doc- Registration the lack of for drive coordina- only Center, and offered solutions and the OrangeCounty Board tors." Exactlyhow the Medi- tor says, students. "The polling Laura Davis "We have places for students last time of Supervisors over the acqui- cal Center and the UCI Medi- groups in Mesa Court and sition of the Orange County 'cal school will interact with was in town center, and Middle Earth plus other stra- apparently Medical Center have finally each other is stilt under nego- tegic points campus." students didn't want around to make the trip." ended. Both parties seem tiations, but the^Dean insists She says there is usually a She is hopingfor pollsto be lo- satisfied with the results. that a "reasonable degree of registrar in the campus com- From the start, the debate autonomyof the medical cen- cated in Mesa Court and the mons area around noon each Middle - over OCMC was purely eco- teris necessary for itto func- day. Earth Vfirano Place nomic. "The Board of Super- tion properly," and he fore- area. $18 million, I major operational or The drive is expected to gear Sontag believes student par- visors wanted sees no shortly offered to buy the center for organizational changes in the up for the city council ticipationat the local levelises- $1.25 million," Dr. van den near future. election on March 2. "We only sential. "The onlyplaceyou can Noort said jokingly. Van den Noort is also con- have until Feb. 1 to get people have impact on the systemisat BROTHERS! "Actually, UCI drove an cerned about the malpractice who want to vote in the city the local level." agreementfor$5.5million,not problems. "The withdrawl of including the land. But when basicmedical care by doctors we found out that there would is somethingIcan'tsupport," VAN HALEISI be problems with taxes,audit- stated van denNoortemphati- ing, and paperwork we de- cally. "But Ican sympathize cided to buy the whole pack- withtheir concerns. Iamcon- age for $8 million. UCI will, cerned on behalf of the Uni- however,have toapproachthe versity, which must pay in- legislature in the spring for surance rates of $11 million KIDS the remaining $2.5 million." annually." He feels that a WHIZ money pressed good portion of that UCI also for reas- should be used to fund other " surance from the Board of educational programs at UCI. Supervisors that it would 1970, I THURS., JAN.29th make up any' "The fact that in when deficiencies in came here from out of state, MACHINE GUN KELLY the budget for treatment of personal premiums were DISCO SHOW those people unable to pay. my $120 a year, and now thesame "There are approximately would cost $12,000, 100,000 illegal Orange insurance STUDENTNIGHT aliensin suggests a crisis of serious SUNDAY County, who, as a result, are indigent, and who obviously proportions." Admission Free Van den Noort suggested a with I.D. have no medi-c?l or medi- care. Previously, their health solutionmay bepossible with- in a non-legal framework. Every Sunday care was paid for by the mediation County, which hasbeen losing He recommends a CONTEST panel. "A patient agrees be- DANCE money by doing so. We want- being any Sioor CASH ed the County to continue to fore treated that if pick up the tab for the medi- dispute arises they will both Wliun CswptlvIn Tt>« fin.iH go before a mediationpanel— $300" CASH cal services for these aliens, despite the fact we are taking consisting of lawyers, doc- tors, and non-professionals controlof theMedical Center. Dr.van den Noort The University could sirriply wha will,— hear expert testi- not afford to do so." mony a low cost alterna- photo by Sylvia Leos tive to thelegalsystem.Other specialities RaiphDiedrich,Chairmanof states show that this is' an ef- forming occasional favors for into lower-cost County others (a chest surgeon per- such as dermatology.' the Orange Board|of fective way of cutting the answer, says van den Supervisors, fought hard ina amount of settlements and forming an appendectomy) The against van will cease, forcing specializa- Noort, is not to seek a quick series of debates time. solution, "butj to den Noort over thisproposal. He predicted also, that Cali- tion. "Large medical spe- long-term cialization groups would grow find a short-term solution so He felt the County was al- fornia won't be able to rely on have time to gen- ready paying $10 million for "medical expert imports," strong, diminishing competi- that you poor. As doctors who have migrated tion, and private practition- erate the legislative ma- Strip the healthcare of the chinery into finding a reason- "«»««t I long as UCI was buying the from out of state. This popu- ers would not be able to com- lation for of the pete with insurance rates. It able solution to the insurance Center,Diedrichfelttheboard accounts 2/3 crisis." should no longer pay for the doctors now practicing. Sec- might sway medical students I9O39 education of young doctors, ond, he felt that doctors per- PAGE 10 NEW UNIVERSITY FRIDAY. JANUARY 23. 1976 IMEntries Due Today in Rec Office: 3-PersonFootball; 3-PersonFootball;Men's,Women's andCoed Soccer; Handball DoublesTourney (BeginsWednesday at 4p.m.) Squash Tournament (BeginsMondayafternoon) SpecialOffer,$10.00 Value: FreeHP-21ApplicationsBook withthepurchaseofanyHP-21,OfferexpiresMarch15,1976.

See yourdealer fordetails. Offer voidwhereprohibitedby lawregulation,orotherwise.Availableonlywiththe purchaseof a newHP-21 beforeMarch 15,1976. Thesecondgenerationishere.

°^ generation calculators you :.^rf^B SSSSS^fctk. ne our scconcl can save .^9 pSS^ai%^^ countless hours and errors en route to your diploma and llfiP^agSmpSPJ^SjBR^ft^^MljBfc^ on the job thereafter. Each offers problem-solving tech- <| JfiHRSSifilKPSSBiP^Ei'Siifl^t nology youprobably won't find on competitivecalculators. Newlowprice.

Tne f 'p-21 makes short work of the technical calcula- r|'^^Sl^JP^^J^M^^^^^k"^H|^S^^\«^^^^S^J|^^^, tions even so-called "non-technical" courses require today. 'r performs most arithmetic,log and trig calculations auto- "*'^it ft^^ii^P^^.' _Jfl SfiH 1*^ *"*.*?. 'H^9«^'*i*!flflR9[KDr^ matically.'It's also the only calculator at its price that offers - » ; .full^djsplay formatting: you can choose between fixed :H^^^Bi«3JSBP^ decimal and scientificnotation. '-. If you need a calculator that does more than simple r^^_^ fkfkJr — B*^ arithmetic,this is it especially at its new low price.

:.-_ S|Si8flBSsi^Si8BH^r^»L- ~^c takes the starch out of the calculations you ■ ' . HkS^B^SJH^^^^jjfBfc^^ acc n business' courses today,in management tomorrow. S&jSB^^Sre. BJH^^^^^^^v ou can so ve most time-value-of-rnoney problems in sec- onds. You can breeze through business math calculations 15- " 8|teSgi tUB^^W^^^r^^ a^x :J^^j^S^B^^S^^^P^ai (logs, roots, %s, etc.). And, most important, youcan use JmRV e s statistical functions to build existingdata into more reliable forecasts. No other pocket calculator at any Hl^2^^^P^^!fe W^ESSSvSb price offers you a comparable combination of financial, HkWJ£^**" math and stat capabilities.

HP-25ScientificProgrammable, ' — |j Wti Ur 25 cocs everything our HP-21 can do and :j§ much, much more. It's programmable, which means it can B 1* x^^«^^%iifiBP!^lii^BffSp5?!W solve automatically the countless repetitive problems every " science and engineeringstudent faces. Withan HP-25,you ;1| enter thekeystrokes necessary to solve arepetitive problem K^^\i> on'v oncc- Thereafter, you just enter the variables and BBfcMfc^^^BB^^iELJipP^Sfe^-^^. press the Run/Stop key for an almost instant answer dis- played to 10 digits. You gain time-, precision; flexibility. B^S^^^J^^lJ^T^^ii^it S|i^p! ^H^5^^»^H^»A^^ (e.g.,theHP-25 requiresnopriorprogramming experience). S^li^^^m-iSiP % <^^H a " 5 1^51^(^B^^^^&b^H S a three* are almost certainly on display at vour bookstore. Bn^^"^^^ miMwr

Sales and servicefrom 172offices in 65 countries. i Dept.65SE, 193'lO.Pruneridge Avenue^ Cupertino,CA 95014

\J 'Sogfinted retailprice, excludingapplicablestateand local taxes— Continental US ,Alaska hHawaii. FRIDAY. JANUARY 23. 1976 NEW UNIVERSITY PAGE 11 I UCI Bridge Tourney UCI Cager Jenkins: +le Tries Harder Monday Night In Verano UCI basketball coach Tim "Fourth,he shoots for a very Tift was talking about an at- high percentage. He know The growing UCIBridge Club has hosted two records with12 teamscompeting. Thefield was tribute rarely found in play- he's not a great shooter,so he duplicate tournaments so far thisquarter,pro- close, with the teams of Tom Miller-Bob Het- ers, one that is invisible to takes only high percentage viding hours of spirited competition. The first linger and Steve Levin-Allan Foodym dead- most spectators. shots." tourney,onJanuary 12, was the sceneof some locked in first place. Both teams used non- To a coach, however,it is,a Through 10 games, Jenkins wild bidding coups and a few disasters. Domi- standard bidding systems, "" trait clearly perceived. hadhiton nearly 63% of them. nating the largest field .urdate, the team of and "Kaplan-Sheinwold," respectively, back "I'm talking about the play- Last season, as a sub,Jenkins Frank Spears andMike Elliott again asserted of the leaders by only two match points were er who has a strong grasp of played in 26 games but took the strength of their little-understood KSM&F. Steve Johnston andBob Solick with consistent reality as to his skills," Tift only 70 shots. Hemade 55% of , leading all others by a size- high scores for the evening. TomMorgan and said. them,averaging3.6 pointsper able gap. Closely contested second place was Robert Johnson pulled down fourth place. "He's the kind of guy who is game. Plouffe, UCI bridge are open very aware of what he does taken by DonHarriman and Wil edg- tournaments to all in- "Iusually don't shoot unless'' ing Vince Manopoli andTom Voldeninthe last terested players. There are two scheduled for well and also whathe does not itlooks like a sure thing, Jen- hand. Fourth place went to Lance Clizbe and January 26 and February 17,bothto be heldat do well. He never lets his kins said. "Andagainsta zone Mike Locke. Eight newcomers to duplicate the Verano Place Recreation Center at 7 p.m. weaknesses as a player be- Iprobably average about two play participated in the tournament,including For further information, come play rubber come a factor in the game. shots per game." the third place winners Manopoli and Volden. bridge noontimes at the ANTRAPorcall Rob- "You read and hear about Always, Jenkins has been re- The second tournament ain set attendance ert at 752-0188. basketball players who are gardedas a defensivespecial- great shooters, great reboun- ist. dersand greatpassers. Butto me, a player who knows ex- "When Iwas at Poly, Dale actly Dillon (now averaging 14 what hecanand can't do points per game at Long is a valuable skill. Beach State) "As a coach,you deal with a was the team's the scorer. Iguardedthe best for- lot of players through ward we were playingagainst. years who don't have a realis-— Ithink points tic image of themselves an the most Iever average shooter, for let a guy score on me was ex- when Steve Simeock of Milli- ample, who viewshimself as a kan got 18 great shooter. I've had guys once." fancied themselves as , He's a tough, aggressive who player, great passers who forced one who plays in prac- passes they simply couldn't tice as hard as he performs on make," game nights. One afternoon All of this was by way of in- last season, practice was in- troducing Scott Jenkins, a 6-5 terruptedby the soundof teeth forward who willnever be an clattering on the gymnasium All-American, never lead the floor. leaguein scoring or rebound- He'd collided with another ing and willnever draw gasps UCI forward, Steve Cleve- from the crowds forlong,loop- land,and knocked out several ing jump shots or acrobatic upper front teeth. Cleve- layups. land's shoulder still bears the But the point is, says Tilt, scar from the mishapandJen-— that Jenkins KNOWS those kins wears false teeth things. except when he plays. "I had a coach ask me ear- "Ididthe same thinginprac- lier in the season why Jenkins tice a week later andthe den- pulled starts for us, that he didn't tist " the ones that were loose, think Jenkins " could even Jenkins recalled. make his team. Tift said. "I didn't mind. They were "I told him you had to see crooked anyway." Jen-kins game in and game out It issomewhat significant the to appreciate him. You don't accident occurred in prac- notice him out there. If you're tice. not watching him specifi- "Coach Tilt is very con- cally, you'd think he hadn't sciousol ho whard we're work- contributed much when the ing in practice. If you don't game's over. play hard in practice, you "Then you look at the stats don't play in the games." and he's three-for-five from The season of 1975-76 is giv- the floor, got six or eight re- ing Jenkins a rebirthof confi- bounds,no turnoversandheld dence. his man to 10 or 12 points." "I didn't have a lot of confi- Jenkins, a junior from Long dence in my shooting last sea- Beach Poly High School,con- son. Neither did coach Tift. tributes substantially in four He toldme not toshoot at all. areas to UCI's basketball But now Ihave more con- team, Tift explained. fidence inmy shooting, soI'm "First of all, he gives "us a shooting a little more." great deal defensively, the Jenkins plays for a 7-6 team coach said. that endured cin 0-4 road trip "He generally guards the earlier that included other team's best forwardand and 90-55 thrashings at Ne- usually holds him under his vada-Las VegasandUtah. His average. prep record of not permitting "Second, he's very good at an opponent more than 18 screeningoff under the defen- points in a game was termi- sive board. He can keep a nated at Utah. strong rebounder away from "Jeff Judkins of Utah got 18 the board all night. in the first half onme. Heim- "Third, he understands our pressedme more thananyone passing game very well and on that trip. At Las Vegas,I knows how to executeit. His guardedGlen Gondrezick and timing is good and he keeps has was-making30-footersoff the motion going. me." . from L.A.Times Learning Skills Center ...

continued from page 9 notetaking, reading, review- objective exams,outliningfor ing, test taking,time manage- essay exams and preparation ment and writing. For the stu- of both journal and textbook dent who wishes to haveanin- material. dividual assessment of Students may come into the his/her learning difficulties,a Center, which -is located in counselor is available for Trailer 706 behind Humani- drop-in from 9 a.m.to 4 p.m. tiesPlaza,between 8a.m.and When the LSC is unable to 5 p.m. daily for information, meet a specific request for and for a schedule of Winter services or when it is npl Quarter workshops. Also appropriate' to develop a pro- available are handouts cover- gram to meet that need, stu- ing the areas of concentra- dents are referred to appro- tion, memory improvement. priatehelpingagencies. PAGE 12 NEW UNIVERSITY FRIDAY. JANUARY 23, 1976 Jgt^SKfMJMM/M fM

|\ ASUC! NIGHT /I |\ AT THE FOXHUNTER / I Next Sunday, Feb. 1st / ■ student \ I |Recommended\ "Greg Carroll Group" / I IFaculty ProgranX Wi|| Perform From , #/HOW WOULD YOU I ... \ - «^ I Al.ve \ 8:30 1:30 am / like to get I Come to 107 Administration // on Tuesday, Jan.27at12:30 to // Q C kA\ I I organize support for this im- \v // xl.3 fVilLLiv^lM I portant program. \v . // (No T-Shirts, / I \ ' BUCKS I OPENINGS \ I. i / in your hot littfehands? Well, if you Under 2.\// are a graduate student with a great There are still a few openings on the Com- deal of interest in UCTsRegistration munications Board. (The Com Board is the Pl#an^Prieaac \)//// Fee,please come byASUCIand grab officialpolicy-makingbody fortheNew Uand \\ GregThomas. (Act fast,suppliesare KUCI.) Apply to Curtis Graham, First Floor JY// limited.) Gateway Commons. // 1p|| M f lEisHF""$^/\ Thank You For Supporting I

I /migyM \. We will be open again next quar- M _„.„.„ i ki \v ter, but we need more volunteer I ■ FRIDAY- ... Forc- // \^—m "And NOW // \ helpers. Call Missy or Susan at I Something Completely // I \ 833-7596 it you can help.

" rr - \sj\"""#t?U\1a*^± m I Rre^AASter // r ftti "n

I /^/ I "Les Moore and Friend" ■ \ I

- ■ // Student Center I t |B

' I// Friday & Saturday Nights . SSRHNHfl^HHIHI^r Others $1.00