New University

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE October 11, 1977/Vol. 10/No. 5 OCTD contract stalled Passes may not be sold until November 8, according to AS by Jim Parker nessofthe contract,"I am optimistic we will be Discountbus passesfor studentsmaynotgo on able tosellpasses before November 8,"hesaid. sale untilaslateasNovember 8due tohitches in OCTD's board ofdirectors has a blank group the contract between ASandthe Orange County fare contract which OCTD authorized to offer TransitDistrict(OCTD)^accordingtoASPresi- UCI.Ifanychangesormodificationsaremadein dentBruce Hallett. the contract,thenthe OCTDboard ofdirectors Thecontract'sbiggesthitch,Hallettsaidis "just must approvethem.Theboardonlymeets once a a really piddly thing. It wouldn't affect us this month; their next scheduled meeting is for No- quarter. vember 8. Hallett said the biggest problem with the pro- Clause10oftheOCTDfarecontract statesthat posed contract is that it has no clause for re- AS could not be reimbursed for unsold passes, imbursing AS for unsold bus passes. However, although they wouldbe billed an administrative Hallett said,because of the contract's complex cost of 10$ a pass if they were sent back to formulas, AS is not planning to return unsold OCTD. passes anyway. AccordingtoHallett,ASis onlyordering 5,000 passes fromOCTD. Returningthemback would effect the of the Assistant Vice-chancellor James Wilson must in violate intent contract and sign the contract,buthe won'tbecausehe wants effectively rob OCTD of any profits. changes take OCTD only offers the contract in three month made. Hallett threatened to the packages; Hallett indicated that if it isn't ap- contract to ChancellorDan Aldrich and try and proved it if soon, it won't be worthit financially for convince him to sign Wilson remains ad- AS to sellthe passes. amant. GRADING VIOLATIONS- The Academic Senatehaschangedits However,Wilson won'tact unless the adminis- policy to not allow students to repeat a course when they've been tration's legal counselagrees to accept the con- "It would be very inequitable," he said. "It's reallybadbusiness— justgivingupawholemonth discriminated against Pictured above is Academic Senate Chair- tract."Iwouldnotexecuteacontractthatwasnot personRenee Hubert. Photoby Darral Maltonee acceptable to legal counsel,"he said. onyourcontractItmightnotevenbeworthdoing Dennis Hampton, AS business manager, be- in that case." lieves thatlegal counselwillsee the reasonable [con'tonpg.11] Senate rules on grading policies by Robert English Faculty members attending last Thursday's Academic Senate meeting approved a change in the options of the Academic GrievancePanel. A student may no longer repeat a course when the Panel rules that the student was discriminated against in grading. If,uponexaminingastudentcomplaint, the adhoc subcommittee rules that a student was graded in violation of the Title IX rules concerningdiscrimination,the committee will examine available records and consult with appropriate faculty members. Thenew provision states that the committee will then determine an ap- propriate new grade,allow the student todrop the course without penalty, or award a grade of "Pass" or "Satisfactory." In the past,if available records were inadequatethe student had the option of repeating the course without penalty.

Senate members also decided to recommend a program to the Chancellor andthe University tosimplify the relocatingof faculty involved in discontinued programs. The Senate's recommen- dation is that faculty members draw up lists of the programs that theyare qualified tojoin.Theseprograms willbeprovided,in turn, BOOKWORMS- UCIlibrary and administration officials claim that the library is understacked with the opportunity to accept the faculty members. The process becauseofa1971budget squeezeunderRonaldReagan.StudentswhofindUCIlibraryinadequate will continue until the faculty member has been successfully may have to rely on other schools for reference materials. photoby Darrel Mallonee relocated. The Senate also proposed that a faculty member's Full Time equivalent (FTE) accompany him upon relocation.The FTE is a ONLY 800.000 BOOKS budgeted, salaried postion. [con'tonpg.11] Library deficiencycited by David Stoner Thelibrary'sown expansionproblemshavealso Over 800,000 volumes and 11,000 journalsin been hindered because of a lack of funds," said the UCI library are insufficient for current uni- Hartman. "It costs a lot of money to stock an versity needs according to Vice-chancellor of adequatelibrary. Thelibraryreceivesalump sum Academic Affairs CarlHartman. every year. Each department gets an amount "Thereasons for the understockedlibrary ori- according to its size.' ginated in 1971 with the budget squeeze under Thesizeofthelibraryisoneofthelargestfactors former GovenorRonaldReagan,"saidHartman. that goes into accreditation, said Hartman. Plansinthemid-sixtiesatIrvine weretoexpand "Every accreditation team says the same thing; facilities and faculty to where 25,000 students 'Your library is too small.'" would be accomodated. "We manage to sneak by accreditation every However a booklet published this year, The year," addedUCI Librarian John Smith. University ofCalifornia Libraries:A Plan For Development estimates only9,100 studentswill According to Hartman, thenumber of graduate attendUCIfor each of the next 10 years. programs remains at 22 Masters and 2 PhDs "If the budgetsqueeze would have Come three because of the library's book deficiency. "Pro- years earlier it would have been a different grams just are unable to get off the ground." story," saidHartman. Hartman mentioned a PhD. program in Fine Plans for new facilities had to be curtailed. Arts that wasonce attempted. We wouldhave "It'snotlike some of theotherUC campuses," had tobuy all of those big,expensivebooks." Hartman said. "They have to search to find a Money is a problem, but Hartman is also place for a new building." concerned with convenience. Hartman points out that UC Irvine has 900 "Itisunreasonabletoaskanundergraduatewho RIP-RAP- Janet Storms performs in Penrod-Plastinc acres withno structures onthem. But expansion wants a book to take a bus to UCLA. It isn't Movement Theatre presentation at theIrvine Harvest planshavebeensloweddownbecauseofalackof anythingserious;justaninconveniencetorelyon Festival. PhotobyRichard Clucas funds. other schools. 2 Opinion/Editorial October 11,1977 New University Bakke:makingup forpast inequality Starting tommorrowthe U.S. Supreme Courtbegins hearingson whatmayprovetobethemost controversialandcrucialcivilrights case in history. The impact of the court's decision onthe Bakke casecannotbeunderestimated;itwillbefeltinnearlyeverysector of American life. After several years of rejection from over 30medical schools, Allan Bakke, a white male, sued the University of California, claimingthattheUCDavismedical schoolhadrejectedhimsolely on thebasisof his color. Bakke's gradesand test scores were weU above those of the 16disadvantagedstudents Davishad admitted each year. Bakke is correct incharging that he was unfairly discriminated against— areversediscriminationsincehe isa whitemale.Heisright in charging UC Davis with operating an unjust quota system- Davis had set aside a specific number of seats for disadvantaged students.Bakke andhis supporters are wrong,however,whenthey contendthat allaffirmativeactionprogramsshouldbeabolishedby the Supreme Court. A quota is unconstitutional because the laws are supposed to guarantee equal protection of everybody's.rights, whatever their race, creed or color. A quota definitively bars certain qualified groups or classes from a job,an education or other activities. A quotadoes notallow for equalprotection.Butis affirmative action unconstitutional? Yes and no. Technically,any program givingspecial consideration tocertain groups violates the constitution. But affirmative action, which seeks to reestablish the equilibrium in jobs and education lost between whites and blacks in America during some 300years of slavery, does not violate the intent of the constitution.A strict interpretationoftheconstitutionbythe courtwouldprobablystrike down affirmative action-substantially eradicating the civil rights gains made in the last 20 years. A quota by any The integration of the races into the mainstream of American other name society cannot be accomplished overnight. It has only been a century since the Civil War, andbarely a decade since the civil by Jim Parker distinction between the terms What Saxon and the Justice rights act was signed. True equality will not be forthcoming for The number of amicus cuifee 'goal' and 'quota.' President department don't say is that severalmore generations.Affirmative action-the integrationofthe (friendof the court)briefs fifed Saxon said recently, "The Davis had a set number of races— is a necessary evil. in the Bakke case underscores Bakkecaseinvolvesnota quota places for disadvantaged stu- the Supreme dents; whenever a disadvan- As Lyndon Johnsonsaid upon establishing affirmative action in what significance but a goal of 16 placements to who, hasbeen Court'sdecision onreversedis- be achievedthroughthespecial tagedstudentapplied,heor she 1965,"Youdonot take aperson for years, hobbled in by him,bringhim uptothe startinglineof arace crimination will have on the admissions program and this was automatically placed a chains andliberate been sent pool and judged only andthensay,'Youare free tocompete withall theothers,'and still nation. Over 50 have goalinno wayfixedthe number seperate believe youhave been completely fair." tothe court-morethanallowed of minority admissions." againstother disadvantagedap- inany other case inhistory. plicants. Curiously, no white Quotas are unacceptable because they set limits. By removing Wrong. The key word here is waseveradmittedamong the 16 those limits,and yetrecognizingthatcertaindisadvantages should Of those 50-odd briefs, the fixed. Saxon and the Justice slots. be takenintoconsideration-especiallyculturalandeconomic-the mostprestigiousandpotentially department lawyers argue that harmonious integration of black, chicanos and other minority the most influential is the Jus- 16 was jst the targetnumber of If agoal of 16isnotaquotaof groups can be peacefully achieved. Studies have shown that tice department's, filed on be- disadvantaged students to ad- 16 wasjustthe targetnumber of without affirmative action the minority population in higher halfof the executive branch of mit;presumably,if16qualified are interchangeable. schools of learning wouldnearly disappear. government.Insteadof beinga disadvantaged students could forthright documentthat takesa not be found, the extra seats The Justice department's Ifthereisafinalanswerto theBakkedilemma,it won'tcome from clearposition,itonlycloudsthe professionalschools.It from source: would go to white students. stance, blessed by President the must come the theterrible issue with false terms, just as Carter, simply educationminorities livinginlower economic areas are receiving. is a political ac- has UC President David Sax- But surely at least 16 qualified comadation.Saxon'sattempt to For now, wemust live withsome reverse discrimination tomake on's recentremarks. disadvantagedstudentswill ap- muddle this vitalissue is ironic up for centuries ofinequality. ply to Davis' medical school in thatitcomes fromaman who Both Saxon and the Justice each year. That argument is a heads an institution proud of department decided to blur the red herring. shedding light on ignorance. NewUniversity EDITOR Jim Parker MANAGING EDITOR ADVERTISING MANAGER Letters Richard Clucas John Lamb NEWS EDITORS FEATURES EDITOR Beth Blenz and Alan Schoff J«f Ettinger ADVERTISING SBPC dead wrong But in black and white, at the a more legitimate number for SALESPERSONS beginning of a letter to Pre- the ASUC Lobby touse. sident Carter, we see: "Onbe- Sincerely, SPORTSEDITOR Connie Cannon on Bakke halfof the 120,000 Associated Frank Caterinicchio Frank Gibbs Thane Tieraey Poage Students of the University of Jennifer Dear Editor. California, writing Wolfe nice to know we are to Steve It's always that urge your support the Just 'Great Hope' FINE ARTS EDITOR one has a "voice", with one full of Steve Manseau ADVERTISING PRODUCTION exception. That occurs when University of California's ap- GertaUnd the voice speaks in your name, peal of the Bakke decision." Dear Jim, R without your consent. The matteris notso muchone While Ienjoyed very much P NEWS EDITOR your article Scott, I M?tchMitcn i5n?Evans ASSOCIATE Thelatestexample ofthis vex- ofpolitics asofsensitivity. The on Steve peterSundqul8t ation without representation decisionwasbasedonarecom- was shocked tosee the caption hascomefromacorner whereit mendationbythe Student Body "Great WhiteHope" underhis wasnotexpected:the A.S.U.C Presidents Council, an organi- picture. PRODUCTION BUSINESSMANAGER the comprised We havea"people team,"not Laurie Dibble Barbara Dittrick Student Lobby.Normally, zation ofindividuals UC Student Lobbydoes agood who, at best, were elected by a black white team, and em- the job of presenting the student's \2Vi% of their respective stu- pathy tells me unitentionally Unsigned editorials represent a majority opinion of you art- point of view to legislators who dent bodies.It wouldbe safe to hurt some ofmy guys. New Univeristy editorial board. Signed articles and divine it of own that opportunity writers andare not would not their say on this issue, the stu- Iwelcome the of work are theopinions oftheindividual accord. dents are divided significantly. chatting with you. necessarily those the New University, ASUCI or the of However, the ASUCLobbyis Even if weren't, and the Perhaps a tasteful apology in University of California. dead wrongon the Bakke case. they the paper wouldbe inorder. The editors reserve the right to use their discretion in entire \2Vi% were solidly be- libel or It is, at the least, glaringly ob- hind the SBPC, the number of Sincerely, publishing letters and they may be editedfor for vious that120,000UCstudents CoachMiller spaceconsiderations.Alllettersmustbesigned;allmaterial students being actively repre- University. couldnotagree on anything,let sented would be about 15,000. submitted becomes theproperty ofthe New alone a sensitive and compli- You'reabsolutelyright. We're cated issue like the Bakke case. Perhapsthat would have been sorry. -Ed. New University October 11, 1977 News 3 ■ NEWS NOTES NEWS NOTES Lobby protests nuclear RECOMMENDEDFACULTY weapons Two StudentRecommended faculty willparticipatein the at Livermore School of Social Sciences program during the coming- by Dan Koberle Themostrecent developementfrom thelabs was Academic Year. Dr. Carl Boggs, a political scientist, will A nuclear weapons contract between UC and the neutron bomb at Livermore. teach Contemporary Political Theory and Comparative two University-affiliated research labs wasdis- Last year, the University opened negotiations Revolutionary Movements this Fall Quarter.Dr. Thomas puted at two recent Regents committee meet- with the labs to renew their five-year contract. Glenn,an anthropologist,will teachEconomicdevelopment ings. Student Lobby officials from UC Berkeley and andacourseentitled'^NativesoftheAmericanSouthwest.", UC SanFranciscodemandedtheRegentscreate andhas made tentative plans for student field experience At theirSeptember 29 andOctober5 meetings, a committee for social responsibility innuclear among the Navajo, to whom he will serve as aneconomic a special Regents committee met with various research. consultant for the comingyear. consumer and environmental groups as well as UC Student Lobby officials to discuss the con- EventhoughRegentsdidnotlistento students tract for the Lawrence Livermore and Los A atfirst,Lobbyofficialsbelieve theycouldbecome lamos research labs. Although nothing was de- more responsive. cided,acommittee reportmustbe filled withUC "There's a much better chance for the requests president David Saxonby December 1. to be accepted now," said UCI Lobby Annex The Greek President's Council Director Dan McCarthy. "But it can still go in willhave anorganizationalmeeting groups asked that three provisions be in- any direction." at 5 pm Tuesday, October 11, in The Trailer 302. Major topics for dis- cluded in die new contract: "It'll be interesting to see what Livermore cussionincludeamastercalendarof -phasing out of weapons research at the labs does," he added. "If they drop it (weapons events, thepledge scholarship pro- -workers negotiations for labor contracts research), they will lose a certain amount of LECTURES gram and the coordinating of the handling plutonium federalsubsidy. theother hand,they'll annual Greek leadership Work- -better and storageof On remain Can man fly? Recent research in shop during winter quarter. Both theLawrenceLivermore andLos Alamos with theUniversity ofCalifornia,whichmaybea Europe says Yes! "Enlightenment Jay Jones, chair of the Greek by spend concern tothemas well. Ithink ofitdepends andtheDevelopment labs are funded federal subsidies and a lot ofUnlimited Scholarship Committee, has an- about 50 percent on nuclear weapons research. on the report that's coming out." Human Potential through the nouncedthescheduleforthePledge Transcendental Mediation (TM) Workshops. Program"— Scholarship The series Afreelectureopentoall will be held at7 pm on Tuesday students and faculty will explore evenings in SSL 140. okayed M^BHHfn^Tqfl these findings and many others on Tues. 10/11TimeManagement Center =t^ /" ASUCI Executive Council mem- jobaftercollege graduation are in- ASUCI offices, and student Los An eles Calit 90025 bersandvarious departmentsofthe vited to apply for a Workshop on >«^S^^T I 9 University involvedinstudentpro- Careersfor Women in Scienceand lockers. The proposed site for' | Name gramming. ASUCI willhost an in- Engineeringwhich willbe held on \^/ - Diego the center is the outside peri- | Addr formal social hour proceeding the november 5, 1977, at San _, „. We alto provide original i Addressss dinner.JohnBarber,Chiefofthe the State University. Objectives of the meter ofcCampus Ring west ofe -- Police, workshop describe in research ail fields. city University willbethemaster areto: careers Thesis and dissertation of ceremonies. scienceandengineering which"pay the administration building. oime Reservationsfor thedinnermaybe off"especiallywellforwomen;pre- assistance also available. madeinthe Office of Campus Or- sent opportunities to meetsuccess- ganization Services, Room 106 ful womenscientists andengineers; Gateway Commons (833-5181). counsel students on educationand There is a one dollar donation for training requirements; andencour- the dinner. Deadline for reserva- age women to overcome stereo- tions is 3 pm Tues. Oct. 11. types and torealize their potential by enteringscienceandengineering training. Informational brochures Lesbian Rap Session: Any wo- and applications are available by man who has ever loved or con- writing to: Career Workshop for sidered loving women is welcome. Women in Science and Engineer- Thursday evenings beginning Oct. ing,Women'sStudiesProgram,San 1 QIAUTY PHOTO HINISlNGi 13th, in UCI Women's Center. DiegoState University,SanDiego, (Trailer # 503/ph: 833-6000) CA. 92182. &*if\*^> PRINTS "^^B from LID *- SLIDES -^

JmT3|IPV>^HAIRprecisioncutting W&JKtm PRtSCIllPTIONPERMING Beautiful colcx prints from your *^J '^^^^M |[kflpV^ NUCLEIC COLORING favoriteslides. Borderlessglossy t^ No Appointment Necessary orborderlesssilk finish.

211Wilson (At Fairview) Costa Mesa Offer Expires 548-1344

University UCI " Bookstore" IN TOWN CENTER HOURS- - MONDAY 8:30 - 7:00 Tuesday - Friday 8:30 5:30 Saturday - 10:00 - 4:00 833-0443 October 11.1977 New University

Thisisthesemester toget your programmable.

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.*irwuf>9Tro^s TI Programmable 57. Thepowerfui "W^^Tr^TT^"W^ /-piX>grani intermediate results at any point in a calcula- Leisure Library. tion. Eight multi-use memories provide ad- dressable locations to store and recall data. Program memory ..,„„ , ., .$35.00 you stores up to 150 keystrokes (50 program steps).Editingtoo: A value if act now. Singlestep. Backstep. Insert or delete at Football Predictor. Forecast score, point spread. Bowling anyanu pointnninl in a program.nrnnnm AlcnAISO at powertulnnuuorfi il «C MV^~V HC* VD Scorekeeper. Track 90 bowlers Golf Handicapper. Up- Slide rule calculator With logs, trig func- ?>^/mM 1 .ute handicapfrom latest round s score Bridge.Computes !.«««*" ifcmrg .ionsandadvanced statisticsroutines M S %^^^^t££t£S^Z$S%£. HTM The TI-58 and TI-59 combine three major inno- 51^.7^ W vations to bring the power of programming to you— even if you've never programmed TOiOTttTwfeWfflSKiShtime n gets better sea Battle. 15 missnes to sink sub. 3 3 r- 3 before: Quarterback. Call plays.Photo 1.Compensate for change «l jBE 1 Extraordinarilypowerful-at remarkablelow prices m pholoenlargement magn.lication Photo ll:FIII-ln-(lash. plug-in put Computes correct lens (-stop in strong ambient light.Use 2.Revolutionary', , modules v complex formulas to work it with a PC-100A and have even more fun. Computer Art. , at the tOUCh Of key. Hangman. Put in a word, second player guesses orhangs ... 3 a Tin module 3. Step-by-Step learning guide that takes you from the basics Of Memo Pad. Write enter messages. Print and record them Ubrarymanual. Quick on mag replay . 4U u j 59 s card Use the card to the message referenceguide Label programming through advanced programmings-language you Biorythm. Plotsan three cycles cards.Library waiiet. can understand. ~~ ' ~~ ~ ~ p,,^ TIProgrammable 58.up to 480 program ,7T«-,7T. I -A r~nH n .T" . L steps, or up to 60 memories. Master Library S'ZoWs Jo^cHS-ffiiRu? ■mb||H module contains 25 prewritten programs in I serialized Customer Information Card (packed inIhe box) j^PJ^B^t.^^.J^ llon( W| copy prool of purchase showing mam,math engineering,pnompprina statistics anaand tinance.finanrp AlsoAkn I l th of a dated the sena| number important. Your envelope must be .^^M^2?M- ■B QH increases numberof steps-up to 5000. Library postmarked nolater than October 31. 1977. '4ak&£?43M' J programs may also beaddressed from the key- m MMB Br --^ board or inserted as subroutines.Can also be LeisureLibrary V used with TI s new OH^ B^fiE IPC-100A printer/plot- $^ >g 95* ter. It lets you plot, F I Name print_headings and prompt-messages.__ .M^AV JB. 'i i _. Address TI Programmable 59. More powerful than the TI-58. Up to ' ' 960 programsteps or up to 100 memories.Magnetic cards store City up to 960 steps. And, record and pro- tect custom programs. Also 10 user $^^^^#"\95* state Zip flags. 6 levels of subroutines. 4 types f^w^w ofbranches. M0H~^.^r TI 58 or 59 Serial Number (frombackof calculator). Instruments reserves the right software of Dntinnill ikrarlac a_~i:»~i e*^*1^*-^^ o ,«. o i to substitute libraries equal value based on availability VjpilOnal LIDrarieSi. Applied btatlStlCS, burveymg, Heal Pleaseallow 30 daysloi delivery Otfer voidwhereprohibitedby law Goodin continental U S. only Estate/Finance, Aviation,MarineNavigation.$35.00" each. 1_ _|

" r,; Sugge.,edrB,.i,P 8 TeXAS INSTRUMENTS ■ 1977 Texa^Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED 45529^0 The Penrod-Plastino Theatre AUTS is taking the big gamble by Richard A. Clucas turns to the child and speaks. "Excuseme," she As the dancers enter the stage, they hesitate. says to him, and then continues with the dance. The stage conditions are terrible, and not they must take precautionsagainstmishaps. One area seems especially troublesome — the front of the * * * ♥ stagereachesoutandseeminglybecomes the first row of the audience. To the young children in the first row, who Ina small office,much different fromthe dance clutchtheir balloonsasiftheirlifedependedonit, studios where the directors of the company can the closeproximity ofthedancersdoesn'tmatter. usuallybe found,UCI AssociateProfessors Jim Theireyesatthismoment are fixedonthemotion Penrod and Janice Plastino, talk about the dis- on the stage. tractions of the outside theatre,the small stage, One child seems especially engrossed. As the and the other problems that affected the com- dance continues further and further along, the pany'sperformanceof"Rip-Rap"thedaybefore. childincheshis waycloserandcloser tothefront It was the company's first performance since it of the stage. He, like all the otherchildren who was reformedlast April. have beendrawn tothe stage at the HarvestFes- "Inthat typeofsituation,anythingcan happen," tival this early Sunday afternoon, wisheshe was saysPlastino."You—can fallveryeasily.— Youcan part ofthe dancethePenrod-PlastinoMovement runintoeach other which wedid andyoucan Theatre is performing. become very disoriented,even thoughitdoesn't And for one quick second the children almost show to the audience." are partof theperformance. As the tallestofthe Penrod continues: "We took a gamble working female dancers circles around in front of the in the outdoor situation with such primitive stage, she doesn't seem to notice the tiny legs conditions. Our thinking and choreography for stretched over the imaginary line separating the thisdancetookintoaccountthegreatdistractions dancers from the audience. The imaginary line we knew we would have. So we designed the isdrawnondirtbecause theelevated stage wasso dance and chose the Star Wars theme for the music to the attention of "We are understanding each other's dance small the company directors asked to use the attract the audience. 1 rhythms groundas an extension of the stage. Thedancer guessyou could say-thatoffthe stagethat's what on stage, and off the stage we are" stumbles. She catches herself. Surprised, she we're trying to do get people to notice us." feeling warmth and concernfor each other. At the Irvine Festival people didnotice them photos by Richard Clucas Richard Clucas is the managing editor ofthe Somehow throughallthecommotionofthe other New University thisyear. Once a dancemajor, festivities,the commotionon the stagecaughtthe hemade the miistakeofgoing intojournalism. [con't on pg. 7]

UCI ART GALLERY'

by Tracy Taylor RichardJackson,aPasdena-basedartistwhoseworkhasbeen exhibited in both Europe and the United States,is currently being featuredin the UCIrvine Art Gallery. Inhis exhibit,Jacksonmakes adeparture fromhis previous works by utilizing floor space instead of wall space. His con- struction is three dimensional and sculptural in nature. Richard Jacksonhas built an A-frame structure approximately thirty five feetlong,takingupthebulkofthegallery floor space.Each side consists of seven canvases aboutsixteenfeet longandfive Jackson 's feetwide. Thecanvaspanelsare set atanangletomeeteightfeet luscious above the floor,exactly halfthe ceiling heightof the gallery. ' The structureisabutted against the wall onone sideand open sensuality on the other so that it is actually possible to walk inside it. According to Jackson, thje painted surfaces in his work celebrate the "lucsious sensuality" of the medium.

Aunique combination of expressionistic painting,process art andenvironmental installationembody Jackson's art. A small uses Alliance willaccompany MARTIN'S MAGIC-UCIgraduate student Gary Martin catalogue fundedbythe PasadenaArt the mathematical symbol for "not equal to"in a provacative the exhibition. manner in his current exhibit at the campus art gallery. Also exhibiting in the Irvine gallery this month is UCI grad photoby Ken Ishtzue student Gary Martin. Martin's work uses the "not equal to" symbol inan interesting and thought-provokingmanner. 6 Arts October 11,1977 New University

Books West 17/by Marty Trujillo Amnesia The community of literati is an interestingly-integrated neigh- borhood, thank you, if we are to accept the recent BooksWest BookFaire as its quintessence. The third annual affaire, held September 23-25 at the posh Ambassador hotel in the Wilshire District ofL.A., wasnotable forits concern withshowcasingmost aspectsoflocal,state,andnationalpublishing,bothmagazinesand books. The Ambassador is a monolithof gaudiness,a glaring tribute to poshness, an architecturalpomposity, boasting endless hallways, ubiquitous carpet, mile-wide stairways, restaurants, coiffeurs, bootblacks, drug/souvenir shops, gardens, bars, fountains, and nearlyevery other entreeone would hope tofind upontheplateof extravagance. Such a setting-freeway close to profligacy-is hardly suited for such an event, but wait!mostpeople we talked with seemed to prefer the locale to,say, somethinga bit less,urn, elegant.Worse! Somepreferredthe locationbecause itseemed to embody the "sophistication" and"elitism" sonecessary forthese literary Say it: complacentdrivel (border- vendors. Suchrot. such THE WORLD'S GREATEST DANCER- as the world's greatest dancer, plays Rudolf ingonsolipism) is whatcontinuestokeep theseliteraryeventsnear Valentino in Ken Russells Valentino. the back of the bus ofpopularity. Regardless,BooksWestmakes LOVER?--RudolfNureyev,acclaimedbymany fine use ofits situation and also allows us facility to speak with authors, poets,andpublishers. Which is the primary attractionof BooksWest. The faire boasted over 150 exhibitors, whom Russell gives 'Valentino' * eachof came -.~~-t~~ -*- /. more than prepared to display ""*-_'■' 'a « '.-, his product. Merchandising ibounded— public relations his kick in the crotch therule,nottheexception- vere byDave Schmerler and Vanessa Redgrave in The Nureyev, as Valentino, seems with ample specially printed longs eaflets, samples, and Valentino Devils;Richard Chamberlainin to be made of stone. One free Artists release Lovers', Dorothy a change on his xjsters being offered through- AUnited The Music for crease of booths, directedby KenRussell Tutin in Savage Messiah. expressionless face; the twitch >ut the exhibitors' Thencame Tommy. Although of an eyebrow; the flare of a iardly surprising, the exhibit- "Thisisnottheageofmanners. Pete Townshend's rocking at- nostril; anything! To be fair, >rs wereintoxicatedwithdesire This is the age of kicking tackon commercialism seemed thereare timeswhenhechanges o discuss their products, some people inthecrotchandtelling perfectvehicleforthe wacky When he ven to great pain to as- the his countenance. going them something and getting a Russell(andit did turnout im- wants to look desperate or a- emble multimedia presenta- reaction.Iwarn'toshockpeople left a lot fraid,he screwsupisface and wal displays. A par- pressively), the acting sortof ions into awareness. Idon't believe to be desired. And Russell's intoaprunishgrimace.Notsur- icular delight-adding dimen- there's any" virtue in under- preoccupation withRogerDal- prisingly,the scenesinwhichhe ion to the importance of the statement. aire— was the appearance of treycontinuedintoLisztoman- comes across most believably BooksWest77 — ia, his comic-book treatise on are those that involve dancing. lational publishers (Scribners, beautifully. he Jantam, New Directions) jux- Franz Liszt. That film could He moves Then Unity, Woodbrige)and local(Elysium, The quote says it. For years, have been the perfect Russel- openshis mouthand, try asone taposednearstate (Capra, has a master is Pinnacle, Times Mirror) publishers. Ken Russell been lian fantasy,but Daltreyruined may,thethickRussianaccent varied, with every conceiv- of overstatement. His chronic it almost singlehandedly by hard to sidestep. The subjects ofexhibits werenicely obsessionwiththe senstational, proving himself incapable of Alas, the supporting players able type of publication seemingly displayed. There were, for coupled lush, subjects macrame Hitler, from with a colorful showing any emotion whatso- are little better. Michelle Phil- instance,books covering from to visual style,has made him one ever. While viewing Valentino, andPapas fame, marijuana tomass murder, Miller to HaroldRobbins, lips, ofMamas from Henry most film- one painfully ap- is a zombie portryal of from fixing a toliet to pyramid power. One particular exhibit of the talked-about fact becomes in her makers of the seventies. His parent IfRussell is to continue NatachaRambova,Valentino's displayed abooks for at least 100 esoteric subjects-handgliding, ability filmmaker, second, stifling Volkswagenmaintenance,Beat generation,radio repair,harmon- to take a normal situa- as a successful he's and most wife. appeared doing quite tion and turn it into a wildly going to have to start working We neverlearn whatmakes her ica playing-and, from all indications, to be expressionistic orgy is whathis only supposed well sellingbooks. withreal actors again. tick; that we're to displayed— with samples fans mostadmire,and whatbis Valentinoreally has a lot go- hateher.Phillips'Natachaisso Notable periodicals prominently free despise. has ing script (by andspecial fairediscounts,as wellas advertisingandsubscription critics most Russell for it— a clever shallow she's beached. Leslie the Free Press, BooksWest, New West, San hisownpeculiar vision,charged Russell and Mardik Martin), Carontrieshardtobeentertain- price lists-included sexuality, peppered direction, Nazimova, of [con't on pg. 8] with with Russell's explosive ing as Alia one violence,and he spares his au- beautiful sets and costumes, Valentino's mentors, but the diencenodiscomfortinbringing and electrifying potent feeling roleis so poorly conceived we that vision tothe wide screen. In of "tinsel town madness," as canonlyfeel sorry for her. And this respect, Valentino;Rus- evoked by the stunning photo- William Hootkins' Fatty Ar- sell's newest, succeeds most graphy and editing-but when buckle is a cruel and offensive admirably.Itisas"Russellian" wecome toascene thatrelieson portrait Theonly bright spots, as can be. the actors, the film crumbles; acting-wise, are Carol Kane as There is , however, another Valentinobecomes impotent. a spacy starlet andHuntz Hall Russellian "trademark" that As we have all heard, the (that's right, of the Bowery seems to have dropped com- World's Greatest Lover is be- Boys!) as a studio big-wig, but pletely from sight in his most ing played by the World's both appear ail-toobriefly. recent films— his flair for diet- Greatest Dancer. Rudolf Nu- Russell's treatment of Valen- ing dynamic and engrossing reyev. The parallels obviously tinoisquitesimilar tothatofhis performances from his actors. intrigued Russell. Valentino earlier biographies (on Tchai- Some of the most emotionally- an accomplished dancer; a for- kovsky, Mahler and Henri chargedperformanes ofalltime eigner who hit it bigin theU.S. Gaudier-Brzeska) in that the can be attributed to early Rus- andNureyev himself is anidol focusis noton the "artiste" the sell films: Glenda Jackson in ofmillions. But interestingpar- public sees, but the man be- Lecture Hall Women in Love;Oliver Reed allels do not an actor make. neath the artist As usual with [ Science I Russell,Valentino'svarious in- spirations andpitfallsare linked UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,IRVINE Announcing directly tothe womenby whom Orange County's Newest & Largest he was influenced,and domin- COMMITTEE FOR ARTS PRESENTS: ated. Friday, Oct. 14 Stained Glass Studio The film begins at the Latin 8:00pm Village Theatre " COMPREHENSIVE COLLECTION OF LEAD, lover's elaborate funeral, with LEILA BLAKE IN "FEMININE PLURAL" GLASS & COPPER FOIL SUPPLIES thousandsofscreamingwomen " get fascinating portrait womenof Shakespeare CUSTOM MADE WINDOWS ON DISPLAY & rioting to a look at the A andsensitive of the and corpse. women Wilde evoked at their most dramaticand vulnerablemoments. MADETO ORDER Enter the who " LAMP KITS knew himintimately, and, one Tuesday, Oct.18 and Wednesday, Oct.19 " WIDE SELECTION OF GLASS T^OLS by one, they relate, in flash- COMEINA BROWSE' back, their respective episodes 8:00 pm Village Theatre with Valentino.As aresult,the Cliff Keuter Dance Co. RESERVATIONSFOR NEW CLASSNOW film is veryepisodic, withsome (Lecture-Demonstrationon Monday, Oct. 17 at 8:00 pm in the Village segments workingmuchbetter Theatre. General Admission$2 and UCI Students $1.) BEING TAKEN-COMEINFOR DETAILS than others; particularly those Tickets available atthe ASUCI BoxOffice. 9:3Oamto4:OOpm (833- when the actors clam up and 5549) Monday-Friday. For information onprograms- call the Com- Light Brigade Glassworks Russell, along with editor ex- mittee for Arts at 833-6378.- General Admission S4.OO. -Faculty, 815 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-2310 traordinaire StuartBaird,takes Staff and Other Students S3.OO, and UCI Students S2.OO. Icon't on pg. 8J New University October 11,1977 Arts 7 ■ Penrod-Plastino taking the gamble... [con't frompg.5] Penrod and Plastino took to review, we can take it better rebuild the Movement Theatre together. :ye of the festival goers and since the company started to * * * attracted them to the stage. dissolve in 1972. ♥ The company's modern dance, Founded in 1970, the com- At theHarvestFestival,the au- acombination ofmovementand pany was active for only a cou- dience reaction is mixed. Many theatre, kept them there. of years before Penrod and of the spectators are captivated Now sitting intheir office, the flelastino began directing their bytheperformance,whileothers two company directors reflect interest elsewhere. Penrod was are bewildered by the combi- nation of theatre and dance- em- "We want to be more than" a modern ployedbythecompany acom- dance company... binationoftwoart forms thathas intrigued Penrod and Plastino on the previous day's perfor- thendevotingmostofhis timeto since they first met and then mances. Theyare pleased with writing a dance book, while eventually led them to name the the exposure they received and Plastino finished work on her company the Penrod-Plastino thecompany'sprospects for the doctorateinphysicaleducation. Movement Theatre. future. Afuture,they hope,will Eventually, theydisbanded the "We both feel strongly that we mean thecompanycanleave its company. want to do new and different present non-profit status and When both had finished their things," Penrodsays."We want enter the professional— world. outside responsibilies, they re- togobeyondwhatwehavedone. The dancers Robin Calvert, alized they wanted to give the We want to capture the idea of KathyChern,Lee Cohen,Lane company another try. Since the movement theatre in the Lewis, Mary Liligren, Victoria they first met at USC several sense of dialogue and verbal Murtough,DavidPearson,Rita— years ago,Penrod andPlastino sounds being a part of it. We Redaelh, and Janet Storms have found their style ofdance don't want to be justdance in are just excited. They have verysimiliar.Now,theywanted the abstract form. We want to committed themselves to the to againputtheir ideastogether combine these elements into company until at least July. in a dance company. somethingmore thana modern And at theparty following the "When Jimmy and Iget to- dance company." weekend performances, they gether, sometimes we have Hesmiles. something jokingly pretty ideas," "There's even discussed the some wild Plas- about whenJan andIcome to- prospects of their first Euro- tino says and then laughs a know," gether thatweseem tobuild onto pean tour. little. "You she contin- what each other has done. Mo- "We have only been together ues,"nomatter how outrageous time, derndanceis really asearch for for a short but already they are the otheralwayslikes new and different things.Ithink we're feeling a unity within the it. Maybe our choreography now, with the Movement company," Penrod tells me. wouldn t be so many different Theatre, Iareexploring vibrations, things if to- Jan and "The thepsychicre- we didn't work different areas, together we lationships are starting to hap- gether.Iguessit'sbecauseifwe and DANCEINNOVATION-UCIassociateprofessorsJames Penrod seem to beless afraid to experi- the of pen when we perform. We are get a bad review or a good ment" and Janice Gudde Plastino are looking tofuse movements understanding each other's theatre anddance with their nine-member company. dancerhythmson stage,andoff photo by Richard Clucas the stage we are feeling warmth and concern for eachother." Plastino agrees. "I think this feeling of unity has occured ALFREPOfe SPEAKERS because now the dancers feel ASUCI like apartofacompanyinstead of an extension of the univer- COMMITTEE sity. We now feel like profes- Brings quality speakers to the UCI campus. sionaldancers." Interested Students join now. Theprofessionalfeelings with- meetingThursday,12 noon in inthe company, the two agree, General began last April when the ASUCI. Movement Theatre quit prac- ticing at UCI and began searching for a rehearsal area offcampus. Afteranunsuccess- Appearing ful searchintheIrvine area, the AB^BSkKKL company was forced to look elsewhere. Finally,in the old Fri./Sat. buildings in downtown Santa IAm Ana, they found what they needed - a building with Steve cost IWlBS^B wooden floors that didn't they much to rent.Thebuilding Ambassado^Mn iog a Mt?r a ' found was the YWCA. (Guitarist) "Moving tothe YWCAmade Las Vegjyf° BalboZjdand K us feellike we were a total se- parate organization from the Rm: 401 Mi-7777 67#5O7O I located in university," Penrod tells me. m "Inthe past,the university has m Student alwaysbeenverygoodtous,but Ithink moving off campus has L/sfc)*?^ Center I improved everyone's attitude." Discount with UCI I.D. The move was the first step 20% "" GRAND OPENING "" COLLEGE LEGAL- CLINIC- OFFICE HOURS M F10 a.m. 4 p.m. T - 305 24 HOURS SERVICE 833-5400 833-6767 8 Arts October 11 1977 New University ■ Fransisco Review of Books, were, for the most part, undi- roque)— was, simply, sophomo- wardtheinane.Themagazines, Goodfellow Review of Crafts, stinguished,andtheanthologies ric or puerile, or both. Their though, were not the primary BooksWest... Peking Review, in addition to reekedofstale cheese.Muchof illustrations and comics were attractions and so their pre- [con't frompg.6] sundry literaryanthologies and the work in the anthologies- even worse, andthen the inter- scence went justaboutunnoticed, limitededitions.The magazines NittyGritty, New(BeyondBa- views they carried teetered to- andrightly so. Aparticular problem withthe convention, however was that it was obviously deficient of a speaker ofmajor import and a substantial publisher or author panel that wouldhave interest- you're edan amplecross-sectionofthe public. This has been a sign- dead-set faire if with the ificant problem the last couple years-there have been omissions and can- against cellations from speakers' lists which have not been that a enticing to begin with; in Los Angeles this would seem an unnecessary and inexcusable insufficiency andonethathope- fully will be rectified for next knuckle-buster; year's faire. Overall, the faire was enjoy- able in its unassuming mode, didactive thandivertive,a fine wayUrspendrather ones weekend seeartcarved's afternoon.. Granted, there are improvements that must be made to insure the faire's con- itnuedfuture success, but those changes are bound to be taken fashion then, new in stride.Until we'11putup with the gaudiness— we are so gauche— and all the sub-par publications. Hoping, as al- ways, for all the educationand collection. amusement wecan squeezeout in the meantime. Valentino...

[con't from pg.6] over. Through these successful sequences we are able to piece together a stylized pastiche of Valentino's rise to stardom and the seamy Hollywood deca- dance from whichhe couldnot escape, and which finally (ac- cordingtoRussell)killedhimat the age of 31. Mosteffectiveis Russell'sironicjuxtapositionof Valentino'sunhappy romances (with cold, bitter women) with the undyingprofessions of love from the millions of women whom he would nevermeet Valentinoshouldbeofinterest to both Ken Russell fans and students of expressionist cin- ema. If you fallinto neither of these categories,take heed: it's a shaky business. Russell NEW FOR MEN. We're introducingthreeFashion College Rings shouldhaveknownthat a"kick for college jewelry in thecrotch" isno wayto treat men that make a new statement. a World's Greatest Lover.! They're bold,contemporarydesigns that go withtoday's lifestyles. Addressers Wanted NEW FOR WOMEN. We're introducing three new Immediately!- Fashion CollegeRings for women to give you a choice often. Work at home no"ex- perience necessary - ex- They're feminine, smaller in scale, contemporary cellent pay. Write Ameri- designs that go with thekind of clothes you wear today. can Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 269. TX 75231 /^"V^Vk AU1 *RS. Knuckle-busters are our ART MATERIALSbhbhh ' to°- biggest \^^V-> 11 tn n8/ We've got one of the //^r selections of traditional oval rings I JC PENNY (Fashion Island Only) and we love them. If tradition is your r_ TO way, see our collection. 53 introduces the art shop /IRT(71RVED (locatedon 2nd floor) RINGDAY top quality That's when theArtCarved representative will be here name brand to help you select your ring. You can charge your ArtCarved ring art supplies or to meet your on Master Charge BankAmericard. drawing and painting needs. Gateway Plaza | . 10-2 . Wed, Thurs, Fri PLAPI ACf. T MF nATF WE KNOW also available at— What you're looking for. IRVINE CAMPUS BOOKSTORE Check our new value pricing Next to Gateway Commons on selcted items. New University October 11,1977 Sports 9 PCAA-another world forUCI basketball by Greg Albers court performances as they The other two freshman re- Two Junior College transfers Nelson andlast year'sbest per- "Let's face it, it's another need confidence and support cruits are 6'8" Brett Bell from joining the Anteaters this sea- centageshooter Steve Rodgers. world," said Coach Tim Tift going against such noted op- Sanger High School in Fresno sonare SteveMcGuireandPhil At center UCI has Dave speakingrealistically ofthe new ponents. and 6'4"Rick Jurk fromMira- Bolden. First team all-confer- Knudsen returning along with challenge facing his UCI var- costa High School inManhat- ence players from RioHondo 6'9"Lamont Jerret whocontri- sity basketball team. tenBeach.Jurkisaquick guard College, McGuire is a 6'5" buted some superbperforman- Aftersufferingtheirfirst losing withexceptionalability topene- swing man with an excellent ces near the end of last season. After being an NCAA Divi- season inhistory last year (10- trateonoffense. Bellshouldadd touch from the floor. 6'6" sion IIindependent school for 17),UCIshouldprove tohavea rebounding power as Irvine's Bolden attendedOrange Coast Tift believes this years squad as longas UCIhasexisted, the stronger team this season as inability to winthe battle ofthe College last year where he was is better than last years. He Anteaters will now make the four freshmen and two junior boards has always been a glar- apowerful rebounder. plans totry someexcitingthings tough transition into the Divi- college transfers have been re- ing weakness. such as an occasional "four sion I,Pacific Coast Athletic cruitedtoenhancethe Anteater Anothernewcomer tothe Ant- corners offense" and a spread Association (PCAA). The line up. eater varsity is 6'5" forward court defense employing a va- PCAA contains such basket- Wayne Smith. A transer from riety of presses.The Anteaters ball powers as Cal State Long Possessing the most impres- Portland State two years ago, should be a scrappy ballclub, Beach,Cal StateFullerton,and sive credentialsofanyrecruitis Smithsat outlast year'sseason but their lack of "animalistic San Diego State, and has a 6'6" freshman forward Quen- but willbejoiningtheUCI's77- sizeandboard strength"should national reputation for a high ton Brown.Named the Central 78 squad. be their main weaknesses. level competion. California High School player of the year, Brown "Wehaveafinecoreofreturn- Irvine'sfirstpracticegame will is an ex- be held in Crawford Hall on "I feel we can establish cred- tremely good shooter who has ingguards fromlast year which won many basketball awards. will give us stability and satis- November 17 against Mel- ibilityandcompetesuccessfully borne-Victoria, a touring Aus- in the new conference," faction on offense," expressed Tift tift.Louis Stephens,UCI'shigh tralian team. commented expressing confi- Anotherfine prospectisWillie dencethathisballclubcanhave scorer last year will be back Alexander, who was Brown's along with Terry Lovenger, a respectable season. at Anyoneinterested inbecoming teammate Roosevelt High VOTE OF CONFIDENCE Jack Sapp and Brad Carson. the Team Manager for UCI's School in Fresno" last year. Returning posi- Enthusiastic fans great- Coach Tim Tift feels the to the forward basketball teamshouldreportto could Alexander is a 6'1 guard who tion are Kirk Christ, Marcel ly improve the Anteatershome excells in play. basketball teamwilldo wellthis Coach Tift in 1384, Crawford defensive year inPCAA. Mason, Leo Gonzales, Steve Hall.

JliHlllBi§ra 10 Sports October 11,1977 New University NICK ROMAN Why not breakup the 1984 Olympic Games? Stadium, city, the IOC should consider Last week, we discussedLos real, the $172million Olypmic notbuild anyOlympic an uncompleted Olympic Sta equal tothe butneitherdidMontrealexpect dium, lacking the promised staging events inseveral cities Angeles'bidfor the 1984 Sum- Stadium,is nearly simultaeneously Thereare two Today, entire Los Angeles bid for the such cost overruns. In Mont- roof; an empty Olympic Vil- . mer Olympic Games. real, seen lage; anunused $28 millionbi- distinctadvantages to thisplan well examinethe 1976 Olym- 1984 games. The LA bid is the citizenshave bet- $183 million, ter thana50%jumpinproperty cycling velodrome times first,themassive scopeandcost pic experience, and consider and if that bid is four security be spreadout woefully underestimated, as taxes in the last three years. morecostly than estimated and of could one solution to the highcostof nearing one billion in manageable portions. Los Olympic competition. somehaveclaimed,the wrathof Some have charged that in- a debt dol- costs of the 1976 lars. No city can handle such Angeles has estimated.its se- the citizenry should shake the crease to the $3 That Basin. No, Los Angeles will Games. Already thepeople of expenses. curity costs at million. Los Angeles are up in arms If Los Angeles should fail to does not include the federal about property taxes, andin- provide a low-cost Olympics,I costsinvolvedinusingMarines creasesin waterrates, andfail- dohave one solution. Why not from Camp Pendleton for se- EXPERIMENTAL ures in the school system, and break up the Olympic Games? curitypurposes(oneidea tossed lack of public transportation. That is,spread the events over around by the LA Olympic I Should Angelenosbe forced to several cities. Thisproposal, Icommission). Ifthat cost even COLLEGE pickupaninflated Olympic tab must admit, is not an original approaches reality, and some throughtaxes, or reduced pub- one. Iwas told ofit some time have questioned that, consider lic services, the uproar will ago. It has always appeared, the cost savingsinhostingonly scare every city in America a- however,to bethemostreason- afew events. WINES OF way from the Games. able solutiontoaninflated-cost, The second advantage would Left behind in Montreal fol- single-city Olympiad. allow former Olympic sites to THE WORLD lowing the '76 Games is a Rather than stage all events recoup some of their losses by shambles of mismanagement: andsequester allathletesin one hostingsmaller sizeeventsinan atmosphere of frugality. Mon- Munich, | treal, andMexicoCity Student Center I,Wednesday, 7pm PREPARE FOR: 39th allhave impressive sports facil- ities. Many of them are rarely This course will entail' a series of MCATDATLSATGMAT^ usedtoday.Letthemhostsingle seminars on the viticultural and events.Imagine thepossiblities; GRE OCAT VAT-SAT track in Mexico City, swim- enological process of various wine ming in Munich, bicycling in regions, i.e.Germany,France, Cal- NMBI.II.III-ECFM6-FLEK-VQE Montreal. And more: basket- " ballinNewYorkCity,soccerin ifornia, Australia, Etc. 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BANK OF AMERICA NT&SA. MEMBER FDIC _^^^^BB* BANK.OFAMERICA New University October 11,1977 News 11 ■ Senate... [con't frompg1] If the faculty member is not tenured and does not achieve tenure in the new program, his THIS WEEK ONLY FTE willnot belongtothe pro- gram. In the event the professor is released, the FTE will revert back to the original program or school. In UCI's case, this would be the Vice-chancellor of Academic Affairs. MEN'S TRADITIONAL OCTD... SILADIUM® RING [con't frompg 1] AS officials werealso upsetby the longdelay they've encount- eredin trying to get a bus pass for students. Hallett claimed $59.95 that the administrationhas had ONLY the contract since mid-July or early August Wilson, when asked why he had not made his objection known earlier,replied,"Idon't believe this office had the con- tract anywherenear thatlength* of time." He added that the university wouldn'thavemoved onthe contract asapolicy, until it was sure where the funding was coming from. $35 PLASMA DONORS -If YouHave Had INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS mil II■ViO'Hr^^WMr^H Within the last four week* earn $35 per donation CALL Golden State Biological* (714) 646-6437

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FOR CURTAIN CALL---