University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA)

 - Class of 1975

Page 23 of 342

 

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 23 of 342
Page 23 of 342



University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 22
Previous Page

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 24
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 23 text:

But I guess . . . when you talk about change, basic kinds of changes in the way people look at things or perceive them, you ' re pretty hard put to it. Students now, I think, worry pretty much about the same things we worried about. They are concerned about the same things we were concerned with. Example: Students today complain bitterly about the University ' s parking problem. And properly so, because not everyone who wants to park here can. It was precisely the same thing in 1935. We had exactly the same kind of parking problem — it was just of a different dimension because there was no parking of any sort. Not Parking Lot 1, nothing. In fact the first parking lot that the University developed, I think, was in my Sophomore year, when Mr. Ackerman and the ASUCLA people managed to get a strip of what is now the Intra-mural Field set aside for parking on the other side of Westwood Boulevard, which was, of course, then a through street. They threw some gravel on that, and that was the only University parking lot. If it rained you might lose your car, because it would disappear almost out of sight. If it was a convertible and the top was down, you might not find it till the next day. So we had parking problems which were of precisely the same dimensions of students now, with parking structures which will accomodate upwards of 18,000 people, is it? So I guess it ' s the old story — plus ca change, plus c ' est la meme chose — the more things change, the more they remain the same. They ' re not that different, they ' re just different in time, different somewhat in style and definitely in dimension, but the same problems still remain . . . the problems of how you support whom you ' re going to marry, what kind of a job you ' re going to get, whether you ' re going to get a job . . . other than that I don ' t see much change. Well . . . how about tradition? We have very little of a traditional nature left here at UCLA — except, perhaps losing to SC every year in football and beating them in basketball. But that hasn ' t always been the case. Well for a long, long time we concentrated very strongly on traditional activities. Where they did not exist we created them. We were thought of among American Universities as the Purveyors of Instant Tradition. If we wanted a tradition for something and we had no tradition for it, we created a tradition, and a tradition was anything that was done more than once. We didn ' t have a Founder ' s Rock — all schools had to have a Founder ' s Rock. So when this campus was being leveled and prepared for construction, we dragged in that big rock you see out there and put it on that corner for a Founder ' s Rock. It didn ' t actually belong there at all. It was not UCLA ' s tradition not to have a tradition. Rather, the reverse; we were very anxious to have it and to create it where it was not there. And perhaps it is true, when I was talking about differences in students — that is one considerable difference. But that didn ' t die until recently. It is not the case that it never existed. It existed very strongly until about 1966 or ' 67 — the middle of the years of protest. I date the years of protest from the first year of the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, which is a convenient date, ' 64, and lasting until ' 71 or ' 72, probably ' 72. Right about in the middle of that time was when our students and, I think, many of our faculty as well, began to veer away from tradition because it was not fashionable. The key words were relevance, compassion and concern. These concerns were largely absent earlier, but not just here, almost everywhere. And when a whole generation of students — in college generational terms — begins to move in that other direction a lot of things go by the board, and these went by the board. It ' s quite simplistic. I don ' t think relevance, and the criterion of relevance, is altogether a bad idea. But what is relevant has to be defined in unambiguous terms. You can ' t just say something is irrevelant because it ' s difficult, and that was all too easy to do during the Years of Protest. Hard courses were irrelevant, and easy courses became relevant suddenly. But then there was some real relevance too. The kind of power which the University now delegates to students and to student groups and to the ASUCLA and to things of that kind — I think that ' s good, I think that ' s desirable, I think that ' s relevant. I think the trick is always to find the balance between the necessity for students to have something to say about the kind of education they ' re having and the place where they ' re getting it, and the absolute necessity for there to be a professional corps of teachers, masters, and administrators who are able to take the long view because they are not transient. I think that ' s a very good thing. What are your plans for the future? I ' m finding a kind of turnaround in my role in the last couple of years since the Years of Protest ended, which is very encouraging for me in fact, it ' s very heartwarming - of students especially undergraduate coming to this office to find out . . . they ' re interested in the historical process, they want to find out how it was, and how that can be applied to how things can be. That elder statesman kind of role is one that I am the right age for to begin with, and it ' s one that I like. I enjoy talking to people about it, and being part of it. As long as I feel useful in that sort of role . . . then I like it and I ' m going to stay around — as long as I ' m useful and the job is fun. The day it ceases to be, then I ' ll go do something else. That ' s it.

Page 22 text:

INTERVIEW: BARNEY ATKINSON How long have you been at UCLA? I ' ve been here forever is the answer to that . . . back to where the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. I started here in 1935 as a Freshman, so if you want to count my undergraduate time, that ' s about 40 years. How did you become Dean of Students? Well, I came out of the service in August or September of ' 42 and then came right back to the University, like a homing pigeon. You see, with a Bachelor ' s Degree in English Literature in wartime, I was not a saleable commodity. So I started back in the Graduate School in English. The Dean of Students at that time was Earl J. Miller. His secretary was the fiancee of a fraternity brother of mine . . . and she happened to be telling him that the Dean ' s administrative assistant had just been drafted, which was something that happened all the time . . . everybody went — being in a university wouldn ' t keep you out of the Draft. So he called me up one night and said, Why don ' t you get over there and talk to Earl Miller about this guy ' s job? It was kind of an everything job: being fraternity advisor, loan officer, scholarship counselor — generalist. There were only about three people in the whole student services operation in those days. All of what we now have as specialty departments were essentially done faculty part-time. So I came over and talked to Earl Miller, and Earl Miller was delighted to find a warm male — there weren ' t many warm males walking around; everyone else was in the service — so I think that ' s probably the reason .I got the job. So I went to work for Earl Miller late in 1942, and then sort of stayed with the University ever since. Needless to say, the school has changed a great deal in the last 40 years. But how have the students changed from your days as an undergraduate? Or is it just the issues that have changed? Students are fond of saying now that academic attitudes of current students are more serious than they were of students of my generation. I think that is not true. There was a very great seriousness of purpose among students of my time. For one thing, we were in the depths of what, at least up until recently, was the most bitter recession this country had ever felt. We were not at all sure that with Bachelor ' s Degrees we could find work. We were very work-oriented. The discussion among Seniors wherever you sat down was, What are you going to do after you graduate? And it was never, What Graduate School are you going to go to? which is now what Seniors talk about. It was Have you got any leads on a job? I think it ' s true that we didn ' t have the same kind of interest at all in such present fashionable terms as relevance of the curriculum or student input to decision-making. We assumed that the curriculum was relevant because it was there, and we didn ' t care much about student input. Our idea of the student role outside the classroom was primarily social. We were not concerned with altering academic decision-making processes nor with the uses of the Registration Fee or anything of that sort. I was not even aware until years later that the fee which I paid as an undergraduate was called a Registration Fee and was, by law, segregated for certain non-academic purposes. I just assumed that everything went into one big pot and the University made its way with that.



Page 24 text:

INTERVIEW: RICK TUTTLE How did you get involved with the Programs and Activities Office? Well, I was interested, I ' ve been interested in students — I taught here part-time as a teaching assistant while I was doing Graduate work — and when an opportunity opened in this office as an Assistant Dean, I learned of the position and interviewed for it. The reason I went in for the interview is that the chance to work in Kerckhoff Hall with people who are interested in student government and in the various projects associated with student government, and with people who are also simply involved with social-political questions, all seemed interesting to me. I thought I might have something to contribute, and I also thought I would have an opportunity to learn a good deal. It ' s certainly true that from the people with whom I work I ' ve learned a great deal. I hope I ' ve contributed something. You ' re in the rather unusual position of having worked both as an and as an administrator. Can you contrast the two roles? Well, let me emphasize first that I only taught part-time — I was a teaching assistant with the History Department. That was an awful lot of fun for me. I essential ly taught courses in Modern United States and it was fun first, because I knew something about that field, and secondly, because the students seemed to relate to the subject matter which, I think, was inherently to them . . . events, many of which, took place within their lives or the lives of their parents. I usually opened discussion section by asking students to research the day they were born. So you got people looking back eighteen years — and I found peope related to that, and found it quite interesting. I know I found it interesting when a professor had me do that . . . I tried to teach the course the same way. Of course there were also some basic essentials — fundamentals — which I tried to relate in the course of teaching, and also a series of books assigned by the faculty in charge of the course. So I was often following that. It was a good learning experience for me, and I had the freedom and flexibility to work with students pretty much as I chose. In this work I, first of all, find my- self working primarily in a area — that ' s one difference. Secondly, there is no fixed syllabus, though there are a few things which are guidelines with which one works — for example, the constitutions and by-laws of organizations, the ground rules which are laid out or elections and so on — and an awful lot of the learning and relationship between me as a person and the people with whom I work, the students with whom I work, is very situational, where I do not expect to see them on a regular class schedule. But rather, I tend to see them in situations where they either need to see me, or for some reason wish to see me, or where I simply bump into them, and I think part of this work is to be able to relate to people ' s needs and aspirations from where they ' re coming, not necessarily by any pre-set syllabus. Now I tried to do that in my teaching . . . but I think it ' s even more so in this work. There are similarities. Many of the students working in and around Kerckhoff Hall are interested in questions. I am too, and one of the most enjoyable parts of this work is the informal minutes to discuss matters of, I think, mutual interest having to do with some substantive question; what ' s

Suggestions in the University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) collection:

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

University of California Los Angeles - Bruin Life / Southern Campus Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978


Searching for more yearbooks in California?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online California yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.