University of California Riverside - Tartan Yearbook (Riverside, CA)

 - Class of 1954

Page 1 of 82

 

University of California Riverside - Tartan Yearbook (Riverside, CA) online yearbook collection, 1954 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1954 Edition, University of California Riverside - Tartan Yearbook (Riverside, CA) online yearbook collectionPage 7, 1954 Edition, University of California Riverside - Tartan Yearbook (Riverside, CA) online yearbook collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 82 of the 1954 volume:

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Irrevocably associaTed wiTh These will be a remembrance of The person who has been largely respon- sible for The successful beginning of UCR. The STudenTs of UCR, 1954 STAFF 1 , Alfred M. Boyce, Director Robert A. Nisbet, Dean Citrus Experiment Station College of Letters and Science S DEPARTMENT CHAIRMEN-William Stewart, Daniel Aldrich UCR ADMINISTRATIVE DEPARTMENT HEADS-Edwin Coman, Howard Cook, ting! Robert Metcalf, Charles Fleschner tactingj, Walton Sin- Thomas Broadbent, Charles O'NeilI, John Clark, Loda Mae Davis, Clinton Gilliam, clair, Sterling Richards, Leo J. Klotz. Phyllis Staples. ION OF HUMANITIES-Paul Straubinger, Terrence Hansen, Harbison Parker, Oliver Johnson, Andre Malecot, Mortimer Procter, Phillip Wheel- t, Jean Boggs, John Beatty, William Sharp, John Olmsted lchairmanl, Edwin Simon, James Parson, George Knox, Robert Hine, Charles Page, Eugene Purpus. NM. A ff ll -.K A X is 'I 5 ya. Xu T vi ii? - P' 'Ai ml . ...... . .:.:. 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Jantz Camilla 9. 3 Hester Roy 19. Le Pat Huber 8. r 8 Range Janet 8. 6 David Lesh 1. 6 BUGS H bara 54. Bar nice Brumgardt Ja 7. 4 Nelson Bill 40. Woolfolk ord I4- 91 U Cl CY www: 9- ?m I il. :M- 7 , sf' .f -A 'i H fe mf',-- . 'LW 1 ff v tag, iii: :,---- f 1 limi , 9 ' 9 'I w ' -EI: ' H . i f ' i 4' , - M M855 gpg si' :.,, 4, s v . K Q 2' Q ' X 'H-M ,, ..,, if ...: Qfze., if '::: :'-:- Y fgiwf :'f'?: 'E, 2 4. z,:.:,m.m,,a:.dQ:.., ,ii Y X 2' 'f L 1 , f if A 2 L, 51 X 3 J X 52 'Q E? . V+ 0 'Q-YG' , Pg, x .W W egg., . ':Ei::f,ir .::..:...i E ,.,,,. ' 1 1 ff? I was w -1-..... E m udent Body Officers CR EXECUTIVE COUNCIL ffopl-front row, Charles Young, gie England, Al Bielskis, Bill Cowen, rear row, Joe zello, Bill Anderson, Janice Brumgarcll, PaT Sparlcman, Kassel, Vaughn Blankenship, Douglas Nlumma, IPeTer Vechfen appears on page 91. IORI CLASS OFFICERS fleffj-Margie England, Joe ze o. lHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS frighlj-Jirn McMillin, Barbara s, Vaughn Blankenship, fPeTer Van Vechlen appears on 91. HMAN CLASS OFFICERS Iboftoml-George Harper, Al 'kis, Barbara Cracknell, Douglas Mumma. Activities ASSOCIATED MEN STUDENTS OFFICERS-Hopi Bill Cowen, Ccenterj Ted Wheeler, Dick Pearl, Douglas Mummag fboffoml John Harris. ASSOCIATED WOMEN STUDENTS OFFICERS- Clopj Shirley Wrighf, Janice Brumgardfg Cbof- tomj Isabel Gofori, Pai Huber. UCR ANNUAL STAFF-Tecl Wheeler, Eugene Garner, Sondra Lee Garner, Sue Tegland, Goodie Knight fex officioj, George Harper, John Harris, Don Clark. UCR CUB STAFF-Bill Cowen, Jim Sr. Clair, Marilyn Merchant, Dick Williams, Janet Buvens. THIS IS PETE VAN VECHTEN-Sopho- rnore class representative and originator of the Vanburger. FIRST ANNUAL SPRING SEMLFORMAL- The Springtime theme was carried out with an ivy-covered arbor and picket- encircled bird bath. DRAMATIC PRODUCTION-Cast of l48O And All That lstandingl Eugene Purpus, Francis Carney, lkneelingl Jerome Rothenberg, Martha Mason, Bill Nelson, David Miller, Pamela Payton, John Beatty, Beckley, Corann McNair, Edwin Simon, William Sharp. l l l 4 . .2 . .,.. V. W4 ,, 1-LQ? ff' . Ei ' 91' a ? 'E W 1 Q i A i Q w f f ,f 9' 1 , iq, 3.4 I f- , .,., R 42. :gf -, i V 13' 'Eg Q -S f Y , 4' k 5 -5 1 n ., EQ? ww ' f 2 1 2 V E V 3 5 u L 9 s W 3.5 , s r, , A 4, :W zi' . .. Fw E, Q,.,.,m 1 'i-- N5 -.,, ,sl L W.. ,s . - 2? ,QIFXN , ff E? x ww. Q ff-flwff f lfm :wa 2 ., gg , xg, :K gg Q. . Y is My . vs 7 x ,l mm-0. x .- A ,X if. 2 -2, .., ,wr-A .. :Q 1,4 ui 551 b Ml, Q- w N'--mn fw YG ,.t. 5 GLX 5, , ,il ,vip if 2 2 5 X. wi E53 W, 4 f X, 5 wma- V M fyfgw 7 'fi :im . X 'af C w.1. . r ,,.k,. U1 ' W I , f VI Nag- . f , -K . X, E5 Jigg HMM .4 M U jx: .Um HW. rr X X X sk af Tn Q25 if -rx Bal' ws was -Mums mm sm e'5 gn? 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' .M.-,MMT.Ma'2-71.214-:V1-QQJME,-'L-Me''vi 7 M Tx . :ff -'QQ-3-a'5Q'LiM-HM-2125? fwlifzmz? :wwf ' X M.-,www J'-uw' fm--mm ,ww Y H 'f ,W ' W M fwsw -wpwgvmgf M-.m2QgyM.M3gf'j,3f.M,:f-wifes-ifasm-xrzf' M , rm, run.: I any 5 ' ' W Q Dainty, lsn'I' she? ,W !,M,,, Soph Party Qoffxclall wan P255 -w M, M WYE' ,f ., A iv ,f K., Em i '-' F352 5: ii: I WAX W M ,mmm vw W1 ::- w e iff r. Q55-E 4--M 4' 'H . -9? 55- wl f .K , . 11' w ax. mu sf ui gk Nlo newspaper can appear vithout a masthead. Con- equently, UCB, CUB has 'een selected temporarily as Reception To Be' Held in PE Bldg. RESIDENT SPROUL HERE FEB. 23 llcll e title, pending the selec- 'on and adoption of a more ermanent name by an or- ganized student body. Vol. 1 February 18, 1954 N o. 1 'ROVOST tperimentol ducation ls CR Keynote lt is our hope that here we shall a long time be free to challenge cational methods with a view to , discovery of better ways and ns of attaining educational ends purposes, said Provost Cordon S. :kins at the convocation last Mon- moming. plete Text of the Speech Follows: Elie University of Califomia has rded me a great privilege in giv- lme the responsibility of extending ,e first student body of the College aetters and Science on the River- Campus a word of cordial wel- . I know I speak for President rt G. Sproul and all my associates 16 Universityis official family I say that we are delighted to you. We hope your sojourn on campus will be a pleasant and a table one. a very real sense this is an ric occasion, not only in the life ie world-famous University of omia but also in the lives of the ty and student body of the Uni- ty of California at Riverside. m do students and faculty share opportunities presented on this us. On this young campus teach- nd taught will share creatively old heritage and help make a one. Let me dwell a moment on tegral elements of both types of age. he University of Califomia at side is an important part of a State University, whose claim eatness is, unquestioned by any- who is at all familiar with in- 'ons of higher learning. Faculty students on this campus share heritage of academic renown. ther we shall participate in ing here an institution of higher ation worthy of this priceless age of greatness. second clcment in the old herit- 's the element of quality both as dmission to the University of omia at Riverside and to stand- of performance. Education, we E tContinued on Page 21 OPENS COLLEGE President Sproul's Welcome Message It is always a pleasure to welcome new students to the Univer- sity of California. You would not' indicated some ability and willing be here unless your past record ness to benefit by the opportuni- ties which the University of California has to offer you on the Riverside campus. The University assumes not only that you can do college work, but also that you want to do it as proverbial horse- who can be led Robert Gordon Sproul President of the University but rather as a place where you part in every kind of curricular well as you are able. Unlike the to water but caift be made to drink, you have not been led but have come of your own volition, and presumably you either have a thirst for knowledge or you are not adverse to developing one. With the above assumption in mind, I would like to point out that a thirst for knowledge is one of the best stimulants to a reasonably happy life. It is one thirst that should be cultivated rather than quenched. Students who come to a university like camels expecting to make what they drink last a lifetime are not much better off than those who like the balky horse, refuse to perform at all. You should not look on the Riverside campus, ptherefore, as simply a place where you live learn to live. This means taking and extra-curricular activity for which you can reasonably find time. Thus you may make your stay here a part of your life, and not a haphazard prologue. ROBERT G. SPROUL Reminder . . . All students are reminded that study-list books are to be filed today and tomorrow between the hours of 8:30 and 4:30. There will be a two- dollar penalty for late filing. Applications for scholarships are also currently available in the regis- trar's office for the 1954-55 season. BUS SCHEDULE Students needing transportation to and from Riverside may use the Fon- tana Bus Lines. Buses leave the Grey- hound Depot on Market street near seventh street on the hour from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. On the return trip from March Field, they can be flagged at the Canyon Crest entrance to the campus at about 20 minutes to the hour. Fare is 15 cents a single trip or 10 tickets for 31.40. Next Tuesday President Robert Cordon Sproul of the University of California will personally greet students on the Riv- erside campus at a reception February 28 in the new Physical Education building. The reception will be held in the social activities and dancing room of the PE building. Following that, a dance will be held in the gymnasium. Married students are invited to bring their wives, even though this is to be essentially a non-date affair. Dress will be informal. With President Sproul in the re- ceiving line will be Mrs. Sproul, Vice- President and Mrs. Harry R. Well- man, and Provost and Mrs. Gordon S. Watkins. Faculty members of the new Col- lege of Letters and Science, as well as Science and academic staff mem- bers of the Citrus Experiment Station will also attend the event, tradition- ally held each semester on the five university campuses which offer un- dergraduate instruction. Philosophy Prof Also A Writer of New Book A distinguished member of UCR's first faculty is Dr. Phillip Wheel- wright, visiting professor from Dart- mouth College. Dr. Wheelwright taught this Fall at Pomona College and is teaching philosophy this semester at UCR. Dr. Wheelwright took his under- graduate and graduate work at Princeton University, and has been a member of the Princeton, New York University, and Dartmouth philosophy departments and a member of Phi Beta Kappa. . He is noted for his work on literary criticism and the philosophy of re- ligion, and is the author of many articles and books. Among the books are the Way of Philosophy, published last Monday by the Odyssey Press and A Study in Symbolism, which will be published by Indiana Univer- sity Press later this year. UCR is proud to welcome Dr. Wheelwright as its first visiting pro- fessor. AsWeSeeIt... We're a brand new student body in a brand new school- Pioneers somebody has called us. Like the Pioneers of old there are many things we lack that we do need and need badly. We need a school motto. We need school yells. VV e need student body government and organizations. We need a name for our teams. We need a school mascot. Older branches of the University have had previously estab- lished precedents to follow. We have none. Therefore, it is the responsibility of the student body to establish new precedents for UCR. In establishing those precedents we must be as selective and discriminative as is humanly possible. Many of these precedents will be established this semester by those few of us presently enrolled at the University. We have a tremendous responsibility to the University, to ourselves, and to future students. We must decide whether we should take upon ourselves the responsibility of permanently choosing names, mascots, etc. Dean Broadbent has suggested that it would be wise to select only tentative names and mascots, etc., and leave the selection of permanent names to a larger and more representative student body next year. As Dean Broadbent has emphasized, the final decision on this matter rests with the student body of UCR. -By JIM sr. CLAIR On Studies lAdaptedj Studies serve for delight, for omament, and for ability. To spend too much time in studies is sloth, to use them too much for ornament is affectation, to make judgment wholly by their rules is the humor of a scholar. Crafty men condemn studies, simple men admire them, and wise men use them, for they teach not their own use, but that is a wisdom without them and above them, won by observation. Read not to contra- dict and confute, not to believerand take for granted, nor to find talk and discourse, but to weigh and consider. Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested, that is some books are to be read only in parts, others to be read but not curiously, and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention. Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man. Histories make men wise, poets, witty, the mathematics, subtle, natural phi- losphy, deep, moral, grave, logic and rhetoric, able to contend. -Sir Francis Bacon -THE UCR CUB- The Staff: Dick Williams ....,. Acting Editor Jim St. Clair Acting Associate Editor Dwain Lewis Acting Sports Editor Janet Buvens, Marilyn Merchant, Ed Groven and Mary Howard .... Staff Writers Howard S. Cook, Jr ...... Adviser Watkins . . . CContinued from Page D think, is a serious business, it is a privilege to be used, not a right to be wasted. In a very true sense, you represent a select company of students. You probably represent the top 25 per cent of those who have finished high school. Large numbers who would like to have joined in this new venture at Riverside have been unable to do so because they were not able to meet the admission requirements of the University of Califomia or were unwilling to accept the responsi- bilities of performance we shall im- pose here. To the old heritage of greatness' and high standards we shall add here a new heritage which presents a matchless privilege. For a year or so, at least, the ratio of faculty to stu- dents necessarily will be high. This will provide for you the exceptional opportunity of very personal instruc- tion. You will pursue higher learning at close range, with intimate and friendly relationships between the in- structional staff and students. The privilege in this opening semester will, of course, be very exceptional, for this temi represents only a trial run. Probably never again will you or anybody else have such an excep- tional opportunity. There is another element in the new heritage I want to point out, namely, the atmosphere of educational experimentation which will prevail here. It is our hope that here we shall for a long time be free to challenge educational traditions and to examine educational or instructional methods with a view to the discovery of better ways and means of attaining educa- tional ends and purposes. This is the atmosphere that appeals to bright and adventurous minds and spirits, we hope it will excite your interest and imagination. I would not wish to let this occa- sion pass without reminding you of the heavy investment which the State of California has made here for your advantage. This new college physical plant has been built at the heavy expense of 86,500,000 The operation of this new college will cost several hundred thousand dollars a year. These funds are provided from the incomes of taxpayers and the gifts of generous friends of the University. This extraordinary investment in youth is one of the 'noblest evidences of our people's faith in free educa- tion. We know you will prove worthy of so great an expenditure, and so justify in ample measure tl1is invest- ment of funds. In curricula activities you doubt- less will greatly enjoy expanding your intellectual horizons under the in- struction and guidance of a brilliant, scholarly young faculty, all of whom are eager to assist you in the realiza- tion of your native abilities, interests, and desires. In extra-curricula activi- ties, too, you will have abundant op- portunity to create new traditions since the University of California at Riverside has no traditions. We hope you will share largely in the making of these new traditions. I hope you will help make this University a place of creative activity, known far and wide as a campus of unusual intellectual stimulation. All share my hope, too, that you will help make UCR a friendly college in a friendly community. If you will co- operate to these worthy ends, you will complete your college education with satisfaction and success, pos- sessing' values that will endure throughout your lives. One last word I would pass on to you, it is this: ever remember that the sharpening of your minds is not enough to make possible the most complete enrichment of your exist- ence. You need also the refinement of your spirit and your manners, the quality of strong character, the hu- mility and beauty of spiritual experi- ence, and a sensitivity to the stresses and strains of a world in rapid transi- tion. Contemporary civilization in America and elsewhere in the world is greatly in need of reason and in- tellectual objectivity, of vision and mental courage, of tolerance and un- derstanding, of freedom and self-re- liance. UCR will, I ferverently hope, guide to the fountain heads of these great qualities of mind, character, youth and spirit. -Gordon S. VVatkins Profs Request UCR Performers Professors Edwin J. Simon of the Department of Music and William L. Sharp of the Drama Department have announced that anyone interested in participating in music recitals or drama productions should contact the above departments for advice and information. Gordon S. Watkins Provost, UCR Citrus Station An Integral 4 Part of Campus Have you noticed the beauj stucco buildings, the tree-lined p. and the green lawns on the south of the campus? If you have, perl you have been wondering how I rate such a fine set-up. For nearly a half century the C Experiment Station of the Unive of California has maintained a g of scientists in Riverside to help agriculturists of Southem Calif solve problems peculiar to this Through the years the responsi of the Station has steadily incre Broad Field Studied Today, 80 highly-trained scien assisted by a staff of 150, are ducting basic and applied researc problems ranging from the m habits of microscopic insects to harmful affects of air pollutioi Southland crops. Nearly two-thirds of the stat efforts are devoted to citrus, bu creasing attention is being pai the problems of raising avoc' dates, walnuts, and field and table crops. Indicative of the scope of the Experiment Stationis research, a tomologist is now in the Hong area trying to discover where a wasp lays its male-producing Discovery of this host will Citrus growers thousands of d each year. Expansion Going On Facilities of the Station are expanded as need requires and pemiit. About 500 acres are ava for experiments on the campus and hundreds of field test plot maintained in cooperation with ers throughout Southern Calif The Station is always ready to itself to the needs of the State's ber one industry. , LL THE DEANS SAY HELLO . . . DEAN OF COLLEGE Robert A. Nisbet n behalf of members of the lty and administration I welcome wamily to the new campus. With arrival we become at last, after s of anticipation and planning, a ge in the full sense of the word. u will find here a faculty chosen nowledge and devotion to teach- The most careful thought has into the building of both the nization and the curriculum, and is no doubt but that this college the potentialities of becoming one re outstanding liberal arts colleges e United States. any Backgrounds Represented t a good college must have good ents: Students who are dedicated ie quest for knowledge. You come with varied objectives, with di- intellectual backgrounds, but one quality that we expect to in each of you is high seriousness urpose and resolve to leam. u will find the standards high at g' higher, possibly, than those to lr you are accustomed. But along 'these high standards you will also a constant willingness on the of the faculty to be of help to lin your efforts to learn. hope you will keep in closest h with your advisors and in- Ltors. They are not merely willing eager to discuss with you in class- Ir and in office matters that excite intellectual interest or academic eulties that confront you. oseness of relation between teach- d student is one of the highest oses of this new College, and we achieve this purpose fully only -ugh your willingness to take ad- age of the opportunities pre- d. ,.g :1:15i,g,:,., 2-I-If-0' 4 . , . . . . - v . . is lfzgfzrsfkffawf ., ,. ::.::g:-:3:::Q:5:5:' N521 .f:5,::sg5:sg-: - - ':e1. 31.5.3.5 5.9351-23:1:g:g:g:g:-:.:.:., - g:g:',5Z 'oQg.3.g. M ,.,.,.,...,. , ., :-: -124-I-xo-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-: .-:-:- 4:15:15 :Ir , ,gzgzgggs .,:I:s3h1:z?:1.1?1E1Ef5:5:5: -'f'-'-rs '-3:r:5 Q.: .j.j.:.:.-1. .511gf:I1I'C:C:lj2'Z'I'Z-Z'Z'I'I-S-I Z-I+ gig.: :5: 'C:!:! 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Z-'-:-:-:- :-:- , -:-:-:-:-:-:-:-....-:-:-:-:f:7:5:?:-, '-.-':-'-Q: asf . -:.: . 3 51 3:1:1:-:fggfgtgg:-'-'-::.5:5:::g:g:5:2:2:E:f:f:2:E:Q::::3:5:::g:g.g.,:g :ss ,, -1f:1:5:::Z::a:saSss:sz:s:2:e:1:1:1:2:::::::5z:z:s:s:s:::s:5:2- 'gig I ' 'giglgffe 'E:Eg23152123212giglglglgigiglgigiglgl gigigijigjglgtzirlgq . , ' - . :-:f:-:-.- .A:-:1:IS:I:1:i:2:i:1:I:7:2:1:2+2-I 'f'5'l'f:1:1:1:2:-2: Off To Good Start In conclusion, I congratulate you, even as we of the faculty and ad- ministration congratulate ourselves, on the privilege of getting this new college off to a good start. It re- quired initiativc and imagination on your part to come in rnid-year to a brand new college, and these are qualities indispensable to the develop- ment of the College, its ideals and traditions. There is much to be done by all of us, and I like to think that we shall not be found wanting when future student bodies, many years hence, look back to this, the opening semester of the College. To all of you I extend warmest personal wishes together with an invitation to call on me at any time that I may be of help to you. DEAN OF STUDENTS Thomas L. Broadbent Fifty years from now when you read the student newspaper of UCR -whatever its name might be-you will be keenly aware of what you did in 1954. With my sincere congratula- tions on your being here and my best wishes for a successful career at UCR may I also hope that you will build slowly and soundly for the years ahead. Too often we mistake the urgent for the important. There will be many decisions for you to make, organizations for you to establish. There will be pressures exerted to persuade you to do' things quickly before careful and mature consideration can be given them. You will have greater joy in your CContinued on Page 41 Would You Believe It? 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'15rE'1 .:f:2 .15 -if 525:E:E55555f3fEfE151ErErE1ErE 211152?1?1ErE1E1Er5:5:5:5:5:: 2555553251515 'fri, .:Er .'1151Efirf:3:g15E5E5E555EgE331. ss-W 7-3 f. wr 'ix 2 rt xx. DEAN OF WOMEN Loda Mae Davis You, the first women students of UCB, are beginning a unique adven- ture in higher education. You are forming the traditions of a new col- lege, a part of a great university, which is destined to become one of the outstanding liberal arts and sciences colleges of the nation. You will have to be a serious stu- dent to maintain the academic stand- ards and the cultural development expected of UCR students. But we want you to have fun too. By the end of the semester, I hope every woman on the campus will know every other woman on the cam- pus, that each of you will make friendships with fellow students and the faculty which will endure far into the years ahead, the years when you can look back upon yourselves as the UCR pioneers. Much Interest Shown As you are now beginning your first classroom activities, we hope you will also begin your first student activities. Many of you have already shown talent in music, art, drama, debate, athletics, journalism and writing, stu- dent govemment. Already many of you have shown you want to help to start a goveming body for the associated students, an associated women students body, a college chorus, an orchestra, a little theatre, a student newspaper and yea1'book, an intemational relations club. If previously you have been a passive observer instead of an active participant in campus life, now is the time to get yourselves out of the bleachers onto the playing field. A job of the Dean of Students Of- fice is to see that you are happily housed if you live away from home. Anyone who still needs to find a place fContinued on Page 42 ,F Health Center Announces Rules The Student Health Service will endeavor to help you maintain your health while in college so that you may more regularly attend classes. To that end the Student Health Serv- ice in the Physical Education Build- ing will be open at 8:30 each mom- ing and will close at 5:00 p.m. A nurse will be present at all times be- tween these hours. A local physician will be present the first and last hours of the day. Services Available In case of illness or injury on week days, call or come at once to the Student Health Service. Should you require the services of a physician at night or over the weekend, call River- side 694l, which is a physician's ex- change, AND IDENTIFY YOUR- SELF AS A UCR STUDENT, and the doctor on call will be contacted. However, PLEASE make use of the Student Health Service hours when- ever possible. Should the doctor deem hospitalization necessary, beds are available at Riverside Community Hospital. This Health Service is being pro- vided under a cooperative arrange- ment sponsored by the Califomia Physicians Service, the Riverside County Medical Society, the Riverside Community Hospital, and the Uni- versity. Absence From Classes An instructor may deal directly with a student with respect to brief absences from classes due to illness, or he may ask the student to present a verification from the Dean of Stu- dents' office. For a verified absence of 3 days or more because of illness, the Office of Dean of Students will send a leave of absence notice to instructors. Any student confined to his home be- cause of illness must report to the Health Service before the necessary absence report can be issued. Take advantage of this facility. Let us help you to keep well so that your college experience will be enjoyable. Dean Davis tContinued from Page 32 to live should come to our office at once. We still have listings of rooms and apartments. Transportation Available Some of you still need transporta- tion to Riverside or to the campus. We now have the names of students who will use their cars in car pools and also the names of those of you who want rides. After your schedules shape up on Friday, if you still need transporta- tion, please come in to see Mrs. Royes, room 1820. All of us in the Dean of Students Office want you to feel that you are welcome to visit us at any time. We hope you will drop in whenever you have a problem or just to have a chat about what you are doing at UCR. These winsome newspaper readers are, left to right, UCR's own Joyce Lillibridge, Margie England, Pat Sparkman, Barbara Cracknell and Lorraine Eyer. Need we say more? Campus Police Have Many Jobs By JIM MCMILLIN The campus police department, lo- cated in room 1350 of the administra- tion wing of the Social Sciences Building, asks all students who plan to have automobiles on the campus at anytime to come in as soon as possible and register the vehicle with them. This is necessary so that stu- dents may be issued permits for desig- nated parking areas. Traffic regulations on and about the campus will be strictly enforced. The speed limit is based on traffic conditions, but is never to exceed 25 mph. Besides patrolling the campus and registering vehicles, the department has set up a lost-and-found service which is also located in the police office. Any article found on the cam- pus should be taken, post haste, to the office. The same hours are observed by the police department office as by other offices of the campus-8 to 5, with lunch from 12 to 1 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS The UCR CUB wishes to establish a classified ad section for the use of students, faculty and employees of the university. The tentative rate schedule, sub- ject to student approval, is as follows: 25c per 15 word ad, and 10c for every 5 additional words. Long term ads can be contracted for at a re- duced rate. Since The Cub expects to appear every Thursday, deadline for ads is Tuesday noon of any week. Students Pick Own PE Programs By DWAIN LEWIS Our Physical Education depart- ment will strive to meet the needs and demands of the students, said Dr. Jack Hewitt, Director of Physical Education and Athletics, in an inter- view in his office last week. The program will be set up in four phases-required physical education classes, intercollegiate sports, intra- mural sports and individual recrea- tion. No intercollegiate sports are plan- ned for this semester. However, if enough interest is shown by the stu- dents, schedules with other schools will be drawn up in at least four sports for the next year. This semester, extensive plans for an intramural program have been made. A basketball league and a tennis tournament are only two of the activities planned. Any student, man or woman, who is interested in any type of intramural sport, should see Coach Lindeburg as soon as possible. Individuals are encouraged to make use of recreational facilities. Equip- ment may be checked out and used by any student, provided there are no classes in the recreational area the student plans to use. As soon as the swimming pool is completed and ready for use, prob- ably sometime early in March, it will be available for individual recreation Elluring certain specified hours of the ay. Libra ry Rules -Capsuled For Students The UCR Library wishes to b to your attention the following lib rules. These rules and other irnpo library information published in UCR Letters and Science Lib Bulletin are available at the cir tion desk. Library books from the ge book stacks may be borrowed two-week periods. If such books not on demand they may be rene upon presentation of the book at main circulation desk. Overdue books are subject to that increase from twenty-five c to three dollars through a perio three weeks. Pamphlets and d ments are subject to these fines Books subject to one-day withd al may be withdrawn any time du the day. These books are du twelve noon the following class Reserve book materials circ for two hour periods and may b newed if not in demand. Dupl' reserve copies may be withdraw ovemight use after 2:30 p.m. are due at 9:00 the following day. Bound periodicals and other circulating materials may be borro from the loan desk for two library use. Unbound periodicals can be drawn for three days except for latest issue which can be borro overnight only. Overdue reserve materials, pe ' cals, and ovemight books are su to fines of fifty cents per volume creasing to 31.00 at 4:00 p.m. same day, and 51.00 each day t after. Lost and damaged materia subject to a minimum replacer charge of 35.00. Dean Broadbent tContinued from Page Sl achievements fifty years from no you refuse to be rushed. I hope, too, that this building great UCR tradition will be a munity enterprise in which fac students, and administration share with enthusiasm and mt understanding. One of the trag on many campuses is the sharp c age between students and facult The faculty of UCR has bee lected not only for scholarly ach ment and teaching ability, but their genuine interest in stud We all have a unique opportuni establish on this campus a spi cooperation at its best. We in the office of the Dea Students are sincere in our invit' to you to come in at any time your suggestions and your prob Best wishes for a successful a, happy semester. f jj,f,jQf,?,Z',,, ASUCR CONFAB TODAY ere March 26 :remonies marking the 86th anni- iry of the founding of the Uni- ty of Califomia will begin at a.m. in the Physical Education 'ng on the UCB campus March asses will be suspended and wus offices will be closed to per- Etudents and staff to attend the ng '. Leon Howard, professor of ish on the Los Angeles campus, ddress the Charter Day exercises. fessor Howard, who will also ' at the traditional alumni ban- that evening at the Mission Inn, 'authority on American literature last year published the results of isive research on the early career mes Russell Lowell in the book rian Night-Errant. :fore joining the UCLA faculty '45, Dr. Howard taught at johns ins University, Pomona and fxwestern in Chicago. . Howard holds his A.B. degree Birmingham-Southern College, ILA. from the University of Chi- and a Ph.D. from johns Hopkins ersity. 1944-45 he was awarded a Gug- eim fellowship and spent the year e Houghton Library fHarvardD. untington Library fSan Marinoi, arious other university libraries hout the country doing his re- on Lowell. daughter, Mary, is a freshman UCB campus. But I Can't ember Where When . . . torians will tell you that y does NOT repeat itself. let them mislead you. following incidents in the history of the Berkeley us have been quoted from ook ORIGIN AND DE- PMENT OF THE U.C. ted almost to the letter on CB campus. e rains descend and the comes and the arrival of r for a walk-is welcomed hat the young ladies and rofessors did not have to ut into mud ankle deep. rkeley is already hemmed the rooms for students. are scarce and costly. Oh, club housef, dents walk from Berkeley mcscal, two and a half in twenty-five minutes. ems that the only thing we have is a horse car to carry I ts back and forth from the 'S- Biverside, California Vol. 1 February 25, 1954 No. 2 :.:.::,:::3:5:5:2:2f2EIE':'5'1' -.g.-g.-.- : - NW'f'-W-'1:f:'CS5:g5S':2:2:'1:l'5:g:5:5zf:F:tf:fE151EfS:EE:f'5:E5:5512 p:S:I' ,:5: ' -:::::::::- J..-. .:-g:,:I:3:-:2:I:i51 -2:2E2SIE2E1 : -:Elf .-.-W 4?c+?S:''fqsifzt252'EIEIEIES:2:I:E:1:2:25:2:1:zE-, '1:f-21:-.- V - 2:-:-:IEarf.Iir-J'1:2:1:2--:1EfE2E1ErE .5:5:5:5:5' ',1:::,g:335:2- : .5'4:5a?,5p2:1:fx2:25135:5:515:5:3:5:5:1zf:1::,:.--My '.3 j'f:':':1i: 5:1:2: 55E555ErEr.. . . Qi' ' -Z3 13551 .':5E55E5?5 - - - 11.-,Q-. tb,-gs. -:.IIE553635255555Ei51i1if555E?fE5E5E5E5E53552351553 I -5 5: 5fI?5.f.5' H: f-ff 'fffff 3555515125555 : -'f12sS5?1' -'rx'--S1:'?1YiE:sz:52sEsEsSE555 555255225553552552555 2 55 1. 2-'fsi--ir-ff 52555 -' 7:2:I5IEIE: 2:51 ,, . 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V . . . . . . , . . - 4 i - . . . ' - -'-'. . - . . . . .- - ' 4 4 ' - 4 4 - - -'-'-'-'.' ' ' 'iI:-xi.:I:if-'ZI--,nfl-'-:.:.:::.:':.-' 53:121:53:::,::::::g:g:g.gq:g:g:g:::5:?.s,.' , W .. E::::fi:2- I., 121' A2315 :KEY '54 212342- 2:2- Z 2:' 5: sg 5555 E 555 .. . ., 25:5-ra -5.gs:5:s:s:s:5:215:515151:5:51515:s:s:e:s:s:ge:1:-Q:s:z:- Let us introduce you to Tom Patterson, SC, 1934, and former editor of the Daily Trojan. Tom is the gentleman who did such a fine job of editing the UCB Supplement published by the Riverside Daily Press. He is shown here probing the darkest corners of the campus for news. Language Lab Unique Among U.S. Universities By Janet Buvens The UCB language lab is among the most modern labs in th e country, Dr. Malecot, French language professor, said in an interview last week. The lab, located in room 1114 in the llumanities building, will be used by all students studying French, Ger- man, and Spanish. The program which has been set up for the language lab is designed to further the students knowledge in both reading and understanding the language being studied. The student will be able to listen to thc reading texts of famous persons, take dictation from recordings, an- swer questions in conversation, prac- tice pronunciation, and take oral tests. Students will also be able to re'- cord their voices. However, it will he some time before the tape re- corders can be installed. The lab is to be operated by stu- dent tcclmicians who will place the proper assignments, or records, on the turntables. In each one of tl1c seventeen indi- vidual listening booths there is a channel dial, like the dial on a televi- sion set. By turning this dial to the proper channel number the student will bc able to listen to his assign- ment. The channel number and the as- signmcnt directions thc student is to follow are found on the bulletin board just inside the door. After putting on the ear phones, plugging their connections into the sockets, and selecting the proper chan- nel, thc student proceeds with the as- signment as directed. Students who are not taking lang- uage courses, but who would like to learn on their own, may also use the language lab. These students should first, however, see the professor of the language he wishes to learn and make an appointment to use the lab. Dr. Malecot should be contacted for French, Dr. Straubinger for Ger- man, and Dr. Hansen for Spanish. Student Body Organization A Reality Soon By Bill Nelsen In a meeting in the humani- ties lecture hall at 1:30 p.m. last Thursday, February 18, the stu- dent body of UCB met to discuss formation of student govern- ment. By unanimous decision, Dean Broadbent and Lorraine Eyer were appointed as chair- man and secretary pro-tem, re- spectively, for the meeting. Todayis meeting is a follow-up of last week's ground work. To end what he termed the present state of student anarchy at UCB, Chairman Broadbent then presented a provisional charter which he and Miss Davis had drawn up. It provided for such things as are neccessary for student government to function until a constitution is adopted, that is, membership, election and duties of officers, right of student petition, time of meeting and name-The Associated Students of the University of Califor- nia at Riverside-ASUCB. A brief discussion followed the presentation, and it was decided to elect a temporary chairman and secre- tary for future meetings and to post- pone eharter ratification until more students have become acquainted with it. Nominations were then made. Vaughn Blankenship was elected to the chair, and Lorraine Eyer was chosen as secretary. It was generally felt that the post- ponement of charter ratification 'and the election of regular officers was the best possible course of action at this time because many of the students have not become acquainted with one another. Pre-med. Student George Harper presented what may well become one of the first traditions of UCB. He outlined a custom of Texas A and M-- that of students greeting each other with a cheerful howdy fwhich could be adapted to the more Californian term- Hil J. The first meeting of ASUCB closed in true parliamentary fashion with a motion from the floor for adjourn- ment. A Musical Note Today and tomorrow are the last days for students who de- sire to purchase tickets for the 1954-55 Community Concert sea- son at the half-price of 83.00 to do so. Miss Beverly Baldwin, secre- tary in the Personnel Office, is in charge of ticket sales at UCB. Frarrcisco. Instruction thcrc span Our First Sour Note . . .V One week ago today the student body of UCB held its first student meeting to discuss a proposed charter and to nominate and elect pro tem officers. Slightly less than half the students showed up last Thursday. Of those who did show up, only a small group took an active part in the proceedings. Why the apathy? The date and hour of the meeting had been announced at least twice previously in other student gatherings, so there was no excuse for not being at the student government conclave. The administration has set aside the 1:30 hour every Thursday for ASUCR assemblies. But, as Dean Broadbent has said, that corr- cession carr hardly be justified when so few students indicate an interest in student government and its affairs. Nearly everyone has heard the story of the man who signed a petition stating he was to be shot at dawn. I-Ie signed away his rights because he was too lazy or disinterested to read the petition! Letis not give up our rights and privileges as UCB students by being disinterested and lazy. Let's start filling the lecture hall to capacity every Thursday and find out what's going on! Meet The Masters By Mary Howard Dr. Conway Pierce, a native Kerr- tuckian, is chairman of the Division of Physical Sciences and instructor of chemistry. He has taken undergrad- uate and graduate work at George- town College, and the Universities of Kentucky, South Dakota, and Chicago. He has served in military chemical divisions both as a private in World War I and as a chairman in World War II. The latter' job, with the Of- fice of Scientific Research and De- velopment, won him the Presidential Certificate for Merit. Dr. Pierce was clrainrran of the Pomona College chemistry depart- ment from 1945 to 1953, when he came to UCR. , -run STAFF- Dick VVillianrs ..........,.. .... .. ,..,,,.......,,,,, E ditur lim St. Clair ..................... Associate Editor Marilyn Merchant .... ....... A dvertising Mgr. MEMBERS Janet Buvcns, Ruth Pertel, Ed Groven, Mary Howard, Bill Nelseu, Pat Sparkman, Mary Ann Kish, Barbara Cracknell, Chuck johnson and Carl Radusch. Howard S. Cook, Jr .......... - ............. -.Adviser Business Booms In Coffee Shop The UCR Coffee Shop fin the base- ment of the Physical Education build- ingl opens its doors for business at 7:80 a.m. and closes at 3:30 p.nr. Under the management of Mrs. Anna Stites, it serves sandwiches, coffee, malts, doughnuts, ice cream, milk, and cake or pie. At a later date it will serve ham- burgers and french fries. A TIDAL WAVE OF STUDENTS 76,'lN 1 l 56,700 36,900 :o,11o I t1iSi ..ff . r , aff K -srkizfa U of C Is Fastest Growing School In US Today Since its founding in 1868, the University of California has grown more rapidly than any similar institu- tion in the United States. It is re- garded by educational authorities as one of the most distinguished univer- sities-usually being included among the first five universities in America in quality of faculty and of facilities for instruction and research. Berkeley, oldest of the eight cam- pnscs, covers nrore than 900 acres in the foothills of the east shore of San fields of learning alplrabctically agriculture to zoology. ln addition to courses noni found in the letters and sciences. riculurrr, therc are colleges or sc offe rin g agriculture, archite business administration, chen criminology, education, engine forestry, law, librarianslrip, me nursing, public hcalth, and welfare. Its strrdcnts include residen practically every state of the and many foreign countries. 0 campus is an International Hous of four such Rockefeller fin structures in the world design promote mutually beneficial acq anceships between foreign and students. Dr. Irwin Newell is shown explaining the effects of ten days of classes and homework on the average UCB scholar. The I raptrned audience is made up of his colleagues in the Division of Life Sciences. The artists conception of the soon to be constructed UCR religious center. iany Individuals Donate luch To Religious Center The U11iversity Religious Conference at UCLA has a consider- e reputation for advancing inter-religious understanding. Fre- ently students will leave the campus saying that their most morable and valuable experiences have been the discussions and ternization there. r. VVatkins had a hand in starting UCLA conference 25 years ago it is not surprising that he also a part in interesting friends of University and friends of religion fostering a similar center here at R. Ve now have a University Religious itcr Committee, soon to launch a mcial drive for 360,000 to build ne structure in keeping with UCR iitccture. The site has been given Col. and Mrs. Robert VV. Revelcv, . and Mrs. Oliver C. Shilling and '. Russell T. Brown. lt is situated Canyon Crest Road, northwest of physical education building. he committee is headed by M. Il. 'ner as chairman. Other members Mrs. S. L. Mapes, vice-presidentg '. Virginia R. Stephens, secretary, VV. Melberg, treasurer, Philip L. fd, C. F. Coffee III, Edwin T. nan, jr., Eric YV. Emtman, V. NV. rbbs, j. L. llunter, Elden Smith, A. Steves and james M. XVortz. iartin VVilliamson, who designed building. incorporated features nd desirable from the experience UCLA. An auditorium is planned the lower level. tThe site, on the th side of the arroyo, is slopingi. ices for clergy of the many faiths t are expected to participate are 'ed on the upper level. The com- 1 rooms will include a snack bar, ference rooms and a small chapel. ' iss Adeline Guenther, director of UCLA religious center, headed a X Simon Says He's Willing to Aid UCR's Musicians Ilow many of you are interested in forming the first chorus, glee club, or band on the UCR campus or in participating in thc first musical pro- duction? Dr. Edwin Simon, Professor of Music, has said that hc is more than willing to give any advice or assist- ance to interested students. Dr. .Simon may be contacted in his office, room 2212, of the Social Sci- ences and Humanities building. delegation to Riverside recently to explain the idea of such a center. She was accompanied by Rev. E. Lawr- ence Carter and Rabbi Iedudah Colm, Episcopal and jewish clergymen from the UCLA center, and three students of as many faiths. All of them em- phasized that inter-faith fraterniza- tion improves unde1'standing. More- over, they said it does this without the effect of raiding of one organized faith by another. Reverend Carter made the point that each participant not only leams more about other faiths but is virtually compelled to learn more about his own. Johnson Wants To See A Band, But Made Up of What? By Chuck Johnson In a large university of ten thousand it takes one per cent of the student body to produce a full band of a hundred pieces. At Riverside, in 1954, one per cent of us would produce the fellow on a bass hom! To form a full band, would require the help of our entire student body. That appears to be a golden impos- sibility, in view of the diverse interests represented among a hundred students. So perhaps we should ask first, what docs it take to make a band possible where no thousands of stu- dents exist from which to draw, or where no thousands of dollars are presently available to provide the facilities for such an organization? Assuming we could find a dozen students genuinely interested in 'blowing up a storm, for the new Alma Mater, the first question would be- how many have their own instru- ments, and in what shape are they? Vlfould the instrumentation be varied enough to round out a pep band, or would we be starting with five flutes, four saxcs, and three trap drummers? VVhat if we desperately needed an oompah and a couple of French homs -we have three persons to play them, but no instruments. Well, a mere thousand dollars will solve that Jroblem. I On the other hand, supposing we did get thc necessary horns for a sixteen piece band, but we needed a reliable first trumpet man. Would one of the instructors who used to play a lot of tnmipet offer to help the band until someone could handle the job among the students? The problem of music then pre- sents itself. Most arrangements are written for a full hundred piece band. To make a balanced sound out of a few isolated parts of a score with a handful of musicians becomes a feat for a magician, not a director. It's really out of this world, if you've ever heard it. Special books for pep bands and 'hungry fives' leave something to be desired, although they are the next best thing to special arrangements for the limited group. Specials usually take a lot of time or cost far too much money, compared to band literature already printed for the larger bands. After properly arranged music comes the problem-Where do we re- hearse and store our equipment, such as horns, music stands, drums, podium, and library? Where can we blow with- out interrupting the academic life of the rest of the campus? Last of all-could the band, in spite of all these hurdles, qualify for a pub- lic appearance? What about uniforms? Of course, all these problems will find their solutions in the near future, since wc are an unusual group . . . Instead of one per cent taking a hold in the band world, we should expect ten per cent to come to the aid of UCR morale via the horn and reed. As for instruments, we might hope by next fall to be blowing sound of our own, some borrowed ones, and, if the Regents be willing, a few new ones that operate properly on all keys, and with correct intonation. For rehearsal space, your guess is as good as mine-maybe that shack up on top of the Box Springs Moun- tains wherc we can't be heard, ex- cept with an east wind would be good. Music can and will be provided from one source or another. Uniforms cost nearly as much as the cheaper instruments, but they are vitally important in creating the right impression, since some music lovers see more than they hear. But for the present, is anyone in- terested in a brass quartet? If you are, bring your own homs and meet over at my place-I have a pen, some blank music script, a few ideas-and a trombone. Here's where we begin. w 1 SMOG CHAMBERS-The Citrus Experiment Station is the center of the University of Califor- nia's air pollution research program. Dr. John T. Middleton frightj, associate plant pathologist, discovered in 1944 that smog was damaging plants in Southern California and estimates that losses this year will total S3,000,000. University scientists, including Dr. Ellis F. Darley lleftj and Dr. James B. Kendrick, Ir., are attempting to develop cultural techniques that will permit Southland farmers to grow crops in spite of smog attacks. No Basic Change In Draft Policy r For UCR Males No fundamental changes 1 garding draft policies for colle students have been made rece ly, reports Selective Serv! headquarters in Washington. Students are remindedl of t following regulations and portunities that are afford them, however: All draft eligible stude whose academic year ends january or February should port to the Dean of Studei Office during the first f days of March to request t their academic rank be forwa cd to their boards. Rankings be available by March 1. Draft eligibles holding a c ferred classification until It are expected to be enrolled full time students during spring semester to keep their ferment valid. Any variance from full ti stasus will be automatically ported to the boards, as students continuing full time the spring semester. . . . But You Forgot To Remember . . . CLASSIFIED ADS The UCR CUB wishes to establish a classified ad section for the use of students, faculty and employees of the university. ll The tentative rate schedule, sub- ject to student approval, is as follows: 250 per 15 word ad, and 10c for every 5 additional words. Long term ads can be contracted for at a re- duced rate. Since The Cub expects to appear every Thursday, deadline for ads is 8 a.m. Monday morning of any week. BUS SCHEDULE Students needing transportation to and from Riverside may use the F on- tana Bus Lines. Buses leave the Grey- hound Depot on Market street near seventh street on the hour from 6 a.1n. to 1 3.lll. On the return trip from March Field, they can be flagged at the Canyon Crest entrance to the H- campus at about 20 minutes to the hour. Fare is 15 cents a single trip or 10 tickets for 81.40. Every facility and service has been planned for MAXIMUM STUDENT USE - Edwin Coman, Jr. Librarian. Hmm. Maybe it's just that it's time for Humanities 1B, Mr. Coman! A IANDIDATES VIEWED lil. 1 Riverside, California, March 3, 1954 No. 8 ME Magazine nes Story On CR-Almost c of the TIME magazine cor- ndents in Los Angeles recently e a long and interesting article rovost Gordon S. Watkins and ew College. urray Garret, noted Hollywood ographer, took a series of beau- pictures to illustrate the story. fortunately, the article arrived re New York office just as the there was completing a cover on President Nathan Pusey of fard, another leader in the re- nee of liberal arts education. sult: the story on UCR was re- d to one paragraph fsee TIME, 221. ltural Events mmittee Plans ll Program By Ruth Pertel committee meeting to discuss ral events at UCR was held nesday, February 25. e committee is planning a pro- that will supplement the eur- um of the student. is semester it will include two cal events as a supplement to the munity Concert series, four facul- ctures, and a dramatic event h will involve both faculty and nts. e first event will occur late in and will probably be one of usical events. e committee hopes by this pro- to broaden the student's inter- especially in fields that are not ded ir1 his program. e members of the committee chairman, Dr. john Olmsteadg Loda Mae Davis, Dr. Malcolm 5 Dr. Robert Wild, Dean as Broadbentg Dean Robert A. t lex-officiolg and Dr. Paul binger. HOW ABOUT IT? The staff of the UCR Cub needs more students who are interested in newspaper work of any kind, writing, proof-reading, make-up, etc. No experience is necessary. If you are interested in helping on the student newspaper, your newspaper, please stop at Room 1223 of the Social Sciences build- ing and sign up. Student Loans Available Soon The University has established two general types of student loans. The first is a short term loan. That is, a loan not exceeding 25 dollars and which must be paid back within thirty days. This type loan is designed to help students over emergency situations as they may arise. This loan may be had by a simple application through the Dean of Stu- dents office. The second type loan, a long term loan, will be for amounts up to and including 600 dollars. The treatment of this loan will be more strict than that of the short term loan. The loan will he made only after all the routine procedures and pre- cautions taken by a regular loan com- pany, for example, eo-signers-and must be cleared through a university committee. The loans may be paid back after students have graduated. However, it is to their best interests to pay back the loan before graduation as there is no interest rate as long as they are connected with the Univer- sity. Once they have graduated, however, normal interest rates, cur- rent at that period will be charged. The success of these two types of loans, particularly the first, depends upon student honesty and integrity in paying back the loan. ther, Can You Spare a Dime? n stallation of a Typo-matic service for the convenience of the student has been announced by University officials. ix Typo-matic units will be installed in Room 202 of the Library build- These units are operated by the deposit of 10 cents in a slot on the riter and will operate for approximately one hour. 'ss Berry, assistant order librarian has been designated to handle all rs regarding this installation. ir. Coman stated that the units should be installed and ready for use he students the 15th of March. Dr. Stanley Flanders of Citrus Experimental Station. Insect Parasites Said Best Citrus Pest Controllers Parasites which attack citrus pests offer a better prospect of long-range control than chemical treatment, in the opinion of Dr. Stanley Flanders, professor of biological control in the Citrus Experiment Station here. Discussing his views, the University Explorer will explain some of the features of biological control in a broadcast over the CBS radio net- work at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, March 7. He will describe such parasites as Metaphycus helvolus, a tiny wasp about 1!20th of an inch in length, which preys on tl1e black scale of citrus trees. Entitled Our Insect Allies, the broadcast will be heard on KNX, Los Angeles, KCBS, San Franciseog and the CBS radio network. Dr. Flanders is now in Hong Kong, looking for new parasites. BABYLAND . . . Political Science professor Dr. Mal- colm Smith is the proud father of a new baby, Miss Nancy Leigh Smith, who was born Sunday, February 23rd, and weighed in at eight pounds and two ounces. TODAY Hopefuls Appear In SB Assembly This Afternoon By W. R. Williams I sure don't like this idea of not being able to place campaign posters about the campus, said student Peter Van Vechten at last Thursday's provisional char- ter meeting, and I want to form a committee to take the matter up with Dean Broadbent. Van Vechten was one of a number of students who obviously were a little disgruntled over the controver- sial details of the meeting, held in the large lecture hall of the Social Sci- ences and Humanities building. His sporadic outburst came as a result of pro-tem secretary Lorraine Eyer's having stated that she had leamed that campus rules would not allow indiscriminate posteri.ng of the premises. She stated that one bulletin board had been reserved for campaigning purposes. 'Cement Plan' Gains Ground Pro-tem chaimian Vaughn Blanken- ship hastily appointed a committee to assist Van Vechten with his prob- lem, while other students were agitating for action on Doug Mum- ma's proposed 'cement plan'. Student Mumma had earlier dis- cussed with Dean Broadbent an idea which spread like melted cheese throughout the campus about the feasibility of each of the original UCR student body members being al- lowed to write their names in con- crete for posterity. Chairman Blankenship asked for volunteers to make up a committee which would be charged with the responsibility of making the final ar- rangements. Dick Pearl and Bill Kassel answered the call to aid Mumma. I The first half-hour of the meeting was taken up with a repeat reading of the proposed temporary charter by Miss Eyer. After much discussion among the attendant members, the issue of whether or not to adopt the charter 'as wasv was put to a vote and passed unanimously. Candidates By Petition After the charter was ratified, a petition method of nominating stu- dent body officers was approved. The plan called for any group of students who desired to run a candi- date to report to the office of the Deans for petitions which would need to be signed not only by the candi- date himself, but by fifteen accredited ASUCR members. Chairman 'Blankenship announced that he would like a motion from the floor calling for a 12 noon deadline on Wednesday, March 3, for final filing of the petitions with the Deans' office. His idea for the Wednesday dead- line was ss that the contenders could be presented at today's assembly. Riverside Camp Grauman's Chinese Mumma By now Doug Mumma is probably UCR's most popular citizen. It's no longer news, but it must here be re-chronicled that Doug was the originator of the cement plan , as it has come to be known. This plan is so obvious and so appealing that the editorial staff of the Cub is backing it all the way. His idea was born in a brain beseiged and battered by two weeks of facts and figures and homeworkl Mumma had come upon one of our more publicity-conscious students scrawling his name in Mr. Yeager's freshly-laid cement outside the large lecture hall, and instantly he came to the con- clusion that maybe it would be kind of fun for 129 or so more of us to engage in the same sport. Remembering that Sid Grauman's Chinese Theatre, a pretty ordinary kind of a movie house, gained an unparalled fame and made a pile of money for the owner simply because a lot of Holly- wood people placed their names, noses, kneeprints and! or other impressions that could legitimately be made by various parts of their anatomies in soft concrete around the arcade, Mr. Mumma was inspired. The idea quickly gained official sanction and grew to propor- tions undreamed of by the maker. Everyone has gotten enthusiastic over it. Tom Patterson of the Press-Enterprise staff, upon hearing of the scheme, suggested land in all seriousness, toolj that the ASUCR borrow a grave-stone chisel from the Army so that the names would have a uniform appearance! At any rate, if his plan hasn't come off at the time you're read- ing this, plan to be around when it does. The Expanding University tlleprinted From The Daily Califomiannl Amidst the orange groves and under the sun of the Santa Ana valley a campus has been born-the new University of California at Riverside. Indications are that potentialities for real learning on this new outpost of the expanding university may be larger than those afforded by older institutions like Berkeley. For one thing, because of its tie with the statewide university, Riverside will be able to offer university education with the ad- vantages of small college surroundings. In fact, at first only 300 students will be enrolled under a 65-member faculty. And plans call for an enrollment limitation of 1500, a mere tenth of Berkeleyis present, and relatively low, figure. The Riverside liberal arts major has been set up so that, in the words of the new Riverside general catalogue of courses, work toward the degree of Bachelor of Arts is not conceived as merely the successive completion of so many fragments of knowledge, in the forms of units, courses and reading assignments. To this end, comprehensive examinations will be required at the end of the sophomore and senior years so that knowledge can be acquired cumulatively and not in fits and starts. On top of all other advantages, Riverside students will have the opportunity to initiatiate their own traditions-their own student government, their own alma mater, their own school colors, their own news- paper. We wish to welcome Riverside to the growing University family-a citrus experiment station gone liberal arts college. POOL ALMOST READY Final painting of the swim- ming pool is almost complete, Coach jack Hewitt has an- nounced. The swimming pool should be open next week for swimming classes. -THE STAFF- Dick Williams .... -..... ...... -...,. ....,. ......Editor lim St. Clair .................. ,. .... Associate Editor Marilyn Merchant ........... -Advertising Mgr. MEMBERS janet Buvens, Ruth Pertel, Ed Groven, Mary Howard, Bill Nelsen, Pat Sparkman, Mary Ann Kish, Barbara Cracknell, Chuck Johnson and Carl Radusch. Howard S. Cook, Ir............ .... ....-...Adviset President Sproul and Dr. Watkins, shown coming from th Library on the new walks. President's Reception Enjoys Heavy Turnout Approximately S00 students, faculty members of both Letters and Science and CES staffs, and administrative office the University, accompanied by their wives or husbands, atte the President's reception a week As students entered the Physical Education building they were given a member of the faculty or a faculty yellow name plates and introduced to wife who took them through the re- ceiving line and introduced them to President and Mrs. Robert Cordon Sproul, Vice-President and Mrs. Harry R. Wellman and to Provost and Mrs. Gordon S. Watkins. Once through the reception line students were directed to the re- freshments table consisting of fruit juice and cookies. A 5-piece orchestra attracted the attentions of many of the students and faculty members and a large group soon gathered on the main floor of the gymnasium for dancing. The President and Vice-President and the Provost and their wives were exceedingly pleasant to all students and were very easy to meet. President Sproul made some very nice comments about our Student Body organization and about the UCR Cub. It is estimated that 81 students and wives, 110 Letters and Science faculty members and their wives and ago Tuesday. 102 Citrus Stations faculty me and their wives were present a number of administrative of and several members of the press. Arrangements for the rece were made by a committee of members of both the Letters Science College and the Citrus tion. Accepts Grants Grants totaling S7050 for th erside campus were accepte Friday by the Regents of the versity of California, meeting i Angeles. The Du Pont Company gave for research at the Citrus Expe Station on leaf application of zers. Dow Chemical Co. gave for research on control of insect The Tri-County Savings Br League gave S50 for the studen fund. ' , rovisional Charter Accepted University Will y Students As Follows: EAMBLE: We, the students of the University of California at Riverside, under Iiority and powers granted us by the Regents of the University and in er that we might govern ourselves in an orderly way, do hereby accept Charter under which we shall be governed until such time as a Constitu- shall have been adopted. ll'ICLE I. The organized students of the University of California at Riverside shall Enown as the Associated Students of the University of Califomia at Riv- e. The abbreviation shall be ASUCR. FICLE II. Membership: All students duly registered at the University of California liverside shall be voting members of ASUCR. l'ICLE III. Officers: There shall be elected during the Spring Semester 1953-54, the wing officers: a President, a Vice-President, a Secretary and a Treasurer SUCR. There shall also be established a Student Affairs Committee con- g of the elected officers and six other members, two members from each e classes fthe freshman, sophomore, and juniorl, one of whom shall be elected president of the class, the other to be elected by the members of class. ICLE IV. Duties of Officers: The President shall fulfill those duties generally 'bed to the office of President. I-Ie shall also preside over meetings of the ent Affairs Committee. The Vice-President shall serve in the absence of President or when delegated to so act by the President. The Secretary of ASUCR shall perform the customary duties of secretary and shall, in tion, serve as Historian. The Treasurer shall ful fill the customary duties reasurer. The Student Affairs Committee shall serve with all members ng equal vote in establishing such other committees, boards, etc. as may ecessary to govem the affairs of the student body, until such time as nstitution is established. In the event a Constitution is not adopted dur- the Spring Semester, 1954, the Student Affairs Committee shall prepare ssary by-laws and regulations to assure continuance of govemment during school year 1954-55, or until a Constitution is adopted. Such by-laws, shall be presented to the student body for action not later than the second rsday in May, 1954. ICLE V. A Method of elections: Elections of the student body officers, of class ers, and of the Student Affairs Committee shall be by secret ballot. ICLE VI. Responsibility: During the Spring Semester 1954, the President of CR periodically shall bring to the attention of the student body, con- d in open meetings, affairs relating to the development of student mment, the establishment of a Constitution, or other matters, falling in the interest and purisdiction of the student body for discussion and n. , TICLE VII. Any members of ASUCR may present matters to the officers of ASUCR presentation at the open meetings of ASUCR. Should the Student Affairs mittee rule against presentation of such matters, such member may ent a petition requesting presentation signed by at least ten members of ECB. Upon receipt of such petition, the matter must be brought before ext regular meeting of ASUCR. TICLE VIII. Unless otherwise determined in specific cases, a majority vote of those ent at the meeting of the ASUCR in which the matter is presented for nn shall be decisive. ricrgii' IX. , All mass meetings of the ASUCR during the Spring Semester, 1954, shall ield on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. . FICLE X. This Charter shall be considered in force upon adoption by a two-thirds ority vote of the members of ASUCR voting. ' Fight Loyalty Oath Payments Regents of the University of California, ordered last Thurs- day by a Sacramento Superior judge to pay EB29O,291 in back pay and severance demands of 21 professors fired in a loyalty oath controversy, are going to hire an attorney to fight the Order. The regents met on the UCLA campus last Friday and voted to re- tain San Francisco lawyer Eugene Prince. They declined to comment on the Thursday order by judge John Quincy Brown to pay the sum or show reason for not so doing April 8. A special committee headed by regcnt John Francis Neyland was set up to find another attorney if Prince, who has represented the regents on other matters, is unavail- able. The professors were dismissed for failing to sign a loyalty oath and lost two years' pay. A 1952 Supreme Court decision ordered their rein- statement. In other action, the regents ap- proved a policy to set up a retire- ment system granting teaching and top administrative staffs retirement benefits like those now given to other state employees. Ceeiling would be 80 per cent of the average of an em- ployee's three highest paid years. Regent Victor R. Hanses of Angeles said the system would less than transferring university ployees to the state retirement tem He said '1 committee would Los cost em- sys- ' . . - pre- sent detailed plans for the system at a later meeting. Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard john W. Olmsted, history professor and head of the Division of Humani- ties, was the first member of the UCR faculty to be chosen. He has been Assistant Dean of the UCLA College of Letters and Science, has held a Rhodes scholarship to Ox- ford University, and is a member of the American Historical Association, and of Phi Beta Kappa. Dr. Olmsted is a specialist in the history of science, especially that of the seventeenth century. He has at- tendeed the University of Califomia at Berkeley and Comell University. MEXICAN FOOD Ralph De Marco's Y up ,.-4 gag 1 ,de . thi Y ' n ML 0, fu .L 4 ff 23-ET, ' ' '- . . ,Qt 77 ,, , ,,- ni i :greening .i ,, fx, ' r 'Q 'iFf.- H,-gfw M llmiflll .1, - .- EL'zl.4Ll'r m ?7t:' if - Qi in 'ovrosirz I I E MAN lNST 9039 MAGNQLIAAVE-, . ' ' nwrsslni.'cAilroRNiA ., 5- ' . , ' f 1 ' ali ffgll - .ev . Fashioned for Fun ,:,,:,:,,5'v M M Sailtone, Demurn, Cotton and cool seer- 2 Ss.. fs qifwt' ' +490 gs aw 6. , , 71, f a , if 22 , tw 1 , '2:5:5:3:5:5:5:5:3, '2:E:E121E:E:Z:2:5 :j, ,.,.5:5:f:5:5:f:5:2z3:3:, -'f ,E 55311:13:11:ziqzgz:::3g:5:5:f:f:Q:f:f:f::. 1:Z:2:f:f:2:f:f:f:I- -' I ,.,.g:-: - : :E:E:Q:2:5:2:f:f:2:55:212:55:222:2:Q:E:2:Z:E:Q:2:5Z2g:g:5:-:A 3, ' ' K ' ' '-1ag:-:-:-:-:-:c-:-:-:':4:-:-:-:-:-:-11:-:-:1:5:ISj9' Jzisi. SQ - '---i---:-:-:-:-:-:-:':':-:-:-:-'gg A -55:15. ' -1 .,, . THE sucker coordinates . . . summertime styled dresses, bathing suits, 'peddle pushers, shorts, slacks, skirts, and blouses tailored to collegiate needs and tastes . . . costume iewelry, belts, and other accessories. eaiir aaiaa IRENE BAYLESS 3638 NINTH STREET TELEPHONE IIIO Between Main 81 Orange Streets --- RIVERSIDE, CALIFORNIA 4-- Berkeleyites Unable to Reach Change Decision Students of the Berkeley Campus have been unablc to reach any deci- sion on a proposed change in the academic calendar. The proposed change would mean the fall semester would run from about August 23 to December 20 and the spring term from February 1 to lvlay 20. The proposal would mean that the final examinations would end before Christmas holidays and the spring semester would still start late enough for mid-year high school graduates to cuter the University. ' Advantages Listed According to Stanford A. Mosk, professor of economics, said that the advantages of the new system would be ll elimination of the lame d-wk session after Christmas. 21 fall grades would be known before the spring semester started, 35 fall grades would a formal three-day break for Thanks- giving. 4D travel expenses would be lessened, 5D early graduation gives a better chance to get j0bS, 67 the facultv could use the extra time f01' research, 71 Bookstores would have a better supply of books. Students on the Davis Campus so far have favored the change, Mosk said. This will eliminate student's cutting classes to work before Christ- mas, which is of no educational value, but at the same time finals will be over early enough to work, especially if a student has them all the first week, he said. Students Veto Change At a special ASUC open house students voted 25 to 22 against chang- ing the schedule. Twenty-three 'of the students who voted against the measure were opposed for employ- ment reasons. Recreational Schedule Setup By PE Division For students who are interest- ed in using the recreational fa- cilities of the Physical Education Department the following is a tenative schedule which will go into effect as soon as facilities become ready. Swimming Pool Monday and Wednesday 12:30-5:45 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday 12:30-2:30 P.M. Friday 12:00-5:45 P.M. Basketball Pavilion Monday and Wednesday 8:30-10:30 A.M. 12:30-5:45 P.M. Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 8:30-6:00 P.M. Fields and Courts NVhcnever not in use by University classes or teams. Locker Facilities Monday thru Friday 8:00-5:45 P.M. im1wlNTIcMillin, UCR's first student, is shown here being greeted by Dr. Watkins the day after his release from the U. S. Navy. ' UCR's First Coaching Staff To Attend Meet ln Pasadena By Dwain Lewis Next Monday the UCR coaching staff will attend the official Southern California inter-scholastic athletic con- ference at Cal-Tech to discuss some of the problems they might en- counter in varsity competition. UCR is planning to develop basket- ball, tennis and swimming for inter- collegiate competition next year. The fog, last Friday, was bad, but it brought the humidity up so that the pool could be painted. Within a week our swimming classes should be in full swing. Intra-murals have begun to materi- alize. Plans for a basketball league are being made and the play should start next week. The faculty plans to field a team, also the basketball class and the Ex- periment station plus one or two in- dependent student fives. The games will be played at 12:30 on Mondays and Wednesdays. Spectators are in- vited. Any man wishing to play on a team should see Doug Mumma or jack Sauls. Student Son Of SB Principal Jim McMillin holds the distinction of being the first student admitted to the University of California at Riv- erside. McMi1lin is a Navy reservist and was stationed at Camp Pendleton. San Bernardino is his home town. Jim is following in the footsteps of his father, principal of San Ber- nardino High School for a number of years, by preparing for a teaching career. He likes the small enrollment at UCB, stating that: classes are small enough to learn something in, and the student receives more attention. For That Important Date AN ORCHID coasaoe Humanities Prof: Plan Medieval Farce For Spring By Pat Sparkman The real value of dram found today in the universi and collegesf, said Dr. Willi Sharp in an interview last we It is Dr.' Sharp's objective give the students and faculty UCB the opportunity to witr the techniques that go into production of a true drama Pierre Patelinu, a French medi farce, has been selected for its p bilities to demonstrate the relat ship of music, art and drama to Humanities. Accompanying the play will t discussion, in debate fomi, of medieval music and art. Dr. Boggs will represent the art ment, while the music aspect be handled by Dr. Edwin Simon. Thursday evening, March 4, p.m., UCR students and faculty have an opportunity to become quainted with the scri for theh forthcoming Pierre Patelinef' This for the purpose of classifying the talent UCR. Anyone with musical, theatrical experience is urged tend the Thursday meeting. If sufficient enthusiasm is more dramatic productions planned. pt and RENT! NEW ROYAl SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 54 per month, STO FULL INITIAL RENTAL PAID N' 9 X3 as APPLIED ON PURCHAS Your compleg---. OFFICE - SCHOOL of SUPPLIES Riverside TYPEWEEER5 - I ADDING MACHINES MISSES' HARRY E COSNER Sales-Rentals-Repairs 8 . WOMEN 5 ORC:-nos Telephone 448I-W 5462 Grand Ave. Riverside 3855 MAIN 3744 MAIN STREET -1 UT r Vol. I Riverside, California, March 11, 1954 No. 4 hese three profound gentlemen are, from L to R, Joe Pitruzzello, Vaughn Blankenship and huck Young. They are UCR's first presidential candidates. RE IDENTIAL CANDIDATES' O Jon PITRUZZELLO V. BLANKENSHHJ CHARLES YoUNc w people realize how lucky we at this time we are able to es- sh good government with con- rules, traditions, and precedents students will be proud to follow r footsteps. e in tum will be proud to call our Alma Mater. believe in establishing these , precedents, and traditions we ld use good judgement and above move slowly. Everyone must cipate. it is possible for us to choose e for the school paper, to have 1 cheers and songs, I am strongly vor. ee no reason, however, why we wait until next semester if the student body, are willing. ove all, if I am elected to office, do my utmost to abide by stu- body wishes and opinions. Experience! Diligence! Imagination! A soda is only as good as the jerk who makes itf' Experience! Hardwork! Imagination! You can put them all in our student government. My platform? To use these ele- ments, if elected, in establishing by- laws, traditions, clubs, social func- tions, for ASUCR. To give everyone an opportunity to express his ideas, to give everyone the job of establish- ing ASUCR, to give effective leader- ship in the direction required. It takes more than buildings to make a college. It takes a group of students and a student body govem- ment. It takes more than being elected to make a student body govemment. It takes experience, imag- ination, and leadership. Vote for Vaughn! That's me. Thatis mc?? Stu- dent body Presidcnt of ASUCR-thatis Vaughn. Tomorrow is election day. I hope that 100'Z1 of the Student Body goes to the polls. During the past few weeks, I have had the good fortune to become fair- ly well acquainted with most of you, and I am convinced that the Student Body of this College is capable of laying the foundations that are need- ed if this organization which we are now founding is to be lasting. I think we will need to move slowly and carefully in the weeks ahead but the final decision will remain with you. The office of President during this formative semester will be one of ex- treme importance in realizing our goal. With your help, I believe that I will be able to help you do the job that must be done. XVhen you vote tomorrow, I hope it will be for. me so 'that together we can achieve our aims. ' ST BALLOTS FROM 8 - 5 ON FRIDAY 1 Candidates Meet To Discuss Plans With Broadbent Leis keep it vigorous but clean, said Dean Broadbent at the meeting of candidates and campaign managers of the forth- coming election. That was the Dean's parting word at the Wednesday, March 3rd meet- ing in his office. A meeting keynoted by high-spirits and friendly coopera- tion. By mutual consent, it was agreed that no candidate was to spend more than five dollars on his or her cam- paign, and that all the political as- pirants would submit a statement of expenses to the Dean of Students. The first order of business was to determine if all the candidates were eligible -to run for office. An exam- ination of the petitions showed that none were ineligible. The following individuals were of- ficially declared as candidates at the meeting: For President of the Student Body were Joe Pitmzzello, Vaughn Blankenship and Charles Young. Running for Vice-President: Bill Cowan, Lorraine Eyer and Bill Kas- sel. Secretarial aspirants are Pat Sparkman and Mabel Fariester, while Peter C. Van Vechten, Bill Anderson and Bud Barton have thrown their hats into the financial ring-treasurers. The meeting lasted for nearly an hour, and was interrupted only by several photographers who had come to the office to take pictures of the presidential candidates for the local press. A post-election party will be held in the Physical Education Bldg. from 7-11 Friday, March 12. All students are invited. Police Have Auto Decals Decal stickers are now available at the Police Department for spring semester students of UCR, Sgt. Edw. Schroeder announced yesterday. Students who have registered their vehicles should come into the de- partment headquarters, room 1350, SS 6: Humanities Bldg., Adm wing, as soon as possible to receive these stickers. An officer will place the decal on the windshield of every registered UCB student vehicle. Students who have not registered their vehicles must do so before ob- taining a sticker. . - Sgt. Schroeder and his staff would like 'also to thank the student body for their cooperation in registering their vehicles and'for th econserva- tive manner in which they drive on campus. u You COULD Flip A Coin-But Don't Tomorrow, March 12, we will all have the opportunity to exer- cise one of our privileges as members of ASUCR, that of voting for candidates for student body offices. It is hardly necessary to remind you that this is probably the most important issue that will face the student body this year. It is the editorial opinion of the UCB Cub that all our candi- dates are well-qualified for the offices they seek. When you come down to cases there is little to choose between any of them, they are all so well-qualified. However, too often students neglect to express their desires in student elections, fail to campaign for the individual of their choice, and fail to cast their votes. Later, recriminations are heard against the person chosen for office. These criticisms cannot be justified if less than 507: of the student body is interested enough to participate in the elections either as candidates or as voters. We have had rather poor turn-outs for student meetings in the past. Let us hope that tomorrow all students qualified to vote for candidates will do so. It is important that in casting our votes we be truly convinced that the individual for whom we vote is truly qualified for office. Don't cast your vote for any particular individual simply because your friend votes for him. Cast your ballot because you honestly believe him to be the man best qualified for the office. Above all, remember to go to the polls tomorrow and VOTE. VICE-PRESIDENTS BILL KASSEL I fully realize the responsibility of holding such a position in student govemment and also can realize how important it is to have student gov- ernment directed by student opinions, suggestions, and criticisms. At this point, we come to my sec- ondary objective in running for this office and that is to work for the com- mon interests of the student body by getting ideas and suggestions from the student body as a whole and not according to certain groups My primary objective in running for the office is that I want to see the student body united because I sincerely believe that A HOUSE DIVIDED CANNOT STAND. I picked that well-worn cliche because the truth of that statement can be seen almost anywhere in history, and that same statement applies directly to our situation at UCB at present. The only remedy that I can see is to emphasize entire student body par- ticipation in everything rather than small-groupv control of everything. But if everyone is so filled with the idea of starting a group, let's all start one called UCB Students Inc. where each student sincerely inter- ester in UCR's affairs is backed by 129 other students feeling exactly the same way about the school. BILL COWAN We, the soon-to-be formed student body of UCR, must set up a govern- ment with sound principles and a strong consideration for the future. Our student government must be built and run by the students them- selves, independent of ALL outside factions. Lastly, I would like to call for a good, clean campaign. Regardless of who might ultimately win out, let's all pull together to make our ASUCR the compact, well-organized entity it should be. LORRAINE EYER We, as students of UCB, face the challenge of a new University void of tradition. Academically we have a pattem of individualized education set before us, it has been planned for many years and now we are rather warily par- taking of it. Socially we have no precedents. VVe have an advantage over the other Universities. Every student is on the same level regardless of background. We need not feel the pressure of organized against unorganized stu- dents which is present in the larger Universities. Our social events must be organ- ized to unify the student body and emphasize the potentiality that is within each student. I am ready to help organize such social events. Whether I am elected or not I will work for the development of events at which students may relax from their studies and learn to know each other better. SECRETARIES PAT SPARKMAN A secretary's duties are not only to record accurately the business con- ducted in a meeting, but also to be willing, as well as capable, of plan- ning, discussing, and carrying out projects that will be a credit to the University. I am willing to expend the time and effort to promote good will, plan progressive activities, enter into social functions and record for future action and reference the decisions made in our meetings. The records of this first semester will be a guidepost and will help to set the tradition for the future stu- dents of UCB. I would like to make that record a complete, accurate, honest, and in- teresting one. MABLE FARISTER As I said in my speech last Thurs- day, I fully realize the responsibility of the job of secretary-historian of a new school. The records of UCBIS first semester will be referred to many times in the years to COITIS. We are setting a new stage upon which many scenes will be played. These scenes should have a good background so that they will be remembered in the future. I feel that I am capable of recording these scenes in a clear and interesting manner and would consider it a great honor to serve as UCR's first Secretary. TREASURERS BILL ANDERSON I think all of us at UCR realize the great privilege we have in form- also must not overlook our duty to ing our own student govemment. We the school to form good traditions. We want these traditions to last for many years to come. I think that the treasurer will have a good chance to help form the student government and lasting traditions. I hope that I will have the chance to take a part in these things as your treasurer. While in high school I served on committees. These were: activities committee, assembly committee, and Tradition Day committee. I did some work in the drama department and worked on the production of the school plays. I have never handled much money. That is an understatement. I do feel that I can make the best possible use of what money we will have this semester. Thank you. BUD BARTON This chance to be in on the ground floor of student govemment is a terri- fic challenge and an opportunity for a person to help establish .student governmental traditions that will re- main over a long period of time. I believe I can help to start these traditions and if I'm elected I will try and help start the type of student government that we will be proud of in future years. I have attended school in River- side from grade school until 1953 when I graduated from Riverside College. Through high school I was on many student committeesg was active in sports, especially swimming, and I was treasurer and Vice-President of the Hi-Y and treasurer of the Letter- man's Club. While in J. C. I was cheerleader one year, Vice-President of Kappa Upsilon fraternity, and I was a member of the rally committee. ' In conclusion, let me say that if elected I will do everything in my power to help run the student body in a way that will meet with the general approval of students and faculty. PETE VAN VECHTEN It is indeed a privilege to pa pate in the organization of our student government. Now, as in the past, I have ali been interested in student go ment. During the formative yea high school I was active in va committees i.e. Scholarship, Sa and Board of Representatives. YVhile at UCLA in 1949 and I was secretary in the Organizati Control Board. If elected I will devote the n sary time to the fulfillment of duties as treasurer. Any suggestions as to the impr ment of the office of treasurer be greatly appreciated. In any position it is not the duty of said officer to run his o but to be open-minded to the sug tions the student body may have Monday Deacllin For Scholarships Applications for undergra scholarships for the fall semester due Monday, March 15. Awards of scholarships are b on applicant's academic record on the Committee's estimate o financial need and his promise. The only necessary qualifica for applicants are a minimum of grade point average, and a degr one quarter self-support. Three persons in the comm must also recommend you f scholarship. This application must be in office of the Committee on U graduate Scholarships, Universit Califomia at Riverside by cl time on March I5 or bear a I5 PM postmark. It should be understood that intent of the University and of donors of the scholarship funds assist students of ability and si purpose, but of limited financial cation-not to dispense charity. Santa Barbara Campus Since ' In 1944 by Legislative and Re action, Santa Barbara State Co became the eighth campus of the versity of California. Located i picturesque community of Santa bara, the College has recently m to a spacious 408-acre seashore pus a few miles from the city. Santa Barbara College offers year undergraduate programs le to a University of California Bac of Arts degree. Curricul aleadi teaching credentials are also prov The small size of Classes and the ber of the faculty assure instru emphasizing close attention to th dividual student's needs. More than forty major fiel study are offered in the follo departments: Art, Biological Sci Education, English, Foreign L ages, Home Economics, Indu Arts, Mathematics, Music, Ph Education, Physical Sciences, chology, Social Sciences, and Sp, eons Report On erkeley Confab The Editors of the UCR Cub d Deans Tom Broadbent and a Mae Davis to report on ir annual conference student sonnel services. The follow- is their report: in February 26 and 27 Deans of lents, Deans of Men, Deans of men and their staffs met in an- l conference to exchange ideas and ore ways to improve student :onnel services. in the agends were such major cs as: The Role of the Associated Ilents: Current Problems and Fu- Prospectsug Student Social Func- s: Policies and Proceduresng Resi- e Halls , Financial Aids , and muters and Unattached Stu- s. ports from all campuses indicate the most successful student ac- 'programs were those in which ents, faculty, and administration ed cooperatively and had man- to avoid the frictions that often when students on the one hand faculty-administrative groups on other do not recognize common ctives in student activities and ' in close harmony to achieve CR was the object of a good deal vy. Here, it was felt, is an oppor- f 'Ififf1:si2252225522252ge33sg1:ffl:1f2525?22325E3252522245552gs5egagzg2g2gzgs,.,.,.,. 25:3 ii: Q, :lt-:+1-1-:ir E5 , M,5:5:3:3:g:g13:5.,.1-.-. 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WG. revels s U I . . . , . ,, , ,, - R fx 4-4. ..... -- :-:-:l:g:g:g.,.:.: -.-.,.:.,.5.:.:., , 3, ji 1ZliIE2:I:E:2:E:2:fEf35:f:f:5:2:E:E: :2:, 32 f if? ' 5i3EfEfEfEQEQEfEQEfEl 1:55:g:5:5:5gZg2:1:i:1:T 1-1-2 1:-g:E:51::gZ12:1- ' 2754152515:-:-:g:5:g:53.,. -'-315132, ':2:I'5:E:5:g:E1E!EI212131. .... :I:1:i:!:2:7:' 1 Z' Z 'E2EIE1EI5:2:2:I' ki:1:2:2 : - 2g5Eg:5:3:::Q:5:5:, :E:2:f:2:2:5:5:' 1 fE:: ::I-' 'giiifgw I. . f. 5515:-zfzzzygzzrz 2:-:f:1:3.5.,.,., . .'.7:E:2:2:Z:, ' ,I , If , , gl., . .- .-'q:- - :1 -'ii r:f:1:f:1.2:5:5: .l:5i1if51:?:i:1:5:f15., Eff 'f Qg:1:g:g:5:g:g:gg:5,.,2.1Q: Q:Q:5:Q:E:f:3::: ,:g1'Q:Q1Q:Q:f:f:5iQ. .3:5:,-:y I 5,913.52- ' . ' '- '-'cgigt 1?ErEi1E2??E2??5f422E fgfriiiii: -, . , . . EgEgE5i,.,,,:5-gig., -- f E115 ' 35121: '-5: ,:g:gg:-':p:::-'125135112 ,-153.1 f-1-:',-:-:-:ft-:gg .y ,,.::3:5.g:, , -.-.:53:f .. . - . ., . ,,:,m,,.,:m ::, 3112.344 Dr. Herman T. Spieth Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard Dr. Herman T. Spieth is the chair- man of the Division of Life Sciences. He is a specialist in the field of en- tomology and has attended Indiana Central College and Indiana Univer- sity. Dr. Spieth has taught at Indiana p- - 1 Corbin Gives Lowdown on Taxes By Donald Corbin Associate Economics Professor March 15 is the last day for filing Federal income tax re- turns. April 15 is the deadline for California state tax returns, so a few remarks seem appropriate. 1953 tax rates are at near record levels. They range from 22.2'Z: of net taxable income of 32,000 to 9221 on the income in excess of 200,000. However, those who complain about taxes might recall that it takes beau- coup de loot to finance wars and re- cessions every few decades. Both faculty and students should be interested in taxes, because they are either taxpayers or dependents. A working student is a dependent if he or she eamed less than S600 in 1953, and received more than half support from the taxpayer. A refund of withheld income taxes may be requested by the dependent merely by filing his own separate re- turn. Allowable deductions from taxable income are usually the most interest- ing phase of tax law. All taxpayers may deduct l0'Z: of their adjusted gross income, but have the option of itemizing certain de- ductions if they exceed this 107: stan- dard deduction. The deductible items are many and tricky. Within each classification such as contributions, interest, taxes, casualty losses, medical expenses, etc., there are often several deductions of which the average taxpayer has never heard. He may also have misconceptions as to allowable deductions. If he is con- templating iteniizing deductions, and especially if he has income other than salary-fees, dividends, and rentals are examples-he definitely should seek expert advice. ' This may not only save him taxes, but also keep him out of legal diffi- culties. The postwar inflation and the poli- cies of the new administration have brought forth the possibility of sev- eral desirable tax reforms. Chief among these are the proposals to raise the personal exemption above the present 35600, to allow working moth- ers to deduct the cost of child care, tolavoid double taxation of corporate dividends, and to raise the medical deduction. One might even argue that the per- sonal exemption should be raised high enough to eliminate families earning less than say S4500 fthe bulk of wage-earning unitsl. The saving in tax collection ex- penses, and man-hours spent pouring over tax returns might more than offset the loss in revenue. Millions of Americans would wel- come this relief. 1 -c -4+ 5:5313 y to build a new tradition of University and at College of the City US Wide Community SPlrlr-With Of New York- 3:gagaia5.5525age52555Q5555525sgarage,zis,sis3s5a5age5z5gage55533.555agfgegsg5gzgsis5sgzgzgagzggzgzgagzgzgagsg flly sfowins from H, .. . , b, E S. . X. , , ....,,. ,,,,,... 'mall size of the student body and L 15 'l mem at 0 lgmd 1' t K he faculty and becoming tradi- Scientific research fraternity' and of l through the years. the American Association for the Ad- iff increasingly llwtufe annnde Of vancement of Science- He has Wfinffn ents in the University was ap' many articles on various entomologi- 6 ..,.,. , ded by the group. It was noted VI Q b, I 1 up I, H tl f ,t H 55 -Q .ak on all campuses, students are Ld su Icfthi 'fbllefm Y le ru' Y- g,.5,, , I, ning responsibility and are recog- .,.4.,i,: ,A , , , . ' - :zgsgagzgzggaggigaff ' 1-2''i5WEE1i5E','ifs'af5if5f11Zfwa.. -,.,' 1 1335, Igt ggigfaigzgiziaia- 8 the PnrnnrY Plane Of ncndelmc R S T O TS USGS nf the UnlVerSlfY and the CHO U RY U to integrate the exnn-Cnfncnlar Try-Outs fOr fl UCB Cl10f11S 'ties into tiese purposes. . 2 leneral the need fn explore POS- fl'0m 4230 t0 5130 P-HL and from I .,....,,, .,., avenues leading fv after lm' - - nfllnlnlslfnllnn- ll WHS recognized Of the Hunranllles Bldg- N 5 1 Student PnnlClPnti0n is Such CX- . . . ltofy nnflvlties is Viral- The rwn All who are mferested In Slug' ' ' Sentafives from Riverside in are i,,vit.,d to amd the COHVGHUOH Cvnfiflenf that g . . ivnverins venture OH this Cam' Dr. Edwin Simon Professor of - - . - ' 552225iiieieifiafifiiif fiiifiiiiii : ti-2252125232522 .:-i':122E2i2i1i2e2ii ' Wlthm the general framework of M - - in b - h E55E5E5E5E5E55E5E5E5E5E5EQ 5555251 . eiaf:222a2s25s2s ' gf:s5a3gz5s515s5sg efsity Policy Will lend ln Sig- um W e m C arge' Ht innnvnhnns- The other Ginn' nfs Watching US with the sfenf- nferesf- The Convention will be on the UCB CHIHPUS in 1955' 9 ..,.,,.., Fire Damaged - of IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL STUDENT-S Note Books Hema. I . S I .I LATE MODEL UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS ARE AVAILABLE G S V I e S735 MIESES' FOR YouR use IN rl-ns TYPING ROOM or THE LIBRARY. a ues To . , . -I . p WOMENS A SMALL CHARGE OF IOC FOR 30' MINUTES USE IS MADE..- Q I I I . , , 'Clothes TYPE-o-MArlc SERVICE ROY D. GRAHAM ' 8' Men S Wear 4217 E. Gage Avenue ' Owner . 6566 Magnolia Ave., ggll C rf ia Riverside 3855 MAIN ' Blom . . Voting Technique For Election Day By Jim sr. Clair Tomorrow we go to the polls to cast our votes for the candidates of our choice. Certain rules have been established by the student committee on elections in a meeting with Dean Broadbent. These rules are essentially as fol- lows: Polls will open at 8 a.m. for ballot- ing and will close at 5 p.m. Balloting will take place in the airway just outside the large lecture hall, rm. 1000 of the Social Sciences Building. The blue registration card will serve as identification for the voting. The officials at the polls will have two complete lists of all students registered at UCR. When you go to the polls present your registration card to the officials. They will punch the card, hand you a ballot, and check your name off one list. You will then mark the ballot, plac- ing an X', after the name of the candidate of your choosing. Once the ballot has been properly marked place it in the ballot box and the poll offi- cials will cross your name of the sec- ond list of student names. The election committee appointed at the last student body meeting will arrange for students to count the votes under the supervision of the Dean of Students office. A simple majority of those voting will be sufficient to elect any candi- date. However, if no candidate re- ceives a majority of the votes a run- off election will be held between the two candidates receiving the highest number of votes in the regular elec- tion. Students are to be cautioned to make no erasures on the ballots as these will disqualify the ballot. If a mistake is made ask for a new ballot. The Registrar's Office wishes to remind students that a great deal of information of import- ance to students is contained in their green handbook of instruc- tions. SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knobe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th MEXICAN FOOD Q If you wan't a job in the libra- ry don't hesitate-apply now. A few student openings are still available. If interested contact the Per- sonnel Office or the Office of the Librarian. Watkins' Birthday Almost Unnoticed By janet Buvens A birthday is a significant date in oneis life, but to most of us neither job nor time allows ex- tensive celebration. The extent of most birthday festivi- ties is a modest home celebration with the symbolic cake and candles. Some- times a few friends are invited to help celebrate the 'occasion, but generally, birthdays to the majority of us are simple and quiet celebrations. Sometimes when we wish to honor great men and their achievements we set aside a special day in which to do so, as in the case of George Washing- ton and Abraham Lincoln. A national holiday is declared, bands play, mayors make speeches, and parades march through the main streets of every town. If we had known March 9th was your birthday, Provost Watkins, we too would have declared a holiday, hired a band or even made you that birthday cake. But since we did not know until too late, may we the ASUCR extend to you our congratula- tions and best wishes. Happy Birthday, Provost Watkins. REYIVUYEPV SPECIAL STUDENT RATES S4 per month, S10-3 months FULL INITIAL RENTAL PAID MAY BE APPLIED ON PURCHASE Your complete headquarters for OFFICE - SCHOOL - ENGINEER Citrus Station An Integral Part Of University By Ken Philbrick Founded in 1907, the Univer- sity of California Citrus Experi- ment Station has grown from 464 to its present size of 871 acres. What started to be a staff of only a handful of research workers has grown to more than 170 qualified scientists and more than 105 assistants. As the name implies, the main function of the CES is to conquer problems which arise in the pro- duction of citrus. But due to the di- versity of California agriculture, pi lems ranging from dates to alfalfa also undertaken. While the staff's principal wor carried on here at thhe campus, nj of th eexperiments are conductec fields and orchards whose locati range from as far North as Tu County to the Imperial Valley on South. The CES Library which now cupies part of the second floor of UCR Library is one of the fines its type in the world. At the pr time it contains about 16,000 bd volumes and many more bulletins pamphlets. Instruction at the CES is lim to graduate students who are d research for their doctorate deg For this reason the courses avail are limited and consist mostly seniors and laboratory work. I . 1 u , 's 1 'I L li a fffl' 'Tr' ll itil W lflllwwanea T DRlVE IN S RESTAURANT 'l3th 8. Market Streets Riverside C7779 SLAC KS for Town or Campus Everything from Demms to Charmeen Gabardlnes Ms? 54-95 TO 545 nslplyoemsrw' 522255 .,,.---' -H ' TYPEW'RlTERS --f : K 4 ADDING MACHINES j' G In ' V' I Sales-Rentals-Repairs -1' I ' -- ..3, ,, ij Laciann V P l,, E . f- BINN f ' I -.'l.l.'7 1'lU-i 5'3-31552372 ff and El ' STORE EOR MEN 9059 'WGN AW- GW f U Main at Eighth ln Riverside 3744 MAIN STREET lf 5 11 tl . his-J-eff., A Q , , 1 5 5 M A ,P L' E I Q L 1 X , 4.-in milfs, V .,,I , TVN luVj1iE'L'- .VT-,f-e I ! sf' :M .5 I -- ' . I. , Jig: 1 .',.-. .24 . 4 V I . I' -- '?5s:.5::1'. ggi, L TA f . U LH WT 'PED T 'l il' 1 f in fa ll' 4'4 .g: I A iizifaa t N 1 f ,. 253535 - 25555 . W f .1:zfi2E5f:iti'S':i --4- -:1- 2i2i252ti2i:zEt 255253 fig ' 252555255515 E' ' - . tiziiiiiii til-iii? - ?f'3?1E7'? 2f 2.-.EI 5,3525 1. z j . get . 5 1 349 . ,- at AQ ,, ly ' l 1 ' l X A6 . f j if w , - f ar! J 1 ff Ll. 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We have it on good authority that the face is located .... arter Day rch 26th arter Day Exercises, marking the anniversary of the founding of niversity of California, will be at 11:00 p.m., Friday, March 1 the main room of the Physical ation Building. isses will be suspended for this ion so that students and all us employees may attend. dents will be addressed by Pro- Gordon S. XVatkins and by Dr. Howard, professor of English e Los Angeles campus and emin- uthority on American literature. 7 p.m., in the Mission Inn the ional Charter Day Banquet will ld. vost Watkins will give a uni- progress report and tell some e interesting sidelights on the ic opening of the new College -tters and Science at Riverside. Howard will also address the 1 on the subject of Academic om and the Freedom to know. Phillip Vtfheelwright will give entitled, Impressions of a Col- i 'thout Ivyf' of course, that a booster organization entitled the Order of the Great Stone Face should be formed on the campus. This organization, according to present plans, would constitute the rally group for assemblies, athletic events and the like. In order to qualify for membership in the Order of the Great Stone Face, students must find its location with- out any assistance from those who have already been there, and must re- turn with a picture proving that they have actually been there. Pat Sparkman, Lorraine Eyer, Jim McMillan, and Harold Durian arc the first four UCR students to have dis- covered the location of the Face. It was first found some twenty years ago and then supposedly lost for 18 years until two years ago. At that time it was rediscovered and pic- torial proof of its existence presented. Since that time increasing interest in its location has been displayed. Further plans for the organization of The Order of The Great Stone Face will be discussed at a future meeting of the student body. Paintings Shown ln CES Library The Letters and Science Library has displayed on the second floor in the entrance hall to the CES Library four of the loveliest paintings of one of England's greatest nineteenth cen- tury artists. These beautiful paintings loaned to the Library by Dr. Edmond C. Jaeger, fomier professor at Riverside College, are hand-retouched lithographs done from the famous Holy Land and Syrian sketches of David Roberts. Born in Stockbridge, Edinburgh, in 1796 David Roberts evidenced great love for 2111 at an early age. In 1822 he became active in theatrical scene painting. Noted for these paintings he was elected President of the Society of British Artists in 1831. Roberts made a long tour of the East in 1838, visiting Egypt and the Holy Land. The paintings on display are sketches made during this trip. The next time you are browsing through the Library make it a point to go upstairs and see these beautiful sketches. They will be on display for the next two weeks only. Riverside Delegation. Will at UCLA By jim St. Clair . In cooperation with Riverside junior College, UCR will send a delegation representing Poland, to the Model United Nations meeting to be held at UCLA March 24 through the 27th. i Representing UCR at this meeting will be Marilyn Merchant, janet Buvens, Ruth Pcrtcl, Ruth Eldred, Pat Sparkman, Ed Crovcn, Dick Williams, and Jim St. Clair. Dr. Malcolm Smith, Professor of .Political Science, will be the UCR's delegation adviser. More than 1000 students from 100 western universities are expected to take part in the meeting. This is the fourth such meeting to be held on the VVest Coast. The model United Nations attempts to exactly duplicate official United Nations procedures and methods. The meetings are designed to ac- quaint students with the workings of the U.N. and to provide opportunities for studying world affairs by direct participation. The Model U.N. Conference Direc- tor is Aly VVassil, a foreign student from Hydcrbad, India, attending at UCLA. He will be assisted by a student committee, a coordinating council of faculty and administrative officers, and an advisory board. Lecture Series Scheduled By Faculty Group Professor john W. Olmsted, chairman of the Committee on Drama, Lectures and Music, has announced the following events to be presented to UCR students during the school year. April 14 at 8:00 p.m., Dr. Phillip Wheelwright will lecture on Idea and Imagery in Contemporary Poetry as exemplified in T. S. Eliots' Four Quartets. Patzquaro, a film about Mexico's most beautiful lake will be shown in Rm. 1141 next Wednesday at 9:30 and 2:30. It is the first of a series being spon- sored by the language depart- ment. 7 May 6 at 1:30 p.m. and May 10 at 8:00 p.n1., Dr. Herman T. Spieth will lecture on Evolution: The Golden Thread of Biology. Dr. Arthur C. Turner will discuss Britain's Changing Role in World Affairs at 1:30 p.m. on May 20 and at 8:00 p.m. May 24. Each faculty lecture is to be of- fered on a Thursday aftemoon pri- marily for students, and repeated on a following evening primarily for members of the community. All faculty lectures are to be held in the Lecture Room, Room 1000 of the Social Sciences and Humanities Building. The CUB-To-Be Or Not To Be? Every now and then someone approaches a member of the present SMALL CUB staff and declares, 'Cee, I surely would like to write something for your paper, but I just don't have the time. Know what's wrong with that statement? Several things. . First, it is only once in a great while that anyone approaches a staff member and says he would like to work on the paper. Secondly, and most important, this is not our paper. That is, it is not the exclusive publication of anyone individual or indivi- duals. lt is yours, yours and mine. lt belongs to, and we hope is, a part of everyone here on the campus. It's by no means an exclu- sive organization limited to a few. Third, who DOES have time enough to work on the paper and build it up to the high standard we would all like to see? The pres- ent staff can boast of approximately twelve members. Approximate- ly four of these twelve are active every issue and can be counted upon to do their share and more and to get their copy in on time. Four people to write copy, sell the ads, make the lay-outs, write the headlines, proof read, distribute, and act as laison between the Rubidoux Printers and the Riverside Press and Enterprise. Four people. Thus far the CUB has managed to stagger out every Thurs- day. And we do mean stagger. Some of us have had to work late practically every week trying to get this paper out. Some of us have even had to come out Sunday afternoons to finish it up. We hope to continue to appear every Friday, but with home- work and all it is becoming increasingly difficult to meet our dead- line. If we don't make it there will be no paper that week. We have scores of advertisers who are interested in publicizing their merchandise through the CUB. So long as we are able to come out every week we will probably have plenty of advertisers. However, if we are able-to come out only once, say every two weeks, we will lose a good many of those advertisers. Since funds for publishing the paper are as limited as they are, we of necessity must rely on advertisers for our money. N0 advertisers-no money -no paper. We have the necessary talent on the campus to build this paper up to the level of one of the finest college newspapers in the country-if we can find an equal measure of interest and as- sistance. There are several students of the CUB,s acquaintance who are extremely capable of turning out top-grade copy. No one wants you to put so much time on the newspaper that your grades will suffer, but, if you could put in only an hour or two every week it would help tremendously. C'est C Bon. Es Bueno, Ja? By Bill Anderson Like other branches in the University of California, UCR needs a Big CD to symbolize its existance. Plans are already being made as to where this C should be placed. Of course the student body must decide, and therefore nothing can be done until the organization of the student body. The money will come from the student body fund, which at the present does not exist. The owner of the hill in back of school has given his tentative approval that we could put the Big Cv on his land. A group of students from UCLA are coming to a meeting on May 16, to discuss with us the construction of the Big Cf These students are members of the Cal Club, which consists of the stu- dent body officers of the different branches of the University of California. This club helps to unite the different campuses, and is trying to bring a feeling of cooperation to the separate schools. UCR should take part in the Cal Club, and offer its cooperation to the rest of the University of California. APPROPRIATE DECORATION-Drinking fountains in University of California's new library on the Riverside have a unique literary design. Printer's marks which identified the source of some of the world's earliest books been used on the tiles lining the niches. Marilyn Hart, of UCR stenographic staff, fabovei studies marks originated l: Caxton, the first English printer, linitialsig Iensen, 16th centui Venetian, ftall cross symbollg and an early English bookbindu whose name is unknown. The UCR CUB is published weekly by thc Associated Students of the Univer- sity of Califomia, Riverside. W. R. Williams, Ediforg Iim St. Clair, Mnnaging Editorg Marilyn Merchant, Advertising Manager, Kenny Philbrick, Sports Editorg janet Buvens, Circulation Manager. REPORTERS: Pat Sparkman, Ed Groven, Ruth Pertel, Bill Nelsen, SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knoloe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th Sailtone Coordinates Scoopneck Blouse ...... 3.95 Flaring Skirt ...,i, .....,,.. . -.... 8.95 Play Shirt. ......... . ...... ....... 8 .95 Deep-cut sunback dress 12,95 7.95 Button Front Skirt ..... Sleeveless Blousew, ..,.. .- 3.95 Pedal Pushers .,...,...... .. ..... 6.95 Button Front Dress ,........ 12.95 Bermuda Shorts ........ .... 4.95 Till QALW ERMAB Women's Sportswear ' -3638 NINTH STREET- tBetween Main and Orangel I rung, Sparkman ated First UCR exy, Secretary harles Young and Pat Spark- l were elected UCR's first ,ent body president and etary, respectively, at the :ral elections held on campus Friday. run-off election was scheduled hc vote connnittcc for Wednes- lN'Iarch 17, between Bill Cowen Bill Kassel, the two top vice-presi- ial contenders, as well as between Anderson and Pete Van Vechten. arc battling it out for the office casurer. ill Anderson defeated Pete i Vechten 54-48 in Wednes- 's run-off balloting. However, Cowen and Bill Kassel had at 50-all for the vice-presi- ey, and remedial plans had been laid at press time. tllowing are the results of last y's elections: ur President: Vaughn Blankenship, votes, Joe Pitruzzello, 32 votes, les Young, 56 votes. Total Presi- lal votes cast: 109. r Vice-President: Bill Cowen, 32 5 Lorraine Eyer, 23 votes, Bill I, 50 votes. Total Vice-Presiden- otes east: 105. r Secretary: Mabel Fariester, 38 5 Pat Sparkman, 66 votes. Total tarial votes cast: 104. r Treasurer: Bill Anderson, 45 5 Bud Barton, 21 votes, Pete Van ten, 41 votes. Total Treasurial cast: 107. e CUB would like to start tters to the Editor column in ext issue. you have any complaints or rks of any sort that you d like to make write us a will be necessary that the be signed by you. If, how- you wish to remain anony- we shall not use your name Dr. Arthur C. Turner Meet Your Masters By Mary, Howard The chairman of UCR's Division of Social Sciences is Dr. Arthur C. Turner. I-Ie has attended the University of Glasgow, Queenfs College of the Uni- xcrsity of Oxford, and thc University of 1 California, Berkeley, and has taught at Glasgow, Berkeley, and the University of Toronto. Dr. Turner specializes in thc field of international relations and is a member of British and American his- torical societies. His latest book, Bulwark of the Vifest, is about thc North Atlantic Treaty Organization. UCR students will be admitted to the Fox Theater in downtown Riverside with a student ticket upon presentation of their Regis- tration card Mr. David Lackie, manager, has announced. The difference between a stu- dent admission and regular ad- mission is 20c. History of the University Of CaIifornia's Big C Idea Since the ASUCR proposes to' build a big Cv on the mountains behind the campus it might bel a good idea to give a brief history of the development of the big C idea. The following excerpts are taken from the book Origin and Develop- ment of the University of Califomia and depict occurrences on the Berke- ley campus almost 50 years ago: The big C on the hills back of the campus marks a time when the class spirit began to be supplemented by thc University spirit. For many years it was the ambition of each freshman class to place its number on the hill the evening before Charter Day. It was the determination of the sopho- more class to prevent this, if possible, and the slopes above the campus be- came a battle groundf, The suggestion that this battle should be replaced with a Big C met with both favorable and unfavorable reactions. The Daily Bruin said: The war of words rages around the concrete C that the lower classses hope to place on Charter Hill-an emblem ol peace where of yore blood-thirsty belliger- ents were wont to satiate their thirst for human gore. The above referring to the fact that on Charter Day it was the custom of the lower classes to celebrate the joyous event by tying each other with rope and leaving them in an old can- yon for the remainder of the night. One professor, an antagonist of the Big Cv proposal stated: Of all in- stitutions in the world a university should stand for only what is best- Let three thousand young people live for four years in contemplation of suc11 vulgarity and the state need not be surprised to find them painting 'KC's upon El Capitan fMountain in Yosemite National Parklf' Early Saturday moming, March 20, 1905, a long line of sophomores and freshmen began, in a drizzling rain, the work of passing bags of sand and of cement from man to man up the hillf' Shortly before noon, while the Charter Day services were being held in the Greek Theater, when the last wheel-barrow load of rock was dump- cd an Oski-wow-wow floated down to the Theater and mingled in the air with the ascending words of the ad- dress of Professor Henry Van Dyke of Princeton on Creative De- mocracyf, Thus was born the traditional Big ac., Davis Campus Biggest of All The 3,000-acre Davis campus, 13 miles west of Sacramento, is the largest in physical size of the Univer- sity of California's state-wide system. Set in the heart of the Central Val- ley, the tree-lined campus and city of Davis are within sight of the Sierra. About two-thirds of the campus acreage is devoted to crops and farm animals for teaching and research by the College of Agriculture. The campus also includes the School of Veterinary Medicine and the rapidly expanding two-year-old College of Letters and Science, now offering 16 majors.. Since the end of World War II, campus construction has added the Food Technology Building, Haring Hall Cvetcrinary sciencei, Hunt Hall lplant sciencesl, Soils and Irrigation Building, Home Economics Building, Student Health Center, and Hughes and Bechett Residence Halls for men. A residence hall wing for 200 wo- men students is on the construction schedule. For That Important Date . AN ORCHID CORSAGE O ITIISSIUII Iilfl 3 it e paper. A lt's Sunshine-Time! 1 Time to visit Avants' for a leisurely look at Riverside's smartest casual of wear. Gay colored. Blouses and niversid' Skirts . . . Peddle Pushers, Shorts, MIQSES' HARRY E. CQSNER Slpacks, and Bathing Suits. W MEN' - . O S ORC'-HDS For anytime Wearl.. -. -.-Suits, Dresses gtgmglg Telephone 4481-W and Actfessories. 5462 Grand Ave. Riverside I U D 3855 MAIN n A Calendar Revision . . . Feb. 15, Monday. First day of semester or Tolly Day. Instruc- tors will beam at students, assure them that the course is a snap, and tell one joke. Iollyness and merriment will hold general sway. Feb. 16, Tuesday. Post-Nuptial Depression Day. The honey- moon IS over. Feb. 19, Friday. Last day for students who have not already do11e so, to laugh at jokes told by instructors on jolly Day. Feb. 24, Wediiesday. Awful-Realization-That-Program-Is-Sim- ply-Impossiblhe-Day. Last day for all old, new and reentering stu- dents to brain their advisers. March 12, Friday. Good Idea Day. For all students who have thus far not attended a single class, it might be a. good idea to begin. March 15, Monday. Ides of March Day. just watch out, that's I all. April 5, Monday. I-Shall-Go-To-The-Remotest-Pa1't-Of-Africa- A n d-Become-A-Missionary-Or-Something-You-Iust-See-If-I-Don't Day. Midterms begin. April 24, Saturday. Whee Day. Last day of school before spring recess. Instructors will repeat joke told on Tolly Day, lending it new piquancy and charm by not omitting punch line this time. May 3, Monday. Boy-Could-I-Use-Another-One Day. Spring vacation is over. Last day to petition without fee, to be exempted from laughing at jokes told on Whee Day-punch line or no punch line. May 18, Tuesday. Eartha Kittis Birthday. No special signifi- cance. Just thought you might like to know. May 26, Wednesday. All candidates expecting to receive de- grees this semester will be informed that requirements for such degrees have been altered beyond recognition. june 4, Friday. Day before semester ends. Students will be- gin to assemble materials, organize ideas, and buy paper for 4000- word term report due tomorrow. june 5, Saturday. If-I-Never-See-This-Semesteris-Instructors- Again-It-Will-Be-Too-Soon Day. Day instruction ends. ProfessorsI will be applauded. All students bordering between a D and an F I will clap their hands into a state of red-hot translucence. June 7, Monday. No--Not-Africa-DorisBut-The-Impenetrable- I Wastes-Of-Anarctica-VVhere-No-Man-Has-Ever-S e t-Foot-Thither- I Shall-I-Go-If-I-Donit-Pass-At-Least-One-Course Day. Finals begin -Tune 17, Thursday. Spring semester ends. It,s-Colder-Here- Than-I-Thought-Doris-But-The-Penquins-Are-Friendly. The above calendar was swiped from the Daily Bruin of Feb. 24, 1954 and was written by CLAUDE BAUM. I r Spring Fashions 4 styled for - V your Taste -and - A 97' budget , gr 'I' Beautiful Printed -ff C ofton S .Sz Z 1' ':I:55l- : 1, ' . Q . Sizes 7 fo I5 and io to is -gfgi' I' '5 ax g- H. fa' . -fi, Price: 8.98 io 14.98 515, 5::1r:2E1i:3.ft-3-EQ' ':,J:+ ' V -4.- ,gg -r -. M-I ,gfff OPEN 'wif Upstairs Store 'J' av 3730 M ' SI I Riverside,aI2aIif:'Eia Golf Pro To Hold Clinic On Campus A golf clinic and demonstration will be staged for UCB students and faculty at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday on the field north of the Physical Education building. Ray Haynes, new pro at the Vic- toria country club in Riverside, will be in charge of a group of local pros staging the demonstration. The event, arranged by Dr. Wayne Crawford of the PE staff, is part of the regularly-scheduled sports appre- ciation program. These .lectures and demonstrations are being designed to increase stu- dents' knowledge and understanding of sports. MEXICAN FOOD Ralph DeMarco' . 'I' , En 4 ' W- .. Ill' 1 i. Film FM . . Eff 'KX 9114 H 1 I I l,I I . Lausuua Jlmmg.. 2 wi., jiifriii' T 5 ' V' x Cl I NIA .., I .. -,iwmfea-FY' -.--' - - -A - 1 V.: --X t:f,iEgi:l?'!,-Essex -f, aosa MAGNOLIA AVE. ' erm-if I 1 , I HXIRM CA Hon 1 Z SHEIIMANIQ REVTI NEW PURMEIE A SPECIAL STUDENT RATES S4 per month, STO-3 month FULL INITIAL RENTAL PAID Mi BE APPLIED ON PURCHASI Your complete headquarters OFFICE -A SCHOOL - ENGINEER SUPPLIES TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES Sales-Rentals-Repairs 3744 MAIN STREET IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS LATE MODEL UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS ARE AV FOR YOUR USE INL THE TYPING ROOM OF THE LIBRARY. A SMALL CHARGE OF 'I0c FOR 30 MINUTES USE IS MADE TYPE-0-MATIC SERVICE 4217 E. Gage Avenue Bell, California ROY D. GRAH Owner V .J ,... .A . :sa---. ,fw?':'a:z' 'Y-b' ..3:5:5.5:5:, . .2:sazgegeg:5.z:z:z:s:a:2af1'-1-'1:11241.11,'..zi'2:a::4a:e1eg.g1-1--e-asrai . 5255555255 .3151.22:Ss2:s:si52sEs5sEsiZiia. ':3.I W 1:N 'te iff' ...,.1:.22:z.a:.:s.a:1:... 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':2:e:s:z:z:s:a. ....,. afaef ff -'11:a:a:e:afef2 2:ef.a:zz::1a:1:zts2f:s:1:.1zSs: -f1:1:5:::, -:-.-:-:-:-:'-:-:-:.. .-:7:f:I1:3:gt5:-:gt-:g:':'-139 . ::51g11Z:1:Z:2:5:5:V:-:+:-14-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:':5:1:5:5:::, -z-14-:-:':-13. :5:3:g:g:- 14:-:-:-1315511 :g:g:g.,:5-:- :::::g::.:q.p:g :-.,:32:g:g5g-15-:iz-iqtgrg.-, '-1:-R.-'-:gl -:-:-:':-:-:-:v:-:':-:-:4:-:-:':5:7: ..g1g:-' 'gt-:-:gz-:-:g:':-56:51-Q . --- - ---' --'-z.:-1-:-:-.f.'.-.:4-:4:-:-.-, - :-:vi-:A:-1'11.161-1-1-I-H251-1-:-iwhk '- Dr. Cordon S, Watkins Dr. Leon Howard Dr. Phillip Wheelwright ecial events marking the 86th U E I ! ersary of the University of Cali- a are being held toda on the . . . . Campus y Vol. I Riverside, California, March 26, 1954 No. 6 arter exercises will be held at .m. Friday in the new Physical ation building for faculty, stu- , and campus employees. Classes e suspended. vost Gordon S. Watkins will ct the exercises and ive a Uni- progress report. Tie Charter ss, entitled Academic Freedom he Freedom to Know, will be red by Dr. Leon Howard, pro- - of English on the Los Angeles us. e annual Charter banquet will be tonight at 7 p.m. at the Mission All alumni and friends of the rsity are welcome to attend, but ations must be made in the ,e of Public Infommation on the icampus. v es Wortz, Riverside attorney raduate of the Berkeley campus be master of ceremonies at the 1 et. Speakers will be Provost ins, Dr. Howard, and Dr. Phillip lwright, visiting professor of ophy from Dartmouth, who will his impressions of A College ut Ivy. e theme of this year's Charter which is being observed on all uses of the statewide university, an's Right to Knowledge and the Use Thereof, adopted from I bia University's 200th anniver- elebration. terday at 3 p.m. the annual ty Research lecture was given in aculty Club auditorium on the campus by Dr. Leon Batchelor, sor of horticulture and horticul- in the Citrus Experiment Sta- Batchelor, a member of the n staff since 1915 and director 1929 to 1951, spoke on Four es of Research in Horticulture. UCR Veterans are remind- at they should sign for their s April lst and 2nd in the an's Affairs office. CPS cards remain uncalled for at the Registrar's Office. In the event of sickness or accident the student may experience some in- convenience vvithout his CPS card, and should call for it as soon as possible. Humanities Group To Present Show Middle Of May On May 12, 13 and 14th the Divi- sion of Humanities will present a production entitled, An Evenings Entertainment in the Late Middle Ages. ' ' The program will include the Medieval farce, 'Bierre Patelan, starring Dave Miller as Master Pierre, Bill Nelsen as Draper, Pamela Payton as Gill, Francis Mason as Shep, and Dr. jack Beatty as the judge. Dr. William Sharp as over-all di- rector of the program will be assisted by I-Ial Telford, Assistant Director and Dick Moretti, Production Man- ager. Drs. Edwin Simon and Eugene Purpus will also assist. Faculty and student musicians will perform sacred and secular music by Okeghem and Dufy. These two com- posers worked in Burgundy and in Paris and are two of the outstanding composers of the late 15th century. Faculty and student musicians, un- der the direction of Dr. Simon will include Drs. Rothenberg, Malecot, Bookaw, and Knox and Martha Beck- ley and Corann McNair, students. The first night will be limited to students. On the following two nights mem- bers of the community will be invited. Male Students Warned To Check Own Draft Status Male students at UCB, who have .registered with their selec- tive service boards, are advised to take personal responsibility for their selective service status. Those students who have been classified 2-S, as a result of attendance at another college prior to coming to UCB this semester should, without fail, call at the office of the Dean of Students and request that a certifica- tion be sent to their local boards, in- dicating that they are pursuing a full course of instruction at UCB. The college which they attended last semester is under legal obligation to notify their' local boards that they are no longer attending that particular college. Unless the draft board is notified that college training is being continued here, such students will be reclassified 1-A automatically, since local board files will no longer show them as students. Students who receive a notice of induction, upon reaching the age of 19-21, should apply at the office of the Dean of Students immediately for certification to their local boards that they are enrolled for a full course of instruction. Normally, local boards will then reclassify them 2-S, until they are no longer making normal and satisfactory progress toward a degree. Certifications to local boards can- not be sent in' automatically, since it is impossible for the Dean's office to know which men are deferred, which are eligible for deferment, or the local boards in which students are registered. In addition, before certifi- cations can be made, a written appli- cation and information form must be on file in the Dean's office. Student Affairs Group Sets April Mascot Deadline Chuck Young, UCR's first stu- dent body president, called to order the first Student Affairs Committee meeting last Tuesday afternoon at 4:30. The first order of business to be considered was the much-publicized, much-discussed 'UCR mascot problem. Both Garland Rose and Joe Wimer of the Riverside Daily Enterprise and Press, respectively, have been mak- ing regular mention in their columns of mascot suggestions which have been submitted to them. After a discussion by the members of the committee, it was decided that a contest to select a mascot would be held late in April. While students of the university will 'have the final say in the selection of a mascot, other outsiders will be permitted to submit names for consideration. Howard Cook, our public informa- tion officer, announced that he is completing arrangements which would entitle the person who submits the winning suggestion to a life pass to all UCR athletic events. The committee set April 23rd as the deadline for submitting names, and an election to select the official mascot will be held shortly there- after. Next, the group voted to establish a six-member Apportiomnent Board to handle the disbursement of student funds for the remainder of the semes- ter. The board also received official sanction to investigate and report on the problems contingent to establish- ing a mandatory student body fee for next semester. Vice-President Bill Kassel then mentioned that something should be done about setting up a publications board, in order that the CUB staff could operate with official sanction. The group voted to give the current staff a clean bill of health by grant- ing them pro-tem authority until such time as a board can be established to more adequately handle the publica- tions problems. Vaughn Blankenship made a motion that the meeting adjoum, so at 5:45 it was brought to a vote and passed unanimously. he next regular sched- uled meeting of the Student Affairs Committee was set for 7:30 p.m. Wed- nesday, March 31st. Our campus police depart- ment, which has always been so accommodating to the student body, has requested that the student body return the favor and please come on down to their office frm. 1350, SS and Humanities bldgJ and ask that their auto identification stickers be placed on their respective Windshields. Doesn't Anyone Ca re? Last week the CUB ran an editorial asking for additional help. We had two responses. One of our own student body members came forth and volun- teered some of his relatively valuable time, and the second volun- teer came from San jose State College. Of course he won't be with us until next Fall. There is, it seems, considerably more outside interest in the welfare of the CUB than internal interest. Why? Many students tell us that the pressure of homework is too great. Others have outside jobs. This is all very understandable. But what about that group of individuals who seem to have very little else to do but drink coffee and play Cross Over the fUghj Bridge? A closer investigation of the situation has disclosed that many students think that a great deal of specialized talent or esoteric knowledge is essential to journalistic writing. To a degree this is true. Basically, however, there is not a student on this campus who couldn't satisfactorily cover an event of campus-wide importance and write a story on it. That would be all we would ask. Think on this, you placid scholars who are accustomed to spend your afternoons in quiet repose in our admittedly lovely library. If you can see that one afternoon per week of anything but peace and solitude wouldn't hurt you, then come see us. We'll be more than merely appreciative-we'll be able to put you to work! To Be Proud Of . . . tFrom the Daily Bruinl I beg to differ with the editorial in The Bruin stating that UCLA has no traditions. QA Great Idea, But Not for Us, DB. March 8b. UCLA does have traditions. Inst last year a Spirit and Tradi- tions Committee was formed on campus to help perpetuate UCLA's traditions. Although this new committee was later assimilated into the Music and Service Board, the many traditions still live on. For the information of students who may not be in the know, there are quite a few traditions at UCLA. Following are some of the best-known traditions: Spirit Friday, is probably one of our oldest traditions. School songs are sung in all the classes to stir up spirit. The seal in the Library Foyer is 'traditionally' not stepped on by students and the UCLA Victory Flag is always raised the morning after an athletic victory and can be seen flying from the Jacob Cimbell flagpole. The yearly celebration of Menis Week when the men on campus take over and the celebration of Women's Week are tradi- tions of long standing at UCLA. The F rosh-Soph Brawl, the frosh- soph dance, now known as the Dublin Ball and the Aloha Ball are also well-known traditions on campus. The painting of the C in the appropriate freshman class color of green on Freshman Day is done every year. And of course, there's the age-old crosstown rivah'y flaming between UCLA and USC. The traditional way of pronouncing the name UCLA is one of the many things strongly impressed upon incoming freshmen. It is never pronounced youclah. When the football team meets either Stanford or Cal up north, the yearly trip northward is traditionally undertaken by student body members. Last semester, the trek was made on a specail rooteris train. The tremendous rally and march down to the corner of West- Wood and Wilshire Blvds. is 'traditionallyi observed following the football victory of UCLA over USC. Ever since 1942, the winning team at the USC-UCLA football game takes over the Victory Bell. True, UCLA doesnit have enough traditions to fill up an en- cyclopedia, but Bruin students still have more than enough tradi- tions to observe and be proud of. Letters To The Editors This section of the UCR being established to offer members an opportunity to themselves on campus affairs. must be signed in order to be but publication of the name withheld on request. Letters CUB is ASUCR express Letters printed, will be may be left at the UCR CUB office, 1123 Social Sciences-Humanities building, or at the Office of Public Informa- tion, 1149 Social Sciences-Humanities. -Eds. if 5 il TO THE EDITORS: When will the Riverside campus have dormitories? Tired Commuter '56 The Regents of the University have been requested to set aside land on the north-east corner of the campus as the site for residence halls. They are currently conducting an experi- ment with residence halls on the Davis campus to determine future participation by the University in this field. This fall, Santa Barbara College will have living accommodations for 480 students on its new campus at Goleta. These were former Marine officers quarters that were converted to pro- vide rooms, lounges, recreation facili- ties and dining rooms. The cost of these accommodations, which include room and meals, has been tentatively set at S336 per semes- ter. Linen and basic furnishings will be provided by the College. The University's experience with these ventures will determine the fu- ture of housing at UCR-Eds. The UCR CUB is tpublished weekly by the Associated Stu ents of the Univer- sity of California, Riverside. W. R. Williams, Editor, jim St. Clair, Managing Editor, Marilyn Merchant, Advertising Manager, Kenny Philbrigk, Sports Editor, Janet Buvens, Circulation Manager. REPORTERS: Pat Sparlcman, Ed Groven, Ruth Pertel, Bill Nelsen, Mary Kish, Carl Radusch, Mary How- ard Dwain Lewis and Barbara Crack- nell. Howard S. Cook, Ir., Advisor. TO THE EDITOR: Who is the cute secretary in Personnel office? Interesteq This column was not establishe serve the lovelom.-Eds. 5 5 G TO THE EDITOR: I see in the papers that your, dents are seeking a suitable totei would like to suggest the ARABS Think of the campus traditions would spring up practically ove -the annual student show woul course, be The Arabian Nights maybe the menis rally organiz would be The Arabian Knight rather intriguing anomaly. And gals would no doubt have an h ary society called The Harem, The Arabs are important in an scholarly achievements-great m maticians-and they gave us a numerals, didn't they? fYes, they Edsl. So, I vote for the Rive ARABSI Hale Sparks '30 The University Exp For another suggestion from of our neighboring campuses, se story on La Iolla on page 3-Ed if U 5 TO THE EDITORS: When are they going to plan lawns? Mudd The present schedule calls for pletion of the paving contract end of this month. Planting of l shrubs and trees will start s thereafter.-Eds. it U ii TO THE EDITORS: Most of the Cal songs we've at our student meetings have from the Berkeley campus. Isn't an all-University song? Sue Teglan The Office of Public Info reports that before World W President Robert Cordon Spro offered a prize to the composer all-University song. As far as is this prize has never been aw, The UCR office is now seeking mation on this in the hopes th University song might be com on this campus.-Eds. Turner Claims Publicity Bod For Diplomacy Diplomacy by conference in the glaring light of publi has been highly overrated, according to Dr. Arthur Turner, of the Division of Social Sciences. There is a great difference between open covenant an attempt to arrive at them in the open, he points out. The I generally makes negotiation impossible, he feels. Americans are currently handicapped in international rela by the incompatibility of being great and being lovedf' It is inevitable that the greatest and richest of powers s be envied by many and disliked by some. This would happen whatever the merits of American p just as Britain was widely critized in the nineteenth ce when she was supreme in the world, Dr. Turner declares. As long as American policy combines a legitimate ma' ance of her national interests with a decent regard for the r the free world, it is probable that in any emergency she will the support of the majority of mankind, he concludes. arkeley Campus etoes Change By Carl Radusch Fhere has been a proposed Inge in the academic calendar the University of California ich would mean that sessions uld run from August 23 to bember 20 and from February b May 20 inclusive.. 'he students of the Berkeley :pus voted down the proposal in open house by a close margin of zo 22. In an informal inquiry about R it was found that the students e somewhat in favor of this new oosal. iean Thomas Broadbent is in favor he issue mainly because it would IH that both semesters would be qual length and uninterrupted. He that the first two weeks after llstmas vacation are futile as far :tudy and learning are concerned. 'he Dean points out that the extra weeks between semesters is par- arly advantageous because grade rts would be put out. This would le students to make necessary ges in their courses if necessary. Dean also noted that students in ing areas would be able to ey home and have a comfortable between semesters. e change would be favorable to uctors too, in extra time to een semesters. order to make matter official, we must bring it a class meeting and present our ion to the Provost who will make ailable to the state wide commit- that they would do research work our feelings about you would care to express your 'ons to this proposed change the rs of the CUB would appreciate letters. r. Lindeburg has asked that students interested in parti- ting in th e intramural etball program c o n t a c t rge Harper as soon as possi- any group of students has ady organized a team, their esentative should contact ch Lindeburg at the earliest ible opportunity. 9 of Riverside MIQSES' WOMEN'S Fashion Clothes 3855 MAIN E2E2E2EfE2E2E2EfEiEI: i1EIE1E1E2:1EI -:- I1i2EIE2 12EIE1ii'if?. :lil i'E2E5Ef:Q 515'i:i' 1:-25252sSsisEe2s2zie252s?e ': - :cf:-: :-14:-:-:-cr.-'+2-:-if-1 '-:':-:f:':':-:-:-:-:-- ' ' '21-:':.-: :: 'if -:N A we 5 N if . . Wx . . . ee. . , 3 'Yah Vt-A' x 'C t'- '-- :ici E? :Y 'L ' W .,Qb1s3,.. 1412.521 -2.-marzzlszrfrzrrrz' 12:2 --:-:-:- '--.4.-1.1-:-:-1-:H-:-:-'az'-:-xg:-:--1' .-:5:-. 'gg-::.1:::g:f:g::::: 51: ' ' ' ' 3-1 ' 5 'r-:- , -rs: ,:' 5::5:g:3:,. '-'-2-rar-1 as gg. Q is fl tw V' 4 M 'I' 1 -.t Q,-. x E, ,Nw .5 ,649 ,SK pa -.r ,s , N -4. u J. ,. K X H .-Q, ,, 2. .Y X.. SQ? CQ- X P- Q t . . 1. 12 S .W a Q I W ti - i f sb rs' . .fs- ..x . 4, . as f ' A - f sul 5 A 2 f 952.539 . ., -sf.. 0- r A s , . f-':6l'f:'1f . . 1- 1 ' 'J'I'Z'Z'I'Z'?1'Z'I'I'.'f-Z'2 'igigijlglglgljljl 523111: 2'f'i'1 .52 Dr. Edwin Simon Meet Your Ma ste rs By Mary Howard Dr. Edwin I. Simon is acting assist- ant professor of music in the Division of Humanities. He teaches the music history and theory courses and is in charge of building the library's music collection. Dr. Simon received his A.B. in English from Stanford University and did graduate work in music at Mills College. He is a member of the American Musicological Society, the Internation- al Musicological Society, and the Sierra Club. His special interests are hiking, skiing, and photography. REWII NEW PORM8lE SPECIAL STUDENT RATES S4 per month, S10-3 months FULL INITIAL RENTAL PAID MAY BE APPLIED ON PURCHASE Your complete headquarters for OFFICE - SCHOOL - ENGINEER 'SUPPLIES TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES Sales-Rentals-Repairs S-I CLKWIIICI, .ami BINNLY 3744 MAIN singer U. C. School Of Oceanography Is Biggest jOriginally established by W. E. Ritter and others, largely through gifts from E. W. and Ellen Scripps, as the Marine Biological Association of San Diego, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography became a part of the University of California in 1912. It is the largest institution for oceanographic research in theworld. It has sent its vessels to such faraway places as Tahiti, Peru, and the Aleu- tian Islands in quest of detailed scientific information about the ocean. Its studies of ocean currents and waves, submarine geology, marine physics and chemistry, and animals have directed bearing on the military security and the economic life of the nation. The Institution provides in- struction and research training lead- ing to advanced degrees for graduate students. Each year it plays host to distin- guished investigators from the U.S. and abroad. Its fleet of five ocean- going ships is one of the University's uniqque facilities for research and education. On the 170-acre campus, a major point of interest is the colorful Thomas VVayland Vaughn Aquarium-Museum, which is open to the public without charge every day in the week. One of the outstanding members of the Lalolla faculty recently wrote Provost Gordon S. Watkins, suggest- CES Has Orange Show Exhibit ' The Citrus Experiment Station has an exhibit at the National Orange Show March 25-April 1, 1954, in San Bernardino.. Ken Middleham, UCR photographer who has taken most of the pictures which have appeared in the CUB, will present one of the most interest- ing features of the exhibit-a short motion picture in color showing harm- ful insects being devoured by bene- ficial insects. Included in the Citrus Station's pro- gram at the Citrus Institute April 1 will be Dr. William S. Stewwart, Chairman of the Department of Horticulture, Dr. Richard C. Baines, of the Department of Plant Pathology, Dr. John T. Middleton, Chairman of the Air Pollution Research Commit- tee, Dr. Robert L. Metcalf, chairman of the Department of Entomology, 2nd Extension Specialist Clem Meith. They will address the Institute on some of the myriad problems facing citrus growers in Southern California. Dr. A. M. Boyce, Director of CES, will explain the Station's program in Citrus Research. ing a list of prospective names for the UCR mascot. In the letter, Dr. Denis L. Fox, professor of marine biochemistry, de- clared: If what is wanted is the name of an animal reasonably common to the general region, and a tough customer with which to deal, the names lynx, panther, badger or jaguar IMG for short?-Edsj come to mind. If a bird-name were acceptable, perhaps the falcon would be suitable. 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Staff member of these departments will start moving into the second and third floors early this month. I i Theatre Group To Facts, Fallacies Fife Damaged MEXWAN F009 Meet Here 27th About UCR Pool Note Books mph AETA Provost Gordon S. Watkins will welcome 150 members of the South- em California section, American Edu- cational Theatre Association, to their annual spring conference on the UCR campus Saturday. William Sharp, acting instructor in English and speech, will introduce Dr. Watkins. Three original one-act plays by three young, unpublished Southern Califomia paywrights, will be pre- sented in Room 1000, Social Sciences- Humanities building. The plays are: The Man Who Came Back by joel Climenhaga, pro- duced by Canoga Park High Schoolg Aux Deux Magotsn by Richard Drig- gets, produced by Pasadena City College: and Second Story Lover by Carl Gabler, produced by UCLA. Following the plays, the conference will be transferred to the Mission Inn for luncheon and a critique of the To settle the minds of those students who have been wonder- ing if UCR would ever have a swimming pool with water, here is an explanation from the man who is responsible for all build- ing enterprises undertaken on the UCR campus. Said Mr. Iohn Braucher lrhymes with Shower l in an interview last week, We have to wait for just the right kind of weather before painting the lines on the bottom of the pool. Once we have that weather it will take us four days and the pool will be ready for swimming. Why four days? The 300,000 gallon pool is filled from a 50,000 gallon tank! Mr. Braucher .is Construction In- spector for the University of Califor- nia Department of Architects and Plays, Engineers. -1 Spfina Fashions ag styled for ,,4': '-:-':- '-:X .4-.-: , - .-4112 ,.e- h ,f f:2ErErf'2 -F' -' S,-si : . :rfif 'fit ' .x' ,. .rr K . c f , sf egg s 44 'V -. :-1: -1- f 11- PG:- ' -f.-12:5QjL.. .-'fif 5EQ?fE' :f:5oi:f:'3:M ':5'23.g::5:f.fL il, 'Eff 555' 5555 . ' 1 -2515: '.- - -- '- 1 .'vf 3' :1:2::,::: 2:2 cg'-Gai -- -1:--4-112: '-1 -.,:S'f::::::f:f: gsgsgnsf: -'-- . :I 5:5355-' ,f'rsff1'.fi,:g.s:s: 1'f11r1if 2iig:5:5:5E5E5E,4.q4.?? ' ' 'eff' 4 U QPEN ,FRIDAY your taste and budget Beautiful Printed Cottons Sizes 7to 'I5 and l0 to l6 Price: 8.98 to 14.98 I O 'PS D T Upstairs Store Sale Sl .99 Values to 57.95 Hiiimeffs fuggage 81 Men's Wear 6566 Magnolia Ave., Riverside 5 IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALL STUDENTS LATE MODEL UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS ARE AVAI FOR YOUR USE IN THE TYPING ROOM OF THE LIBRARY. A SMALL CHARGE OF 10c FOR 30 MINUTES USE IS MADE N 3730 Main Sheet TYPE-O-MATIC SERVICE ROY D. GRAHA IT Riverside california 4217 E. Gage Avenue Owner ' Bell, California ill Rogers, Jr. dresses Group UN Banquet ven though the Cherokee ion is not a member of the ted Nationsf' said Will ers, jr., it is one of the five ized tribes. The reason we rokees were civilized is be- e they couldn't find any oil ur reservationlv e occasion of Mr. Rogers' utter- was the banquet held in the Angeles Ambassador Hotel last rday night for the participating bers of the fourth annual Model ed Nations conference which was d by UCLA. Educational-And Fun verside's Polish delegation, made f students from both UCB and junior college, have agreed that ducational properties of the con- ce made the venture extremely while. e delegation arrived in Los les Wednesday afternoon, March , along with some 750 other nts representing more than 60 rent colleges and universities of estern United States and Alaska. returned home last Sunday in . e if the highlights of the Model was the reading of a telegram the Chief Delegate of the d States to the UN, Henry Cabot e. Efforts Guide Beal UN . Lodge said, in effect, that the s and decisions of all the attend- delegations were being closely ed at UN headquarters in New with an eye to using the knowl- so gained to guide the members in making some of their more ult decisions. e four day conference saw political maneuvering and dick- , on the part of all the delega- especially in sessions of the ral Assembly, which met in A's Boyce Hall Auditorium. UCB Plans UN Class cause more and more interest ing shown in the UN and its ems, both Dr. Malcolm Smith Francis Carney, UCR's political e professors, have recommended a course be established on this us next year to facilitate prepara- or the event. San Francisco State ge has tentatively been selected e site of next year's conference. ' Cof which We have had h latelyl often times causes things as wet heads and feet. Anyone will tell you colds and maybe even pneu- 'a follow wet heads and wet All we're trying to say is, ourselves down to the regis- office and pick up your ornia Physician's Service so that you will be eligible admittance to the campus c when next you fall victim ther a wet head or wet feet. Aly Wassil, conference director of this year's Model UN, is shown addressing the members of his staff just prior to the opening session of the General Assembly last Thursday, March 25. -UCLA Daily Bruin Photo Vol. 1 Riverside, California, April 2, 1954 No. 7 Dr. Howard Warns Against Junior Jitters By TOM PATTERSON Riverside Press-Enterprise Staff Writer Dr. Leon Howard of UCLA last Friday applauded the UCB experi- ment in liberal education but wamed the campus against pressures of voca- tionalism and particularly against a fonn of it called junior jittersf' Junior jitters was more partic- ularly described as the fear of students that they will be left without qualifica- tion for employment at the end of the four years. He pointed out, moreover, that more than one recent effort on other campuses to emphasize general rather than specific education has failed. He considered, nevertheless, that the chances of success are good here. Charter Day Speaker Dr. Howard, professor of English on the LA campus, was charter day speaker at an assembly in the UCB gymnasium. He was introduced by Dr. Gordon S. Watkins, UCB provost, who talked briefly in the name of President Robert Gordon Sproul of the state-wide university. Rabbi Bemard Zeiger gave the in- vocation and the benediction. Dr. Watkins said that the uni- versity of California's greatness lies not in its great size but in other factors, chief among which are con- scientious instruction, creative scholar- ship and untrammeled freedom of in- quiry. Describes Failure Dr. Howard described in particular fSee HOWARD, Page 41 Sgt. Schroeder of the univer- sity police is still trying to unload some of those nice yellow wind- shield stickers he has in his office, room 1350 of the SS and Humanities Bldg. Will the de- linquent individuals who haven't as yet picked theirs up please do so? It'll make the police sooo happy to rid themselves of the stickers. Advisor Carney Chronicles His Reactions to UN By FRANCIS M. CARNEY Acting Instructor of Political Science We took a beating. But may- be it was worth it. That senti- ment generally would character- ize the reaction of the eight UCB students who represented Po- land in last weekis Model United Nations proceedings, held on the Los Angeles campus. Naturally disappointed at not being permitted to make any significant substantive speeches our students, nevertheless, felt the entire experience was profit- able. Many of our people did participate actively in the smaller committee meetings and the Polish delegation was always a forward factor in the planning and maneuvering by which the Soviet bloc sought to break out qsee CABNEY, Page 41 Student Affairs Group Appoints Many Committees UCB,s Student Affairs Com- mittee met for the second time last Wednesday night in the large discussion room across the hall from the Social Sciences divisional office. Student Body President Chuck Young called the group to order short- ly after 7:30 and they adjourned at 9:45. The first order of business was the reading of the report of the ap- portionment board. Several tentative financial allot- ments had been made by the board for the expenditure of available funds as requested by various groups and departments about the school, but the entire report was tabled for fruther study when it became evi- dent that certain coming activities which would require a cash outlay had not been considered at the time the board met. Social Group Formed The activities concerned were of a social nature, so Al Bielski made the motion that a social affairs commit- tee be appointed to ascertain what events UCB should have this year, as well as to make plans for the handling of social activities for fall, 1954. The motion was approved by the group. Vaughn Blankenship was called upon to deliver a report of the mascot committee which was held last Tues- day morning in the office of UCB's public information officer, Howard Cook. It was agreed that the prize was to remain a life-tirne pass to all UCB athletic events, even though Blankenship favored an either or type deal with S25 being offered as the alternate prize. Contest entries will be collected in Howard Cook's office, room 1349, SS and Humani- ties. Charter Eiqaansion Studied A The next motion on the floor was one to appoint a by-laws committee to study means of working out an expansion of the charter. All available background sources were to be con- sidered in the collecting of informa- tion. A motion was then made for the establishment of a publications board which would handle problems con- tingent with putting out a campus newspaper. Jim St. Clair, managing editor of the CUB, pointed out to the group that the motion should read so as not to preclude any future type of publication, such as an an- nual or magazine, from coming under the board's jurisdiction. The motion was amended accordingly. Dean of Women Loda Mae Davis then passed out slices of cake which she had brought to the meeting, while Young gave the floor to CUB editor, Dick Williams. Daily Bruin Trek Told Williams made a request that the board act to appoint a joint commit- tee with members of his staff to lay plans for a proposed journey to the campus by editorial staff members of the UCLA Daily Bruin. Dean Thomas L. Broadbent then mentioned that he fSee COMMITTEES, Page 41 UCR Treasurer IS Really St. Nick I would like to suggest to the students of UCR that we have a Christmas Fund. I know that it is a long time before Christmas, but if We are to form really good traditions, it is better that we think about them a while before we establish them. This Christmas fund of which I speak would be obtained from the students of UCR and put to whatever Work we students de- cided to use it for. I suggest that if enough interest is shown in such a project that the students choose a committee of about four members to decide on exactly how it should be obtained and to whom it should go. The money could be obtained by having an annual Christmas Dance, the profits going to the Christmas Fund of which I have Written. If the whole school supported such a dance, the profit would be very substantial and the school would be able to under- take an outstanding Christmas project. I think that by taking the responsibility of helping someone in need, we not only give comfort to others, but bring unity to our- selves by having a wholesome and unified interests outside of school. -Bill Anderson A Chef in Ph. D.'s Clothing Dr. Eugene Eisman is obviously a man who believes in some of the more revolutionary aspects of the art of modern education. Last Sunday afternoon he and his Wife Calso a Ph. DQ hosted a combination barbecue and study-fest for all his students just prior to giving them examinations on Monday. I 1' iff 1 24 'mei-s X 2.39 fafif. saw QW? W? gg DR. 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'25 N w -' '- -.3'3 1-1'1-:-.-35.-1114?.'7.-:5: :3:5:5:2.-:I:1:5:':1::: -:gi:1:I-. -11.-:5:5:T:3:1'5:T.-21 I -. , A1 .2 , 1:t:ag55g2gzg1g2r:2ZsA5:5:sS:5:5 f f:z:5:5z:f2:2:5 15,1451 u lar fellows. Everyone who attended fand it is notable that all his students but one were therej was very pleased with the idea, and the 1'esults of the ultimate tests proved his theories of study to be sound. Many of Dr. Eisman's students have asked the CUB to publicly thank him for his aid and gener- osity. The group had every op- portunity to ask questions about their various problems in psy- chology on an informal discus- sion-type basis. While the CUB does not necessarily advocate that UCR's professors and instructors adopt the Eisman Plan of Eats and Educationf' it does feel that his experiment in the food forum cators are, after all, pretty regu- Thank you for spending your one free afternoon of last week with your students, Dr. Eisman. Laugh a Little Every Day From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Everyone should take care to laugh a little every day. We are reminded of it by the case of a 39-year-old Lithuanian in Australia who had a few drinks and laughed for six hours and then fell asleep. A doctor said the drinks released his inhibitions and everything appeared screamingly funny. There is a fellow, it seems to us, whose inhibitions must have been large, numerous and glowering. He mustnit have laughed at anything for months, maybe even years. Then, a few drinks, and zowiel-he'd got to do all his laughing at once for everything thatis been funny since early 1951. We'll take our laughing a little every day, by preference, thank you. Preferably starting with a warm chuckle before breakfast, to make the orange juice a bit more sunny, the bacon a little more crisp, and winding up with a retrospective giggle just before turn- ing out the bedlight, to preface a pleasant dream. From now until the end of April, the CUB will run a com- plete list of the mascot titles which have been suggested by various individuals, both off campus and on, as the name we should permanently adopt here at UCR. The following is the complete tabulation to this time: BEARCATS, ROCKS, RATT- LERS, RAMS, SUN BEARS, PANDAS, SUNDOGS, R E D RAIDERS, B O X E R S, BOB- CATS, RAN GE RS, SCOR- PIONS, S H I E K S, CABAL- LEROS, CUBS, FRIARS, BUF- FALOS, GOLDEN EAGLES, BEARCATS, B L U E I A Y S, GOLDEN CUBS, CUBBEARS, VAQUEROS, GOLDEN GRIZZLIES, LYNX, BOBCATS, PANTHERS, BADGERS, IAG- UARS, FALCONS, S T A G S, BISONS, BEAVERS, GOLDEN BEAVERS, GOLDEN FOXES, ARABS, RANGERS, ROVERS, RAMBLERS, M U S K R A T S, BULLFROGS, G O R I L L A S, TIGERS, LIONS, PROSPEC- TORS, CONDORS, DIGGERS, and BONDSMEN. M ller Both An Actor, Scientistl David Miller, winner of one of Milton Phillipis scholarships, is a dent of Vista in San Diego Cou Califomia. He is not a native Californian. hails from Worcester, Massachus His major is entomology and i present employed by UCR in division of Life Sciences.- He came to UCR from Palo Junior College. During high school he won Bank of America Achievement A life membership in the Califd Scholarship Federation, and was tive in dramatics. He has the lea the forthcoming UCR procluctiol Master Pierre Patilan. His hobby is stamp collecting. sells stamps to collectors earjl thereby, a part of his college expe1 UCLA Boasts Seconcl Largest State Enrollmen- Of the eight campuses of the versity of California, the Los Ang campus is the second largest in 1 A J dent enrollment This campus, from 1919 until Incidentally, anyone desirous of submitting names may either turn them in at the Public In- formation Office or send a letter to Garland Rose or joe Wimer at the Riverside Daily Press 61 Enterprise. Dr. W. B. Sinclair, chairman of the Department Biochemistry of CES, is shown here examining lemons grown without tree. was known as the Los Angeles Normal School. In 1927 it was g the name UCLA and in 1929 m to its present site in Westwood. The campus, a gift from the of Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, Monica, and Venice, is only miles from the Pacific Ocean. REATNESS NOT MEASURED IN SIZE, AGE' - WATKINS ollowing are excerpts of vost Watkins Charter Day ess delivered on the camp- ast Friday morning. behalf of the President and the d of Regents it is a real pleasure elcome you to the 86th Charter 'versary Celebration of the Uni- 'ty of California. Similar celebra- have been held this week in e principal centers of the Uni- 'tyis activities. While we have d in these anniversary ceremonies g the past four years, this is, of se, the first time that the Charter Ceremony has been held in the ing and on the campus. We are pleased to share with our university colleagues and our friends throughout the State this important occasion, which represents another milestone in the history of the Uni- versity. As the ages of universities go in Europe and in Great Britain, the University of Califomia is a very young institution of higher learning. Bologna, Oxford, Cambridge, and the Sorbonne were founded in the period between the llth and 13th centuries when perhaps the values of advanced leaming were being rediscovered. Even compared with some univer- sities and colleges in the United States of America the University of Califor- nia is a very young institution. HAR- VARD has celebrated its 300th anni- versary, having been founded in 1636. YALE was chartered in 1701 and established at New Haven as YALE COLLEGE in 1718. WILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE was established in 1693. This year, COLUMBIA UNI- VERSITY is celebrating its 200th an- niversary, having been established as KING'S COLLEGE in 1754. Fortunately, AGE is not a positive evidence of greatness, much less a RELIABLE INDEX to vitality. I am fully qualified to testify on both of these points. Although it is among the youngest of universities, the UNIVERSITY OF hairrnan Robert Metcalf of the CES department of entomology has something to be proud of is week. His group recently perfected a method of testing the spreading qualities of insect rays by hanging test tube-covered eight balls in orange trees. The current issue of POPULAR IENCE magazine tells the story and shows the eight ball on the cover. CALIFORNIA may justly claim to be among the greatest and most dis- tinguished. Some people, very un- wisely, I think, boast of the great size of the University of California, claim- ing that ours is the world's largest institution of higher learning. Like AGE, SIZE is not a criterion of true greatness. The criteria of real great- ness seem to me to comprise these qualities: 1. Conscientious and inspiring in- struction, based upon adequate knowledge and true learning and free from cynicism and super- ficiality. 2. Creative scholarship, measured not by the number of printed pages of published works but by the soundness and quality of research findings. Untrammelled freedom of in- quiry, investigation, and expres- sion, resting on a solid founda- tion of scientific objectivity and a keen sense of individual and social responsibility. A student body propelled in its quest for knowledge by a com- pelling impulse to self-realiza- tion. An imperishable vision of ever- receding horizons of new truths and never-conquered frontiers of new knowledge. A deep love of truth and a de- termination to pronouce it re- gardless of the consequences. An abiding belief in the educa- tion of the whole personality and a clear perception of the totality of the educational pattern. 8. Facilities for researcheincluding laboratories and libraries, mea- sured in terms of these criteria, the University of California on this 86th birthday can, I be- lieve, make a modest claim to a place among the world's great centers of leaming. The University of California at Riverside is, of course, only in its in- fancy, whether we think of the CITRUS EXPERIMENT STATION, which is the proud possessor of an international reputation, or the COL- LEGE OF LETTERS AND SCI- ENCE, which is just opening its in- fant eyes upon a perplexed, confused, bewildered and paradoxical world. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. , ' ipiiia' I f ----Nf ffl ,, E. K-X' A 4 I e f ' 'f 5, ax if if .. t Pi fa ,aff it Q we a Q 1 rrra Q .. f I , , 0 . , Q ff 'vu -..af a. ' 22 ' c if , if D1 it we-Si. , , fi g - t 'Elf .1'e- , y 1 Q f 3, 1- 62. D . . ' I ' ,L - g ,P O L V Q E 1,8 V f . WHICH WILL IT BE? axes, owls, rabbits or turtles. Whatever our mascot may finally be, don't you want to have a part in making the choice? If you have any sugges- jns along this lines, submit them as soon as possible to the Office of Public Information. Open House will be held on the UCR campus Sunday, April 25, from 1-5 p.m. Student guides will be employed to lead tours of the buildings and grounds, and faculty members will be asked to sit in their offices to greet the visitors during those hours. COMMITTEES fContinued from Page li had received a letter from the Cali- fornia Club of the same campus ask- ing if they could come to Riverside in May and assist the student body here in laying plans for a big C high-atop Box Spring Mountain. Vaughn Blankenship then mentioned that maybe the affair should also in- clude UCLA's student body officers, but Williams pointed out that the staff of the BRUIN was nearly as large as UCR's entire student body, so maybe things would get out of hand. Plan Pigeonholed The Student Affairs Committee agreed that this would probably be the case, so President Young said that he thought the social events commit- tee should study the matter. A mo- tion was made and passed that the entire matter be bound over to that committee. The meeting adjourned after a brief discussion of the coming high school open house to be held in late May. It was decided that the next Student Affairs Committee meeting would be held on Wednesday, April 7. Would you like to participate in some very worthwhile re- search? Dr. Andre Malecot is requesting that any student fand especially language studentsi come to his office in room 2232, SS 8: Humanities, and take a Psycho-Physics test which deals with sounds made by the human voice. It only takes about ten minutes of your time, so be a volunteer. SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. 55 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th HOWARD fContinued from Page li one failure on a midwestern campus, named, which sought to introduce a I program of unspecialized liberal edu- cation, surrounded by the usual pro- fessional schools and professional pro- grams of a modern university campus. In this instance he found that the junior jitters was especially signifi- cant in the breakdown of the idea, so enthusiastically conceived by presi- dent and faculty alike. He considered that the opportunity to establish a unique four-year liberal education program on the UCR cam- pus is better because it is undertaken within the framework of the existing American education system and partic- ularly because it is within the frame- work of the university itself. his, he explained, would give the student with junior jitters the freedom to trans- fer to another campus. Hopes Cases Few If a person suffers from an in- curable case of junior jitters, he can come to UCLA and get professional treatment, Dr. Howard said. He added that he and other well- wishers on the UCLA campus hope that such cases will be few. Dr. Howard continued that the Riverside experiment has a better chance of succeeding because it it better adapted than similar experi- ments to the capacity of the individual student and because the separate campus will provide fewer temptations from the illusion of practical training which quite often is not practical at all. Commends System Despite his wish for the accom- plishment of the aims of the River- side campus, Dr. Howard found much to be commended in the American educational system, finding in it a universal opportunity for a new start comparable to the opportunity of the once-expanding American frontier. Dr. Howard said, The invariable question that's asked in America is not 'who is your father?' but 'where did you go to school?' For That Important Date AN ORCHID CORSAGE CARNEY fContinued from Page 17 of the parliamentary straitjacket the General Assembly placed on them. Valuable lessons were leamed in this process. Intimate knowledge of the procedural chessboard is prerequisite to any successful use of parliamentary machinery. Our people know that now and are thus forearmed for future Model UN participation. There will be future model UNs and, assuredly, UCR will play a role in them. These sorts of things are immensely valuable. They are def- initely not child's play. It is, of course, trite to say that future lead- ers, future activists if you will, were gathered in Royce Hall last week but it is very true. Somebody has to do these public things in a democracy and the doers are the very people who get into programs like Model UN. The ideal- ism displayed in Royce Hall was impressive, but one expects that ' active young people. Even more im- pressive was the all around serious- ness, maturity and real ability. It was good to see. It was not all business however, There was time for play. Possibly there was not quite enough time for that. At least it seemed that intra and extra delegational interaction was really just getting interesting when it was time to leave. But good friend- ships were formed and possibly a flir- tation or two initiated under the watchful but tolerant eyes of the faculty advisors. Those things are also good. comprised the Polish delegation. At- tending from UCR were Dick Wil- liams, Jim St. Clair, Ed Groven, Ianet Athletic League Wants Us To Joi Last week a delegation from UCR Physical Education Departn attended a meeting of the Soutli California Inter-Scholastic Ath Conference. Members present at Cal-Tech meeting WB1'6 Dr. Jaclf Hewitt, Dr. Wayne Crawford and Frank Lindeburg. According to Dr. Hewitt the pose of attendance was to see if Il would be able to compete in league in the future. They seel anxious to have us join when our will permit such competition, Dr. Hewitt. Colleges in th.is league inc Whittier, Occidental, Pomona, lands and Cal-Tech. Buvens, Marilyn Merchant, Pat Sp man Ruth Pertel and Ruth El Faculty 'advisors were Mr Cecil der Chats off to him for a grand mcidentallyj of Riverside College Malcolm Smith of UCR and me MEXICAN FOOD Ralph DeMarcos gC0 E.-7 ijpptcw if Wir. 9Dx9 MAbNOLIA AVE an ru :Auf WA IN CASE YOU DON'T KNOW IT YOU RE CONNECTED KN fin 'R Q I0 1 . of Riverside - .2 , MISSES' HARRY E. cosNER F a. I A W WOMENS orecruos Af A f 2 Fashion CALIFORNIA Clothes Telephone 4481-W 5462 Grand Ave. Riverside 3855 MAIN 'e in 4 ' I . ' . ', . it B -' 12 ' itil 0 vp . ' 5.4 V. XXX, ifiiw 'I VY 1:1 .:,- .yu .I . z.: ' qi, 5 W' lg ajaf.. . .. UCR and Riverside College jointly . T ' Y ,':-.. - - - -L 1 ' Q ' V , ,Movrosns -1 up ' Y Rn S w I D 1 . 1 SNEFMA NSY. ' I TO N :- 'QQ , 7 V '. F .x S V fl 0 X u Q 0 v J S . j . 7 K W 'ix N 'ol. 1 Riverside, California, April 9, 1954 No. 8 V 'ss Pat Tighe poses prettily on a sailboat anchored in radise Lake, the new fishing and boating recreational area hich is less than one mile from the campus. Will it become e new campus hangout? vost and Mrs. tkins Honored Association vost and Mrs. Cordon S. Wat- were recently honored by the uate Students Association of A. st Friday afternoon Margaret vens, President of the Associa- presented Mrs. Watkins with an ary membership in the Associa- . Watkins was presented with ilar membership and the Asso- n's Gold Key in recognition of any years of meritorious service e graduate students of the Los es Campus. . Watkins stated, I have re- many nice tributes from stu- through the long years at the rsity of Illinois and the Univer- f California, but none has been meaningful to me than this one UCLA's graduate students.. AWS Organizes On Campusg Elects Brumgardt Pres. The Associated Women Stu- dents of UCB, while not yet an official organization, had its first meeting on April first. The group elected four officers for the remainder of the semester. The officers are Janice Brumgardt, presi- dent, Pat Huber, vice-president, secre- tary-treasurer, Shirley Wright, and social chairman, Isabel Gotori. The Dean of Women, Miss Davis, told the members some of the duties the AWS had at other colleges and would probably have at UCR. On other compuses the AWS is in charge of welfare projects, establishes wo- men's honorary organizations such as Mortar Board, and deals with matters concerning women's organizations. The Sophomore class is sched- uling a beach party to be held this Saturday, April 10, from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. The party will be held at Victoria Beach south of Laguna. All UCR students are invited. Large Crowds Expected At UCR Open House An open house for the public is planned by the campus for Sunday, April 25. Provost Gordon Watkins has an- nounced that faculty members of the Letters and Science College will be in their offices from 1-5 p.m. that day to demonstrate the facilities of the five modern buildings on the campus. Visitors will be shown the open- stack library, the gymnasium and swimming pool, the health center, the specially designed laboratories that permit students to hear lectures and conduct experiments in the same room, and other points of interest on the campus. There will be a need for student guides to conduct the visitors around the campus. Anyone interested in serving as a guide should contact either ASUCR President Chuck Young or leave their names in the Public Information Office. Area Service Clubs Donate Flagpole Funds Various service clubs in Riv- ersied and Arlington have donated S1000 to UCR for the purpose of erecting a flagpole on the campus. The service clubs involved in the donation include the Riverside Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions, Exchange, Optimists, 20-30, Soroptimists, and Zonta Clubs. The Arlington Lions Club, the Rubidoux Exchange Club, Rubidoux Lions Club. The flagpole will be installed and dedicated in connection with the dedication of the College the week of October 17th, 1954. Representatives of the service clubs will be invited to attend the ceremonies. In a letter to Provost Cordon S. Watkins informing him of the gift, Mr. Lewis P. Alabaster, chaimlan of the committee, stated: All members of the participating clubs congradu- late you and your fine staff upon the development of the beautiful campus and buildings. We appreciate es- pecially, the fine program of the University to be offered the youths who are fortunate enough to come Within its halls. The Regents of the University have accepted the gift. Provost Watkins stated that he and President Robert Gordon Sproul felt that the gift is indicative of a deep and abiding interest in UCR. , Governing Body Moves To Seat AWS President By jim St. Clair As a result of Wednesday's Student Affairs Council meeting, an assembly of the entire student body has been scheduled for April 15th, Thursday. The pur- pose of the assembly is to amend the charter so as to seat the representatives of the newly or- ganized Associated Women Stu- dents Organization. The Student Affairs Commit- tee held its third meeting in the SS conference room Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. The meeting was called to order by ASUCB President Chuck Young. Due to the absence of the secretary, no minutes of the last meeting were read. Reports Called For President Young called for reports from several of the committees that had been previously established. Vaughn Blankenship, chairman of the committee in charge of the mas- cot contest, reported that almost a hundred names had been submitted for the mascot. It was his suggestion that the mascot committee select from these names about 25 of the best to present to the Student Affairs Council. he Council would then se- lect 5 of these names to be presented to the student body as a whole for their action. No Action Taken The Council also discussed the pos- sibility of selecting the final slate by April 25th in time for the open house. No action was taken. Chairman of the Social Commit- tee, Bill Kassell, submitted the report of his committee. They have requested fContinued on Page 42 Davis Campus Conference Site Each year representatives of the faculty of the various campuses of the University hold an annual All- University Faculty Conference. Plans for the Ninth All-University Faculty Conference, to be held at Davis, April 29, 30, and May 1, on call of President Robert Gordon Sproul, have now been completed. The theme of the Conference will be How to Appraise the Value of the University to Society. Representing UCR at this confer- ence will be Dr. William S. Stewart, Chairman of the Department of Orchard Management and Dr. Arthur C. Tumer, Chairman of the Division of Social Sciences of the Letters and Science College. J ,, Ads Support CUB - Support CUB Ads I I C I V Lick Observotor Student body funds are very definitely limited this year. We started the year with some S1500 and have reduced that to a balance of about 8200. , The CUB has taken about S550 of that money for its publica- tion. Still, that is not enough. It costs about S70 to put out each edition of the CUB. If, as we hope, we put out 15 issues the total cost will be roughly 51000. Obviously we don't have enough money to finance the total cost of publishing the CUB and still have any money left for other student activities. The only solution to our dilemma is to secure a large num- ber of advertisers. Marilyn Merchant, our advertising manager, has done a fine job getting ads from the stores and shops in Riverside. However, the job is almost too big for any one individual who also has to do homework. If we can get about S40 per issue in advertising we can still finance the CUB and come out every week. However, the advertisers must feel that they are getting their money's worth. The only way we can assure the advertisers that they are getting their money's worth is to patronize them regularly and to inform them at the same time that we are UCR students who have seen their ads in the CUB. If you would like to help the CUB continue its publication patronize your advertisers. I -Jim St. Clair Blankenship - The iNew Ruark? Beginning with this issue the CUB will feature a regular column by UCR's own rustic and sagacious Vaughn Blankenship. Vaughnis new column, Time Out, will doubtless be the first read and most discussed feature of any issue. We here on the staff have long felt the need for something of this nature, and when we got wind of Vaughnis writing abilities we set right to work to sign him up. V This is truly a long step forward in the direction we would like to see the CUB go. After all, this is a student newspaper for student consumption. We hope in timee to be able to bring you more and more of this sort of thing-things that you, the readers, have hounded us for from the beginning. If you like Vaughn's new column fand Weill bet student body funds that you willl let us know, won't you? Better still, give Vaughn a friendly slap on the back for on the face, if he has men- tioned you in his columnj and tellfhim how you feel. is -YC LlNES FROM TINTERN ABEY By William Wordsworth . . . and this prayer I make, Knowing that Nature never did betray The heart that loved herg 'tis her privilege, Through all the years of this our life, to lead From joy to joy: for she can so inform The mind that is within us, so impress With quietness and beauty, and so feed With lofty thoughts, that neither evil tongues, Bash judgements, nor the sneers of selfish men, Nor greetings where no kindness is, nor all The dreary intercourse of daily life, Shall e'er prevail against us, or disturb Our cheerful faith, that all which we behold Is whole of blessing. jCLASSIFlED Aus Wanted! Baby Sitter. Contact Dr. George Knox in Room 2214 SS. -Home Address, 895 Marlborough Drive, Riverside. 22 Stevens Model 15. Single shot. .Fired only 22 rounds. Shoots 22 short, long Sr long rifle. See Walt Birch, CES, Cultivation Dept. RATES: 250 for 15 words for 1 insertion. 1Oc for every 5 addi- tional words. THE UCR CUB Published Weekly by the Associated Students of the University of California at Riverside THE STAFF Editor .... ................... W. Managing Editor .. ..., -,- Jim St. Clair City Edit-or ..-,..-- ........ L Janet Buvens Feature Editor ,. ......,,,....,. Bill Anderson Ass't. Feature Editor ........ Society Editor ..... ....... L Mary Howard Adv. Manager ........ - Marilyn Merchant Cir. Br Proofreading ............ Ed Groven The CUB office is ocated in room 1223 of the Social Scigpges and Humanities g. R. Williams Ruth Pertel ' 0 60146 , , By VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP Somewhere between Petrarch fHumanities IBJ and Spillane QI The Iuryl comes the most joyous instant in the life of the UCR student-re- laxation. Longfellow called this moment - sarcastically, certainly - 11 e Children'S I am in' 2 little more the line of ancient He' adage, -all : f:4., :-:-:-L-sv.-:-: -. - .-Lt-34. :Y:-:-.- -' .- 521:52- '4:1: and no Play we fi, makes Issac dull as Hell. In other words, this is sup- posed to be a very , I K , clever way to in- '-.: ' 0 troduce a new, weekly column entitled, simply, TIME OUT. Everything has a purpose except maybe Aristophanes and Marilyn Monroe. And I can think of nothing with less purpose than trying to make an evening of Aristophanes and Miss Monroe. But I'm digressing. This column, too, has a purpose. Let's for- get Aristophanes and concentrate on Mrs. Dimaggio. In other words, this column is to shed the scholars cap for the purpose of gossip, opinions, some news, idle chit-chat, and-I flatter myself - humor. Any suggestions gratefully accepted. Having thus laid a broad, general background which really says nothing I proceed to the first topic of interest. THE MASCOT. Everyone seems to have his own private goodie along this line. So far I have no preference. I like Arabs,', if I must make a choice. We could have an Arabian Night set up. We could have harems. It offers nameless and endless ideas for homecoming decorations. Then I would like to make a suggestion of my own-the UCR Students VVhat potentiality! We could adopt a mas- cot with stooped shoulders, thick, hornrimmed glasses, bags under both eyes, and the motto- In Hoc Signo Vincesf' This quite liberally trans- lated means, For God's sake, Gor- don, no more Humanities courses. THE SOPHOMOBE CLASS. 1 un- derstand that the Sophomore class is having a party this weekend. That's great. I frankly am in favor of re- viving the old tradition of T.G.I.F. To the uninitiated this means, simply, Thank God itis Fridayiingf' In other words, come Friday after- noon and everyone takes off to some local joint to live it up. T.G.I.F.'ing successfully- takes the edge off the human mind and is guaranteed to reduce even Einstein to the depths of joe College and Pogo. Newton becomes the guy who makes figs and Annabelle Lee be- comes the sister of Gypsy Rose. THE HIT PARADE. I'd like to predict that the ditty about the Wed- ding Bell -or something like that- will be the next in the footsteps of Cross Over the Bridge. I have noth- ls World Fomou The world-famous Lick Observa became a campus of the Universitl Califomia in 1888 through a gift f the estate of James A. Lick. A 4,209-foot Mount Hamilton, campus over looks the fertile Si Clara Valley on the west and distant Sierra on the east. The Mount Hamilton campu dedidcated to research to enh man's knowledge of the stellar verse. Its facilities are available only to the staff, but to grad students and scientists from 0 campuses and from univers throughout the world. The principal equipment of Observatory includes a new 120- telescope, second largest in the w a 36-inch Crossley reflector, a inch equatorial refractorg a 20- astrographic telescope, exte equipment for photoelectric p metryg a 12-inch equatorial refra and various additional telescopes auxiliary equipment. Throughout its history, Lick servatory has been a prolific so of new astronomical knowledge, the training ground for a signifi percentage of America's astronon ing against Miss Kitt-mind you. just the song. Miss Kitt has ob charms that would cause a wo Indian to make like Mt. Vesuvius a hot foot-to be trite. JOE MCCARTHY. The man made the theory of evolution re nant to the animal kingdom. THE CUB. Let's patronize advertisers. Then maybe we can more money for advertising a can draw some cartoons to go this stuff. I can be real funny, ho THE END. I have contacted guna Fever. It has various sympt The patient hears a pounding ' ears not unlike the surf on a s shore. He feels the buming he his shoulders, and thinks that dressed in nothing but a swim suit. He goes around mumblin himself: A loaf of bread, a jug of wine a beach, A breath of air, a kiss of sun, to each. The open road, the joy-some lucky guy- There, but for the grace of German one, go I. The Physical Education partment is in need of se lifeguards for the pool. A saving certificate will be n sary for the position. Also will need some good swi who can vaccuum the pool time to time in order to dirt out. Anyone interested in above positions should co the Personnel Office, SS as soon as possible. troducing - rba ra Hanes By Ruth Pertel rs. Barbara Hanes was born ara Schweppe in Chillacothe, ouri on june 9, 1934. She moved ort Scott, Kansas and graduated high school there. e came to Califomia to go to ol and-more important-to be ied to Lieutenant Alfred Hanes e United States Air Force. Lieu- nt Hanes is very active in the munity Players, having had the in the recent production Broken n, and a part in the present pro- 'on of the Player's, Rain. rbara spent her freshman year at enwood College for Women at harles, Missouri, on a President's larship. Last semester she at- ed UCLA. present she is the secretary of sophomore class and helps to activities for the 22 sophomores CR. r major is merchandising. esident Young Man of Talent uck Young, president of ASUCR, s from San Bemardino Junior ge. Before that he served in the ed States Air Force for 21 months. s past experience in deciding l activities includes president of reshman class at San Bernardino, missioner of Fine Arts, and Presi- of Alpha Gamma Sigma Honor I ,er activities include football, atics, and speech. is married. Her name is Sue. do not have any children and ot expecting any yet. plans to graduate from UCR ne, 1955. He is going to do his ate work at Berkeley. He is ring in Political science and to teach after he completes his ate work. 'T roducing Miss mi lla Jantz e Chamber of Commerce of em California would be very y to hear from this pert' UCR nt. She likes our weather 'very illa is from Budapest, Hun- She has lived there most of her ut came to the United States in e likes the small classes at UCR further states that colleges in pest are very different from The students go to school six a week and they have oral and n exams every month. Camilla t like the oral exams. Everyday, classes were over, the students meet around tables and dis- what they had studied' during a . . mlilla is a junior and l1er fav- class is history and some day ants to be a foreign language er. eryone at UCR wishes her the of luck in her studies and we her again for her views on our eatherl Dr. Andre Malecot Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard UCR's lone French professor, Andre Malecot, is a Parisian by birth. He has attended the University of Delaware, Middlebury College Language School, the University of Pennsylvania, and the Institute of Phonetics at the Sor- bonne. He has taught at Haverford Col- lege, Villanova College, and is a member of the research staff at Haskins Laboratory, New York. Haskins maintains a psycho-acoustics laboratory that is trying to determine the components of speech in order, to improve communications. To do this they are making speech synthe- tically. Dr. Malecot will work there this summer. An accomplished guitarist, Dr. Malecot is also the local branch of the Paris Chamber of Commerce. Student Health Service Unique There are many things we of UCR can be proud of. Among them is our unique, health service program. The following extract from the Daily Californian of March 30 indicates the interest other campuses of the state- ' wide University have been taking in UCR. h I A unique health service that pro- vides medical care for students at home as well as on the campus has been established by the Riverside campus of the University. Each registered student is auto- matically enrolled in the California Physicians Service entitling him to medical care at the campus dispen- sary, local hospitals, or at home, as required. Hospitalization up to 50 days for each illness or injury will be pro- vided. Routine ills will be treated at the campus dispensary, staffed by Uni- versity nurses and doctors recom- mended by the Riverside County Medical Association. The program developed after an 18-month study by the association and the Univeresity, is financed by part of the S35 incidental fee paid by students each semester. Contractor About Ready To Start UCR Landscaping Contracts were being drafted today for the job of landscaping New Campus at UCR and installing a sprinkling system. Authorities on the Riverside camp- us leamed today the Regents of UC had accepted the low bids at their meeting Friday on the Davis campus. The jobs will be done by the same firms that landscaped the athletic field, where turf and ground cover plants are now well established. Use Pop-Up Sprinklers The KEC Co. of Long Beach will :lo the landscaping of New Campus at a price of 824,-155. The Automatic Law Irrigation Co. will install the irrigation system, including pop-up sprinklers, at 338,962 On the ath- letic field job the former was con- tractor for both and the Automatic Lawn Irrigation Co. was subcon- tractor. Plans drawn under supervision of VVilliam Bridgers, University land- scape architect at UCLA, call for use of virtually all trees that thrive under local growing conditions. Harmony Sought Palms, oaks and eucalyptus will be emphasized. The effect will harmon- ize with the plantings on Old Campus where the eucalyptus predominates. Although the contractors will pro- vide only young nursery stock, Bridgers expects to make special ar- rangements for planting of full-grown trees in some locations, to provide early shade. The landscaping will emphasize the circular commons area laid out be- tween the present and planned build- ings on New Campus. Guides Sought For Open House In the next few weeks many people are going to be coming through the University to take a look at our grounds and buildings. Guides will be needed to show these people around. The Office of Public Information has been filling the job in the past months. However, their time schedule is such that it is becoming increasingly diffi- cult for them to serve as guides too. It has been suggested by Howard Cook that members of the student body, especially any members of the Order of the Great Stone Face, should undertake the task of guiding these people. 'Howard Cook, Public Information Manager, has requested that any stu- dent with free time contact him. He would like students to' .leave their schedules with him and tell him where they could be contacted at certain hours so he could have them on call. , flf there are any students who can spare the time they may contact Howard Cook in office number 1849 in the Social Sciences and Humani- ties Building. From now until the end of April, the CUB will run a com- plete list of the mascot titles which have been suggested by various individuals, both off campus and on, as the name we should permanently adopt here at UCR. The following is the complete tabulation to this time: BEARCATS, ROCKS, RATT- LERS, RAMS, SUN BEARS, PANDAS, SUNDOGS, R E D RAIDERS, B O X E R S, BOB- CATS, R A N G E R S, SCOR- PIONS, S I-I I E K S, CABAL- LEROS, CUBS, FRIARS, BUF- FALOS, GOLDEN EAGLES, BEARCATS, B L U E I A Y S, GOLDEN CUBS, CUBBEARS, VAQUEROS, GOLDEN GRIZZLIES, LYNX, BOBCATS, PANTHERS, BADGERS, JAG- UARS, FALCONS, S T A G S, BISONS, BEAVERS, GOLDEN BEAVERS, GOLDEN F OXES, ARABS, RANGERS, ROVERS, RAMBLERS, M U S K R A T S, BULLFROGS, G O R I L L A S, TIGERS, LIONS, PROSPEC- TORS, CONDORS, DIGGERS, and BONDSMEN. Incidentally, anyone desirous of submitting names may either turn them in at the Public In- formation Office or send a letter to Garland Rose or Joe Wimer at the Riverside Daily Press 6: Enterprise. Divisional Meets Scheduled For Thursday, 22nd Divisional meetings for all students will be held at the regular hour of the student meetings on April 22. It is extremely important that students meet with their Division chairmen from 1:30 to 2:30 on that date for information regarding advance enroll- ment, discussion of major programs, possible formation of semi-profession- al clubs, etc. Physical Science students will meet in the Physical Science lecture hall, Life Science students in the Life Science lecture hall, Social Science students in the Social Science con- ference room, room 1203, and Humanities students in the lecture hall, room 1000. Since all students presently regis- tered are assigned for counseling pur- poses to one or another of the four Divisions, all students should appear at one of the meetings. REGULATIONS FOR THE CONDUCT OF THE SOCIAL ACTIVITIES OF RECOGNIZED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS 1. The University expects its students and student organizations to observe the commonly accepted standards of morality, behavior, and good taste. a. These standards shall be observed in the conduct of initiation cere- monies, including any so-called informal initiationsn which may be held, as well as in other activities of recognized student organizations. b. At all social functions which are attended by mixed groups of men and women, chaperones shall be present, whose names previously have been submitted to and approved by the Dean of Students. c. No intoxicating beverages shall be served by such groups at any function, regardless of where it is held. d. At any such function, regardless of where it is held, mixed gatherings of men and women shall be restricted to public rooms on main floors. 2. The University expects its students and student organizations to obey the laws of the State and community. a. Included among such laws are those which prohibit the serving of intoxicating beverages in the vicinity of a University campus. b. Since the possession of a bar is prima facie evidence of intent to vio- late the law, no bars shall be installed or maintained in the residence of headquarters of any fraternity, society, or other recognized student organization. 3. The University expects that the social activities of its students and student organizations will be compatible with the educational purposes of the institution. a. Social functions, such as parties, dances, and initiations, and prepara- tions for such events, shall be so scheduled, and of such reasonable number and extent as to leave ample study time for those partici- pating. b. Social functions, sponsored by recognized student organizations for mixed groups of men and women, shall secure advance authorization from the Dean of Students, or in certain categories of events, from other members of the University or Associated Students staff, to whom authority has been specially delegated. c. Such social functions shall rigidly observe closing hour schedules established by the Dean of Students. d. Recognized residence groups are urged to maintain quiet periods, particularly conducive to study and rest. 4. a. Both the organizations, as such, and their members, as individuals, will be held responsible for compliance with these regulations. b. Each group shall have an advisor or advisory board, chosen from members of the faculty, or alumni, and acceptable to the University, whose names will be on record with the Dean of Students, and who will cooperate with the student organization and with University authorities in securing observance of these regulations. Hurford E. Stone, Dean of Students, University of California at Berkeley Milton E. Hahn, Dean of Students, University of Califomia at Los Angeles J. Price Gittinger, Supervisor of Student Affairs, University of California at Davis Will E. Hayes, Acting Dean of Men, University of Califomia at Santa Barbara Endorsed: Thomas L. Broadbent, Dean of Students, University of California at Riverside Loda Mae Davis, Associate Dean of Students, University of California at GOVERNING BODY lContinued from Page 13 that a total of S190 of student body funds be allotted them for social ac- tivities. These activities would in- clude a swimming party to which would be invited the members of the Daily Bruin, ASUCLA officers, and members of the Cal Club. The esti- mated cost of this party would be about 365. Also included in their re- quest was a sum for a dance for the entire student body to cost about S100 and an additional S25 for a student body picnic. May 8 Swim Date The tentative date set for the swim- ming party is May 8. The other events would be scheduled later. The Student Affairs Committee recommended that the Apportion- ment Board allot the money requested by the Social Committee. The Council also recommended that the Apportionment Board allot an additional S75 to the CUB so that it may continue its operations. The proposed Student Year Book also came in for some discussion. The question was raised whether a non al charge should be made for book. It was suggested that perh 311.00 was a reasonable chag Methods of financing the book vi discussed. Pete Van Vechten mo that the matter be remanded to Publications Board for further st with the recommendation that ' Board look into cost of binding Q the possibility of ads. The motion carried, AWS Pres. To Sit In The Council agreed that the 1 president of the AWS should be vited to sit in on the Council m ings in the future. The Council appointed Pete ' Vechten and Al Bielskis as a com: tee of 2 to investigate the possibil: of a Freshman week and of a sp sor system. The results of their vestigations will be submitted toi Council the 14th of April. Al Bielskis then made the mol that the meeting be adjourned. It decided that the next meeting w bc held at 7:00 a.m. this co Wednesday. The meeting was joumed. sid 1 3-11- T'! ' ifil as S DRIVE IN RESTAURANT 13th 8. Market Streets Riverside IN CASE YOU DON T KNOW IT YOU RE CONNECTED fN Riverside Approved: Robert Cordon Sproul, October 8, 1949 On April 14, 1954, instructors SMALL will have reported all grades of P I A N 0 S D and below resulting from Mid- terms. Beginning Tuesday, April 20, students may call at the Reg- istraris Office between 9:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. to inquire if they have been delinquent in any courses, and if they have, to re- ceive m i d t e r m delinquency Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. S5 a mo. up G-ossett's - 4024 7th og .1-N W. Wx fa: notices. 9 . 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I I I.:.f.:.:.:.5:-:5:E:-322-52ag,w:I : I I , , :- :::,:4:- 5'1'2'l'C'1'I'l5'?+ 34i'PtI:I:2:25i7: :I:I:I:I:I:I:1:ii:f:l:I:7:2-:-:-:-:-:-:4:f:-:-:-'-:-:-a:-:-:-:gg , -:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:Q-'---'-' v- ''4:23Z g5gm5gk.I4.55.2. .,54.5.1.5:.:.3.3.:.:.:.:.5.g.-:4.---IggmIv., 4 -.-.-.3.5.:.,.:.:.:,,,I,I.CII . E5:E:E1E:E:Er?1E2E1S1E1E155r5:5151E1525152i1E1ErS1ErirE2ErErE1E2E2212222525123525221::ifzrirififififiriftirif f i : i i ' ' 1'12f4f'11 - . I - I --zr:::::1:2s:3 :3:I:f:-:T: ,3a15S5E555Q5E5E5E5E5E5EE2EErE2rEirE32E1E1ErE:ErE2ErEr21ErE1E52225:2251525122215E132Eririri2241212rE25ErE1ErErEitS'11EE:Ersigigsigigigtiigrggxgafz,.::3:g:,:,:,,,gE55gi3 'his a scene in the Canyon Crest housing area adjacent to the UCR campus. If current legis- rtion is passed in Washington, it will eventually become a part of our future dormitory system. l. I Riverside, California, April 16, 1954 No. 9 iversity May quire Canyon esl' Home Area By W. R. Williams cquisition of the Canyon t housing development is 's most important pending ram, said Provost Gordon atkins in an interview ear- this week. He went on to hat it will fill the gap un- ormitories can be builtf, e development Watkins was 'ng of is located just north and e east of the campus. It con- f 275 permanent dwelling units acres of land. new bill, currently on the con- onal floor in Washington, would, sed, give the University's Board egents first priority in bidding e property. Congressman john ps and his administrative assist- fonner Riverside attorney Don s, have done much to insure ge of the bill that they formu- along with California Senator m Knowland, Senator Thomas el, and Congressman Harry ard. An older bill gave three interests first bidding privileges. the bill is passed by the Con- fand according to the latest from Phillips it should bel the ,rsity would set to work improv- :ie property which might later amed University Gardensv or gersity City. Yearbook To Be On Sale Soon A word to the wise . . . UCR's first yearbook will go on sale-ad- 18 and will last until May 8. The price per copy? Only ONE DOLLAR for vance sale, that is-the week of April a truly historical for is it hysteri- cal? l piece of literature. The yearbook will contain copies of this yearis CUB and also supple- mentary pages, and will be bound with real binding. The title will not be known until the final choice of a mascot is made. The housing units would be avail- able to faculty members on the as- sistant professor and instructor levels, as well as to corresponding ranks in the Citrus Experiment Station and to non-academic personnel. Students, especially married C-I's and their families, would live in the houses on a dormitory basis. Central eating facilities are also being considered as a vital part of the unique plan in university housing. The houses were originally built in the Canyon Crest area for March Field personnel and their families. However, as Watkins pointed out, they are no longer needed or used by that installation. Even if we didn't seriously need the dwellings now, he said, the University should control the area so that it won't de- generate and affect adversely campus growth. Griller uartel- To Play in Gym Next Friday Nite By Ruth Pertel The Committee on Drama, Lectures, and Music is present- ing its first major musical pro- duction, the Griller Quartet in a concert on Friday, April 23, at 8:00 p.m. in the UCB gym- nasium. The Griller Quartet is reputedly one of the best in the world. They have been playing together for 25 years. They were the official Royal Air Force quartet during the last war and gave many Lunch Hour Be- citals at the National Gallery in Lon- don in spite of enemy air attacks. They also played for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth. At present they are the official quartet for the University of Califor- nia at Berkeley and have been in residence there for four years. The Griller Quartet will play the Quartets by Haydn, Beethoven, and Bloch. Bloch's Third Quartet was written especially for the Griller Quartet and is dedicated to them. Mr. Edwin Simon will present an informal discussion and demonstra- tion on the Beethoven Quartet, Opus 59, No. 3 on April 20 preceding the concert. The discussion will be held in the library Seminar room at 4 p.m. Tickets for the concert are on sale in the UCB book store. The price of the tickets is: adults, 31.25, students, 3.755 and married students may buy two seats for 3.75 each. Coffee and cookies will be served at the end of the concert. Eight or ten ushers will be needed for the event. Any student who is in- terested should contact Shirley Hine, telephone 11611-I. Students who serve as ushers will be admitted free. Work Al' Early Morn Meeting By Mary Howard The fourth meeting of the Student Affairs Committee was held at 7:00 in the morning on April 14 in the Social Sciences building. ASUCR President Chuck Young called the meeting to order and the minutes of the previous meeting were read by the secretary, Pat Sparkman. 72 Mascot Names Submitted Vaughn Blankenship gave a report on the mascot contest. As the contest will be over on April 23, the final list of five names will be ready by Open House on April 25. About 72 different names have been submitted, however, very few of these have come from members of the student body. Chuck Young reported on progress made toward a yearbook for this semester. The committee appointed for this decided to request S150, which would go toward the cost of binding the book, and also charge one dollar per copy for the book. AWS To Sell Yearbook Pete Van Vechten suggested that the AWS be in charge of the sales campaign, this suggestion was adopted. Yearbook sales will last un- til May 7. The Budget Committee said that they had investigated the need for a mandatory fee for student body funds and had found that an amount between five and ten dollars per semester would be necessary. It was decided that the subject would be brought up before the student body at their next meeting and that the final choice of amount would be made by secret ballot. Frosh Week Planned Pete Van Vechten and Al Bielskis reported that, according to their in- vestigation, a Freshman Week would be a good way to let incoming fresh- men meet each other and become acquainted with UCB. They also sug- gested that the Freshman Week be co-ordinated with the AWS' plans for sponsoring incoming freshmen. The committee will meet again this week to work out more detailed plans for this activity. April 15 Is Charter Vote The president announced that the student body would vote at the April 15 meeting on amending the charter to seat the AWS and AMS presidents on the Student Affairs Committee. Joe Pitruzzello suggested that someone find out if the Student Health Service could stay open late on the days when there were science labs lasting until after five o'clock. fContinued on Page 41 Sgt. Schroeder of the Univer- sity Police says that it is illegal to place stickers on the rear windows of automobiles. Stick- ers should be placed on the right front window of the car in the lower right hand corner. Beat 6 The California Highway Patrol calls it Beat G. I call it Beat 1067, because last year there were 106 accidents in that area. This year there have already been 45. This beat is the area from Iris to Chicago Avenue and includes the Box Springs Grade adjacent to the campus. In the last six months there have been 8 highway fatalities in the immediate area of the Box Springs Grade. The last occurred last week. Three women who had been touring the campus were hit by a truck. Two were killed and one was seriously injured. Accidents occur with an almost monotonous frequency on the Grade. Monotonous, that is, until you or someone you know are involved. Fortunately, none of the UCB students or personnel have been directly involved in any of these accidents as far as we know. However, there is always the possibility that someone might be injured or killed using the Pennsylvania Avenue or North en- trances which have no stop lights. Both are bad entrances due to the very heavy and fast traffic on the Box Springs Grade at those two points. Over half of the accidents this year that have occured on Beat 6 have been between the hours of 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. when students are most likely to be using the entrances. The situation next year will be even worse since there will be so many more students and faculty members driving cars onto the campus. As a result, the CHP and the University Police are desirous that students should become accustomed to using either the Iowa Avenue and U. S. 60 to the Linden Street entrance where there will soon be a stop light or to use Linden straight to Kansas and then onto 7th Street which will take you on down town. -Jim St. Clair Tiptoe Through The Juleps We see from reading the papers this past week that a gentle- man by the name of Thomas Evans Biddle has finally cashed in, died, expired. Is this important? Judge for yourself. Biddle was one of the four surviving Confederate veterans. There is only one living Union Veteran. These two hard facts are enough to make anyone stop and think-I think. You see, it is entirely possible that the South may prove to be the ultimate victor of the Civil War. A lot of rabid Southerners are just holding their breath until Albert Woolson, the sole Union survivor who lives in Duluth and who is 107 years of age, turns in his stripes. If the Minnesotan should funhappilyl leave the battlefield before the Dixie trio, there will undoubtedly be much joy and juleping in the land of the boll weevil. -WBW Again San Francisco Have you noticed the swim- ming pool? Itis filling with Campus DeVQted water. Rumor has it that it will To Medical he ready for use next week. The University of California at San Francisco is devoted exclusively to the medical sciences. This campus which overlooks the Golden Gate and the Pacific Ocean became the Uni- versity Medical Center. Instruction is offered in the schools of Medicine and Nursing, in the colleges of Dentis- try and Phannacy, and in such aux- iliary fields as Physical Therapy. The Hooper Foundation for Med- ical Research is a renowned center of investigations in epidemiology. The new Medical Science Building, Uni- versity Hospital, and Herbert C. Mof- fitt Hospital, and the Medical and Dental clinics offer facilities for teaching, research, and service. THE UCB CUB Published Weekly by the Associated Students of the University of California at Riverside THE STAFF Editor ...... -.-.- ........ - W. R. Williams Managing Editor ............ Iim St. Clair City Editor ....... - ....... - .... Ianet Buvens Feature Editor ,.,..., L, .... Bill Anderson Ass't. Feature Editor ........ Ruth Pertel Society Editor - .... - ........ Mary Howard Adv. Manager .......... Marilyn Merchant Cir. 5: Proofreading ............ Ed Groven Columnist .L ....... Vaughn Blankenship Bus. Mgr. .-- .......... - ........... Bill Cowen Adviser ...... L ........ I Howard S. Cook, Ir. The CUB office is located in room 1223 of the Social Scggpcpes and Humanities g. ' 0 une MZ, . By VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP WITH APOLOGIES TO ARTHUR GODFBEY Somewhere between the senility of the eternal pension receiver and the lighthearted lechery of the teens we find a loathsome creature known to some as a juvenile delinquent, to 'others as junior, but known to 'all as a UCB student. A UCP- Student I-Hziness with ! under h i S, Idiocy with shoulders, the Hope of , Future with an Ens- book in his i Ockef- To mother, ,. is the eternal boy Scouts to father he is the composite of frustrated desiresg to science he is-perhaps-the missing link. A UCB student is a composite. He ihas the energy of a Bip Van Winkle, ! the shyness of a Mike Hammer, the racticabilit of '1 Don uixote the ir y - Q ' , 3 kindness of an Atilla, the imagination of a Bill Sykes, the appetite of King fKong, the aspirations of a Don Juan, and when he wants something it is usuall monc or water in his swim- , Y JY ' ming pool. I I He likes good beer. He likes bad beer. He likes called classes, double features, girls, and beach parties. He is not so hot on hopeful mothers. He avoids irate fathers. He hates sharp- eyed ushers, mid-terms, English lit- erature, and alarm clocks. Nobody but the UCB student can cram into one pocket a slide rule, a Marilyn Monroe calendar, Machia- velli's The Prince, a collapsible pool cue, a faked I.D., a ukelele, a can opener, a Jazzbo.Collins record, and last week's lecture notes from Cer- man I. A UCB student is a magical crea- ture-you can lock him out of your heart but you can't keep him out of Hummanities discussion. You can get him off your mind, but not off your attendance record-for such is the tenacity of youth. Might as well give up. He is your jailor. He is your boss -he, this no-account, misfitted, psy- chopathic, girl-chasing humanities student. But when you come into the class- room with only the shattered pieces of your hopes and dreams, he can make them mighty insignificant with those four magic words: Anybody here for chess? WORLD SITUATION. Now they have some bomb which might be de- scribed as the most. I understand that some cat has been spending his working hours figuring out some crazy way to cut down life expectancy to the minute number of Zero. This bomb makes the Butcher of Buchen- wald look like Fun Da at the Y Sunday School Social. In case you, haven't heard, it's called the Co Bomb. Four hundred of them ca kill every living thing on this t Earth. I'm thinking of writing a l entitled What to do in Case P- Breaks Out. SOPHOMOBE PARTY. The B: of Waterloo may have been won the playing fields of Eaton, but Battle of UCB Midterms was cerll ly shot to pieces by the sandy bea- of Victoria. You might gather th am speaking of the Sophomore p of last Saturday night. I am. T1 were forty-five people, ten pouncl weinies, five sacks of potato c fifteen weinie forks, one thousand dog buns, three bottles of relish, two chaperones. Chaperone is Greek word for Anyone here f bottle of 7-up and another ro chorus of 'Onward Christian iers'! I arrived early in the aftern complete with movie camera one-hundred feet of film. I proce to film Victoria Beach, myself, eral other people, one shaggy dog looked like a cross between my mop and John L. Lewis' eyeb and a birds-eye view of sand. last happened when I tripped the camera running. That aftemoon we all played leyball. Volleyball lost. That we ate, drank, and sang-mostly But I believe that a good time wa by all despite the fact that there so much sand in the food a mon of hot dog sounded like a cho Cement Mixer, Putty, Putty. THE SWIMMING POOL. guess is as good as mine. So fa only thing you could do in it be to have a marble tournament. closest water is the Colorado I suggest that in the meantime landscape it and make a mini' golf course out of the thing. If Kilmer were a UCB student he be temped to muse: I think that I shall never see, A pool without water-can that A pool that doesn't like to wear, Some glistening Aqua here and t Most pool's are filled by man, th But only God could fill that da hole in the ground. tIt may not rhyrne-but it con the meaningll I am still recuperating froi mid-term in Humanities IB. I daze, I failed to see the crysta clearly. If I had, I would have k that some great, good, man place was about to answer our l felt prayers. KNO, there is still to be a Humanities section. Not the good Lord could rise to the sion of doing away with that.J referring to the water that is fl in the 'old swimming hole.' We have a reading audience in h But I decided falong with 'Ye to leave in the above bit pure the sake of having something to plain about. Now let's see-in fifty th words or less explain why the ' God', concisely with reference hieroglyphics and Tibetian scripts that we have studied i last five years, became known Age of the Horn Bimmed ........ ' bstemious Bill Campus Iclol? By Ruth Pertel don't smoke, drink, or kiss girls, s how I keep my mind? So says Cowen. is tall, blond, and handsome in- rual was bom in Colton and has in the Colton-San Bernardino for most of his life. Ie graduated from Colton High ol in 1949. Then he joined the nes for three years. ls major interest is money. ll is a freshman here at UCR and not attended much college, to of, previously. is majoring in engineering. nth Dakotan ls R Treasurer l Anderson, UCR's first student treasurer,',l1ails from Bridge- r, South Dakota, and is a grad- of Dorsey High School in Los les. l is a freshman and will eventual- 'rve a history major. He trans- from liiversidc College and is ding advocate of creeping Proc- ls sparkling wit and subtle hu- add new dash and piquancy to fellow students' hard-working He is indentured at the UCB ry, where he occasionally files dicals. ' s brilliant scholarship and vital igence will go far in making the highly respected university intended to be. ides are still needed ,to ' occasional visitors the Jus. If you have any spare and would like to volunteer services please contact Dr. jack Hewitt Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard Dr. Jack E. Hewitt is the chairman of the UCB Physical Education De- partment, or, as it is better known, the Anti-Swimming Pool Association. He has attended the University of California, the University of Oregon, Columbia and Stanford Universities. Dr. Hewitt is a member of the American Association of Health, Phys- ical Education, and Recreation, and of the National Education Association. He has taught at the University of Oregon, Oregon State College, and the University of California at Berke- ley. r 1 Sophs Caper On Victoria Beach By Mary Howard The beach party given by the sophomore class at Victoria Beach on April 10 was one of the liveliest social events held so far this semester. The sophomores, under the direc- tion of Barbara Hanes and Ted Wheeler, set up the dinner fixings and, of course, waited on the stu- dents hand and foot, assisted by volunteer cooks-Joyce Lillibridge, Babs Cracknell, and Bill Nelsen. Some of these brave souls had ven- tured onto the beach as early as noon and had run around scaring people with movie cameras. Vaughn Blankenship led the party in songs and in several new school yells which had been thought up earlier in the aftemoon and which utterly fascinated the chaperones, Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Eisman. After consuming large amounts of hot dogs and marshmallows and a large variety of soda pop, the mem- bers of the group gradually wandered home, agreeing that a mellow time had been had by all. About forty-five people, both UCB students and guests, showed up. SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th IN CASE YOU DON'T KNOW IT . . . Each month the University of California publishes a bulletin entitled, California Agricul- ture. This bulletin is devoted to articles of interest to agricul- turisls throughout the State. About half of the articles in the April edition are devoted to the Citrus Experiment Station at Riverside or are written by members of the CES staff. 2 ' :si'f: Eif.ir.-.f.,z.- .::- , f-ttgisii sz ' 1. 1:25 fi E frlffs I' E I mx . 3. , WN -It 4: . ,:,:p, 1.15 -111:15 rw '--:Y 1-MN. 2 , - v 25215: ,E +112 1539 :-155325 3+ ...M-..-. . - 4- ., . -.., , -' f-g.i:i ?,, -::i :gt f 3:5!:.,'. :-fi-:Q -lf:' f'52-.3 ':,.5' A 515 -Izstggrfefzfaliv-:. . . 1.4 11215, 55:55 . 22 .2.53 T1 ' ' 'li-.1 ' if ' fzf. - f- 51'-r 3 Nl:-2 5' as e N s rx X c 'S X S ' cgxfz isp z' ' N I' Xni NS as , L W 3545- 'A m t 'Q , D --Shin. 1, 2 . 5543-' ' . ' -5?i3 ' J 0 x1t'fv:g P'-H6 m ,f,,.Ae? ' ' sfftxrsf., sggjs, I ' v- ts 4 -.. ft .. -. W x --.IM-. ,ni s asv pe,-. jfsxv x A . st t .5 V x 1 . vi X ,Xa ., .tx - ,. Aw 4'i3 ' sis f' 5. cv tix 1 o,,-.Q 8 , . X 3' 'aff-51 ,12 2- :P 'Q I is 'Q if' 3324 , S' ' . :af X. at x ' 45 i-gz I as ip . . Y N 4 'I' 2 R -. E' for I t -. 5, -. ,I-5: Q ag .W--bf gig -fig? :-: FSE:-:g:5:2:2:5:3f:g.Q'.,. .1 - y :,x' 1355:-:iz-3:11-:-:cat-:Pr 52552 153:12 5EEQEfif13:g:1:5:5:5:5:- .t5i5i5i5i?5f5E5E5f5E5E3E5E5i5I iii- 2 K 'igiiiiiililiiifEIE2EIE12155'i'5f -.P-Nw? ZL '357i5g5:g:-:'-Ln'-4,.' 1 iv F:L,,,--.-'r- ., - 9,1 1--1 - 3 f , - ' ' ' I v ' j A . - 4 v- ,I x , ,S I 'X 4. - . . MEHYL- 1. r 2 ,- mlm' 'X gff - . ,'- X I 4. nn -1 3.-7 ' in . -cxwu.. 1 I -. v.M,a. Y. , . YOU'RE CONNECTED ard Cook, Public Informa- fN Officer, in SS 1349. TO X , N TIIICK MID T-Illll yllllll 5 W i ll - 7 y il 0I'lll For That Important Date I 4 E AN ORCHID comer it-gig X ' 0 U 'D Q 'mnrs me sm: Luo . . j Q IN CASUAL TEXTURE , J - Sport Coats This rugged looking soft-to-the-touch tweed - ' is smartest in new blends Qc ' N of Charcoal tones. HARRY E. COSNER p QRCHIDS i f E2 Msoamu-ocsoo Telephone 4481-W F0 R NIA 3869 Main Street 2 Grand Ave. Riverside is Riverside I 'Average Student' Scholarship Fund Donated School A new S1000 scholarship for a good average student at the Uni- versity of Califomia was announced this week by the trustees of the Al- bert B. Cutter Memorial Fund. The scholarships will extend over the four years of the reeipientis course at UCB, payable S250 yearly. The student selected by Provost Gor- don S. Watkins, acting through the campus scholarship committee, must be one with leadership, an interest in citizenship and sufficient industry to indicate that he or she will obtain a degree. ' The provost was notified of the Cutter Fund boardis action in a letter from' Mrs. Helen G. Lawson, 4509 Brentwood Avenue, executive secre- tary of the fund. Dr. Watkins replied: You may be assured that we shall do some careful screening and select an excellent young person as the beneficiary of this splendid contribu- tion. May I say that I am particularly gratified that the recipient of the scholarship may hold it for four years, provided satisfactory scholar- shi and de ortment are maintained P c c . 'Plug will make the scholarship a great- ly coveted one. Mrs. Florence E. Flaherty, pres- ident of the Cutter Fund, said the fund was established by the late Mrs. Cutter in memory of her husband. Following Mrs. Cutter's death, Su- perior Court Judge O. K. Morton in 1932 established a board of trustees of the fund. Present members, aside from Mrs. Flaherty are D. S. Bell, first vice-president, John E. Dole, second vice-president, john. M. Ache- son, secretary, and Rita A. Mackey, treasurer. A laboratory is now being built at the Citrus Experiment Station to provide scientists of the Entomology Department with adequate facilities for com- pounding insectisides. According to Dr. Robert Met- calf this is the first laboratory of its type outside of private in- dustry. It is being built at a cost of I S30,000. MEXICAN FOOD Mascot Ideas' Keep Rolling In Following is the complete list of names submitted for UCR,s mascot as of April 13, 1954: Bearcats, Rocks, Rattlers, Rams, Sunbears, Pandas, Sun- dogs, Red Raiders, Boxers, Rangers, Bobcats, Scorpions, Sheiks, Caballeros, Cubs, Friars, Buffalo, Golden Eagles, Blue- jays, Golden Cubs, Cubbears, Vaqueros, Lynx, Bobcats, Pan- thers, Badgers, Iaquars, Falcons, Stags, Bisons, Beavers, Golden Beavers, Golden Foxes, Arabs, Rovers, Ramblers, Bullfrogs, Muskrats, Gorillas, T i g e r s, Lions, Grizzlies, Prospectors, Condors, Diggers, C a m e l s, Aphids, Orangemen, Warriors, Bondsmen, Pioneers, Crusaders, Gamecocks, Cachorros, Rebels, Cavaliers, Knights, Possums, Honey Bears, Stallions, Water Buffalo, Kodiaks, Hawks, Val- encias, Gila Monsters, Chihua- huas, Pelicans. 9 of Riverside MIQSES' 1 WOMEN'S Fashion Clothes V 3855 MAIN DON CREE MEN'S WEAR for Social Affairs Board Planning Springtime Dance By Mary Howard The UCR Social Affairs Com- mittee under the chairmanship of Bill Kassel, student body vice- president, held its first meeting April 7 to make tentative plans for this semesteris student body events The group decided to plan one dance with a band sometime after spring vacation The type of dance has not been definitely decided yet but it will not be formal Plans were also started for some outdoor party such as a beach party SAC ACCOMPLISHES lContinued from Page ll Dean Broadbent said that he w- see about the matter. Five Socials on Fire Vice-President Bill Kassel rep on the meeting of the social ai committee. He said that, as five s events had been tentatively pla for the five weeks after spring tion, the social affairs com should become a co-ordinating mittee more than a sponsoring g- for social events. He said also the social calendar for the re the semester would be voted o his groups meeting that afterno or fi picnic The latter will be when Cal Club comes out to B side to make plans for buildr C on one of the Box Sp Mountains above UCB X l ii- RUBY S 13th 8. Market Streets DRIVE IN RESTAURANT Riverside Trunks designed for real swimming pleasure MCGREGOR MCKEEVER .IANTZEN Ralph DeMarco' Young Men of all Ages A a - :TZ - 3.95 to 6.95 6 1 ,HCT . L ' ' A'-,xglgf 3937 Main sneer ' I H9 -f-- I 'il4F5i., f Riverside, California W A . ,'.l.1Q..-f 'lit ' -r f-, A Phone 1-0658 sroize FOR MEN Tm-9 duiyllgiifixfiw' ?:lm3 ' Y Main at Eighth in Riverside - t ll Y lallllall ia---f'-A - , ,,, , -, li-I 5 EI-:il , l .flllilili'1EEmlBlimIl .fif?iii'Ql'Q.'y ' T1-i .-2112115 M 31,74 ' 'f Y- -T W.,-,-eil 1 V ' - , Student Affairs Committee Plans Election May 12 As a result of the Student Affairs Committee's fifth meet- Vol. 1 Riverside, California, April 23, 1954 No. 10 ing held Tuesday, April 20, in umphrey the Buffalo is inspected by ASUCR Treasurer Bill Anderson, Mary Howard and ackie Holyoke as a possible mascot. judging from Iackie's expression, Htnnphrey won't do. he final decision will be made by the Student Body May 13 in a vote on a slate to be selected y the Student Affairs Committee from the hundred-odd entries received to date. Deadline for ntries is 4:30 p.m. today in the Public Information office, 1349 SS-H. A lifetime pass to all arnpus athletic events will be awarded to the person suggesting the winning name. ay Tickets Recreational Dr. Spieth To ailable Soon r. William Sharp has informed the that tickets for the student pro- ion, H1480 and All That will be able in the Dean of Students Of- from Monday, May 3, through sday, May 6. dents are urged to pick up their ts as early as possible since any ining tickets will be used to it the invited public. Each stu- will be entitled to two tickets. ket must be presented before you gain admission to the play. e program will include the ieval farce, Pierre Patelanf' ing Dave Miller as Master Pierre, Nelsen as Draper, Pamela Pay- as Gill, Francis Mason as Shep, Dr. Jack Beatty as the judge. r. Sharp as over-all director is g assisted by Hal Telford and Moretti. Hours For Pool Are Announced Dr. Jack Hewitt has announced that if all plans go according to schedule the pool should be ready for recreational swimming this week. The present schedule calls for recreational periods every afternoon of the week. The following schedule has been tentatively adopted: Monday and Wednesday, 12:15 to 5:45. Tuesday and Thursday, 12:15 to 2:30 and 3:15 to 5:45. Friday, 12:15 to 5:45. The gymnasium, swimming pool, diving area, sun decks, and dance room for men and women are open to all registered students for recrea- tional play and exercise with or with- out University credit. Faculty and non-academic employees may use the gymnasium upon the payment of the 62.00 gymnasium privilege fee. Lecture May 6 Dr. Hennan T. Spieth, Professor of Zoology and Chairman of the Divi- sion of Life Sciences will speak Thursday, May 6 at 1:30 and again Monday, May 10 at 8:00 p.m. on Evolution, The Colden Thread of Biology. Dr. Spieth, a specialist in the field of entomology, has attended Indiana Central College and Indiana Univer- sity. He has taught at Indiana Uni- versity and at the College of the City of New York. He is a member of Sigma Xi, the scientific research fraternity, and of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. He has written many articles on various entomologi- cal subjects, especially the fruit fly. the home of Dean Thomas L. Broadbent, an election will be held Wednesday, May 12. Items to be presented to the ASUCR for ap- proval will include the proposed mandatory student activity fee, the selection of a mascot, and the selec- tion of AWS Head Sponsor for Fresh- man Week. On the latter item only the women students will be allowed to vote. Thursday, May 13, at 1:30 p.m., an ASUCR meeting will be held in Room 1000 of the Social Sciences Building. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss and adopt, if possible, a revised charter which will be pre- sented to the student body at that time. During the meeting the proposed mandatory fee came under discus- sion. There was talk that perhaps it would be best if two sums were pre- sented to the ASUCR for approval. These sums are 510.00 per semester or 87.50 per semester. Al Bielskis and Pete Van Vechten presented to the Committee pro- posals regarding Freshman Week. It was suggested that Freshman stu- dents be required to perform various feats such as memorizing all the campuses of the University, the divi- sions of the College of Letters and Science and of the CES. It was suggested that Freshman Week be considered an effort to ac- quaint new students with the Uni- versity and to assimilate them rather than making it a week of hazing. The Associated Women Students will select a Head Sponsor for wo- men students who will have over-all responsibility to see that they are acquainted with the University and with each other. , The proposal was made that the sponsor system should continue for the full year rather than for just one week. The Mascot Committee will hold a meeting at 4:30 today with Provost Cordon S. Watkins in an effort to reduce the present number of mascot entries to 25. At a later date these 25 names will be presented to the Student Affairs Committee for furth- er reduction to five. These five names fContinued on Page 41 The Physical Educaion De- partment has announced that the swimming pool will be open during vacation. The hours as announced are from 12 to 5:45 Monday through Friday. Life- guards and locker room attend- ants Will be on duty during those hours. I Activities Fee Under Discussion The ASUCB must soon make a decision concerning a manda- tory student activity fee. This first semester the University authorities allotted us sums for student activities such as the newspaper, yearbook, dances and the like. However, it is doubtful that the University could or will grant us such moneys in the future. Then too, it must be remembered that we have had to budget rather carefully even this semester so that we would have suffi- cient funds for all activities. Consequently, the Student Activities Council has prepared a measure to be submitted to the student body as a whole that will establish a S10 per semester mandatory student activity fee. There has been some discussion heard both pro and con on this measure. As a result it was thought that certain aspects of the measure should be clarified. First. The plan of the Student Activities committee is tenta- tive and subject to the final approval of the entire student body in a secret ballot. Second. The proposal calls for a MANDATORY fee. With the exception of the Berkeley campus, the branches of the Univer- sity have made their student activity fee compulsory at registra- tion. UC, with its large enrollment finds it unnecessary to have a compulsory fee. Approximately 5071 of their entire student body buys student activity cards. This provides them with sufficient funds to carry on student activities. Third. The fees vary within the University. Davis and Berkeley charge 37.50 per semester, UCLA charges 88.00 per semester and Santa Barbara charges 810.00 per semester. The fee at Santa Barbara includes the full price of the student yearbook. The proposed 310.00 fee for UCR can be changed to one of the lower sums if the student body desires. However, it should be pointed out that anything less than 37.50 per semester would, of necessity, force us to curtail our activities and to budget them very closely. It is estimated that on the basis of an enrollment of 600 stu- dents the ASUCR would have an income of approximately 312,000 per year if a 810.00 activity fee were charged and 89,000 per year if the fee were 357.50 per semester. The student fee will finance such activities as sports, debate, drama, the Model U.N., the newspaper, dances, and many other activities. There is a need for a compulsory activities fee. The amount must, of course, be determined by the students involved. It should be pointed out that this matter must be decided before the end of this semester in order that we may have money for activities dur- ing the Fall term. The matter is one for serious thought and discussion by all students. If you have an opinion on the matter, either pro or con, the CUB would appreciate hearing from you. -Jim St. Clair Support The Yearbook UCB may or may not have a year book this semester. It de- pends on the students and how well they support the sale of year book subscriptions. If we have a yearbook it will include all the copies of our newspaper along with pictures of the activities during the semester. The school cannot afford to print such a book with- out a strong backing of the students, faculty, and other members of the staff of the University. The girls in the AWS will be in charge of selling the subscrip- tions for the yearbook. The book will cost 31.00. Those that want a book must order it when the AWS members are selling subscrip- tions. . The book will go on sale April 18 and sales will last until Ma 8. ylt will have a bound cover and will be a remembrance of the first semester of UCB's existence. I urge all of you to support the yearbook drive and to buy one from the AWS members selling them. -Bill Anderson ' 0 H406 , . By VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP Spring has been termed by some as that time of year when a young man's thoughts lightly tum to what a young girl has been thinking about year- That de- on the girl- WVC Eiiiimost C e I t i' i U 1 Y have t0 about the Z ii iiiiyouns man- He f 11 I 0 U S h ..... . P f i H 8- Summer, or whether the winds are i?l 55:'f715f5i35. :I' ' 1 -. howling their loudest and coldestJ Anyway, this week UCR is making ready to cele- brate what is loosely called 'Spring Vacation'. 'NSY 4 ' rf . 'M 0 For the life of me I can't figure out why it is called 'Spring Vacation'. To call spending a week at a local beach where it costs you a fortune to even find a place to stay, where you live and eat and sleep in sand, where your subsistance usually consists of several cases and a pound of raw weinies, where you spend seven days buming Hand .peeling-buming -.and peelingjunless you're like me and get the hell burned out of you the first time you stick your nose into the sunl, and where your sleeping hours range from 3 a.m. to no sleep at all, a 'Vacation' is certainly a supreme stretch of the imagination. While if we were much closer to 'Spring', we would be celebrating the fourth of July. I think they ought to close this factory down for a month so we could really kill ourselves-then may- be Henri Bergson tHumanities 2BJ wouldn't look so bad. But this is supposed to be the Easter season. I'll bet more guys have been stoned and more guys have been thrown in the hoosegow for the 'one for the road' during the 'season' of the Prince of Peace, than at any other time. This includes both the Christmas and Easter vacation holi- days. I turned my radio on to what I was a disc jockey show last as I was driving back from thought Sunday a cold, miserable day at Laguna. It tumed out to be a sermon. Some woman the inside walls of P. S. 32 was tell- ing a bunch of chanting people all about Easter. She had a command of speech and an accent that made some of the characters in Caldwell's Tobacco Road sound like Doctor's of History at the University of Cali- fornia at Riverside. It sounded more like a tobacco auction than a sermon. I hope I hurt nobody's feelings. I realize that Freedom of 'Sermon' is written in the Constitution but if you look closely you'll also find Freedom to Criticize and Gripe writ- ten there too. I just think there is a proper way to 'sermon.' who had probably never seen If you look carefully, you'll se guy with red hair leading the par to Laguna. He wants to be the one there, the first one to get bu and the first one to get sick on weinies. If you think he is stupid do I but what can I do about it? if there are any young girls aro who feel their thoughts 'lightly t ing' the number to call is Rlver. 11399-J. MASCOT CONTEST. Today the last day. We have pretty c to one-hundred names to pick fr Voting will take place on them so time shortly after Spring Vacat Al Bielskis had the best point I've heard. He brought it up last wee student affairs committee meetin If we pick the name, Arabs, t we could name the yearbook Tentflap. There is also some vo coming up after vacation on the laws for next year. There are three student body parties pla for the 'Flower' month. Besides t 'High School' day is coming up wards the end of May. We shoul busy. ALAS, POOR JULIUS. I tho I knew him well. That was be I saw the epic that supposedly ev one is talking about Kaccording idiots and Louella Parsonsl. In first place the picture should been called 'Brutus' instead of 'J Ceasarf James Mason, who pl anchor man on the famous three- Shakespeare comedy team of Et and Brutus fModern version: Gr Harp and Chicol, stole the sho you consider playing opposite lon Brando, being chased by gh and being stabbed in the gut 's ing' a show. Louis Calhern, who played 'I Caesar', -spent -.most .-of ,his 1 stretched out at the foot of Pomp statue and most of the rest of i the steps of the senate house 'Brutus' and 'Marc' fAnthony-I looking for Cleopatra but eviden she had the same kind of depend bus system that serves the Cit Iliverside-she never showed up.l bated pro and con over the body' Marlon Brando was his charming self. The closest he ca grinning was while a bunch of Ro soldiers were getting slaughtered. last picture I saw Mr. Brando in The Wild One. All through 'J Caesar' I was waiting for h' reach down, gun his motorcycle, r for a beer, and say: X Uhhhhhl It sounded more Tennessee Williams than Wil Shakespeare. ' Anyway, a lot of local citi were there. UCB was well r sented. They all seemed to feel same way I did. But if you like ing people stabbed and pope you'll love 'julius Caesarf tIn next column, I'll give you a history as to how Mr. Brando into the acting businessd THE END. The next time you from yours truly it will be aft week at the beach-and a good burn. But maybe I'1l get the laz out of my bones. For some re school is about as interesting as ing 'Origin of Species' at a burle show. es your automobile have pitted Windshields? Maybe it's from the Cobalt stored on the University grounds. Dr. Ellis F. allihan fright, checks for possibly dangerous contamination with a survey meter as john Weber removes a sample of radio tive cobalt from the underground vault. Weber is wearing lead gloves and a lead apron and is using metal tongs. Both men ar devices for detecting possible personal injury from radiation. .Of course, there is no possible danger from the cobalt to dents and faculty. dent Guides Il Needed For R Open House dent guides are still needed for pen house Sunday, April 25th. nyone has the time, and is in- d in serving as a guide, give names to ASUCR President Young or leave them in the of Public Information. ulty members of the College of s and Science will be in their from 1-5 that day to demon- the facilities of the buildings answer any questions visitors ave. tors will be shown through the , the gymnasium, the health and other points of interest on mpus. thousand or more visitors are ed that day if the weather is . It is expected that they will from all parts of Southern Cali- interest of the public in UCR rly shown by the fact that an ect notice in the Los Angeles stating that open house would ld brought over a 100 visitors unday. Frats For UCR In The Future The question is being asked about UCR's attitude toward national fra- temities and sororities. First of all, to be successful on any campus a fraternity system must be widely supported' by the student body. Only if a large enough number of students wish to join fratemities can they make a contribution to campus life. Tradition Needed The basis for the development of campus tradition and united student body effort is a strong student body organization. To build student govem- ment takes time and the concerted efforts of many people. When this is achieved and the UCR student body is large enough, the nucleus of a strong fraternity system may exist if enough students wish to support them. Since all other campuses of the University of California include na- tional fratemities among the groups recognized officially, it is clear that University policy is favorable toward the development of Greek letter or- ganizations. On two University camp- uses, University land has been set aside which can be leased on a long- term basis to national organizations for the construction of chapter houses. There is reason to believe this procedure could be followed on the UCB campus if student' interest is strong enough and fraternities are able to finance the building of houses. Study Made Dean Broadbent and Dean Davis have made an extensive study of fra- ternity development on other college campuses and have talked with many officers of national organizations, in- cluding National Panhellenic. The plan which has been found most suc- cessful on new campuses is for stu- dents first to organize local social groups. When there are a sufficient number of these groups to assure their accept- and unable to offer either to their members or to the University com- munity the services which are essen- tial to sound fraternity development. SHOP AT GABRIELS Styles For Young ance as a necessary part of the col- MGH lege student community, and also when the majority of them indicate they wish to affiliate with acceptable national fratemities or sororities, the A , . , .1 ,E H h campus is thrown open for organiza- ,if D .. ' T l tion. Each local club is then assured T ' 1. that it will be able to join with a national and that there is sufficient f '-Y lei support to build strong chapters. ' N Numerous colleges have found that 3827 Main SH-eef when national organizations moved onto new campuses too early, they I were in an exceedingly weak position p I iiiii ff i , i fT:.-- .- ' ,, ' ,im me .., 4....:fr-A- f ' if y , ,.1-if1L.a.Qlii1i1liiM1E'iiL!Qii! natal ,. I .'fe.1..:2.:1..2 -2 -1 I Vrhl me T? V . R'UBY'S DR'VE ' RESTAURANT 13th 81 Market Streets - Riverside Dr. Brokaw Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard The lone female in the division of Life Sciences is Miss Adelaide D. Brokaw, assistant professor of bac- teriology. Dr. Brokaw is a graduate of Swarthmore College and has attended the University of Rochester and Stanford University. She is a member of the Society of American Bacteriologists, Sigma Xi, and Phi Beta Kappa. Dr. Brokaw has been employed by Stanford University and by the Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove. Her main non-professional interest is music. ELECTIONS CContinued from Page ll will then be presented to the student body Wednesday, May 12, for ap- proval or disapproval. The AWS selling campaign for the yearbook is under way. All those interested in purchasing books should contact Pete Van Vechten, Vaughn Blankenship, Patty Huber, Janice Brumgardt, or Barbara Cracknell. Faculty of the College of Letters and Science should submit their names to the Division secretary if they de- sire a yearbook while non-academic employees should give their names to Mrs. Johns, secretary to the Dean's in that office. The Freshman Class is sponsoring a swim party for all UCR students to be tentatively scheduled for May 8. The class is desirous for securing local talent to perform during the party. If anyone has any talent they would like to display, contact Al Bielskis, Frosh President. Plans are also being made to invite the Cal Club and the staff of the UCLA Daily Bruin to the meet. THE UCB CUB Published Weekly by the Associated Students of the University of California at Riverside THE STAFF . 1 Editor L-.- ................ W. R. Williams Managing Editor ...- ....... jim St. Clair City Editor ... ...... -... .... Janet Buvens Feature Editor .............. - Bill Anderson Ass't. Feature Editor ...... Ruth Pertel Society Editor M..- ...... Mary Howard Adv. Manager - ..,... .. Marilyn Merchant Cir. 6: Procfreading L ...... .. Ed Groven Columnist ............ Vaughn Blankenship Bus. Mgr. - ........... - ............ Bill Cowen Adviser ..... .. ........ Howard S. Cook, Jr. The CUB office is located in room 1223 of the Social Scggptpes and Humanities g. p The Junior class is scheduling a fish fry to be held this evening from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. It will be held at the new Paradise Lake. Cost will be 81.00 per person and will include boating and swimming, the food expenses coming out of the student body fund. All UCB students are in- vited. The committee for the ar- rangements consists of Joe Pit- ruzzello, chairman, Loraine Eyer, food, and Tom Ryan, pub- licity. See one of the above about tickets. Tentative Plans Made For Inter- School Athletics Tentative plans for forthcoming athletic competitions are presently being formulated by the UCR coach- ing staff. Definite scheduling will depend upon enrollment next year and upon student interest and participation in inter-collegiate sports competition. Present plans call for UCB partici- pation in inter-collegiate basketball, tennis, golf, swimming, and cross- country. Whether UCR will actually be able to field teams in these sports is still undetermined. It is hoped that at least freshman teams in these activi- ties can engage in competition. If teams can be fielded they will be in the Southern California Inter- Collegiate Athletic Conference. This conference includes the University of Redlands, Whittier, Occidental, Po- mona and Cal-Tech. Dr. Hewitt is presently preparing a budget of next year's tentative ex- penditures. Much of the success of the present plans will depend upon funds allotted the Physical Educa- tion Department by the University and by the Student Body. SMALL P I AN O S Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. 355 a mo. up GosseTT's - 4024 7th ' University One Of Best In U.S The University of California its founding in 1868, has grown rapidly, perhaps, than any simil' stitution in the United States. 'i it comprises eight campuses! numerous minor centers of instru research, and public service in parts of the State. Full-time enrollment of more 30,000 students fplus part-tim rollment of some 100,000 Uni Extension studentsl and 12,000 ty members and employees m one of the largest universities ' world. It is also regarded by educa authorities as one of the mos tinguished-usually being inc among the first five universiti America in the quality of fa and of facilities for instructio research. It has the largest number of f members who are Nobel Prize ners Qsixl, the second largest me ship in the National Acade Sciences, the largest number of ty members who have won Cu heim Fellowships, the third American library in quality of tions, and was ranked second American Council on Educati the number of distinguished d ments which it maintains. Remember, the Griller tet of the University of Ca nia will play in the gymna Friday, April 23, at 8 p.m. dents will be charged admission fee to the conc l MEXICAN FOOD Ralph DeMarco' --1,151 H , . ' ,L.,'.' b fy'-' -' 5' , --L 114 G LJLJL rf . V, -die ' L ,7 . . X . 9 'HQ' N, 4,1 I, 2, EccnsnuE 1 , lrrnflllx. vvul- - '-gd.. I -4-ring ,. -, -f'i.,1L:5v- ' -' - . '-:Q . S . 9359 MAGNOIIA AVE. Wvfuf L ii ll ixlxsonvx W U DON CREE IN CASE YOU DON'T KNOW IT . . . YOU'RE CONNECTED f'N - We TO E x Sli as 2 f M? 7 9 X Q 0 9 Q 6 ' J We X - MEN'S WEAR 1 for .. of . Young Men of all Ages 7 I Riverside QQ N MIQSES' W0MEN'5 3937 Main sneer E f , Fashion Riverside, California W' C A LI Fo R N I A Clothes - 3855 MAIN Phone 1 0658 hief Metalsmith Robert A. Stuck is shown here shaking hands with UCP1's own Provost Wat- lns when he and Chief Aviation pilot Ira Shellhart landed their Hillercopter on the campus st Monday morning in an effort to seek additional pilots for the Navy's Air Cadet program. '-Laws Meet th Approval 1 Committee By Mary Howard me UCB Student Affairs Commit- lat its May fifth meeting, dis- d, amended, and finally ap- fffd a set of UCR by-laws drawn ly Vaughn Blankenship's by-laws mittee. e by-laws, which were approved limously, will be presented to the nt body to be voted upon at lday 12 election. e by-laws include listing of the nt body offices and committees qualifications for these jobs. An ritive Council, comparable to the nt Student Affairs Committee, is Eed and would consist of the R president, vice-president, sec- I, and treasurer, representatives- ge from each class, the presi- of the AWS and AMS, and the of Students lex-officiol. Er standing committees were set social affairs, appropriations, mt guidance, and student ath- . The possibility of an organiza- Joard was discussed, but not de- upon. e-President Bill Kassel reported ie Social Affairs Committee's , ss' toward the semi-formal l dance to be held May 2.2. He that his committee would make ' tContinued on Page 41 Vol. 1 Riverside, California, May 7, 1954 No. 11 There will be a meeting of all students interested in housing for the fall semester 1954. The meeting will be held Wednes- day, May 12, at 4:30 p.m. in Room 1203 of the Social Sci- ences and Humanities Building. Award-Winning Rubens Film To Be Shown May 20 The University Committee on Drama, Lectures, and Music in co- operation with the Division of Humanities will present a motion picture entitled Rubens May 20th, at 10:30 a.m. in the lecture room, room 1000 of the Social Sciences and Humanities Buildings. This motion picture will be shown during the regularly scheduled Hu- manities 1B lecture session. All stu- dents are invited to attend. ' Filmed in Paris, Madrid, London, Antwerp, Brussels, Munich, and Vien- na, the picture received first award tC0ntinued on Page 41 Frosh To Sponsor Swimming Party, Informal Dance The Freshman class is sponsoring a swim party to be held May 8, Satur- day, from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. in the swimming pool. All members of the ASUCR are cordially invited to attend the party according to Frosh President, Al Bielskis. The affair will be stag or drag. However, it is not possible to bring outside guests due to the re- stricted funds available for the party. Refreshments will be served during the course of the party. They will include hot dogs, potato chips, and soft drinks. , The committee in charge hopes to have infomial dancing on the gym floor during or after the party. Music will be provided by records. The committee has also planned some entertainment for the event. Vaughn Blankenship will play the piano and others will also attempt to entertain. However, it was pointed out that there is still a need for more entertainers. If you would like to par- ticipate contact A1 Bielskis. First ,Dramatic Production To Be Staged May 12-14 H1480 And All That, UCR's first dramatic production is scheduled to be presented May 12, 13, and 14 at 8:00 p.m. in the large lecture hall SS 1000. The program, a dramatic dialogue on art, music, architecture, and paint- ing in the Middle Ages, points up the controversy that existed during that t11ne period as to whether art should be purely religious or purely secular. By way of illustrating the prefer- ence for the secular art the play Pierre Patelanu has been woven into thc over-all production. The cast of Pierre Patelann stars Dave Miller as Master Pierre, Pamela Payton as Gill, Bill Nelsen as Draper, Francis Mason as Shep, and Dr. jack Beatty as the judge. Drs. Eugene Purpus, William Sharp, Edwin Simon, and Francis Carney will take part in the dramatic dialogue while Dr. Jerome Rothen- berg, students Corann McNair, and Martha Beckley will sing. Drs. Andre Mulecot, Adelaide Brokaw, and George Knox will ac- company them with music. These musicians will perform sacred and secular music of the Middle Ages composed by two medie- val musicians, Okeghem and Dufy. These two composers worked in Bur- gundy and in Paris. They are con- sidered two of the outstanding com- posers of the late 15th century. Active participants in the dramatic dialogue, singing, and play will be garbed in costumes appropriate to thc time period. Dr. William Sharp has had over-all direction of the program assisted by Drs. Purpus and Sharp. Hal Telford is acting as assistant director and Dick Moretti as production manager. Students may pick up tickets for anyone of the three nights in the office of the Dean of Students. Dr. Sharp has previously urged that stu- dents take only that number of tickets that they can use. A mailbox for Letters to the Editors has been established in the foyer outside the Coffee Shop immediately under the student bulletin board. Students who have any gripes about the newspaper or any other facet of campus activities or has any opinion whatsoever they may wish to express are urged to use the box. Letters must be signed with your name. However, if you do not wish your name to be pub- lished please state so. In such a case the editors will use a pseu- donyin to replace it. The CUB staff urges all stu- dents to use this as a means of communication with all other students and faculty members. Housing Moy Be Problem Next Year' An estimated 10,000 people walked through the UCR campus Sunday, April 25th. Faculty members and student guides were asked numerous questions. One of the questions most frequently asked concerned housing for the forthcoming year. Many parents were concerned with the complete lack of housing facilities on the campus itself. Many others were simply concerned that their kids are a little up in the air over housing next year. It was a fairly simple problem to house this semester's student body of 126. However, if next year's enrollment is as high as is anticipated the problem will become increasingly acute. There is little or no possibility that the University will have student dormitories available next year. Further, there is very little possibility that even should the University acquire the Can- yon Crest Housing area it will be available for occupancy next year. As a result, it will be necessary to find housing in the commu- nity for next year's students. Housing a potential 600 students in a community the size of Riverside is going to be difficult. The University has established rather stringent minimum re- quirements for approved student housing particularly for women students. These requirements must be met by the householder. Many potential quarters were rejected last year for not meeting these requirements. No complete solution to the problem can be presented here. Part of the solution may be cooperative housing such as has been established on the Berkeley campus. Certainly the cooperation of tl1e community, the fullest cooperation, is necessary. Again the attitudes of the students will be an important factor. Dean Loda Mae Davis has been and is working on the prob- lem. She is hopeful that the situation will not be too serious. In regard to the whole problem there will be a meeting of all students interestted in housing for the fall semester 1954. The meeting will be held Wednesday, May 12, at 4:30 p.m. in SS 1203. Interested students are urged to attend. -Jim St. Clair Haste Makes Waste Wednesday, May 12, the ASUCR will go to the polls to cast their ballots either in favor of or in opposition to the present mas- cot selections. Those selections are Corsairs, Condors, Bearcats, Bobcats, Golden Falcons, Panthers, and Rebels. I am sure that the committee charged with the selection of a final slate of mascots to be presented to the .student body have done the best possible job in the selection. However, it is my opinion that none of the above listed names are sufficiently worth- while to adopt as the mascot for UCB. None of them have any particular appeal to most of us. They are not too catchy, not too meaningful, and do not particularly well lend themselves to songs, cheers, etc. Is it absolutely necessary that we should select our mascot this semester? I should say no. After all what is the hurry? There are other universities and colleges that have taken several years before they have finally selected their mascot. San Diego State College, for instance, took two years before they finally selected Aztecs as their mascot name. Others have taken as long. I would recommend that rather than rushing into this selec- tion of a mascot we take our time. Let's wait until such a time as a name is presented that will have a more or less universal appeal to all of us. It would be far better to wait a while rather than rushing to select a name that we will all dislike, a name that has no particular significance where UCB is concerned. It is my recommendation, therefore, that on May 12 we cast our ballots favoring waiting until such a time as a name is pre- sented that will have an appeal to all of us or at least most of us. -by Marilyn Merchant ' 0 6786 . , By VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP The time draws near when UCB students shall select a mascot. If we lived down in Window Rock, Arizona the process of selecting a name would be quite simple. The Navajo Indians have simplified the tedious job of selecting names by an ingenious and -I feel-a meretorious process. In- stead 'of naming the kid John or james or Valadimir-or some other simple name-they merely take the prodigy in their arms, stroll casually to the door, cast their eyes around and the first thing that they see- junior gets the name. It may be 'Crazy Horse,' 'Sitting Bull,' or 'Little-Half-Moon-House-On-Hill,' no matter, junior is christened. I hate to think what results this might have if the same process were applied to UCB. Two weeks ago I sat on a com- mittee that narrowed the names down to the present number. I didn't feel satisfied then. I feel even less satis- fied now'-especially after talking to a few other dissatisfied people. I am still in favor of 'Arabs'l Out of all of the people I have talked too- most of them agree with me. We must select a name. Trying to tell an incoming student that this place is a college without having a mascot is like trying to convince Pedro that he hates chile sauce in his 'Chiwawa'. Half of the unifying force of a stu- dent body comes when they can proudly boast, We're the UCR 'Cottonpickers'. There have been two objections raised against using 'Arabs'- or leav- ing it on the list to be voted on. The first of these is that Coachella Valley High School is known as the 'Arabsf I am certain that this willnot harm the standing of UCR-considering the fact that Coachella Valley High School houses a mere two or three hundred member student body. As far as harming the high school, this I doubt. Many, many high schools are known as the 'Bears' and 'Bruins' and I doubt if it has hurt them, as a matter of fact half of them not only use the name, but the fight song of UCLA. The second reason is simple. The local businessmen and various civic groups are concerned lest the name 'Arabsi convey the meaning of desert and thus cast the stigma of Sahara, dates, camels, harems, and sand upon the city of Riverside. To this I say what is more appro- priate? Riverside may not be a sand dune-but it misses being an Oasis by a long shot-especially come the middle of July. I also ask what other college has the same name? None. I also reminded them of the colorful pagents we could have, pagents that could not be equaled anywhere in the United States simply because we have originality-and a name that every other college doesn't have. Lets keep all of these things in mind. The Stu- dent Affairs Committee may take some action to restore 'Arabs' to the list. I hope so. In Los Angeles people are e: rattlesnake meat. In Winnipeg are eating whale meat, and in F11 lmuch to the disgust of Pogo 6 teesj they are eating possum. French West Africa, they have a good deal further. They are ez politicians. A dispatch from Paris tells story. M. Victor Biakaboda, Se member from the Ivory Coast, fa to take his seat after the june re- Officials there are convinced all unwillingly, he has achieve supreme objective of every seeker. He has gotten right i his constituents. Other politicians be their poison, but he is-or x their meat. There is a clear warning her UCR politicians who don't wa put 'Arabs' on the list. The r snake meat supply is limited. meat is not available. Possum 1 soon palls. The student body eventually cast an eye on the St Affairs Committee. They may c the galleries not to appraise the ty of the speech, but the quanti the speaker, and in line with French West African prece- abolish the Student Affairs Con tee lg the simple process of demc ing e members. IN VINO VERITAS. In wine is truth-and a lot of other tfl namely one hell of a headache, heck of a good time, and one roaring Spring Vacation. Thou venture on safe ground when i that for many, Spring Vacation far from roaring. At least it good thing to keep the roaring until the Bromo Seltzer took You can't very well say what t fuel cars are run on during Spring Vacation Week, but five miles someone had to ge and blow the foam off the carb tor. Actually though, it wasn't a as all of that. As a matter of f was really great-if you discoun sand in the bed, the tar on the and the guy who misplaced 'Church Key'. All you have to is fifteen dollars, a fake I.D., pair of dark glasses. We spent part of the time o beach getting brown fI got bu and so did everyone elsel, part time sleeping, part of the time ing cards, part of the time a Long Beach Pike, part of the dancing, and the rest of the tim ing things that would make m hair do a fast tango to the F March, papa take a quick trip t hospital where the prodigy was to make certain that he had re the right junior, and grandma happily as she thought of gr and the day he asked her up t his 'Com Huskings' fModern Ve Etchingsl. You think up a lot of crazy too, when you're at the beac Saint Wino, Mama, Latin Mickey Mouse, Eighteen and Half Hole Pete-they all go do history, each with a red face, u' And you learn a lot of things li guy who said: I think that I shall never see, A girl refuse a meal that's fre A girl who doesn't like to w A mess of junk to match her h CContinued on Page Sl tudents or Faculty members o have been invited to give s describing the Riverside npus are encouraged to use ored slide films. These slides available in the Office of lic Information. rge Number Of isitors Creates eed For Guides unday, April 25, the residents of rside and other surrounding com- iities displayed their vital interest CR by coming to the open house ast numbers. .his interest is nothing new to personnel of the University. Every numerous visitors from Riverside other areas come here to take a at the campus. oward Cook, Public Information cer has the task of showing these rested people the campus. It is e a chore especially when one has iany other things to do. ' a result, Mr. Cook would like ave student guides available dur- the day to show these visitors the pusl : V ,is -not necessary that students volunteer for this job should stay 'e Public .Information Office at imes. All that is desired is that ents who are willing to guide rs should make their names and dules known to Mr. Cook so that ould contact them when guides needed. you have a free hour or two wouold like to help out a bit, e give your name and schedule ie Public Information Office. Out fContinued from Page 2D girl with hungry eyes not fixed, a drink that's being mixed. ch girls are loved by guys like me,- 'e who the hell would kiss a tree? iESH-MAN CLASS. They are g a party'tomorrow night. It celebrate the opening of the new ming pool. It starts at eight ck. Everyone is invited. Yours is going to bbe part of the en- xinment. I don't know how it ens, but some fool always makes mistake of asking me to do thing. Anyway, everyone is in- RLON BRAN DO. I promised to mow this guy got into the acting t is interesting to me, and you t find it likewise. During tryouts Streetcarf some guy whowwas g in the back of the auditorium making remarks. They were little things about how said ctcr could do much betterf' y, in a fit of anger, the casting ' asked this guy to put his where his mouth was. He did. he got the part of Stanley. This ow Mr. Brando broke into big That is Why' I am in favor of ninating all casting directors. Harper Said To Be Offering Bop Lessons Free If you are interested in bop, George Harper is the one to see. He said in an interview this week land I quotel I will give tfree?l bop lessons to any one who wants them. unquote. How does one find this bop master? Well, you can't miss him. He is six feet five, has brown hair and brown eyes, fseems he has long eye- lashes tool and can be seen driving about in a little green foreign car. This car can be distinguished from other little gieen foreign cars be- cause it has three Texas Aggie stick- ers on the windows and has a tank that carries six gallons of gas. George is a graduate of Riverside Poly High where he achieved fame as a varsity basketball star. He spent his last semester at Texas A 6: M. He is majoring in pre-med and hopes to complete his education at Cal. His hobbies include basketball and hunting. I-Ie likes dogs but not cats. He likes girls that have short hair, preferrably blends it seems. What are his future plans? He's going to remain a bachelor. Well, George despite what your future holds in store, I know UCB will always remember you as the one who gave us the tradition of a friend- ly campus. Barbara Is Busy Being Freshman Class Secretary She might not know how to open a can of peaches, but Barbara Crack- nell makes up for it with her winning smile and personality. A native daughter of the Golden State, Miss Cracknell comes to us from Narbome High in Lomita, Cali- fomia. Barbara was student body secretary at Narborne and received the Ephebian award for her academic and leadership ability. As an elemen- try teaching major, she spent last semester at Santa Barbara University. Other than swimming it seems a favorite pastime of this popular co-ed is trying to keep a certain car fill in one piece and in running condition. She calls this monstrosity Tuddy. At present, Barbara is secretary of I wish to take this opportunity of thanking all University per- sonnel-academic, non-academic and students-who gave so gen- erously fo their time and effort in assisting at the Open House on Sunday. From numerous per- sons have come expressions of appreciation and gratitude for the courteous attention received on the campus. In expressing to you my own gratitude I know I am also reflecting the apprecia- tion of the President and the Board of Regents. Cordon S. Watkins Provost P. E. Department Schedules Intra- Mural Tourneys The Physical Education Depart- mcnt has announced that there will be a single and doubles badminton and table tennis tournament held for all interested UCB students. Inter- ested students may sign up for the tournament in the locker rooms bulle- tin boards. The deadline for signups will be Friday, May 14. The tourna- ment will start the following Monday. Dr. Wayne Crawford has also an- nounced that if sufficient interest is shown by the ASUCR plans will be made for a swim meet to be held late in May. Students who are interested should contact Dr. Crawford at their earliest convenience. At present members of the CES and College of Letters and Science faculties are well into the faculty in- tra-mural badminton tournament. The doubles and singles, double elimina- tion tournament has produced the following winners from the faculty: Drs. Frank Lindeburg, Wayne Craw- ford of the Physical Education De- partment, lack Clark, University Con- troller, Pat Murphy and J. G. Wilson of the Business Office, F. T. Bingham and Dan Aldrich of Soils, I. O. Or- tega and J. O. Complin, Entomology and Dr. Zentmyer of Plant Pathology. In the menis doubles toumament j. C. Ortega and Dr. Vincent of Plant Pathology, I. A. Brusca and Bob Burns, Frank Lindeburg and Wayne Crawford, Jack Clark and Dr. Zent- myer won their contests. . Dr. Eugene Purpus Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard One of the most well-known pro- fessors on the UCR campus is Dr. Eugene R. Purpus, assistant professor of English in the division of Humani- ties. Dr. Purpus attended the University of California at Los Angeles and has taught at UCLA, Louisiana State University, and Pomona College. He belongs to the American Asso- ciation of University Professors and the Modem Language Association. Dr. Purpus is very much interested in dramatic production, direction, and acting. He may be seen in the forth- coming production, l48O and All That, which will be presented on May 12, 13, and 14. Fire Damaged Note Books Sale 51.99 Values to 57.95 Hillmetfs fuggage 84 Men's Wear 6566 Magnolia Ave., Riverside the freshman class and is working ' SHOP AT GABRIEI-S hard on plans for the freshman swim- K ming party, to which she invites each and every one of you. 9 Styles FOI' Young MEXICAN Foon f Men Ralph DeMafeo' of g 1 Riverside an Misses' . g 3 ,L , o ,N f 8 S Y' 1- '. ' ' M 9122? A 'l ' ' nh 1 el 1 . WOMEN S - MENS Wfazf.-5 'L-.Lipid Lccnnw . R 1 v E. P su., ,D E-lsr.. Q 'Iii-I by Ff7f5gLgp1r- Fashion ' . if ilkrif-it Ciofhes 3827 Main Street 90S9.NtAN6NO'lIAAVE. 930315 1, 3855 MAIN UCR To Host High School Students Friday, Moy l4 On May 14, from 2:00 to 5:00Ip.m., UCR will entertain high school and junior college students from all Southern Califomia. A student-faculty committee com- posed of Bill Kassel, Janice Brum- gardt, Dr. Donald Corbin, Dr. Robert Wild, and Registrar Clinton C. Gilliam have made arrangements to show the campus to 300 or more interested stu- dents. Posters and lettcrs from the office of the Registrar have been sent to all high schools and junior colleges. Re- sponses from these schools indicate that interest in UCR is high amongst the students. A program has been planned for that afternoon. Refreshments of orange juice and cookies will be served on the veranda overlooking the swimming pool. Recreational swim- ming for the visitors has been sched- uled for that aftemoon. Students will be provided with the necessary equipment and lifeguards and locker room attendants will be on hand dur- ing the aftemoon. For those students not interested in swimming tentative plans for a dance have been made. At the beginning of the afternoon the visiting students will meet in the gymnasium to receive instructions for the tour of the campus and to meet Dr. john Olmsted, representing the Provost, who will briefly tell the students about UCR. ASUCR Prexy, Chuck Young, will also be introduced to the visitors. After introductions have been made and instructions received the high school and junior college people will be taken on a tour of the camp- us. Student guides will show them through all five of the new buildings. Special arrangements are being made so that students may see the language lab and laboratories in the Physical Science and Life Science Divisions. Information regarding anthropology, geography, and Subject A will be given to the students by the instruc- tors in those fields. Bill Kassel, ASUCR Vice-President has over-all responsibility for the tours. DON CREE MEN'S WEAR for Young Men of all Ages By Laws lContinued from Page D the final choice of band at their next meeting, and that members of the Student Affairs Committee would probably sell the tickets. Pete Van Vechten reported on the meeting of the Freshman Week Com- mittee. He showed the group two hat styles to choose from. It was decided that a blue and gold crew cap would be used. The hat would cost about 31.25 and be required of all new freshmen. Janice Brumgardt reported on yearbook sales, which have been very good among students. President Chuck Young announced that student body elections would be held May 12 to select a mascot, vote on the adoption of the new by- laws, choose an AWS head sponsor, and decide whether students would pay a mandatory student body fee in the future. Margie England announced that the final list of mascot suggestions was: Falcons, Arabs, Bearcats, Cor- sairs, and Condors. The winning mas- cot would be decided by majority vote. I Dean Davis Announced that the Citizens University Committee wishes to entertain the entire UCR student body at dinner at the Mission Inn, either May 20 or May 27. Dr. Pierce Honored Dr. W. Conway Pierce, chairman of the Physical Sciences division, was one of the nationis top 30 chemistry teachers invited by the National Sci- ence Foundation to participate in a conference on teaching and research in undergraduate colleges. SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th For That Important Date AN ORCHID CORSAGE HARRY E. COSNER Ten Thousand Visit UCR During Open House Sun Over 10000 persons among them Senators Nelson Dilworth and Lee Backstrand visited the UCR campus during open house last week. The vis itors who came from all over Southern California arrived as early at 9:00 o'clock. The doors didn't open offi cially until one and visitors were still inspecting the campus as late as 6:80 Due to the enormous crowds con ducted tours by student guides be came impossible. However guides were stationed at strategic points where they could direct the visitors to places of interest on the campus Faculty members were on h ind to demonstrate the facilities of the buildings and to answer the visitoris questions. Interest seemed to lie main ly in the mascot names, the housing problem, adult education, and the faculty offices. Many visitors mis takenly assumed that the offices were classrooms Ruben s Film COHl1DU6d from Page 1 1 thc most artistic motion plctur the year The award was grantc the International Film Festiv ll Venice Italy by the Intematl Committee for the promotion of Literiture ind Science through motion picturc medium The Siturclay Review of Li turc commenting on the film c '1 triumph of clarity beauty Thc commentary and ph graphy add greatly to an underst mg and appreciation of art fonn style The Commonweal maga said The film moves through s ful use of cameras from palntin painting 'ls it traces this master s s position is it studies Rubens jects and techniques Accompa by 'in English commentary the uals ictually flow and one can precifitc thc paintings anew is cfunem ciptures their movemcnt det ul The committec urges that all dents mtcrcsted in thc film attcn showing I la fr? u lv-ll '1 Hint ease RUBY S 13th 8. Market Streets DRIVE IN RESTAURANT Riverside IN CASE YOU DON T KNOW IT YOU RE CONNECTED fx I IM 'S Q5 ,- 3937 Main Street A 'QRCHIDS f 9 Riverside, California I II Telephone 448 l -W . I F 0 R N IA l-O 8 ' ' il' Q. X P one 65 5462 Grand Ave. Riverside , . C ' ' J IS I I I .I . I . . I I ' . c ' ' . I . I . . 1 . I . 3 3 ' ' . . I I I I. II.. I . . I - it, . . . . ' C ' I. I U . I I I . . I I I . I . , I I . . I. .. ,prflzgf Neil I, ,i II I IIIYI :I I 6 - '4f'j. -'.- N hil will W ll. -' I I s ' is an me ff i . , F .v II N l I SL.. 7'-7 1.--ev 4: i- .l.1-iff, I . 1 I TO I N qs -1 if 7 ' Qf il' if I '.i1i3g5'r If ill' il' D 7 i9 X u 5 0 0 ' 2 7 Qs- N f ' Q A l..I Riverside, California, May 14, 1954 No. 12 :using Situation For UCR uclents Next Fall Favorable Dean Davis explained to an interested group Wednesday that .pects for housing next fall will probably be favorable. Esti- lrig that between 500 and 700 students will be enrolled at UCB fall, Dean Davis explained that upon past experience approxi- zly 120 of these students would desire housing in the com- .1ty. . . It was pointed up that the possibilities for University operated ent housing were not too good. The University has no present s, for the construction of dormitories and it is doubtful that University will acquire Canyon Crest in time to be of use year. e meeting then tumed to a ssion of cooperative housing for nts. Dean Davis reported that had called several real estate :s in town to inquire about the -ibility of large homes next year. he basis of figures given her by -real estate agents Dean Davis ithat there would probably be ber of large homes available for nt rentals. According to figures inted the group housing would each student between 2820 and er month including all utilities. 'Donald Corbin, professor of mics, pointed out that the most ante prerequisite to successful rative housing is a willingness e part of students involved to rate with other students. Corbin also pointed out that ts organizing a cooperative for irst time would have to bring rchase, dishes, silver, cooking s, linens, etc. Other problems involve cooking, buying of house keeping and house- ement. stated that students living in ratives at Berkeley pay about er month or S200 to S225 per ter. On top of this they also approximately four hours per definite conclusions or decisions made at the meeting which was ed primarily to point up the difficulties inherent in the co- ive housing situation. dents are reminded that rthur C. Turner, Chairman Division of Social Science lecture Thursday, May 20, 0 and again, Monday, May t 8:00 p.m. 011 'Britain's ging' Role' World Af- e lecture is sponsored by ommittee on Drama, Lec- A and Music. dents are urged to attend. Students currently registered who wish to continue in the fall semester 1954 may register and enroll in classes by mail during the summer months. In order to accomplish this, an appointment for advising must be made with the student's division between Monday, May 24 and Friday, May 28. At the time set by the division, the student will repoit to his faculty adviser and arrange his program for the fall semester. On and after June 1, students may obtain from the Office of the Registrar the necessary ma- terials for registration by mail. This procedure should make it much easier for the continuing students to accomplish their registration and enrollment. UCR's' First r , Spring Dance To Be Held May 22 UCR's first annual Spring Dance will be held in the modern dance room of the Physical Education Build- ing, Saturday, May 22, from 9 to 12. Music will be furnished by Johnny Allen's 8 piece band. The dance will be semi-formal, that is, suits for the men and dressy dresses for the girls. The affair will be strictly dates only at 81.50 per couple. The theme, carried out by the decorations will be Summer Time. Tickets will go on sale this coming week. Bill Kassel, chairman .of the Social Affairs Committee, has an- nounced that there will be advance sales only. No tickets will be sold at the door. Faculty and administrative em- ployees are invited to attend. Three of the cast of 61480 And All That, Cleft to rightl Drs. Jerome Rothenberg, Francis Car- ney and Eugene Purpus, are shown here engaging in a scholarly disputation over secular and religious art forms. For a review of Wednesday's performance see page 4. Student Activities Lack Support e At the beginning of the semester students hollered for ac- tivities. We were all saying that the campus was dead because there were no social functions. Well, kids, funds have been slowly running out on affairs that have had very poor support! You asked for these functions-now support them. You say we have too much homeworkf well so do the old faithfuls who have been putting in their appearances. Do you want outside activities? If you don't, say so. If you do, for pity's sake show it. Let's be an organized student body, let's show a little spirit. D0 you want facts? We started off pretty well at the Presi- dent's Reception and the post-election party. How about the junior Class' beach party? Oh, we can find time for the beach. But there were only about 45 people present. One-half to two- thirds would be a good percentage if we had an enrollment of 1000, but let's face it-we haven't. Then the Sophomore Class Party . . . fifteen or twenty people. Hide your heads in shame. Last, but not least, the Freshman Class Swim Party had from twenty to thirty people dragging in at odd times. ' We have at least two more affairs scheduled this year. Let's see some good backing for them. What kind of a record do we want as the first UCB student body! -by Jackie Holyoke New Or Old The question has arisen, what shall we do for next yearis ASUCR officers. Should we retain the present officers or should we elect new officers? The answer to this question must be ar- rived at soon. Therefore, we should give some thought to this problem. There are many people who share the same opinion as I-keep our present officers for another year. I believe the officers now in office have done a commendable job thus far and would continue to keep up the good work for another year. These officers have hardly had time to give their jobs the maximum of the abilities. I certainly believe they should be allowed to finish the many jobs that have been started. These officers have made a good start in organizing ASUCR. I believe we should heed the saying, Never change horses in the middle of the stream. If we elect new officers they will have to start at the beginning of the present problems in order to find a solution. Why should we throw the progress of our present Council out the window after hey have put in so much effort and work? With these facts in mind I appeal to the members of the ASUCR for a vote to retain our present officers and give them the chance to finish the job they have started and have done so well. -Bill Cowen Dean Returns From Conference In Roanoke, Va. Dean Thomas L. Broadbent re- turned to the UCB campus after an absence of two weeks while attend- ing the convention of the National Association of Student Personnel Ad- ministrators held at Roanoke, Virginia, May 1 through May 4. While this was the first year the Dean attended he was active on sev- eral committees and panel discussions including the Committee on Reception and Hospitality, the Committee on Fratemities and a luncheon meeting dealing with problems concerning the organization of student activities ad- ministration. Dean Broadbent has reported that most of the deans 'present at the con- vention knew of UCR beforehand. These deans expressed particular envy at the opportunity present here to establish good working relations among all segments of the campus community, faculty, students, and ad- ministration. They felt that we have the opportunity to establish organiza- tions without the problems apparent on many of their campuses. For ex- ample, many campuses are having problems with fraternities with dis- crimination clauses in their constitu- tions. This can be avoided here. During his trip Dean Broadbent visited the University of Utah, North- western University, the University of Chicago, Washington and Lee Uni- versity, Tulane, and Texas Christian Uiversities to confer with adminis- trative officials of these campuses. Particularly, he was concemed with over-all organization of student activi- ties, with the ramifications of housing problems and with the methods of organizing and recognizing student organizations. ' ' 0 60116 1 f By vAueHN BLANKENSHIP California! The land where men are men, women are women. The land of etemal sunshine and the ever-green TV antenna that sheds nothing in summer and little else in winter-unless pop kicks hell out of the set. The land where you have to have at least two, haired daughters in governor. beautiful, blonde- order to become This is the land where jun- ior thinks that Santa Anita is a place mom goes to- take care of ., the washing, and the 'Burbank' is a zoo that pop goes to on Satur- day night to feed peanuts to the monkeys. Califomia, a land of Mexican an- cestry, Mexican architecture, Tiaju- ana, Mexican food and the place Will Shakespeare must have had in mind when he penned those immortal words, Is that your nose, Pedro, or are you eating another one of them dammed Tacos? The land of the Golden Cate Bridge, Lake Tahoe, Half-Moon Bay, the largest university in the world fwe pause briefly for a chorus of 'Hail To California'l, China Town- of which the famous Chinese scholar, Won Ho Hum said, Fifty-thousand Chinese can't be Wong! The place where movie stars count ex-husbands and wives on adding rnachines, Aly Kahn M-Cees a new quiz show called Is This Your Wife? and having two wives is known as bigamy, three wives is known as trig- onometry, and one wife as monotony. The land that everyone wants to go to and then once they get here they complain about everything, the weather, smog, traffic, and not a large enough unemployment check. The place where everything is com- mercialized-everything from dying and being buried to Christmas. If the author of The Night Before Christmas lived in California, he might be tempted to write: Mid honking homs and movie stars, The TV shows and cheery bars, The traffic cop at Sunset-Vine It's California Christmas Time. At Nome, Alaska way up North, Its Christmas Eve, the Twenty- fourth, And down 'round Argentina way, They celebrate on Christmas Day. But in the land of midnight shows, It always shines and never snows, Where everything is always bigger, And we have oranges, Hoppy, f .1 f , 'cvs 9 112252525fi222i2525?5fE552i?5?2?if5'ff 2 ,125525555355553feEs5555555IE22?Es:f5s55:zff2sS5ie2sE1: 25521: 2111.5 5555555 gig? 515:5:2cf:2:5:2:5:f:f:Q:5:5:5:5:5:f:,. .' ,.j:5:j:5:3:3:' 5155- ,:::::, 1:2:Ez5:5:2:f:2:3:f:5:5:5:2:3,5:'-: .:-gzrzj : ' , :q::: gsfffaizfeagg . . f , , :a a?zi,f:a,. :5:g:5q3:1.f:f-rE11':j,5E: sggsz-,ev 2555521 :5:s:e:3fi5?9Ef:s: :ease-f2. ..4:5SsSfS151 1:-.1:1:':7:f:' tiff:-. +1I3:5 N'P5fQU:.-13:-:-:-:-:::f:1:5 :5:5:5:5:i:i: ar::Q:1:1::5g.-1-ff::f:f:Sss-:fi-. ez:z:::2:r:r. -' :1.?:?:f:-'7:-. ':f:3:1:3:39PS:35: - -:-112111275221 Iii 5' :Q:2:2:Q1? :g.gf:Q:f:f:Zi:3:5 ':2 . :-:.:::':15:,:5:::::, 44:5 5:3:f1r:5s--.- - 5:k21: :-EIEIEWIHEIEQZ 35151 ':i:2-f12:TEISS. E:E:E:2::::.,.,.,.5:E:1:Q:' -' -:::C:f f:5 fi :5Zfif?Q5Qi'3'7'f,,If.,-.-- 5'71- Ft-i: T .Q :' 4 ::E-::fvs5f3-f2f:2i2i- stir' f Trigger, Kids never write to Old St. Nick, From Bullocks on Wilshire' they get their pick. The stockings are hung, the gas stove they deck, In hopes of a bigger pension check. And Santa won't come .on a sleigh or a star, ' He drives quite a souped-up, N T car. The old gent won't wear a h 'round his neck, He'll look more like Gregory Peck. -. He won't come on Xmas, his Q mates to reach, He spends his spare time beach, And when he runs short folding money, He wrestles on TV as Baron Ln 'th t Gablt on M: of g And on Christmas day wi Chiquita, He rides in the seventh Anita, But I heard him call out, 'eri- rode away drumming, Merry Christmas to all, an gold is coming! M5323 atb dRl THE MACARTHY have only one word to say friend, the junior Senator from consin, who has evidently never t of five-o'clock shadow. In the of the Bible it was considered I a Miracle when an Ass spoke. A THE SWIMMING PARTY. I late last Saturday afternoon, figl on avoiding the crowd. I could come anytime and avoided the cr For some reason the Freshman I sponsored affair left a great dei be desired-namel , a few people than attendled. The pa self was well planned, Miss I Boyer, local swimming star, ga outstanding performance of ballet, the chow was good, -a was the entertainment tAmenD. TIME OUT. I think I should time out now to pull an Edwa Murrow. I am going to offer sp anyone who would like to offer ' truly' constructive criticism. As as you try you never 'please al people all of the time'. A guy could ever do that would be the Distinguished Service Cros worshipped by politicians, joum and college students. So if I o you for good reason I invite y become a guest columnist an your views. I think 'Ye Ed.' go along with me. I try to be realistic about thi friend of mine told me recentl a couple of faculty members s him: Isn't that guy the one who that column today? Yes, Don't you think it got a lit of hand? Well, maybe so. I just try to things the way myself and c kids like me think-and talk. At I write the way I think and talk. Davis put it very nicely into for me the other day. - Well, I guess you write ' language that the kids unders Anyway, my invitation is op anyone. Remember! Tonight is th night you will have an o tunity to see UCR's first d production, 1480 and All If you have not yet attende sure to do' so tonight. ERS TO THE EDITORS THE EDITORS: -have observed a movement on campus to establish traditions, cots, and policies in the short od of this first term. I would like sk two questions and I would also 'to see the ASUCR give these tions some. serious thought: 1. at is the all-fired rush? 2. Why t traditions,-'mascots, and poli- ,- be established NOW? This ol is hardly ninety days old and ady many are expecting the ities of a campus ninety years .Let's slow down and build our pus with the goals and ultimate itions that only time will produce. 'tions grow, they are not formed. -Bill Cowen his is one opinion, certainly there others. If you have a contrary ion why not drop it in the CUB box in the foyer of the coffee ?-Eds. . THE EDITORS: ow do they expect to grow grass that aenemic-looking soil about new buildings? , -Curious e landscape architects advise us they have a secret weapon that completely rejuvenate campus il. Details cannot be disclosed at tiinelbut we are assured that nts- will become aware of the essaslsoon as it begins.-Eds. THE EDITORS: 'cent rumors heard about the us indicate that certain indivi- are displeased with the content ime Out, perhaps the most ar column in the CUB. hen questioned about the cause eir displeasure these individuals vague references to inferences erning the facts of life and cer- habits and social behaviors. They indicate that they believe the ment of these social aspects in column are not in the best of e disagreelv We believe that Time treatment of the above men- d subjects is meant to be hum- s and- should be taken in that er. The question might arise her. any treatment of these sub- shouldbe included in our pub- on. Why Not? I e are here to prepare ourselves ntering into the adult American ty where the fact of the exist- of these subjects is self-evident. e to face the existance of facts e we to be held in monastic- se- n? Let's keep Time Out as it n enjoyable and humourous Il. -Amused Students lated.-Eds. nopies of UCR's yearbook still be obtained by faculty -non-academic staffs of the If. s College and the CES. ,ies may be obtained from ,Public Information Office, I: 1349 for only 81.00 per k. The yearbook will include past editions of the CUB I6 pages of new pictures. i Among many other things the Citrus Experiment Station is noted for its fine library covering practically all fields of Southern Califomia's agriculture. Pictured here, Miss Mar- garet Buvens and Mrs. lean Lloyd look over a recent addition to the library. p The Office of the Registrar wishes to announce that final examination schedules are avail- able in their office. Students are asked to please pick up a copy. F rosh Sponsor Swimming Party The freshman class held its first party Saturday, May 8, with approxi- mately 35 students in attendance. Swimming, dance music, and en- tertainment were provided by the class. Entertainment included a div- ing exhibition by Bud Barton. Bud performed five basic dives including: a forward one-half somersault from a pike position, a backward somer- sault from a pike position, a gainer somersault from a tuck position. These dives were all from the high board. From the low board Bud performed a full twist somersault from a pike position and a cutaway somersault from a tuck position. Miss Joanne Royer gave a demon- stration of synchronized swimming consisting of her interpretation of Starlight. Vaughn Blankenship gave his in- terpretation of Grimmis Fairy Tales for Hep Kids. Patty and Linda Huber sang Red, Red Robin, Zing Went the Strings of My Heart. Al Bielskis, Frosh President, M.C.'d Educ. Program At UCR Clarified Answering numerous inquiries con- cerning UCR education courses, Dr. Arthur C. Turner, chainnan of the Division of Social Sciences of the new College of Letters and Science, Said yesterday the courses will cover basic subjects like child development and the history and philosophy of education. Emphasis will be placed on broad knowledge of fundamental subject matter rather than a superficial smat- tering of educational methods, he pointed out. Dr. Robert A. Nisbet, dean of the College, said although opportunities for practice teaching are not now available it is possible for any stu- dent looking forward to a career as a teacher to begin work at UCR. He said the student could meet the great majority of requirements leading to a elementary or secondary school credential and finish work by SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. 55 a mo. up GosseTt's - 4024 7th transfering to another campus, such as UCLA. It is very definitely the intention of the new college to explore at the earliest possible time arrangements for the granting of elementary and secondary school credentials, Dr. Nisbet added. The Dean pointed out that such arrangements necessarily can be Completed only by action of the uni- versity president and regents after due consultation with appropriate representatives of the public schools. The UCR program for training prospective teachers was explained by Provost Gordon S. Watkins in these words: ' We think it is important to know how to teach, but we are equally certain that it is important to know what to teach. Teachers impoverished in subject matter in the arts, letters, and sci- ences are likely to be mechanically- minded, uninteresting and uninspir.. ing teachers? ' We desire, first, to give prospec- tive teachers a sound, well-rounded cultural education, and, second, Within this framework of broad knowledge to teach them how to pre- sent their subject matter effectively. The Provost said prospective teach- ers will constitute only a small per. centage of the large numbers who eventually will enroll at UCR, but the faculty desires to tum out uni excelled elementary and secondary teachers, the kind we think can be produced only through a liberal arts program. DON CREE Mews win I for Young Men of all Ages 3937 Main Street Riverside, California Phone I-0658 the party with Provost and Mrs. Wat- kins in attendance. I , Km-GS HAMBURGERS is: MEXICAN FOOD y.,f 'f',, ' . Cheesebvrgers .......... - ,.... -23c , to ,At-,l u - Pastrami Sandwich-35: . A jfnf if Tender Be f, D,l' t I 6 A 'f' - ' '1t a2-rgzjig g Spiced, oneFrenecIicl2dIIC ' f 1 J , 1 ' Tasty Bar-B-Q Sauce . , as Riverside's Unique ' ' . I ' ' r' f gpg Self-Service THICK MALTS -------Q ,..,.,,, ,-,2Og . 94 ..-iugrf. DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT. FRENCI-IFRIES -,,,,,--,- ----15: - '- rf 2- flllk' , ' H H Q NL, ,ns ,lI:fgj'E' 1365 Eighth sfreef HUT CHOCOLATE .............. 'I5c A' . . Corner Iowa Ave. COFFEE, ROOT BEER, I Pvffi51a-NLiNQl'fj5fN'fr 5:::,11!. . NEAR UCR CAMPUS ORANGE and CQKE ---- - --vu me Farce l480 And All That Opens To Capacity First-Night Crowd -N ' By W. R. Williams The students, faculty members, and friends of UCR, after having witnessed the opening performance of H1480 and all That Wednesday night in the auditorium, came away as pleased as kittens who had just finished lapping up bowls of warm milk-that is to say, they were ex- tremely gratified with the quality of the entertainment which had just been presented them. The performance, which never flaggedor became boresome, was 'of a.decidedly higher calibre than most of the first-nighters had an- ticipated. Every perfonner dished -out his or her role with an obvious relish which seemed to advertize that I, and I alone am the star of your show. Yet, no one managed or even tried to steal the limelight from his fellow thespians. The theme of this well-balanced bit of pot pouri pointed up the con- troversy during the 14th century as to whether art, music and architec- ture should be purely religious or purely secular. Dr. Jack Beatty set the stage for -the scholarly discussions of PARI- SIAN men of letters, Drs. Purpus, Ballots Show ASUCR Favors Delay On Mascot As a result ofthe ballots cast by the ASUCR in elections May 12 it was decided that no immediate choice should be made as regards to a mas- cot. The count was as follows: Arabs, 16, Bearcats, 75 Condors, 6, Corsairs, 2 votes, and Falcons, 8 votes. How- ever, a large majority, 561voters, cast their ballots in favor of delaying the choice of mascot. A mandatory student activities fee was also approved by the large mar- gin of ,80 in favor and 17 against. D owever, as regards the amount to be charged the balloting was much closer, 40 in favor of a 37.50 fee and 43 in favor of a 310.00 per semester fee. Martha Beckley was chosen by the Associated Women Students to be Head Sponsor for Sponsor Week. Almost 8071 of the student body cast votes in the election. 9 of Riverside M IEKSES' WOM EN'S Fashion Clothes 3855 MAIN William Sharp, Edwin Simon and Francis Camey. These gentlemen in turn, at the special behest of scho- lar Sharp, went on to introduce the farce Pierre Patelin, which saw Pamela Payton and Dave Miller las the lawyer Patelin and his wifel, Bill Nelson Kas Jacques, the Draperl, Frank Mason fas Thibault Lambkin, the sheepherderl, and Dr. Beatty Cas the ludxcrously solemn judgel, tum in performances which, either individually or collectively, would be difficult to top. Coran McNair, Dr. Jerome Roth- enberg and Martha Beckley did an admirable job as the singers. A spe- cial aside is due Miss Beckley, whose melodious sole work did much to enchance the entire bit. Drs. Adelaide Brokaw, George Knox and Andre Malccot provided the singer's background music. Gene of Claremont fmore com- monly known as Dr. Eugene Pur- pusl and director William Sharp are especially to be commended for their delightfully inspired costum- ing and staging, respectively. Dr. Jean Boggs, although not present on the stage, was represented for the entire performance by her well- executed mural which hung behind the players in a centrally positioned spot. Much of the wittiest dialogue was taken up with a discussion of this very mural. Critically speaking then, I have not a leg to criticize on, so to speak. The farce was definitely one of the finest pieces of theatre ever to have been staged in Riverside. And-it has to be seen to be appreciated. The annual staff would appre- ciate students loaning snapshots of UCR students in action, parties, etc., for the snapshot sec- tion of the yearbook. UCR Welcomes H. S., J. C. Visitors On behalf of the staff of the UCR CUB may I extend a cordial welcome to all high school and junior college students visiting our campus today. We are happy that you have an opportunity to see the campus and its facilities of which we feel justifi- ably proud. . Unfortunately, it will be impos- sible for you to see and understand facets of University life other than those represented by our physical plant. We Wish you had the opportunity to sit in on our classes, to see our stu- dent government in action, and to attend some of the student body func- tions and parties. One cannot truly appreciate UCR unless he is a part of student life. However, we hope that by j tours throughout the campus and your contacts with student gu you will gain some appreciation the pride we all feel in UCR. May we hope you have a g time during your visit and may further hope we will see many you as students at UCR next fall jim St. Clair Managing Ed I would like to take this opj tunity to welcome, on behalf of Associated Students, all the l school and junior college stud who are visiting our campus todaj We, the first student body of college, are very proud of the f ties this campus has to offer. Wea that after inspecting them you feel the same way. I know that student body members who are , ing as hosts and guides will be ha to help you and to answer any qi tion you may have. We hope that in the future In of you will become students at U Again a cordial welcome to al you. Chuck Young President, ASI' iii i'Q.,. 1-121' 'ir' ' is c RUBY'S RE'3l'llL'iBI'Nf 13th 8. Market Streets - Riverside I The University Committee on ' Drama, Lectures, and Music in TQJOPGWUOU the Division Of IN CASE YOU DON'T KNOW IT . . I umanities ' present a mo- , l tion picture entitled Rubens YOU RE CONNECTED ,K Thursday, May 20th, at 10:30 TO 5 a.m. in room 1000 of the Social Q Sciences and Humanities Build- f 7' 7 ing. All UCR students, faculty r L., and staff of the Citrus Experi- I 'im I ment Station and the College of 55, S V Letters and Science are invited ' X to attend. 0 u Q X J J E SHOP AT GABRIELS I' I gb. Styles For Young X Men - . QQ N Mi1QrwiS1i5 i fi: X CALIFORNIA 3827 Main Street Ecru I c ' nur, D MEANS ATTACK-Sgt. Ed. A. Schroeder of the UCR police force explains operation of e newly-installed air raid warning system to john Farley, engineer in the campus steam ant. The light and bell system was installed in the plant since it has personnel on duty 24 urs a day. The campus air raid siren is operated from the same office. The warning color de is: yellow, possible attack, blue, not used at present, red, attack, White, clear. The UCR Plans For First UCR Spring Dance en serves the local area as well as the campus. . 1 Riverside, California, May 21, 1954 No. 13 a result of Wednesday's ting the ASUCR voted 76 to adopt the proposed er and 70 to 12 to keep nt student officers in posi- for the next school year. t. Educator dresses UCR Profs By W. 11. Williams California, 53 per cent of the between the ages of 18 and involved with some form of education. That is approxi- ten times as many students as highest place in the world said Kenneth Lindsay, or of political science in a talk to a group of professors at UCR Wed- noon. Lindsay, who came to the fContinued on Page 42 SI' Cal Club To Be Hosted By Dean Broadbent By Jim St. Clair Dean Thomas L. Broadbent has extended an invitation to UCLA members of the Cal Club to be his guests at UCR tomorrow, May 22, for a business and swimming meeting. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the placing of a big Cn on the mountains behind the campus. As in the past, the Cal Club is anx- ious to sponsor and to participate in the construction of a traditional Big C the purpose of which is to foster a sense of pride in the University. It is hoped that during the meet- ing plans for the organization of a chapter of the Cal Club at UCR will be made. It is possible that such ar- rangements can be made so that a chapter will be chartered as part of dedication ceremonies this fall. The Cal Club was founded in 1934 CContinued on Page 4l Changed By Com. Unforeseen complications have necessitated a change in plans for UCR's first semi-formal Spring Dance. As a result of University regu- lations which require that all bands playing on the campus carry Work- men's Compensation Insurance, it has been necessary to cancel plans calling for Iohnny Allen's band to play for the dance. Substituting for Allen will be Johnny Guinn and his band. Because of the change in bands it has also been necessary to change the date of the dance from Saturday, May 22, to Friday, May 21, that is tonight. The dance will still be held in the Physical Education Building from 9 to 12. It will be semi-formal, dark suits for the men and dressy dresses for the women. The affair will still be dates only at 351.50 per couple. Ticket sales will close today, an- nounced Bill Kassel, ASUCR Vice- President, and chairman of the Social Affairs Committee. No tickets will be sold at the doors. Faculty and administrative person- nel have been invited to attend. Citizen's Univ. Comm. To Host UCR Students The Citizen's University Commit- tee has extended an invitation to all UCR students and their wives or husbands to attend a banquet in honor of the UCR student body. Plans have been made to invite stu- dents Thursday, May 27, to the main dining room of the Mission Inn. A 6:30 reception for all students will precede the scheduled 7 p.m. dinner. Dean Loda Mae Davis and stu- dents Martha Beckley and Jim St. Clair met with Mr. Phil Boyd, Mr. Howard Hays Ir., Miss Frances Frazer, Mr. W. A. Thompson, Mrs. Henry Keil, Mr. T. F. Gore, and Mr. Buchanan of the Committee last Tuesday, May 8, to discuss arrange- ments for the affair. Members of the Committee pro- posed that students should be en- couraged to dress informally, suits for the men and dressy dresses for the women. Name cards will identify both stu- dents and the members of the Com- mittee. This has been done since it is planned that each student, who will have a personal host for the evening, can identify and in turn be identified by his host. Arrangements have been made to provide entertainment for a part of the evening to include among other things a strolling accordianist. Mr. Phil Boyd will briefly address the group explaining the Citizen's Committee. During the course Mr. Boyd expressed purpose of the dinner to the effect that Riverside realized that it was now a college town and hoped to make students realize that the community is very happy to have them here. All UCR students are urged to at- tend this dinner with their husbands and wives. Because it is necessary that the Committee know approxi- mately how many guests to expect students should sign their names in the Dean of Students Office, if they are going, before 4:00 p.m. Tuesday, May 25. STUDENTS CURRENTLY registered who wish to continue in the fall semester 1954 may register and enroll in classes by mail during the summer months. In order to accomplish this, an appointment for advising must be made with the student's divi- sion between Monday, May 24 and Friday, May 28. At the time set by the division, the student will report to his faculty adviser and arrange his program for the fall semeste1'. On and after june 1, students may obtain from the Office of the Registrar the necessary materials for registra- tion by mail. This procedure should make it much easier for the continuing students to ac- complish their registration. purpose of the of the meeting in essence the when he Stated Want A Job This Summer? UCB's first semester is almost over. Most of us are eagerly ' me 0 anticipating summer vacation even though it means we may have to go to work. Most of us, at least I do, consider summer vacation as just that-a vacation. We let up on practically everything we have been doing during the year-especially anything that is connected with school. However, there is one thing I urge you not to let up on- selling and publicizing UCB. There are no better salesmen for the University than contented, happy, and enthusiastic students who are willing and able to sell their University to other students. Certainly Provost Watkins, Dean Nisbet, Howard Cook, and many others of the academic and administrative staffs have done marvelous jobs selling the University to the people of Riverside and the surrounding communities. As valuable as this publicity is to us it still is impersonal of necessity and does not actually reach the prospective student. That's where we can be of service. If you are able and willing YOU can sell UCB to others. In your daily contacts with friends and acquaintances you will have an opportunity-to express your views on UCB. Some may be called upon to address student groups giving you another chance to sell UCB. Some will have an excellent opportunity while traveling during the summer to interest others in the campus. Through these personal contacts you can do more to acquaint and interest prospective students in UCB than several thousand words of type could ever do. -Iim St. Clair Lets Walt - For What? Over three fourths of the UCB student body stepped to the polls May 14 to select a mascot. The results are known to every- one-fifty-six members of the student body wrote 'Letis Wait' on their ballots and as a result we have no mascot and are still known as that new UC campus at the Citrus Experiment Station in Biversidef, Now the die has been cast-at least for the coming year. At the risk of sounding too much like a Monday Morning Quarter- back, let us now consider what has been gained by the postpone- ment. We now have no name for the newspaper. We now have no name for the annual. We now have no theme for that annual. We have no yells, no fight songs, no name to give any athletic teams which might be formed in the next year. We now have no decals to stick on the windshield of a car. We now have no mascot. All of these things are of importance to any college. Many students feel that a name will evolve, that one day someone will say, That,s itf' and that will be it. There is an old saying-something about pleasing all the people, etc. The secret of a mascot name is becoming accustomed to it. The reason that 'Sagehorns' sounds good and that 'Trojans' seems to have that certain ring is because Pomona College has adopted the first, SC the second and students of those institutions, sports writers, and college fans have become accustomed to them. The same would be true of any name that UCB would choose. So We Wait-why? what for? what is gained? -Vaughn Blankenship AN INFORMAL discussion of British and Canadian universi- ties will be conducted at 1:30 p.1n. Monday, May 24, in SSH 1101 by Dr. I. W. Olmsted and Dr. A. C. Turner. Dr. Olmsted, chairman of the UCB Commit- tee on Drama, Lectures, and Music, arranged the discussion in answer to interest aroused by Professor Kenneth Lindsay of Oxford University in his lecture Monday, May 17. U Panhellenic 'Awards UCR Scholarships Members of the Riverside Panhel- lenic Association have awarded three scholarships valued at S150 each to three women seniors at Polytechnic High School who plan to attend UCB next fall. Jeanie Parlett, a language and dra- matics studentg Carol McDonald, science major, and Marcia Nish, pros- pective elementary teacher, were awarded the scholarships on the basis of outstanding records in leadership and scholarship in high school. II By VAUGHN BLANKENSHIP Time was when all you needed to have a dance was a hay loft, a violin, and a few morons to kick around the floor dust. Fair boards and raise up a little That was before the rise of the New Deal when many '1 respect Deal and the made his family fortune running hooch Now you need 1 big room at least '1 five piece combo and 1 few morons to kick around the floor boards and stir up the dance , , V wax so that no- can walk on the floor for a month lest they slip and become an insurance company debit. EEEQEiEiEfEQ3EEE5E5f5E2E5ErE1 ' ' rEiEgE5Er?5ZrErEgE5E1ErEr255525 ' 1 - :1:1:1:2:1:2ErErE2f :EgE5:5EgE5E5E2E2E5E5 - - 12222sfzisiaasfsiaffsfsisfafaizisiaieisa fl bl 6 C 1 t 1 Z C Tl 1 ' C ' i2E1i' : 1i5:if ' f 1i:' i i iiiiifiiiiiiiis ' er' ,gs5212121215:a:s:z:s:sisizfsfsfeaf' 'sfsisfs - . ' s:r'::.z.s.s:s1s:z:s:-- ,fi-:?::r::::4-1-via -w e . . ' ':I:1:1:1:1S: 2'i'i:-:PI' ' -'1:1:1:l:-:1 7!2I ' 'E-:Ii '-E2- 2:-fl? .. -gsgegsgzgsgr2?5tgs::5r .sae st:s:2:fs:s: ' .:a::a.g..:e:: .:s:s::- ' -sa::s:1:1 ' - :f:z:s:s:s:a...f:1-' as-2- :e:sfs2s:sSs2 ,.,.,.-.,,.,.,..,,.,. ........ C . , ,axs'v' , 5??5f5??f5i???5?f5?5Ei' ' -' 4.-.-4gg3.m.3 4. .-:--r ,-'-'-:-!:- - 5 ':::5rgq',-mg: :ar: : .+fia?I-.1- 54- -1 ' ' . 1 1 -'fa S5E3E5E3E5Z5Sff' '14 .f:2.- Q:-, body There is some kind of a hop go- ing on here at UCB tonight. Origin- ally the shindig was planned for Saturday night, the price was set at 81.50 a couple-with Uncle Sammy getting no share of the take -and featuring Johnny Allen's Swing Band. Somebody not only fumbled the ball but was tackled fifteen minutes before they left the dressing room. Anyway, the way it turned out, the dance is tonight, Johnny Quinn and His Hot Five are scheduled for the main bout, and the Lord only knows what Uncle Sammy is going to pocket KI understand that the cost of liv- ing went up 75c a fifth the other dayl. IT'S CABBAGE BY A HEAD. A certain individual-Mr. D o o dl e s Weaver of Spike Jones and William Tell Overture fame-attended Stan- ford University some fifteen years ago where his antics made him somewhat of a hero. Since that time he has be- come the 'Paul Bunyan, of college lore, his name having gone down as the 'Ideal College Goof-Off'. Perhaps the one antic which has endeared him to more college hearts than any other single one occurred one registration day. Sev- eral thousand people were lined up, waiting to pay their registra- tion fees. The sun was high and hot overhead and someone was heard to remark that 'it reminded them a hell of a lot of Riverside, come Iune'. Everyone was feeling grouchy. Then somewhere at the edge of the crowd a commotion started. The crowd split-everyone straining to see what was happen- ing. Several voices were calling out- Make way, make way! Finally Doodles appeared, com- plete with turban, howdah, and two servants at each end carrying it and him. AS THEY PBOCEEDED through the crowd Doodles flung handfulls of 'pennies to the crowd-the crowd cheered wildly. When the small group finally reached the cashier, twc the servants rolled out a carpet Doodles and he proceeded to briskly up to the desk and pl down two large sacks of money. paid his tuition with 6,000 penr CI hate to think what a mess 5 action would throw the local fine office into. They have a hard eno time figuring out how many por of hamburger they can get by or the Coffee Shop each day, witl trying to figure out how many dc bills is in 6,000 penniesj. Another one they like to I about Mr. 'It's-a-beautiful-day- the-races' occurred during a vu solemn un-veiling of the statue Leland Stanford which was co plete with frown and majestica folded arms. Half of the State California was present, includi Stanford Alumns and the Coverr of California. Stanford's President strod to platfonn and slowly pulled the 4 tc release the canvass covering. covering fell away to reveal Lel and Doodles Weaver sitting in arms, drinking a can of beer. Rumor has it that Doodles v expelled a total of seven times fri Stanford. He once completely i set the Board of Regents and entire Student Council when assembled a little English Au on the top floor of Encino H the freshmen men's dorm-and a taxi service from one end of hall to the other. I wonder if we could interestll Weaver in attending UCB Fall? ' AMS PARTY. I understand th certain unofficial AMS group re ly had some kind of a party. It I hear, the best attended social f tion of the year, so far. What wa secret fellows? By the way, I u stand that Don Clark is plannin giving modern dancing lessons fall-and Bruce Bickborn is sched to become the next Ogden Nas unofficially of course. Maybe B gold better go back where it from. LOVELOBN COLUMN. It be my honest, innocent face does it. For the last two wee have been the 'Mr. Anthony' UCR. First it's Mr. Lewis, t it's Miss Sparkman. Then it's Harper, then it's Miss Holyoke guy could go crazy. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO UCB yearbook may still be tained by faculty and non- demic staff members. If ' ested contact Howard Public Information, SSH or any one of the following dents: Vaughn Blanken Chuck Young, Pete Van V ten, Pat Huber, Janice B gardt, or Sue Tegland. C are being sold at only each. K 5 ANNUAL STAFF still' . 1 1122s2z2s2sSs:5:g2z:2:a:2:2 :ess21252i2E2izi2i2iEi5E512a2s2zE gag ls snapshots of student ac- ies and personalities for the book. If you have any that consider useful, leave them ie Office of Public Informa- , SSH 1349, or with one of members of the yearbook :ferment Info railable To CR Students tters relating to the deferment fudents eligible under Selective ice are handled by the Office of ean of Students in Social Sci- E3Humanities Building. ertifications regarding enrollment, X standing and other pertinent ation will be submitted to the nt's Selective Service board up- quest. be considered for deferment by tive Service, the student must be ring a full-time course of instruc- which for undergraduates con- of at least 15 units. This does not e .non-credit courses such as ct A. Students who plan to seek rent continuously until quali- or the Bacheloris Degree should stand that present policies of tive Service permit continuous ent only through the eighth of college residence, including nly the period of residence at niversity of Califomia, but also rms spent at junior colleges or collegiate institutions. dents should plan course se- ces for several terms ahead so re requlsites for all desired ad- d courses can be satisfied with- e eight term period. To qualify full tlnie grrdu ite student, the nt must be in residence, actually full time on his studies, and the criteria generally applied ormal progress toward the de- 16 two years or less for the rs Degree and four years or or the Doctors Degree finclud- ime spent working toward the rs Degree if takenl. 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V, --.,...1.5.3.-.-.Mgr.:.:.1.,:.5.:.:.5.:.g.3. ., :-za. :-:-:-:-4. .-Ito.-.-.:q4,5.1.5.5.,.1.1. ,g-:+A :- . -- -- N--.f. A , .. M- K -'f'- ,.- ...-...J ,. . ,,,. .. .t,,.,.,,:,,..,,.,.,:,:,:,:,. --'--f-:-:-:-: .-'-:+:-'-xqsac-.-.-.-.1-,-.-.-.-.y.- -.g.,-1-1 V -A -.-.xg.,.-.::3.3.:.,,.,.,.,., --- Z':-152-.-:g.jc-.5-.5.99g.gfE2,,.g2 .5-.3-1'-:-zo:-.-1' 42' 5 3 s Na, t. '26-t W at 7 4 . , ,- ,,ix'.,,.,.,.., .,.. e- ,s f 4- X 'fe X 9? W 5 'nl :KW V' 9 4 K' ii, f' 1541-V-I'1::'.-.Maize-:.sa:-ru:-' :--1-zz-::. :-' 'gig'gr1-3V:-1-za-:-:-:-1:4-:-:-z-:-:-'-:-QL-: 4:-:-:-25:51:31 .xgqzg:SgtgQgQ12f5:Q:gq:g:g:g':gg:g: N -:-:-:-:-.gf.g1:3.- ,.g.: -1-1-1-14.53:gQ:-:5:::::::5:g:5:g9,,g:' Meet Your Masters By Mary Howard This weekis MASTER is Robert Van Norden Hine, instructor in United States History and Humani- ties. Dr. Hine received his B.A. from Pomona College, M.A. from Yale University in 1949, and his Ph.D. al- so froni Yale in 1952. He received a Huntington Library Fellowship for the years 1951-1953. It was at Huntington that he finished work on his book, California's Utopian Colonies. Dr. Hine is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Theta Phi, The Ameri- can Historical Association, and Amer- ican Studies Association. Dr. Hine's wife, Shirley, is secre- tary to the Committee on Drama, Lectures, and Concerts. Utopia Comes to California is the title of a talk to be given Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Univer- salist Church, Seventh and Lemon Streets, by Dr. Robert V. Hine, UCB instructor in his- tory. Dr. I-Iineis latest book, Cali- fornia Utopian Colonies, was named 1953's best work on west- ern United States history by the Pacific Coast branch of the American Historical Association. Students and faculty are in- vited to the lecture, which is being sponsored by the local Foreign Travel Opportunities For Students Interested in traveling and becom- ing fluent in a foreign language? Then why not travel this summer the ex- perimental way. The experimental way is a non- profit, non-sectarian, educational in- stitution which has its headquarters in Putney, Vennont. It is a plan by which an intemationally-minded per- son may go abroad, not just to see a country but to learn to know its people. Experimenters go abroad in groups of 10, either mixed or all-girl, under the guidance of a qualified and a trained leader. Half the summer is spent living as a member of a se- lected family in another country. Then the group and young hosts from the families travel informally for three weeks in other regions of the country-taking advantage of the cultural and educational opportuni- ties along the way. To round out their experiences, Experimenters us- ually spend a few days in a capital city like London or Paris. Age Limits Candidates must be between 16 and 30 years of age. It is desired that they have a genuine interest in working for international understand- ing, the ability to get along well with others, reasonab e conversation- al fluency where a language is re- quired, experience in outdoor living, academic standing in top half of class, and good health. The candidates are chosen on the above qualifications and recommendations from profes- sors, employers, or other associates. Applications may be secured from The Admissions Department, The Experiment for International Living, Putney, Vermont. Each application must be accompanied by a S25 fee in order to be processed. June 1 is the deadline for application. Credit Given Two college semesters in language, fields of human relations, social, and area studies is being given by several colleges and universities. Estimate fees to several countries are as follows: France, 3755, Ger- many, S7255 Holland, S6955 Mexico, S3905 Switzerland, 8715, India, 81245, and Egypt, 81255. Scholarships are available, how- Intramurals In Full Swing Several intramural sports contests, organized by the Physical Education Department, are in full swing this week. Intramural sports tournaments in badminton and table tennis started this week. Events included are singles tournaments for both men and wo- men and double tournaments for men in badminton. A mixed doubles tournament in badminton is also in progress. This type of tournameant includes a man and a woman on each team. All players entered in the tourna- ments are asked to look at the bulle- tin board at the east end of the gym- nasium playing floor to find out when they meet in the various touma- ments. Matches are to be arranged at a mutually convenient time, and should be completed as soon as pos- sible. After two weeks of play, the fol- lowing faculty members are fat this writingl undefeated in singles play: Drs. Lindeburg, Ortega, Bums, Hewitt, Crawford, Martin, Murphy, Rothenberg, and Wilson. In the doubles toumament, the fol- lowing are still undefeated: Ortega- Vincent, Ervin-Martin, Lindeburg- Crawford, Branson-Brewer, Gerhardt- Complin, Clark-Zentmyer, Hewitt- Klotz, and Carlson-Metcalf. - ever, they have been closed for this summer. They range from S100 to S600 and non-interest loans are made up to 3300. . Experiment groups not only leave from the United States to other countries but groups will come to the United States this summer from England, France, Germany, Holland, Switzerland, Belgium, Sweden, and Denmark. -by Marilyn Merchant SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 71h DON CREE Historical Society. E ' I MEN'S WEAR HAMBURGERS 18c ' for Cheeseburgers .... - ............ 23: - - . - - - of ' A' 2 Pastrami Sandwich-351: mversid. Young Men of all Ages gendcgr Beefff Deliicagely I 0 1 1 'fra' Qflssy Sgr-BI-g'cSauce MIQSES d U ' ' V . Rwegsf :grwxque THICK MAI-1-5 M ----------------- 2Qc WOMEN'S 3937 Minn Street mauve IN RESTAURANT FRENCH FRIES ........... - .... .15c Fashion Riverside, California 1365 Eighth Street HOT CHOCOLATE - ' JSC Clothes I Phone 1-0658 Corner Iowa Ave. COFFEE. ROOT BEER, ' - NEAR UCR CAMPUS ORANGE and COKE 'I0c 3855 MAIN 1 . .L C . .L . . -' z 1 ' . . .K . ., . , , . - J department. E f '?2if?iv 4.12.1 pm ' - -r - .. 51 9 , YQ- L . Q, N1 5 'ff Wu. U gl, ,iugb 1 , er . . , Lindsay fContinued from Page D Northern California campus from England, served for 17 years as a uni- versity member of the House of Par- liament. He was educated at Oxford, and during his student years was president of the Oxford Union. His well-attended lecture was spiced with occasional witticisms, which served to lend additional em- phasis to the points he was attempting to make. Clement Attlee, he said, is the leader of our opposition party in Eng- land. Over there .he is the equivalent of what Mr. Stevenson is not quite over here. He went on to say that we pay them for opposing us over there. Constant Weeding Out Lindsay Qthough he holds only a master's degree, in England that is generally considered the equivalent of the American doctor's degreej told the group the present British educa- tional system, which began about 1870, consists of a constant weeding- cut of all but the very best scholars for ultimate university attendance. Of all the children attending the English equivalent of your American elementary schools,', he said, less than 20 per cent are selected for the universities. This was rather surprising, since the speaker had earlier pointed out that there is very little difference in the percentage of U. S. children who attend elementary school and English elementary students. The figures Lindsay quoted were 96-plus per cent Britons go to ele- mentary school, while 99-plus per cent Americans attend. Financial Assistance He said that better than 71 per cent of all university students in Great Britain are assisted financially by the state. The subsidizations range from partial to total assistance. In comparing the merits of a well- rounded liberal education with a background of technical training, he said that business men are generally inclined to feel that they themselves can render any specialized training that may be necessary to the em- ployee who has come from a liberal arts school. SHOP AT GABRIELS Styles For Young Men Cal Club CContinued from Page ll by President Robert Gordon Sproul to be a unifying agency on the stu- dent level for the several campuses of the state-wide university. At pres- cnt there are five chapters located at Berkeley, UCLA, Davis, Santa Bar- bara, and San Francisco. Each chapter is composed of twenty students personally appointed by President Sproul, plus four ex- officio members, including the stu- dent body president, vice-president, the editor of the newspaper, and the yell leader. The Club sponsors a variety of ac- tivities during the year including stag- ing the Presidential receptions for new students, Charter Anniversary exercises, the publication of a supple- ment to student newspapers entitled the All-Californian, and the All- University weekend, staged either at Berkeley or Los Angeles. The members of the Cal Club will come shortly after noon. The first item on the agenda will be a dis- cussion of the Big C and proposals for the organization of a chapter at UCB. From two to four that afternoon guests will be able to use the swim pool. Approximately 12 members of the UCLA Cal Club accompanied by their sponsors, Dr. and Mrs. Spironi are expected to attend the confer- ence. A CHANGE HAS been an- nonmced in the date of the Spring formal. Instead of Satur- day, May 2.2, the dance will be held from 9 to 12 Friday, May 21, in the Physical Education Building. johnny Quinn's band will play rather than Jolmny Allen as previously announced in the CUB. For That Important Date I AN ORCHID coRsAeE DR. WAYNE CRAWFORD has announced that due to a lack of interest no swimming meet will be held as previously planned. Only 6 students have indicated any interest in such a contest. H. S. Students Visit Campus Approximately 150 high school and junior college students, representing various high schools and junior col- leges in the UCB area, attended open house held May 14. The open house was designed pri- marily to acquaint interested students and school administrators with the physical plant of the University. To familiarize them with some of the subjects being offered here, students were shown the language lab, the display of skulls arranged by the An- thropology classes, laboratories in Physical Sciences and Life Sciences Buildings, and the facilities of the Department of Physical Education. Bill Kassel, ASUCR Vice-President, served as master of ceremonies, in- troducing ASUCR President Chuck Young and Dean of Students Thomas L. Broadbent to the students. Young and Dean Broadbent gave short ad- dresses welcoming the students to the campus and introducing their stu- dent guides. The visitors were then divided in- to three groups conducted by Dwaine Lewis, Pat Tighe, and Chuck Young and taken on a tour of the campus. After the tour refreshments were served and a question and answer period held. Students interested in swimming were allowed in t.he pool. Vocational Testing Saturday, June All interested students will given an opportunity to take a s of vocational interest tests on S: day, June 5, in room 1101 SI Sciences Building. The tests will gin at 9:00 and continue throug the day. They will include the St Vocational Interest Test and American Council on Education chological Examination. About half of the UCB stud indicated at the beginning of semester that they wished to have cational counseling. If you are certain what your occupational i ests are or whether you are t the right courses at UCR, it is gested you plan to take these j There will be no charge eithe the tests or for the individual st.r counseling which will be prov after the tests are scored. Please sign up for the tests in office of the DEAN OF STUDEi at once. MEXICAN FOOD I Ralph DeManco' ' it I li' W 'df 95 ' . 43,1 I., IAI rig, 3 , Q 1 gr ffyilfii rifrt-mr. 9052 N1-XGNOIIA AVE, L.--rv tXI:l.-MA ' IN CASE YOU DON'T KNOW IT . . . YOU'RE CONNECTED ro A1 ' g we 2 s X E f 9 H 2 G 0 Q x J - 0 2 , 'fav Q CD AL HARRY E. COSNER 'D 8bY'lQ'g, -, iyrlegsggggasxi oacl-nos f 3827 M I ST T Telephone 4481-W ' am ree 5462 Grand Ave. Riverside , lulu, . W y ! CALIFORNIA RIC imma ry Of :R Activities e thought it appropriate to run mis last edition of the CUB a summary of student activities ig this first semester. Without er ado, this is what happened: bruary 23: UCR held a recep- for Robert Gordon Sproul, Presi- of the University of Califomia. dent Sproul welcomed all new :nts and faculty members. 1 bruary 25: The student body its first formal meeting in the lecture hall to discuss the adop- of a provisional charter to govem ltudcnt body. 1rch'3: ASUCR elections were underway by this time. Candi- 1 appeared that day before the fnt body to explain their plat- s. irch 12: Chuck Young was ed ASUCR Prexy: Pat Spark- ASUCR Secretary. Runoffs were led for the positions of Vice- dent and Treasurer. irch 26: Dr. Leon Howard, pro- of English at UCLA, addressed fer Day Exercise marking the birthday of the University of nrnia. -rch 29: UCR's delegation to liloclel U.N. Conference at UCLA ed home after a hectic four representing Poland. il 9: The newly organized As- ed Women Students elected Brumgardt President. il 25: An estimated 10,000 in- d people visited UCR during house ceremonies. 12: UCB's first drama pro- n H1480 And All Thati' opened ull house. 12: Balloting showed that reat majority of UCR students d delaying selection of a mas- til a future date. 14: UCR hosted prospective ts from high schools and junior s in the Riverside area. 19: Professor Kenneth Lind- visiting professor of Political e at Berkeley, addressed an ted group of students and es on the British educational 21: UCR held its first spring rrnal dance. Johnny Guinn is band played for the affair. 22: Dean Thomas L. Broad- nd Dean Loda Mae Davis, as- by a group of UCR students members of, the UCLA Daily and Cal Club. 27: Citizen's University Com- hosted UCR students in the 'ning room of the Mission Inn. musn't forget the very success- rties hosted by the Junior, ore, and Freshman , classes. niors held a taco feed on the of Paradise Lake.-'Sophomores ined at the beach and the held a swimming party in the a new student body and one 11 as ours has been this semester be proud of the many activi- e have sponsored and partici- in. Let's hope that next year re even more. Vol. 1 Riverside, California, May 28, 1954 No. 14 This We Can Be Proud Of Since the first semester at UCB is almost over perhaps it is time we paused for a moment and took a brief look at what has been accomplished or not accomplished in that semester. On the credit side of the ledger we have elected student body officers to serve for next year, we have elected class officers, we have organ- ized the Associated Women Students and the Associated Men Students, we have organized and published a newspaper and a yearbook, and we have adopted a charter to govern the student body next year. We have also planned several successful social events: the President's reception, junior, sophomore, and freshman parties, a spring dance and others. On the debit side of the ledger we have failed to adopt a mascot for the coming year. Perhaps in the con- duct of our student government, and newspaper we have not been as efficient as possible. Considering all things, I think we can point with pride to the achievements of the student body this first year. Much has been accomplished in a very short period of time, more could have been accomplished. I feel obligated to point out one more thing, without the co- operation of Deans Broadbent and Davis, without the coopera- tion of Howard Cook, and without the cooperation of many mem- bers of the faculty and administrative staffs much less could have been achieved. To them and to the officers of the ASUCB we owe a vote of thanks. -jim St. Clair Thirty Couples Attend Dance By Pat Sparkman Thirty couples danced to the music of Johnny Guinn Friday evening at the first annual Springtime Dance held in the ball room of the gym. The Springtime Theme was car- ried out in a garden motif. Couples entered through an ivy-covered ar- bor to view a garden scene. A bird bath surrounded by a low flower- entwined picket fence completed the decorations. Bill Anderson and George Harper won the door prizes which consisted of free sandwiches and drinks for two donated by the owners of the Pastrami Palace. Refreshments of lemonade and cookies were served throughout the evening. Arrangements for the dance were supervised by Bill Kassel. Sue Teg- land and Patty Huber were in charge of decorations. THE DEPARTMENT OF Phy- sical Education will need sev- eral student managers to assist in the organization and conduct of next year's intramural sports program. Any men students who are interested in serving as an Intramural s p 0 r t s manager should contact Dr. Wayne Crawford, Room 107, Physical Education Building, prior to the end of the present semester. THE CAMPUS Bookstore will have a book sale on june 2nd, 3rd, and 4th. The sale will in- clude books, bound tion. Also, many supply items such as fountain pens and automatic pencils will be sold at a reduced price. All students, faculty, and staff members are welcome to come in and shop during the sale. many good reference both paper and cloth- editions, and some fic- Cowen Elected AMS President Bill Cowen, in elections held Thursday, May 20, was elected presi- dent of the Associated Men Students. John Harris was elected Vice-Presi- dent, Dick Pearl, Secretary, Ted Wheeler, Treasurer, and Doug Mum- ma, Sponsor Chainnan. In conjunction with the Associated Women Students on the campus, the AMS is making plans for a sponsor system for next fall. The purpose of this sponsor system will be to help new students become better ac- quainted with the campus and their fellow students. To accomplish this goal the AMS and AWS will select a number of sponsors from among their groups. It is their hope that through this sponsor system all new students may rapidly be integrated into the camp- us 3Ct1Y?f12Sr.. . . Current Events Interest Many UCR Students Bud Barton has been taking a survey recently on the campus. In this survey he has asked a number of questions generally dealing with topics of current interest. Listed be- low are the results of this survey. 84W of the students know who the current Secretary of State is. 1572: know who General John Hull is. 4601: know which country granted Cambodia its independence. 992: of the students know the ma- terial from which the Atom bomb is constructed. 4505 of the students know that the Chamber of Commerce opposes di- rect Federal aid to peacetime de- velopment of atomic energy. 7706 know the names of the islands where the Hydrogen and Atomic bombs have been tested. 57'Z: of the students thought that the most important problems facing the United States are intemational in character and 4872 felt they were of a national nature. When asked when they thought the U.S. would possibly be involved in another war 9'Z: answered that it would be within 25 years, 63'Z: with- in 10 years, and 2872: thought it would be within the next year. Deans Entertain 2 UCLA Groups Deans Thomas L. Broadbent and Loda Mae Davis, assisted by mem- bers of the student body, entertained approximately 25 members of the UCLA Daily Bruin staff and Cal Club on the campus Saturday, May 22. Members of the two organizations arrived on the campus between one p.m. and two p.m. that aftemoon. As they arrived members of the student body took them on a conducted tour of the buildings. Dr. Andre Malecot put on a demonstration of the lan- guage lab equipment. After the tour the visitors were invited to take a swim in the pool. Most of them took advantage of the invitation. About 4 p.m. guests and hosts re- tired to the picnic grounds for a lunch and soft drinks and ice cream provided by the Deans. A brief dis- cussion of the problems of construct- ing a large C on the hills behind the campus resulted. No definite de- cisions were arrived at but the Cal Club was invited to retum to the campus early this fall to complete ar- rangements. It was noted by students of UCR that many favorable comments on the buildings resulted from the tour. Many of the students expressed envy of our physical plant. YOU ARE REMINDED that the Registrar's Office has copies of the final examination sched- ules available to students. You are urged to secure a copy from them. . :za 2525 iii:5:iffE:EifZi:if:EZigE:fit?'EzifSxiii:ifziziiitfiiiiiiii 5iiiiiiiiziziifiiiiziziff 3535: ,gE5E55E5:g:gE5EgE +:?:-:2:1:I:-:f:'. '-:1:':I:-:-:-:':-:A:- 1:-zzz, :-g:55:::5::,:,:51. 4 :-:4:-:-:-:4:-:-:-:-.v:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:':-:-: :-:- '-was.g.g.3,:.:.Q.3.g.-.f. :I151221:3:31I:I:5:2:?:1:f:7:2:i:1:5:7:2:7: .5:5:3:7:5:7:5:7:- 5:5 '?bS'11-:-:f:v:- ' :-21:-' ' f55fi5E5f5fff5EfE157fff1f1E '4 ' 'i'f'i'f'5if5E1f . ........,.. . -:-:-:-:-:-:4:-:-:-:-:-:-:- ::-:- :-:-:-'- 'c 1:-1-:-:iz-:-:+:-:-:-: WESZIIIIZC sgsfag: ftiiirirfifiiii 5225225215: 'f::-'-ac-1 CQZEC-'-'Cy 5EEE:. Effie- ,sg5sgsg2. ....... . . . ..... . .............,.,.....,.,,A,.. . . --'-- ii GI-I-.-2 I'Z'C-I+. 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' Si,:?:Q:v:5551-:-zggzgzgzgzgzgzg'313:35-tg:-.:.,. eriioa Hwhi li ' .i.g...ss'a..i.s.a'oi....' if ansmitted from tree to h'ee and techniques for determining resistant varieties are objectives of work being conducted by Dr. I. M. Wallace, plant pathologist in the Citrus Experiment Station. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE UCB yearbook may still be ob- tained by faculty and non-aca- demic staff members. If inter- ested contact Howard Cook, Public I Information, SSH 1349 or any one of the following stu- dents: Vaughn Blankenship, Chuck Yolmg, Pete Van Vech- ten, Pat Huber, Janice Brum- gardt, or Sue Tegland. Copies are being sold at only 81.00. THE REGISTRAR'S OFFICE tells us that many students have moved from their old residences without informing the office of their new addresses. As a result many important notices and letters cannot be sent to these students by the Registrar. If you have moved they would ap- preciate it if you would drop into their office to inform them of your new address. p Introducing . . .t Riverside's New, Modern Gymnasium for Ladies and Men Offering.. . . 0 Figure Contouring 0 Body Building and Reconditioning 0 Weight Gaining and Reducing With Personal Instruction to Each Individual RETURN THIS AD BEFORE JUNE lst AND RECEIVE ONE MONTH FREE TRAINING WITH MEMBERSHIP 3705 MAIN DHONE 8368 M M... ,,,. Letter To The Editors From the first issue of the CUB, students have placidly accepted a weekly publication as part of the go of things and will continue to ex- pect a newspaper in the future. Most of you know how difficult it is to organize social events, elections, and student government. It is even more difficult to organize a student newspaper. It takes a certain amount of technical know-how, organizing ability, and above all else-willing- ness. Dick Williams first began plan- ning a newspaper before most stu- dents had begun to register. His was the drive that made the first editions of the CUB possible. Although Williams' joumalistic ex- perience is not yet vast, he nonethe- less displayed more journalistic know- how than any other student on the campus. Despite the controversies that have existed over him, I feel that all of us owe a vote of thanks to his organizing efforts. Without him we might not even yet have a student A SUPPLY OF THE Pl POSED schedule of classes pre-enrollment of students the fall semester is now ax able at the Office of the Re trar For That important Date 1 AN ORCHID coRsAoE HARRY E. COSNER newspaper. -Ed. Croven Mg. Ed. Note: Telephone 4481-W I would be the first to acknowledge . the debt that all of us owe Dick. 5462 Grand Ave' River -St. Clair For Graduation 1 I Hcllmefz s Select The Luggage Pattern now That you want for Graduation. I Samsonite 0Amazon 0 Crown, etc. Magnolia Center lziiilmefzis LUGGAGE and MEN'S WEAR 6566 Magnolia Ave. y Bray Is R Coffee King you happen down to the coffee v and see rows of stacked coffee . on one of the tables toward the , more than likely the person ll find behind them is our well n fellow student Raymond y, who was bom March 8, 1929 owlingreen, Kentucky, is a grad- of Clarksfork High. After grad- n he served in the United States 5 for fifteen and a half years. He t his tour of duty in the Pacific rs through both World War II the Korean War. Ray was dec- d several times for his bravery e field of action and retired two s ago as a Navy Lieutenant. hile in the Navy, Ray 'also ed into the whirlpool of matra- . His wife's name is Lillian and have sir lovely children. hen asked how he liked UCR, answered Great school, swell ers beautiful girls, and a nice e shop Ray really appreciates coffee shop because his present tion is to beat his own record of ups of coffee in one day. tty Jo Likes lrlt At UCR ie school spirit which Betty Io ran exhibits could well be an ple for us and future students to w Betty Io who thinks that has the best spirit of any school ras ever attended has displayed utstandlng interest in student rnment and activities. Meet Your Mo ste rs Dr. Frank Laycock, Assistant Pro- fessor of Education, is this week's MASTER. Dr. Laycock joined the faculty from Chico State College, Chico, Califor- nia. He received his A.B. in 1943, a Master of Science in 1944, and his Ph.D. in 1947. All were received from the University of California's Berkeley campus. He is a member of the American Psychological Association, AAUP Western Psychological Association, California State Psychological Asso- ciation, California Education Re- search Association, and Phi Kappa Delta. Dr. Laycock's primary interests outside the field of education and psychology are choral singing, musi- cal performance, and reading. Texas, Betty Jo graduated from Miller High, Missouri in 1940. Following her graduation she jumped into the whirlpool of matramonyn and she now has three of the most beautiful daughters in the world. She spent last semester at Chaffey JC and en- tered UCR as a pre-med student. Her hobbies are photography and sports. At present she is a participant in the UCR badminton toumaments. CUB STAFF Editor . ................ Dick Williams Mg. Editor ..,.,r,,...... jim St. Clair City Editor - ......... Janet Buvens Cir. Mgr. ..... -- Marilyn Merchant Bus. Mgr. .................. Bill Cowen AS 'OF MAY 28, students may leave their study list stubs at the Office of the Registrar in order to receive a report of final grades for the spring semester. Each stub must be enclosed in a stamped envelope bearing the full name and address of the student. MEXICAN FOOD Ralpll DeMaroo' A , ...al . .. mr P' .,'- - E... .2i 6 C , f , flll l V ' , A. ,. , , I , I, I 4: 'L M-L 5 'lt' - 1 li33'7'l?.gQ1!!:f-1 i -1- . a , one .wr 5 :kill Lxlx 'NBTA ' use NIACNOUA AVE. I . H SMALL PIANOS Bought - Sold - Rented Steinway - Knabe - etc. S5 a mo. up Gossett's - 4024 7th SHOP AT GABRIELS Styles For Young Men 3827 Main Street ' af R'UBY'S negiiifnililnr rn July 20 1923 in Plainview, DON CREE 13th 8. Market Streets - Riverside MEN, WEAR IN cAsE You DoN'T KNow IT . . YOU'RE CONNECTED I TOT fx - N Y M f u X.-E ' Riverside Oung emo a Ages I-XJ I Q Masses Qwitwt' 5 5 , WOMEN 5 3937 Main sneer 9 I X Q Fashlon Riverside, California 0. u Q J Uofhes Phone 1-0658 0 . ' V 3855 MAIN 4- fig WN GS HAMBURGERS isc KI Cheeseburgers ,,,,..,.,.,,,,,,,, 23: 9 , . . C 1 C 3 ' Pastrami Sandwich-351: , -L .' Tender Beef, Delicately Sag ' A -1 4 xx Spiced, on French Roll, N ' Tasty Bar-B-Q Sauce Y Ruversldes Unique W' ' ' if ' T Self Service THICK MAI-TS - ------- -------- 2 of ' X lf' DRIVE IN RESTAURANT FRENCH FRIES M, ,-.,-,, ,,,- , 'ISC '- - I 1365 E hgh S, t HOT CHOCOLATE ....,....... 'I5c A,ppY- CAl.I FO R N IA C,,,,e,'?.w, comes, Root BEER, T R I C NEAR UCR CAMPUS ORANGE and COKE ...... ..--'I0c ' ' ' ' . I 1 .. . , . ,, 3 . I O l ' I f n 5 . I s 1 of I I . 14' 'iiE6'gi, . ,' ' , 'ra -' 1 . . 'fl iff,-as f'IlQiP'w Ei th., . gig., 3Q5'f z- iiP'g- I . . , . 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