University of California Riverside - Tartan Yearbook (Riverside, CA)
- Class of 1954
Page 49 of 82
Page 49 of 82
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Page 49 text:
“
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.
”
Page 48 text:
“
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.
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DR. EUGENE EISMAN
For students, eats before exams
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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.
”
Page 50 text:
“
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
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