University of California Santa Barbara - La Cumbre Yearbook (Santa Barbara, CA)

 - Class of 1963

Page 12 of 280

 

University of California Santa Barbara - La Cumbre Yearbook (Santa Barbara, CA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 12 of 280
Page 12 of 280



University of California Santa Barbara - La Cumbre Yearbook (Santa Barbara, CA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 11
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Page 12 text:

uc B desimel for OYov tfi, Among the plans for the growth of the campus is a proposed design for a new University Center. It will be the heart of the campus providing a gathering place for students, faculty, and guests in a friendly atmosphere conducive to in- JFormal discussion and closer relationships. Listed in the statement of basic principles for the University Center are four main purposes: . . . (1) to offer cultural and intellectual opportunities designed to encourage the enjoyment and appreciation of the world of creative arts as part of the daily educational experience of all students, (2) to provide basic services to the campus community, (3) to foster community participation through the Center serving as a meeting place where students and faculty can join with alumni, townspeople, and parents, (4) to provide facilities for wholesome physical and mentally-stimulating recreational activities as a needed counter-part of the de- mands of academic responsibilities. The Center is only one of the many buildings planned for the expansion of the campus, which will look strikingly different within ten years. Temporary buildings will no longer stand; in their places will be separate buildings for ad- ministration, for various disciplines, a Marine Biology Laboratory, many new resi- dence halls, and a new Student Health Center. Plans for landscaping will add to the natural beauty of the campus. A foot- path will skirt the northwest portion of the lagoon and could be used for gradu- ation and academic processions. While the northwest portion of the water will be used for boating activities, the rest will be preserved for the wildlife of the area. By September 1962 some plans had already been realized, and others were becoming realities. North Hall opened for full utilization of class and office space in the Fall of 1962. The addition to the library was completed at the same time. That same semester sow work progressing on the eight-story San Miguel Resi- dence Hall, the extension of the Health Center, and the addition of a bakery to the De La Guerra Dining Commons. It is clear from the height of North Hall and San Miguel that the new direc- tion for UCSB is upward as well as outward. This new two-way growth is the result of large enrollment pressures, maintenance of reasonable walking distances on campus, and efficient land use. If the original plans for the campus site had been followed, we would have exceeded the maximum enrollment in 1960-61. When the school was moved to its present site from the Rivera Campus in Santa Barbara the maximum enrollment was set at 3,500. The first permanent structures, the Physical Science Building and Library, were planned accordingly. Temporary barracks were sufficient for classrooms, dormitories, and offices. In 1958, with the steadily increasing enrollment, plans for a small, liberal arts college were no longer feasible. The Regents decided to make Santa Barbara a general campus of the University of California, setting the maximum enrollment at 15,000. Architect ' s drawing of proposed University Center as submitted to the Regents for approval in the fall of 1962.

Page 11 text:

iabfc of contenh Awards and Honoraries, 14 Administration and Government, 28 Activities, 72 Fall, 74 Fall Sports, 97 Winter, 106 Winter Sports, 1 1 8 Spring, 128 Spring Sports, 1 46 Graduates, 1 58 Organizations, 178 Residence Halls Association, 180 Greeks, 217 General Organizations, 250 Index, 260



Page 13 text:

bui(dino on a $o(id foundaiion. Organizations and activities on campus are growing. To help pay for the University Center, the Associated Students have voted to tax themselves to supplement the private pledges and provisional loans from the Regents. The Associated Students have also undertaken, for the next two years at least, a major portion of the finan- cial support and some of the administration of Camp Conestoqa, which provides camping experience for less privileged children. Our student government is gaining maturity and in- sight with experience. The annual Gaucho Grand Prix, dances such as the Playboy, Sadie Hawkins, and RHA Formal, and the Roadrunner Revue are growing into tra- ditions supplementing Homecoming and Spring Sing. New staff enthusiasm plus the guidance of a part- time Director of Publications has resulted in enlarged and improved student publications. Many student organizations are expanding, and new groups are forming. In the fall semester organizations such as the Drill Team, the Young Republicans, and the Honey Bears became very active. The Associated Men Students were reorganized. To promote a more sophisticated and realistic view of the UCSB campus, especially among high school students, the Associated Students organized a Speakers ' Bureau which went on the road for the first time in the fall of 1962. Pledges for a motion picture about the campus and students materialized, and subsequent work on the film was undertaken. The Radio Committee fought al- most insurmountable problems in trying to establish local and FM stations on campus. University growth has included the town of Santa Barbara. The Affiliates and a new Student-Affiliate Com- mittee further campus-community relations. These developments are only representative of the total activity of our various organizations. They are the foundation on which a student body three times the size of the present one can develop spirit and unity.

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