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Page 33 text:
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' t? This spring, the first closed-circuit instructional television studio facility in the entire University of California v as put into operation. The studio is located in North Hall and twenty-eight receiving monitors are installed in fourteen viewing classrooms in the same building. For the Spring semester 1962 the first project was to present Biology 1 A lecture demonstrations through television while handling the laboratory sections in the conventional manner. Lab instructors were present in each classroom during the television presentation. The use of television on our campus actually began in the Fall of 1961 when the Biology 1 A staff used an intra-classroom television set-up to make it possible for students to better observe demonstra- tions, magnified microscope slides, and other visual materials. The objective in using television is to bring high quality instruction within the reach of a greater number of students and to make more efficient use of faculty, space, and instructional materials. By teaching some large enrollment courses through television with one or two professors, others will be able to devote their time to small-enrollment situations such as seminars and laboratories. adminhiration and Cjovernmeni 29
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Page 32 text:
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In the foreground is an old Marine barracks, the top of whic h is now an extension to the Student Health Center 28
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Page 34 text:
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Kerr, Regents Visit U.C.S.B. It is a pleasure to greet the students and faculty of Santo Barbara in the 1962-63 La Cumbre, whose theme is the growth of the University of Califor- nia, and particularly of this campus. During this decade of the sixties, the University as a whole will double in size, from 55,000 students to more than 1 10,000. Santa Barbara, however, will triple — from 1960 enrollment of 3,448, you are expected to grow to 11,800 by 1970. This growth offers both great promise and great challenge. To preserve standards of high quality while educating an ever greater number of stu- dents; to foster diversity within unity; to retain the informality and sense of identity of the Santa Barbara campus while coping with the problems posed by greatly increased enrollments will require skill, forbearance, and dedica- tion of the ideals of a university. Although it will be for from easy, I feel confident the students and faculty of the Santa Barbara campus will meet these challenges with success. Clark Kerr The Regents The administration of the University is entrusted, under the State Con- stitution, to the 24 Regents of the University of California. The board has full powers of organization and government, subject only to such Legislative con- trol as is necessary to insure compliance with the terms of the University ' s endowments and the security of its funds. This board deals with problems of formation of University policy, the selection of the President of the Univer- sity, and the selection of faculty and facilities. The Regents convened at UCSB late in September for a meeting and the inauguration of Chancellor Cheadle. First row; Jerd F. Sullivan, Jr., Samuel B. Mosher, Norris Nash (1962 Alumni Association President). Philip L. Boyd, Lieutenant Governor Glenn M. Anderson, President Clark Kerr, Edwin W. Pauley, Donald H. McLaughlin, Norton Simon, and Edward W. Carter. Second row: Cornelius J. Haggerty, Mrs. Randolph A. Hearst, Mrs. Edward H. Heller, William M. Roth, Robert E. Alshuler, William E Forbes, John S. Watson. 30
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