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Page 25 text:
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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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' 11 s:.f:5Eziz25S fzE,.-. . - '---:-:-:1:-:+:-:-:i: :-,-: ... .::-:-1-:-:-:-' -:-:' .1e-s.-.w'.x-- : -, , '-2:4:V:-:-:-:-:-:-:I:?:2zI-1'2-:-:':-:- .-:-:-:-:?:2:5:1:I Ar- :-:-:1:- - .-:et-5' ' FEE: :5:5:5:-.' --E-123-I-Erfrffilira.,A ' 'ifirkffiririrfrf:1:1if5vErE1E252. .2:1E2:fE '- . Qs 52EIE'E1E1S2.fE5E5E5Efifffifififfiifliiilz '''ifiiiiilfiilifffffififii'212555125 3E55553iiiEliliifrifilififfiilzff '55255225555EE5555555i5S55f3Z5E5Eg25E55255eg1 5f'E5?555:-:Q .5252 52gi5E5E55555555isiiiiisisifizfzigtigfgig 2:2:- ':1'':1:25522151E2S2E:E:E:E:5:1:3:2: E f'f'fff1E2:- ' 'f i:i552E1E -Frffi :IiiE1E15151EI?75252E.':IS1E2E2E2EIE2E2EIZ15 ' 1-f'il?:if:'i: ',Qff':2s' ffiiifiiisfzE55sSe2sSs255sfs:. fsg5is5s5s:l........ s 4.-:-1:52 232252555535352555555555 ?E5E?Ei5E5E5E555E5E525: 'E?E5E5Erf...,I-2 211 fig: :ggi35:E55555E5E55E5E5E5E3E3E iIE?E151ErE15:51E1EfE1ErEr, 3355252252325rErE1ErE:E1ErEr: . '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
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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. ,
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,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
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