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Page 55 text:
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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.
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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 . MEXICAN FOOD Ralph DeMarco' of , ,,,, Q -. - Riverside Q ' ' - Q Lge RK ' an C ,. ,C . , MIESES' N M I ' ' 4 ' WOMEN S I f .2 .. . 1... . .ummm '- -1- . 1 till-F FEy,i 7'iTit-- Fashion I- H, I h CALIFORNIA - Cot es ,E p etwsxaxmpplpkixffmvt, 5:55315 RAN, 3855 MAIN , nm I .J-:gl . .- 1--14' 'ii', if i'i' F . ' . ro N at if ' . 9 X Q 0 U Q J .N ' ' J . M 1
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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 ........ '
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