Letters
Letters to the editor
Student priority
Editor:
We want students in the humanities to understand the reasoning behind
the administrative reorganization of the Humanities Division - the subject
of a recent Bruin article ("Department clustering creates strange
bedfellow," Nov. 14) and Viewpoint piece ("Humanities merger sells all
involved short," Nov. 16).
First, a little background. UCLA's budget - including the budget for the
humanities - was cut dramatically, effective July 1, 1994. The Humanities
Division alone was required to sustain a cut of $1.4 million in annually
recurring expenditures.
Our highest priority in the face of this reduction was to preserve the
academic quality of the humanities, with a special concern for the quality
of undergraduate and graduate education.
We could have taken the entire $1.4 million out of our teaching budget,
but that would have put an intolerable burden on our students. Had we done
so, classes would be larger than they currently are, scores of courses
would be permanently eliminated, and undergraduate education would suffer.
The alternative was to reduce our much smaller administrative budget.
Both the teaching and the administrative budgets had already been
subjected to previous rounds of budget cuts, and painful cuts could not be
avoided. We were not eager to reduce the administrative budget either, but
the alternatives were worse.
Contrary to the Viewpoint piece, our administrative reorganization has
produced needed savings of almost one-half million dollars annually. The
decision to take these funds out of the administrative side of the
humanities has saved some 100 courses per year. The decision was difficult,
but we remain convinced that it was the correct one in the best interests
of students.
The front page Daily Bruin article suggested that the separation of
French, Germanic, Italian, Scandinavian, comparative literature and romance
languages/linguistics faculty from their administrative staff - and the
resulting diminishment of their sense of community - was owed to the
administrative reorganization. It was not.
The faculty/staff separation predated the reorganization by six months
and was a direct consequence of the Northridge earthquake, which displaced
all Royce Hall occupants. The staff were moved into Murphy Hall; the
faculty, initially housed in a Westwood office building, have recently and
mercifully been able to move back to campus into temporary quarters.
Faculty and staff will be immediately reunited on the first day that we
are allowed to move back into Royce Hall.
UCLA's departments and programs in the humanities are strong, and we are
working hard to see that they remain so. In the face of painful budget
cuts, our goal is to inflict as little damage on academic programs as
possible.
Pauline Yu
Dean of Humanities
Dave Wilson
Assistant Dean of Humanities
Lost tradition
Editor:
Missing: one graduation hood. If found, please return to the graduating
class of 1996.
Have any of you seniors (or anyone else for that matter) noticed that we
don't wear hoods at graduation anymore? We used to. Other schools do. We
even wear them when we take our yearbook/senior portrait pictures. Do you
wonder what happened to them?
Why it is that we don't wear them when we walk on that special day in
June? Now for those of you that have no idea what we are talking about, we
are referring to the hoods - those white and yellow pieces of cloth that
drape over your shoulders and down your back, distinguishing your college
graduation pictures from those of high school.
Now, you may be wondering why we are spending so much time on a subject
that only affects a select few students, but hoods are part of a
long-standing college tradition which has been noticeably absent from our
commencement ceremonies for quite some time now.
We believe that it is time to bring this tradition back. (Think of how
good our pictures will look in color!!!!) If any of you are planning to
graduate (we know you exist) and feel as we do, speak now, or be doomed to
wear ALL BLACK (unless you are an honor student) on that "joyous occasion."
Keep in mind that the June sun in Los Angeles is mighty hot on all black
polyester.
Please stop by the general representative's office in Kerckhoff 311 and
leave word with Cheryl Chang, Nancy Licker or Maita Schuster. This is the
first step of the rest of your life - make it a colorful one.
Maita Schuster
Fourth-year
HistoryNancy Licker
Fifth-year
Psychology


