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Chapter 2:
Barely There, Bloom, Then Bust |
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First Full-Time Geographers Finally, in 1961, a lecturer was hired to teach Geography exclusively. In 1962, two lecturers were hired. In 1963, the Geography "Program," which had been administered by the Department of Social Sciences, then the Department of Sociology-Anthropology, was put under the direct charge of the Dean of the College of Letters and Science. The Dean hired two different lecturers, Berl Golomb and Robert McColl. These young men were PhD candidates from UCLA and the University of Washington, respectively. Although McColl left in a couple years, Golomb remained until 1971, struggling to build a Department without the autonomy, funds, and tenure-advancing power that a Department possesses. (2, 30, 32, 33, 40) The Geography Program was located in a building left over from the Marine base, a two-story wood frame bungalow designed to be a "temporary" building. The offices, diagonally across the walkway from the Geology Building, were somewhat campy. Walls were thin, colors dingy, electrical outlets minimal, and furnishings well used. The ground floor was occupied by Geography; upstairs was an anatomy lab. If you knew the right person, you could get a tour of the cadaver du jour. Luckily, the smell of formaldehyde didn't waft downstairs. (2, 34) (Long after Geography moved to Ellison Hall in 1969, "406" was remodeled and expanded. The so-called government temporary building now houses the Equal Opportunity Program and the Chicano/Latino Cultural Center.) First Bachelor's Degree In Fall 1966, the Geography Program began offering a Bachelor of Arts degree. For the first time, the UCSB Catalog described the study of Geography:
In other words, Geography was still considered a "useful liberal education" for, basically, teachers.
Geography faculty and students were especially involved in the environmental issues. Drs. Robert Curry and Norman Sanders were highly vocal. For instance, Sanders, in a regular Geography class that was nicknamed "Norm's Environmental Activism," required students write a press release and go on a field trip to the Diablo Canyon nuclear power generator. (10) Sanders didn't hold UCSB sacred from reproach, either. Once, he orchestrated a media event to publicize the importance of considering wetlands when the Administration was planning a campus roadway that would destroy habitat. Alerting the media, Sanders pressed the Geography secretary and a student to climb in a rowboat in Goleta Slough, which is just north of campus, showing that the channel was navigable and, thus, must be preserved.* Rumor has it the Chancellor was livid. (2, 10) (Sanders, while appreciated by many students, was nicknamed "Stormin' Norman" by some colleagues. (2, 7, 11) He returned to Tasmania in 1974, became a Senator, and received a special lifetime award for environmental activism in 2001.) On a less controversial note, Golomb hired John "Jack" Estes in 1969. Estes taught air photo interpretation, and would be the one man that survived the razing of the Program in 1974. Aerial photography had been a secret endeavor of the United States government since 1958. Satellites carrying cameras took pictures of, among other places, the Soviet Union. Estes had worked for the CIA, interpreting such air photos, in 1963 and 1964. When Estes was hired by UCSB, this technology was beginning to spread to civilian applications. (Link to "sidebar" article about Jack Estes)
Bust But the Program was sinking. Berl Golomb believed a prime factor was "Reaganomics":
Discouraged and defeated in his efforts to create a Department, Golomb left in 1971. (2, 40)
Rickborn countered Golomb's characterization of Dean Cressey and Chancellor Cheadle: "I knew both Don Cressey and Vernon Cheadle very well, and it is simply not true that 'Cressey resigned in disgust.' He did a great job as Dean, but wanted to give more effort to his private consulting, which he subsequently did. He never spoke disparagingly of Cheadle, or vice versa. In fact, in all the years that I knew Cheadle, I only once, in private, heard him say something negative about a faculty member (and it wasn't Norman Sanders)." (10) The disparity in Golomb's and Rickborn's recollections demonstrates how differently life can be experienced and remembered by different people. Who feels supported and valued by whom can especially influence memories and understandings. Golomb clearly did not feel supported by UCSB administrators. Apparently, this wasn't just in his mind. Geology Prof. Emeritus Robert Norris, who later was on the committee to select Geography's first Chair, confirmed that the Geography Program had been poorly run by the administration. Norris had taught general geography courses before Golomb was hired. At one point, he and geology Prof. Robert Webb, who also had taught geography courses, offered to take the program under Geology's wing to lift it out of the administration's morass. (9) Whatever really happened when the Geography program was a stepchild of, at first, social sciences, then, the College of Letters and Science, it was not an easy time. And all persons interviewed considered their contributions honorable. ______________________________ * Norman Saunders' Goleta Slough episode, as related by John Cloud, who was a graduate student in UCSB Geography from 1990-2000: "What was at stake here was the contention of UCSB, lead agency
under California CEQA, that only State permission was necessary to pave
the slough for a freeway that would bypass the university entrance and
go around campus to dead-end in Isla Vista. By traveling up the slough
in a boat (to Hollister Avenue, near where, at the time, there was a
Shakey's Pizza) the geography trio demonstrated that the slough was,
in fact, arguably a "navigable river," meaning that the freeway
proposal would require review and authorization by the Army Corps of
Engineers, pursuant to rules in the US Code that go back to about 1970.
The Army Corps of Engineers wasn't under control of the University of
California, unlike California State agencies. As soon as the freeway
proposal went to the Corps, enough environmental
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December 1,
2003
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