Published by The Museum, UCSB, 1979
Seller: PONCE A TIME BOOKS, SANTA BARBARA, CA, U.S.A.
0 41 p. Includes illustrations. Good. moderate shelfwear, some rubbing to the cover.
Published by UCSB Art Museum, 1999
Seller: Moe's Books, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Very Good. This is a clean copy. There are no markings to the text. There is some minor shelf/handling wear to the cover.
Published by UCSB, 1993
Seller: PONCE A TIME BOOKS, SANTA BARBARA, CA, U.S.A.
0 Very good. light shelf wear, ex museum stamp on blank flyleaf, includes the errata sheet.
Published by SPEECH TECHNOLOGY LIBRARY UCSB, Santa Barbara, Ca, 1987
Seller: PONCE A TIME BOOKS, SANTA BARBARA, CA, U.S.A.
0 199 p. Very good. No dust jacket as issued. Light shelfwear,
Published by UCSB, 1995. Volume 75., 1995
Seller: The Book Den, Santa Barbara, CA, U.S.A.
Very good, a few spots to endpapers.
Published by UCSB Art Museum, University of California, Santa Barbara, [Santa Barbara], 1977
Seller: PONCE A TIME BOOKS, SANTA BARBARA, CA, U.S.A.
0 35 p. : ill.; 22 cm. Includes Illustrations. Exhibition of the works of J. Ain and others. Very good. light shelf wear, mild toning to the cover.
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. No marks in text. No inscriptions etc. Not a library book. Ships today in a cardboard enclosure. Tim's Used Books, open shop in Provincetown, Massachusetts, providing good books at reasonable prices on the same spot since 1991. Shelf A/thin orange.
Published by University of California, Santa Barbara Library, 1968
Seller: PONCE A TIME BOOKS, SANTA BARBARA, CA, U.S.A.
0 7 p. Fine in very good dust jacket. light shelfwear, "Ed. of 1" in pencil on blank flyleaf.
Published by Marisol Press 1999 Santa Barbara, Some Previous Owner Marks / Use, 1999
Seller: GREAT PACIFIC BOOKS, Ventura, CA, U.S.A.
Some b/w Illustrations (illustrator). Spiral bound. Paperback : soft cover edition in good or better condition, some slight wear to edges, as normal for age of book. Excellent read. A good book to enjoy and keep on hand. Or would make a great gift for the fan / reader in your life. Please send us a note if you have any questions. Thank you. Book.
Published by Marisol Press 2000 Santa Barbara, 2000
Seller: GREAT PACIFIC BOOKS, Ventura, CA, U.S.A.
Some b/w Illustrations (illustrator). Spiral bound. Paperback : soft cover edition in good or better condition, some slight wear to edges, as normal for age of book. Excellent read. A good book to enjoy and keep on hand. Or would make a great gift for the fan / reader in your life. Please send us a note if you have any questions. Thank you. Book.
Published by Marisol Press 1999 Santa Barbara, 1999
Seller: GREAT PACIFIC BOOKS, Ventura, CA, U.S.A.
Some b/w Illustrations (illustrator). Spiral bound, cover has a small tear form binding. Paperback : soft cover edition in good or better condition, some slight wear to edges, as normal for age of book. Excellent read. A good book to enjoy and keep on hand. Or would make a great gift for the fan / reader in your life. Please send us a note if you have any questions. Thank you. Book.
Published by University of California UC, Santa Barbara UCSB 1999, Some Highlighting, 1999
Seller: GREAT PACIFIC BOOKS, Ventura, CA, U.S.A.
Some b/w Illustrations (illustrator). Spiral bound. Paperback : soft cover edition in good or better condition, some slight wear to edges, as normal for age of book. Excellent read. A good book to enjoy and keep on hand. Or would make a great gift for the fan / reader in your life. 2 books. Please send us a note if you have any questions. Thank you. Book.
Published by Santa Barbara: 1977., 1977
Seller: D & E LAKE LTD. (ABAC/ILAB), Toronto, ON, Canada
4to. pp. 150. English text with some french. b/w illus. errata loosely inserted. wrs. (title page torn along hinge edge at bottom, foot of spine chipped, bit rubbed, previous owners notes on front free-endpaper).
Seller: Hotdog1947, Glastonbury, CT, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Nice clean copy with a tight binding. Very mild shelf wear.
Published by Santa Barbara, CA: UCSB Library, 1976
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Condition: Good. Letterpress on deckled laid paper. 12.5 x 19.5 cm. Folded Sheet. Envelope and cards within. Illustrated cover.
Published by Santa Barbara, CA: UCSB Library, 1968
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
Condition: Good. 8vo. Portfolio, sheets within. Letterpress on wove paper.
Published by UCSB Art Museum, Santa Barbara, California, 1979
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 4to. 55 pp. Soft Cover. Good. Minor tears on Front Cover and 4 succeeding pages. Smudges on Covers. Stain on Back Cover. BW Plates. Provenance: From the estate of Gerald Nordland (1927-2019). Nordland was a museum director, art critic, educator and author.Dean of the Chouinard Art Institute (1960-64), Director of the San Francisco Museum of Art (now SFMoMA) (1966-73), Milwaukee Art Museum (1977-85), and the UCLA Wight Art Gallery (1973-1977). He is the author of over 60 publications, including books on Lachaise, Nakian, Diebenkorn and Frank Lloyd Wright.
Published by The Art Galleries, University of California, Santa Barbara 1970, 1970
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. 8vo. Unpaginated. Soft Cover. Very Good. Scuff marks on Front and Back Covers. Featured works include Willem de Kooning, Georgia O'Keefe, and Mark Rothko. BW Plates.Provenance: From the estate of Gerald Nordland (1927-2019). Nordland was a museum director, art critic, educator and author.Dean of the Chouinard Art Institute (1960-64), Director of the San Francisco Museum of Art (now SFMoMA) (1966-73), Milwaukee Art Museum (1977-85), and the UCLA Wight Art Gallery (1973-1977). He is the author of over 60 publications, including books on Lachaise, Nakian, Diebenkorn and Frank Lloyd Wright.
Publication Date: 1969
Magazine / Periodical
[Student Activism][Black Panthers] El Gaucho, the University of California, Santa Barbara student newspaper, a record of California student activist reporting in the weeks after the October 15, 1969 Vietnam Moratorium, from the arrest of Michel Barton and Mick Kronman to Black Students Union demands for the removal of Black Studies chairman Setahrd Fisher and Angela Davis's November 4 appearance on campus. Across five late-October and early-November 1969 issues, the paper prints front-page headlines including "Two arrested for moratorium action," "Blacks demand firing of Black Studies Dept. head," "BSU denounces Cheadle and breaks communication with administration," and "Angela Davis speaks to UCSB community today," placing UCSB within the wider California New Left fights over antiwar protest, Black student power, ethnic appropriations, police action, and the political authority of the university itself. Noon rallies, Legislative Council votes, faculty statements, guest editorials, and letters to the editor give the archive the texture of organizing in progress rather than retrospective summary. El Gaucho. Vol. 50, nos. 24, 26, 27, 28, and 30. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, October 27 to November 4, 1969. Archive of 5 issues with coverage centered on antiwar mobilization, Black Studies conflict, student government appropriations, ecological politics, and campus debate over public speech and university governance. [1] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, October 27, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 24. Front page coverage centers on the arrests of Michel Barton and Mick Kronman in the aftermath of the Vietnam Moratorium under the headline "Two arrested for moratorium action," paired with an interview feature, "Busted students - what they think," and an editorial asking "Why cancel classes for Shriver, not for moratorium?" Interior commentary extends the issue's activist frame through debate over class cancellation, political speech, and the university's treatment of protest. [2] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, October 29, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 26. This issue shifts from the Moratorium's immediate aftermath to student institutional strategy, with "Leg Council tackles ethnic appropriations," "Santa Barbara's law system under scrutiny by JAR," and "Two day moratorium planned." The paired attention to Associated Students funding, Judicial Administration Review, and plans for the November 13-15 Moratorium shows student activism moving through both protest and campus governance. [3] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, October 30, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 27. The strongest issue in the group for Black student organizing at UCSB, opening with "Blacks demand firing of Black Studies Dept. head," "BSU's Bob Mason says Fisher is not acceptable," and "Fisher answers BSU charges." Its interior editorial, "Dr. Fisher, your people have spoken," makes clear that the fight concerned who would control Black Studies, whether black students would be recognized as legitimate participants in departmental decision-making, and how Chancellor Vernon Cheadle's administration was handling that demand. [4] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, October 31, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 28. Student government and Black student protest converge here in "Leg Council appropriates money to ethnic groups, JAR" and "BSU denounces Cheadle and breaks communication with administration," with additional coverage of a campaign to lower the voting age. The issue preserves the language of the break itself, including Robert Mason's charge that the administration had failed to admit black students' right to make decisions about black studies concerns. [5] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 4, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 30. Angela Davis's scheduled UCSB appearance anchors the issue under the headline "Angela Davis speaks to UCSB community today," followed by "Trusteeship condemned," a "BLACK FACULTY STATEMENT," and a full "Guest editorial from the Black Students Union." Davis's presence links the local Fisher dispute to the statewide University of California crisis surrounding her UCLA appointment, Communist Party affiliation, and the Regents' intervention, giving this final issue particular force within California New Left and Black campus politics. California was an especially concentrated area for New Left student activism advocating for antiwar organizing, Black student control over Black Studies, voting reform, environmental concerns, and statewide conflict over the governance of the University of California. Because El Gaucho was printing these disputes as they unfolded, the archive preserves not only headline events but the campus organ through which student activists shared information on government appropriations, committee hearings, rally announcements, faculty interventions, legal-defense language, and guest editorials. Newsprint toned with expected wear, including horizontal folds, edge chipping, short tears, creasing, and some small marginal losses; text and headlines remain clear. Overall very good condition. A UCSB student newspaper run from the week in which California student activism moved across the printed page from Moratorium arrests to Black Studies struggle to Angela Davis.
Publication Date: 1969
Magazine / Periodical
[Student Activism][Anti-Vietnam] El Gaucho, the University of California, Santa Barbara student newspaper, reporting on the November 15 Vietnam Moratorium, the anthropology department fight over Professor Bill Allen, and disputes over Black Studies and student power. Five issues dated November 10 to December 2, 1969, with front-page headlines including "Student groups call for unity," "Moratorium mobilizes to San Francisco," "Students demand public hearing," "Reform workshops created," "Moratorium activities finalized," "No funds for IFC, asks for Allen open hearing," and "Academic Senate's power mainly traditional," while interior pages carry editorials, letters, classified ads, and event notices for UCSB and Isla Vista. Named organizations and speakers including MECHA, BSU, GSA, Leg Council, the Academic Senate, Black Panther Chief of Staff David Hilliard, Joan Baez, Ralph Abernathy, and Don Luce anchor the run in the specific political language of California student activism rather than retrospective summary. El Gaucho. Vol. 50, nos. 34, 36, 37, 38, and 47. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 10 to December 2, 1969. Archive of 5 issues documenting antiwar organizing, faculty conflict, Black Studies governance, student government, environmental controversy, and campus debate over university authority. [1] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 10, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 34. Front page coverage opens with "Student groups call for unity" and "Moratorium mobilizes to San Francisco," placing MECHA, BSU, and GSA beside plans for the coming antiwar demonstration. Interior pages with articles titled "Viet War tax protest, "Eclectic GGR brings happiness to all," and a large notice asking "Who Discovered America?," preserving activist controversy. [2] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 12, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 36. Covers the Bill Allen controversy, with front-page headlines "Students demand public hearing" and "Moratorium emphasis on San Francisco," alongside a portrait captioned "BILL ALLEN / Tenured faculty want him out." The same issue also includes "Asian immigration depends on economics," tying antiwar mobilization and the Allen dispute to broader campus arguments over race, labor, and immigration. [3] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 13, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 37. This issue centers on anti-Vietnam War protests including "Moratorium plans here include: marches / vigils / canvasses / picketing / rally," supplemented by an "Official thorough moratorium schedule" listing Bank of America picketing, a Lompoc draft-resisters vigil, and the San Francisco caravan. "Reform workshops created" and "Ordered channel drilling could bring earthquakes" place antiwar action beside university reform and environmental politics, while "Krishna brings consciousness" retains the heterogeneity of the campus paper. [4] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, November 17, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 38. Published after the November 15 march, this issue leads with "Peace hopes bring thousands together," "No funds for IFC, asks for Allen open hearing," and "I.V. - Santa Barbara rent ratio same." The continuation pages preserve the Moratorium photograph essay for November 15 at Santa Barbara and San Francisco, with slogans including "OUT NOW," "NOT ONE MORE DEAD!," "VETERANS FOR PEACE," and "BUSINESS AS USUAL TODAY IS MURDER IN VIETNAM," giving the run direct antiwar language rather than later paraphrase. [5] Wilson, Becca, ed. El Gaucho. Santa Barbara, California: University of California, Santa Barbara, December 2, 1969. Vol. 50, no. 47. Headlines include "Academic Senate's power mainly traditional," "Poll covers a variety: politics, EG, I.V. etc.," "Slough forum today has pros and cons," and "Free panel tomorrow discusses U.S. & French student movements." Its interior spread, headed "USIA film on Vietnam war-support, dissent at home-assumes the existence of Nixon's 'silent majority,'" and the surrounding classifieds and local advertising preserve how foreign policy debate, campus polling, environmental dispute, and everyday student commerce occupied the same issue. These issues were printed during a month when UCSB students were organizing transport to San Francisco for the November 15 Moratorium, confronting anthropology chair Geoffrey Gaherty over Bill Allen, debating the authority of the Academic Senate and Leg Council, and following speakers such as David Hilliard and Don Luce as part of a broader California campus political crisis. The run is especially useful because it preserves the language of process as it was happening, from "public hearing" and "open hearing" to "marches," "vigils," "canvasses," and "picketing," while also retaining letters pages, classifieds, cinema listings, and local advertisements that locate student protest within the ordinary print environment of Santa Barbara and Isla Vista. Newsprint toned with expected horizontal folds, edge chipping, short tears, creasing, and small marginal losses; text and headlines remain clear. Overall very good condition. A five-issue El Gaucho run covering UCSB antiwar mobilization, faculty conflict, and university governance as concurrent campus struggles.