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March 6, 2001
Contact: Jim Burns (831/459-2495, jrburns@cats.ucsc.edu)
UC SANTA CRUZ PUBLISHES ORAL HISTORY MEMOIRS OF FORMER CHANCELLOR KARL S. PISTER
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SANTA CRUZ, CA--The Regional History Project of the University Library at UC Santa
Cruz has published the oral history of Karl S. Pister, chancellor of UCSC for five
years in the early 1990s. Pister's recollections of his tenure as UCSC's sixth chancellor
include his perspectives on a number of issues his administration faced: the recession-caused
budget cuts UCSC absorbed, the UC Regents' controversial decision regarding affirmative
action, the state of town-gown relations upon his arrival at UCSC in 1991, and controversies
surrounding construction projects on campus.
The oral history, entitled Karl S. Pister, UCSC Chancellorship, 1991-1996,
was transcribed and edited from interviews conducted by UCSC Regional Historian Randall
Jarrell.
Born in Stockton, California, Pister received his B.S. (1945) and M.S. degrees (1948)
in civil engineering at UC Berkeley. In 1952 he received his Ph.D. from the University
of Illinois in theoretical and applied mechanics.
Prior to his tenure at UCSC, Pister had spent 30 years at UC Berkeley as a faculty
member and 15 years there as an academic administrator. He began his career at Berkeley
as a lecturer in 1947; in 1952, he joined the faculty of the campus's College of
Engineering, where he had a distinguished career as a professor of engineering. He
served as dean of the college from 1980 until 1990.
In his narration, Pister describes a number of institutional conflicts and town/gown
difficulties that he encountered early in his tenure as UCSC chancellor. He worked
to reconcile UCSC's unique college system and emphasis on undergraduate education
with the university's research mission.
He also described controversies over campus building projects--the founding of Colleges
Nine and Ten and a music/performing arts complex--and efforts that his administration
made to improve UCSC's capital planning process.
Pister also discusses the severe budget cuts, occurring during his tenure, that had
a significant
impact on campus academic programs and future planning. He describes a collaborative
budget process that he said helped the campus weather those budget storms, while
at the same time maintaining faculty, staff, and student morale during a difficult
period in the campus's history.
In the oral history, Pister also describes the difficult state of town/gown relations
that he faced upon his arrival at UCSC. Pister believes he succeeded in toning down
the rhetoric and establishing cordial relations with the city and county of Santa
Cruz, ushering in a new era of cooperation.
Throughout his tenure as chancellor, Pister was a tireless advocate for university
involvement in the effort to improve K-12 education in the region, and he describes
UCSC's role in the Monterey Bay Educational Consortium, which has fostered collaboration
between the campus and public schools. He also describes his effort to expand UCSC's
outreach to the region's thirteen community colleges, as well as the Leadership Opportunity
Awards scholarship program he instituted that assists community college students
transferring to UCSC.
The narrative also includes Pister's detailed commentary on UCSC's admissions strategies
subsequent to the outlawing of affirmative action by the UC Regents. He describes
the role he played in joining with other UC chancellors to issue a unanimous public
statement opposing the board's decision.
The Pister volume, as well as other oral history volumes documenting UCSC history,
are available in Special Collections at UCSC's McHenry Library and at UC Berkeley's
Bancroft Library. The volumes may also be purchased for the cost of duplication.
For additional information, contact UCSC's Regional History Project via e-mail (ihreti@cats.ucsc.edu) or telephone (831/459-2847).
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