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University of New Mexico

UNM Digital Repository

1968 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

11-21-1968

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 48, 11/21/

1968

University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at:https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1968

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1968 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contactdisc@unm.edu.

Recommended Citation

University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 48, 11/21/1968." 72, 48 (1968).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/

daily_lobo_1968/118

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PageS NEW MEXICO I,OBO Wednesday, November 20, 1968

Constitution Group Will Study ASUNM

By SHANNON ROBINSON that changes be made · th II 'd

Staff 'Vriter structure of t d t .m te a .pres! ents ~f campus organi- ommend a constitutional change The Student Senate Steering "M . , ~ u en . go;er~m~~ . zati~ns requestmg th~y ~ead the should send a delegate with the

Any student interested in work- ing on this sub-committee should fill out a student government ap- plication and submit the form to Mrs. Pickett, student government secretary, before December 2.

Committee is currently setting " OI e Efficient Orgamzatwn portlo1!S of the conshtutwn that written proposal, said Miss Wil- There are certainly areas in concern them and make recom- son.

up a subcommittee to make rec- the constitution,'' Dines said yes- mendations, Miss Wilson said. - - - - ommenda tions concerning revi- t d "th t 1 ld V · ·

sion of the Constitution of the As- er ay, a we s IOU look into, oting m Spring

· t d and I'm going to contact all the One or two ammendments soc1a e Students of UNM. executive committee chairmen on

Th might be up for student approval

e steering committee will how their committees can be more this fall, however most of the consider revising the constitution efficiently organized." He sa1'd · ·

Patronize

h revisions will probably be voted

at T t e request of Student Senate that the executive branch can also on next spring, said Miss Wilson.

reasurer, Ron Curry. The re- be reorganized and divided into The steering committee ached- quest is in accord with Student two separate branches with a de- uled an open meeting to hear pro- Senate President Jim Dines' sug- partment head for each. posals for constitutional changes gestion in his inaugural address, "The sub-committee will be on Thursday Dec. 3 in the Activ-

Classes Resume At California U

(Continued from page 1) mayor as he walked to his car.

"Why don't you people try to be reasonable?" asked Alioto.

He was greeted with jeers, in- cluding chants of "pigs off cam- pus," from the crowd, many of whom had attended a meeting of Students for a Democratic Society a few minutes earlier.

Before his half hour conference with Smith, Alioto told newsmen

"if it takes the police force to open state tomorrow, I assume we should do it."

Alioto Urges Opening

"We can't let a small group of a couple of hundred stand in the way of 18,000 students," he said.

In his campus address, Smith said Monday's emergency session of the college trustees "was ex- tremely disappointing" because they "did not discuss the basic underlying problems of finances and moral commitments" regard- ing a black studies program.

Trustees called for resumption of classes and pledged considera- tion of the proposed programs at their regular monthly meeting next Monday.

The campus closure came a week after Negro students called

a strike to support several de- mands, including reinstatement of Black Panther George Mason Murray. Murray was suspended as an Anglish instructor after ad- vocating that Negroes carry guns on campus to defend themselves against "racist administrators."

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PERSONALS

PLAYBOY & NEWSWEEK. College sub- scription rateJI go up January 1, 1959 by 26%. They make excellent Christmas gifts at the lower ralea, To pJaee order simply go by American Bank of Com•

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Letters are being sent to all executive committee chairmen and

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Vol. 72

Board Retires;

Second Session Meets Tonight

Student Standards retired this morning at about 3 a.m. still un- abl to resolve the cases of three UNM students charged with dis- ruption of the University's "edu- cational function."

Standards will reconvene to- night at 5 p.m. to resume delib- eration. Last night's 6 hour ses- sion in the Kiva was followed by over two hours of deliberation by the board.

A crowd of spectators number- ing in the hundreds heard presen- tation of charges and support- ing testimony by the University and Vice-President for Student Affairs Harold Lavender, three NROTC program officers, and one midshipman. Defense for the three students presented a mid- shipman, an eyewitness student, and the three defendents to tes- tify that there had been no sub- stantive disruption.

determine what bias, if any, you might have had toward Cooper,"

he said.

Brown said he had authorized an investigation of Cooper by an agency which he refusd to name.

He also refused to reveal any find- ings of the investigation. Green- hut them ruled that McKinnon could not question Brown further about his investigation. Greenhut also ruled that Brown "can an- swer whatever questions he may

choose."

Brown explained that he had only authorized investigations of

"those who threatened ROTC- for example, activists on campus."

He said these were several, but did not name any others.

All three defendants denied leadership of the demonstration and said it was not premeditated beyond the planned silent vigil.

Thursday, November 21, 1968

Student Standards

Position Open After Thanksgiving

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No. 48

Lobo Photo by Tony Louderbough

Seated left to right at the Student Standards Board meeting held last night are: Harold Lavender, Vice-President for Student Affairs, defense lawyer Bill McKinnon, demonstrators Allen Cooper and Larry Russell, defense attorney Alfred McRae, demonstrator Manuel Wright, and student senator Steve van Dresser.

' '

Lavender explained that only Wright, Cooper, and Russell had been charged, despite photographs of the event furnished him by the Navy and a complicity statement signed by about 70 students, be- cause they were the "only ones identifiable." University counsel William Sloan charged that the statement was "hearsay, irrele- vant, and opinion."

Senate Allocates Draft Adviser Funds

Captain Kenneth Brown, pro- fessor of Naval Science, testified under cross-examination t h a t Cooper was "very evident as an organizer of the demonstration."

Brown testified that he regarded the Navy physical training tests as both a military requirement and an academic activity.

ASUNM Senator Steve van Dresser asked Brown if he wished to deny an earlier conversation to three students in which he said the physical tests were not an academic function. Brown said he could not deny the statement. He said, "I've thought and said many things," and might have cbanged his mind.

Marine Lt. Col. Buynak said Cooper might be considered more of a leader than the rest of the demonstrators. He said he ob- served Cooper ask a group of 15 to 20 students, "Why do we need ROTC on campus?"

Buynak said he told Wright,

"Manny why don't you get off the field?" Wright interjected,

"You said 'Get the hell off the field!'"

Defense counsel Kinnon pursued a tioning o:f Brown

William Me- line of ques- designed "to

By JOY HART Staff Writer

Student Senate last night al- located funds for a draft coun- selor at UNM.

Applications will be taken for the position after Thanksgiving, and a counselor will be hired for a two month trial period beginning Monday, Dec. 2, and ending March 6.

The counselor will be paid $100 a month, and he will be expected to have office hours fifteen hours a week. Senator Lee Pittard ex- plained, "If the counselor worked three hours a day and spent 15 minutes with each student, he could see 12 persons each day."

One Abstention

The bill passed with one absten- tion. Senator Mike Gortney, chair- man of the Senate Finance Com- mittee, abstained from voting after explaining that student gov- ernment had only $2800 for op- erating expenses for the rest of the year.

Earlier, an amendment was made by Senator Leonard De Layo to cut the funds for the proposal :from $250 to $150 providing a $50 monthly salary. The change would have meant that the counselor

U Studies Interrupted

would have been available for 30 hours a month instead of 60 hours.

The amendment was defeated.

Calvani said that he felt the lar- ger salary would have to be pro- vided to acquire a qualified and objective counselor.

Financial Situation

Passage of the bill came after much discussion about the asso- ciated students financial situation.

Gortney explained that if the Sen- ate keeps allocating funds at its present rate, a serious money shortage may develop before the year ends.

Senator Lee Pittard replied,

"If we need to pinch, let's pinch somewhere else." He explained that he felt the draft counseling service would benefit a large per- centage of the student body .

Senator Tony Olmi suggested that "a re-evaluation of where we've spent our money" may be necessary.

Only three students have turned in applications for the ten Senate positions which are up for re-elec- tion in December.

A new NSA co-ordinator will also be elected on December 13,

Draft Affects Graduates

Second semester will find grad- uate schools harder hit by the draft than they were first semes- ter, a recent college Press Se1·vice

(CPS) report said.

Graduate schools did not have the 70 per cent reduction in en- rollment they were expecting at the beginning of first semester CPS said. "Some universities had accepted more graduate students than they had room for, expecting many of them to be taken by the draft," the report said.

CPS said the universities now face money and housing shortages because they have too many stu- dents. "Twenty-five to 50 pe1· cent of the students who expected to be drafted returned to graduate school.''

"Universities will feel the loss of graduate students second se- mester, when all graduate stu- dents who have received draft notices first semester are induct- ed the report said. If they re- ceived a draft notice first semes- ter, they are being allowed to finish first semester," CPS said.

The report said that graduate schools which have felt the de- cline in numbers among students, report their greatest losses in professional schools. They have reported drops in e n r o 11 m e 11 t ranging from one to 20 per cent.

"Despite the apparent opti- mism that has been bred due to the past few month's lower draft calls, deans of some of the lead-

ing schools in the nation are worrying" CPS said.

The deans feel they may have lost their leverage point in lob·

hying to end the war CPS said.

Press coverage that graduate schools have not been hurt by draft calls has Jed many to be- lieve that the new administration will not listen to the dearts when they say their schools have in- deed been hurt by decreasing graduate enrollment, the report said.

Several schools that have grad- uate students facing induction will allow the students to return and pick up their education where the draft interrupted it, C P S said.

and applications are being taken for this position.

Petition Deadline

The deadline for petitions is F1·iday, November 29.

Petitions may be obtained from the student government office in the Union. A senate nominating petition must contain 75 signa-

tures, and a NSA co-ordinator petition 100.

In other action, the senate al- located $400 to help send three UNM law students to New Yorli"""' City next month to represent the Rocky Mountain Region in the na- tional finals of the Moot Court competition.

Police File Charges

Against Nude Co-Eds

MADISON, Wis. (UPI)-One complaint was dropped, but two new ones were signed Wednesday in the case against the University of Wisconsin's version of the play

"Peter Pan" that featured nude coeds.

The complaints were signed by Police Chief Wilbur Emery and Dane County Deputy Sheriff Da- vid Niemann.

Roger Matt, a former state senate journal clerlc, filed the ori- ginal complaint against Stuart A. Gordon, 21, a senior student from Chicago and producer of the parody of James M. Barrie's classic children's tale.

Mott said he withdrew the com- plaint because of "the abuse I've ben taking from people since I signed it."

Gordon and Carolyn Ann Pur- dy, 21, a coed from Janesville, were charged with violation of the state's obscenity law. Authorities were still trying to find out the identity of a second girl who allegedly danced naked in the play.

The girls, who were to repre- sent innocence, danced one of the

~lay's sequences last Sept. 30 in a special showing for Boll and Emery. Boll declared the play obscene and ordered it not to go on again.

However, Boll's ruling was de- fied and it was staged twice on Oct. 1 to capacity audiences.

"The U.S. Supreme Court says that in enforcing obscenity cases we havE' to rely on community standards," Boll said. "Our point is that we want a jury

to

deter- mine what community standards

are in obscenity cases so we can enforce them in the future."

Boll said neither Emery nor Neimann saw the "outlaw" ver- sions, but signed the complaints on the basis of Gordon's alleged admission that the same plays were performed as the one Boll and Emery saw.

Campus Crime

UNM police reported that no leads have turned up concerning an apparent practical poker in

Onate Hall.

A "cloud of smoke" reported Sunday afternoon by an Onate Hall resident turned out to be 'tear gas, ·POlice reports said.

University police, checking out two calls at 4:30p.m. from Onate residents about the smoke found noxious fumes in a first floor meeting room and one restroom;,>4

City firemen, responding to a call from UNM security officer Jack Cairns, took a heavy-duty fan into the building to help clear the fumes. The gas had spread through the first floor halls by 4: 45 p.m. The firemen left 50 minutes later.

UNM officer William Trotter said that the tear gas was ap- parently a practical joke. No one was apprehended. The gas was a type used in tear gas "pens."

Tear gas can be purchased by almost anyone in town," Trotter said.

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James A. Smith's·---~

Deep Education

~---Washington Report

The trouble with American higher education-which I

pref~r

to call "deeper education"-is that it sells the wrong

se~·viCe.

It has agreed to sell youth the best nine-to-five life but let Madison A venue sell him the rest. '

NEW :MEXICO LOBO

NEW

MEXICO

ROBERT BURTON Editor-in-Chief

LOBO

WAYNE CIDDIO Monaging Editor

Box 20, University P.O., UNM, Albuquerque, N.M., 87106 Editorial Phone (505) 277-4102, 277-4202

Thursday, November 21, 1968

The New Mexico Lobo i~ publi~hed daily every regular week af the Univer·

sity year by the Board of Student Pub·

lications of the Assodqted Students of the University of New Mexico, and is not financially associated with UNM. Printed by the UNM Printing Plant with second class poslaiJe P"id "' Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87106. Subscription rate is $5 for the academic year,

The opinions expressed on the editorial pages of The Lobo are those of the author solely, Unsigned opinion is that of the editorial board of The Lobo, Nothing necessarily represents the views of the Associated Students or of the Unl·

versity of New Mexico.

It is the depth of the American tragedy when a student is so occupied by his unwanted calculus assignments (he is let's say, a history major) that he has no time to read a 'daily newspaper, to visit the Bunker Hill monument, to read sev- l!t•al books which strike his interest, or to see the new movie version of War and Peace. If he is poor (which rising tuition has probably made him) we will probably see him working in

the cafeteria after he finishes his calculus. Bema Part Two: Is the Campus Ministry

"The Burden of God?"

Bema. is unsoliei~, sign~ guest editorial opinion, not necessarily r~flecting the views of Tbc Lobo.

In the midst of this misdirection, the cost of deeper educa- tion in America is rising. The U.S. Office of Education esti- mates that tuition at private four-year colleges will rise by 43 per cent in the next decade. At M.I.T. it has risen by 26 per cent in the last three years alone.

At this rate, the history major might soon ask himself on purely pl·agmatic terms if the cost-effectiveness of his

"union card" ordeal is worth it. He might instead, for ex- ample, take a year-long, round-the-world trip on Pan Amer- ican for $1270. Such a trip (with unlimited stops) would cost about 60 per cent of the average Ivy League tuition. The other

40

per cent, added to his normal expenditure on room and board, would provide the necessary living expense.

Unfortunately, the academic-corporate complex tells us that such is not a legitimate investment for "academic cre- dit." The draft board will support their claim if the student doesn't.

The irony of the situation is that the students who are going to private four-year colleges should then use their four years of freedom to their own ends and not the ends of some corporation which has designs on him. I have no more right than the college or corporation to say which ends are right.

Grades and prizes have contributed most to destroying any standard of self-appraisal in deeper education. One pro- fessor of mine has recognized this a11d te11s his students each year to turn in his own grade for the course. The idea is that the grade chosen will be no more inaccurate than the one the professor would choose and that it would remind the student

~·that

in the long run it is he himself, as in life, that he must .. satisfy.

Self-motivation and self-reward are the only basis of sound learning. The university, like Pan American, can and should only provide the facilities. The student will grow into the responsibility and independence which is demanded of him. The interest which is imposed only dies after college.

One concludes after a while that the professors and ad- ministrators who retain curricula lack a degree of optimism in the students: optimism that the student will find an in- terest of his own and pursue it "with discipline." Indeed, one soon concludes that his best four years of life are being exploited at his own consent, in the same way the colleges themselves are exploited by business and government.

Editor's Note--The following is the seeond part of a two-part guest editorial in response to a letter to The Lobo signed by most of the members of the campus ministry.

By MARTHA ROTHENBERG and JAMES KENNEDY What of those Christian clergy who act differently - who pass from dissent to an almost intol- erant action? What of Martin Luther King, Jr., of whom some of you SJloke so passionately last April, who has physically, though

"non-violently" intervened in the way the majority practiced social relations (segregation) in society through sit-ins, demonstrations, boycotts, strikes, etc.? And the same goes :for the grape boycott, what of the "rights" of the grow- ers?

Or what of King's marches in 1966 in Chicago - marches that were aimed, in his own words, at

"creative tcn:>ion"? Are these!, from your premises, not violative

of the intent of the gospels?

Weren't the demonstrations against NROTC aimed at a "cre- ative tension" that would gener- ate debate, action and finally a referendum against this fonn of complicity in war? ("And if there are any moral abSolutes, it is that W"ar is immoral,'' said Vice Presi·

dent Lavender last July 28 at the Unitarian Church in town, "and universities should not be involv·

ed in complicity with war.") How did the demonstrations, which you seem determined to separate yourselves from, differ from those of King or Muste, or the admoni·

tions of theologians like Adolf and Schaull, or the methodolgy of Gandhi?

And as for the gospels them·

selves. Didn't the Rabbi Jesus, who boasted he came to bring a

sword and not tranquillity (and he did bring a sword according to modern scholars like Joel Car- michael), himself violate the premises you attribute to his teachings?

Was it not an accepted part of the l'eligious practice and struc- ture of his society that it was legitimate to sell items for relig- ious offerings at the temple in the temple itself?

If such an act was to profane the bouse of God, the house of prayer, could it not have been dis- sented :from in an orderly man- ner, preached against and ap- peals made to the ·proper autho- rities to correct the abuse? Yet, instead of following s u c h a course, or knowing the power structure he confronted only too well, the Rabbi Jesus passed such actions (dissent) to violent rage and anger (tyranny) :

"Just before the Jewisk Pass- ovc1·, Jesus ~vent U]> to J crusalem, and in tlzc temple he found people selling cattle and sltecp and pig-

cons, and tile money changers sit- ting at their counters there.

"Making a whip out of some l'ord, he drove them all out of the tmnplc, cattle and sheep as well, scattcrccl tltc money- changers' coins, lcnoclced tlwi1· tables over and saicl to the pigeon-seUcrs,

"Take all this out of here ana stop turning my Father's house into a marlcet." (John 2:13-17)

The actions of Cooper, Wright, Russell and the others were hard- ly as intemperate as those of the

Rabbi Jesus in the temple. And granting the somewhat dubious assumption of Christians about the divinity of the Rabbi in question, do not our campus demonstrators have the sanction of divine example for their pro- tests against the profanation of

This is not, of course, to say that college is without value.

There are many things which one can? get only at college:

group living, hell week, intercollegiate sports, institutional 'food, basic science and humanities, and junior prom. But

these experiences can all be acquired in one year.

II To The Editor:

A :friend in Philadelphia, who attended Oxford in the Thirties, suggests one year of college for this reason and "to erase the stigma of not having gone," and suggests a possible curriculum for the remaining three years: one year as a union organizer, another in a Congressman's office, and the third as a reporter. But the idea is that the student would decide for himself, the criterion being that he not settle down. Simply the thought of no home work is healthy.

WANTS NEW STAFF To The Editor:

Come on novt, Lobo. Your edi- torial in the November 13 issue was truly puerile.

It was poorly written and con- tained the usual bromides about the "repressive right" and "over and under thirty" as well as the customary childish shocker about the "state t:it."

For those of us who vehement-

.

·-

...

NEWS EDITOR CAMPUS EDITOR WIRE EDITOR NIGHT EDITORS STAFF WRITfi::lS

"

CARTOONISTS PHOTOGRAPHERS l:lUSlNESS SUPERVISOR ADVERTISING MANAGER

SALES

~EPRESENTATIVES

CAMPUS CIRCULATION MAILING

Grant Harvey Sarah laidlaw

Grace Arnett

Scott Sandlin, Anne O'Brien

STAFF

George Campbell, G<::W Cook, Joy Hart, Steve LaPrade, Pat McCraw, John Miloglav, Anne O'Brien, Shannon Robinson, Scott Sandlin, Sandra Schauer, Susan Smith Susan Craig

Mike Algiers, Sam Hepford, Pat Trujillo Tony louderbough, Bob lager

Richard Pfaff Richard McDonald

David Baldridge, Chuck Ramsey, Chuck Reynolds Grant Harvey

David Baker

ly resent the petition from the hysterical 1200, the editorial was not the answer. We expect higher quality writing and slightly deep- er thinking from a presumedly competent editorial staff.

If the referenced editorial rep- resents yout collective thinking, please let us have a new staff- not because of your liberal lean- ings, for we are liberal also1 but because of your lack of expres- sion in writing.

We prefer competency in those who would be the spokesmen for the liberal left.

IIan-y L. Waler FINDS CHEERLEADERS

REPULSIVE To The EditoJ,":

In my four years at this institu- tion of higher learning I have missed but one borne football game although it has become in- creasingly difficult to drag myself to that site of so many ignomin- ious defeats, but why-and I !lay unto you, must we diehard fans be continuously insulted and em- barrassed by the cheerleaders (I use the term loosely) ?

r

find it hard to understand how anyone; no matter how inebriated, can stomach that repulsive exhi- bition rumored to be cheerleadirtg.

I would assume the students at thia university must have at least some degree of sophistication.

Where then did these ~<spirited

youngsters" come :from 'l llas :It

a house of scholarship and human studies?

Perhaps, unkind though it is, the actions of these students are condemned because not all the money-changers have left the house of the Lord, to say nothing of the house of learning. Perhaps the all-too-pious platitudes about

"justice," dissent, freedom and the not-overly-concrete involve- ment in the real struggles to achieve them by some of our clergy is what leads to the kind of spiritual malaise evident in their letter.

Tolerance, non -violence, and all the other words now enshrined as sacred cows by the liberal clergy are too often the excuses used for maintaining one's I'e-

sponsibility and at the same mo- ment salving one's conscience for not doing what must be done.

How safe Canterbury, Aquinas, Luther and the other houses are compared to Zimmerman Field and the fight against one more preparation for other Yiet Nams.

Perhaps it is that which separates the shepherds from the hired hands-the men and women like the Melvilles, Berrigans, Mustcs, and Kings from the others.

"Thus saith tiLe Lord: renrlcr jurloment in the morning and de- liver him that is opp1·csscd out of the hand of ltis oppresso1·, or cl.sc 11111 /!try will go forth like a fire and burn so that none can querwh it.'' (Jeremiah 21 :12)

It is your ethics that are dubi- ous at best, gentlemen of the cloth, not the values nor the ac- tions of the students and those who preceded 'them. Or as the gospels would say, look to your- selves before you seek out the speck in your brother's eye. Who would impose tyranny of acqui-

escence?

Letters are welcome, and should be no Jont:cr than 250 words type·

'>Titt<m, double spnccd. Natne, tele- phone nntnbci' and addre!ls tnust be included, although b:unc w!U be withheld upon requ.,;l:.

ever been considered that they may be demoralizing our team?

(Ah, perhaps a subversive plot by ou1· intense rivals.) They have certainly demoralized a large number of :fans, myself included, I am afraid I cannot force my·

self to attend another of these exhibitions.

Sorry guys. Rob Foss DISLIKES TAMPON ADS To The Editor:

The Playtex Company says in their ad that I'd be protected even on my ~<worst day"-whatever that euphemism might mean 1 t ? My 'worst day" was when I opened The Lobo and had a heavily made-up eye staring. at

me through the "softer and silky (not cardboardy)" outside o£ a tampon.

Playtex, please stick to

T.V.

and leave the printed word to Ralph Ginsberg.

Stephen M. Pazt ATTACKS GLASSllEI:M To The Editor:

The letter you printed From Glassheim Show& what a fool does In his spare time.

His grammar, Tome,

Is a banner For thee, · And a good laugh

To most of mankind.

Paul F. Weinbaum

Thursday, November Z1, 1968 NEW MEXICO LOBO PageS

Colleges Neglect Students, Says Report

spent with gradaute students.

One advantage of this is that

"graduate students will mo?t like- ly work for the professor, where- as the pesl<y undergraduate is more likely to demand that you

work for him," the report said.

Universities across the country pay far too little attention to the human development o:f the stu- dents :for whom they were creat- ed, according to a report by the Hazen Foundation on "The Stu-

d~nt in Higher Education."

The report said unless colleges start paying more attention to human development of students, the colleges will not be able to

"educate even technicians."

Dr. Alan Frank, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the UNM School of Medicine, was on the study committee composed of students, deans, and faculty mem- bers. At the time the 13-month study was being conducted, Frank was at Pennsylvania State Uni- versity.

Privately Financed

The st1,1dy was financed by the private Hazen Foundation, in New Haven, Conn. The founda- tion originally made religious studies, but recently concentrat- ed on studying higher education in the United States, Frank said.

The commission studied the problems o:f college curriculum, student-faculty communication,

Films

1

Speeches In Group's Plan

"To understand other cultures and get to know foreign students as people," is the function of the recently organized National, In- ternational Committee at UNM, said Chairman Ivan Castro.

The committee will work in conjunction with the Internation- al Club and International Center.

Most of thei.r ·plans are tentative, said Castro.

With the International Club, Castro said he hopes to show

"foreign films that are not neces- sarily educational but illustrate a country's culture.>~

In an effort to promote interest and concern with international political problems, the committee will sponsor panel discussions, said Castro. The invasion of Czechoslovakia by Russia would be one of the possible topics.

A third ;project is to have :for- eign students speak at the vari- ous student organizations on cam- pus. Castro said the purpose

is to better acquaint American students with the life and ;~~eople

of other countries.

At this time there are eight committee members: one admin- istrator, two faculty members, three students, one senator, and the chairman, Ivan Castro. The chairman has no vote.

Castro said the committee plans to meet every three weeks.

It might be an identit4 crisis •••

But we know

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and other campus problems such as living conditions.

The common assumption made by faculty and administration, the report said, is that students are ''simple minded savages who will destroy the peace, order, and reputation of a school if they are not kept at bay."

Consequently, the report said, the organization of many colleges and universities is "not terribly different from penal institutions,"

except students are free to leave the campus.

"Execution Site"

Many universities use the first semester freshman English course as an "execution site" for those the school does not want for vari- ous reasons, the report said.

For example, if the institution is required by state law to admit large numbers of students it con- siders "uneducable," freshman

English is often successful in purging the group.

The report suggested, "Compe- tition in all colleges should be re- duced. Grades should be optional and the student should be permit- ted to settle for a pass-fail alter- native if he so desires."

The commission :found the col- lege environment and programs

generally work to make the fresh-

faculty members must be promis- ed a high ~alary, many fringe benefits, and unlimited opportun- ity to engage in other forms of employment to raise his salary.

man's attempt at adjustment more difficult rather than easier.

The freshman usually comes to college with an open mind and generally is willing to learn, but the "mechanical instruction for freshmen seems to extinguish curiosity and lower intellectual aspirations." ·

Students "Poorly Housed"

Students are also usually poor- ly housed and poorly fed, the re- port said.

As for the faculty, the commis- sion reported there are three sure ways to "collect prestigious facul- ty members." First, prospective

Second, the :faculty members should be given light teaching loads, "In fact, the more disting- uished he is, the lighter his teach- ing load must be, so it is quite pol>sible that the most distinguish- ed faculty members will be hired to teach absolutely nothing at all," said the report.

Third, the faculty members must be promised that time not spent in the classroom will be

ln a final comment, the com- mission said "the admissions pol- icy, the freshman orientation, the selection of teachers, the design- ing of a curriculum and classroom instruction, and the social and physical org·anization of a typical A1nerican college pays little at- tention to the needs and problems of the student's pe1·sonalities.''

Cultural Program Committee and the Albuquerque Pan-Hellenic

Present

Two cool publishers of a protest magazine Share A Crazy Pad in Frisco -

Into the pad next door moves a luscious blonde olympic swimmer

super patriot dum dum What she docs to that magazine!

You gotta see

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*P.S.- Neil Simon wrote itt

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NEW MEXICO LOBO

Teachers Bar California

SAN FRANSISCO (UPI)-San Francisco State College reopened under police guard Wednesday with the majority of teachers boy- cotting their classes.

As many of the campus' 18,000 students reported to their class- rooms, they found most of the 1,- 100 faculty members refused to

Ld1MMI

Makers of Hand Made lndian Jewelry

OLDTOWN

teach and held a ''crisis convoca- tion" over the week-long school closure.

Plainclothesmen were position- ed throughout the tree-studded campus a short distance from the Pacific Ocean, However, no uni- formed officers were on the cam-

pu~. .

Many faculty members were embittered over the trustees' "in- tervention" in the academic af- fairs of the college.

President Robert R. Smith told the convocation he was in accord in many respects with the ef- forts of minority students "to assume greater responsibility for determining" their destiny. But,

he stood firm against violence.

"I do not concur that the cam- pus should be an arena for revo- lution by any and all methods,"

Smith said. "I concur that higher education must involve itself in radical reform and further de- velopment."

The 800-seat main auditorium was jammed for a panel discus- sion by representatives of the administration, faculty and dis- sident students. The discussion was relayed by closed-circuit tele- vision to classrooms in all campus buildings.

The convocation was called by faculty members Tuesday after Smith, under orders from State

Thursday, November 21, 1968

College

College trustees, scheduled the school resumption.

Moderator Jules Grossman, a psychology professor, stressed the convocation was not being held for the purpose of "negotiation"

-prohibited by State College trustees until the campus returns to normal.

"The whole purpose is informa- tional," declared Grossman. He described as "truly appalling" a lack of information and flow of misinformation about the campus crisis.

The strike was supported by militant white students, including members of the Students for a Democratic Society.

0 Carat

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Beauchamp S Co.

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for ladies and gentlemen of distinction!

Columbia..., • purpcse/ully deeioned for thoso u:ho czpect qualily and willMC aettlo /of kso.

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Coronado C".enttth across Mmaul from Us

Cua.Iity!!

Sure we can spell ..•• but ••.• the words Columbia and Quality are so synonomous that we feel one word

"cuality" could· be adopted by the lexicographers to signify a sort of supcr'"'luality •••• and that's Colnm·

bia.

JEWELERS

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(Acto5S Mcnaul &orri Coronado Center)

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Reasons Why You Should Buy Accutron: One Is Hum-m-m-m And The Other Is Accuracy

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Watch and Jcwchy repair done by our

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Not only unuaunl in dCBlgn but unusual in still another way, Columbltt rings nrc a quality product and you will httvc to admit thnt's unusual today,

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Tell Us What You Think! We Are Offering Free A $200.00 Diamond Ring ·

''m

free diamond ring will be given away by Beauchamp letters will be judged by people in the university and the University of New Mexico and their families (the an? Company Jewelers pecember ~' f~r the best lett~r business community. . . . • LOBO readers) to give us their opinions.

wntten about our advertising campcJJgn 10 the New Mex1- We have been sahsfied W1th the campaign and response As an expression of our sincerity and to encourage as co lO.BO. . . • . • at the store makes us feel that it has

.~e?n

successful. But wide a response as possible we are offering the free .. The d1amond i'l~g, ~ppr01sed value ~200.00, WJ!I be g1ven we are conce;ned a~out recent cnhc1s~ from people diamond. It is a full quarter carat diamond and will be for the most obJeCtive and constructiVe letter e1ther chat- allegedly affl!Jated With the campus, Th1s contest Is an mounted in a man's or lady's solitaire ring. Beauchamp lenging or supporting our adverti~ing campaign. The invitation for all students, faculty and staff members of & Co. will not participate in the judging.

}.

~ CONTEST RULES

'.J ,.·~,·

l) No purchase necessary.

2) Approximately 250 words.

1 · 3) Entry may be typed or written on plain

"!1 paper, KEEP AN EXACT COPY, EITHER

;<j

CARBON OR XEROX.

1 1 4) Contest limited to students, faculty and

families, no employees of Beauchamp & 7)

Co. Jewelers nor their families, no em- ployees of any jewelry firm anywhere, 8}

no families of the judges are efigible to win.

1 Mexico and

their

families. . P.O. Box 20, University of New Mexico, ' .$) No members of the lobo staff nor their Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106

\

'

All entrys must be postmarked no later than Friday, Novmbe~ 22, 1968.

Do not sign your name. The winning let- ter will be published In the lo.bo Friday, December 6, 1968. You must present an exact CARBON or XEROX of your letter.

Winner must identify himself at the Lobo offlcs no later than Wednesday evening,

-·-'---~=>:o="""-"=~=-'-- ."

J

.

staff members of the University of New 6) Mail entry to Lobo Contest, University

~-· -~=-

...

,_..,..,..,,_,,.,,~~--==""""'"'' """'~~"'"""'"'"*=-===·==="'7"":'""'. "'"''""-=="""",.""''""' '-'--- ·==-=~! =

~---=---..IW41S,._.,.;c;:::;:;;:;;;:J.,...C4-,...,_..,..~~~....,,."'_w::., - · . ~-::.. ~ , ·~·''-'"'"~..;-','::·--~- - ·

5:00p.m., December 11, 1968.

9} All entries remain the property of Beau- champ &

Co.

Jewelers and cannot be re- turned.

1

0) The decision of the judges pertaining to all phases of the contest is final.

11) Contest winner and judges names will be published In the Lobo, Monday, Decem-

ber 16, 1968.

Thursday, November 21, 1968

Sliders Beware

English Maiers Getting Change

All requirements for under- graduates who nl'e majoring in English have been dropped, with the exception of the number of hours 1·equired, said Dr. Joseph Frank, chairman of the English department.

English majors will be requir- ed to have 33 hours in EngllGh, including 18 hours above the 300 level, said Frank yesterday. Eng- lish majors will also have to com- plete English 101 and 102, which arc required by the university for all students, unless the classes are waived.

Frank said, "The vote was overwhelmingly in favor of the change, but it was not unani- mous."

The change will be effective next September. It will not affect students who are currently ma- joring in English, Frank said.

There will be recommended English com·ses, Frank said.

NEW MEXICO LOBO

Lobo Photo by Grant Harvey

Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of the police as they sulk around arresting sliders and fining them for their crime. The warning sign abGve hangs on the fence of the city reservoir on UNM campus.

lllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll:liiiJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII:tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllillll

Calling U

Announcements by the UNM oommun·

ity will be accepted at The Lobo office.

A 24-hour deadline is in effect.

Thursday, Nov, 21

Harold Lavender di•cusscs the role of the administration in thC" University:

KKUNM, 9 p.m.

Organi•ationul mO<!tlng of the eommittec for lowering the votinr.- n~e: flPOltsor(ld by the Student Edurntion Ar-.soc-intioni Hoom 2GO-C, Union: 7 p.m.

The Business Administration Students' Assocfntion omnnizntional mfftinm south- west alcove of Union C'nfeteria: 7:30 p.m.

Ii'rid2yJ Nov. 22

Professor Romano Unrr£1, lecture on

"The New Philooophy or Science; I!oom 101, \..Jueation Duildinr.-. 1:30 Jl.m.

Job ihtllrvieWR for nay Sroutg o! Amer ..

lea, Albuqul!rquc! Plneement Center.

Broadway Play: "The St.1.r Spangled Girl" l'opcioy Hnll: 8 :lG P.m.

Lecture by Romano Harre of Oxford University, "The New Phi!o:;ophy o£ Sci- ence"; Education 101; 1:30 p.m.

FridaY NiJ,~ht Dnncet 'ShnndPlls,n Union Ballroom; 8·11 p.m.

Intrmnurnt Bonrd Open Forum, to nn.

swcer QUe3tiann vertaining to intrnmuralsi Union Faculty roOmi 3:30 p.m.

Wreotling clinie to introduce UNM wrestlcrn, explain rules, points, skUI9, ref- eree signals. Admission iree. Johnson Gym; 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 23

Broadway Play: "The Stnr Spangled Girl"; Popejoy HnU; 8 :15 p.m.

..U-DO''; Do your thing. :Music, poetry, chess, thenter. Rap, listen, or join in. Uni- vornity Methodbt Church bnscmcnt; Yale and Silver S.E.; 7:30 p.m. to 1 n.m.

Sunday, Nov. 24

Lecture by Romano Harre of Oxford Univernity, uNcw Philosophy of the Mind";

Honora Center, Zimmerman Library; 7:30 p.m.

ProfQ.<;.30I" Romano Hnrr[t, lecture on

44Thc New Philo:;ophy of Science:" Honors Center, Zimmerman Librnry, 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Nov. 2G

Lecture by Prof. Philip Akrigg, "Wil- liam Shal<csponre and tho History or Enc·

la.ndu; Uniou South llnllroom; 8 p.m.

Dr. PhiliJ> Alcri[(g, J<..'nglbh pro!e:Jsor, University of British Columbia, lcctut·e on

"William Shal<eJpcare nnd the History of EnnJnnd;" Union south ballroomj 8 p.m.

UNM A Cnt>Pclln Choir concert; flrat in a series; FAC l!ecitnl linD; 8 :1G p.m.

Debate, discussion on :Prese-nt grading sy.stcm, To change or not to ch::mge; Union Faculty lotmlle: 12:30 p.m.

'rucsdny, Nov. 2G

HThc V crbal Code and the Genetic Code/' Lectura by Dr. Thomas A. Sobeck, lin- v.uiaUc soecinlist nt the Univeraity or Indiana; Kiva. 8 p.m.

·~u-DO"; Do your fhjng. Munlt:!, poctr:v, chess; theater. Rap, listen, or join in. Uni- versity ItletllOdist Church basement; Yale nnd Silver S.E.; 7:30 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Wednesday Nov. 27

Dl!Sk: 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Cn!cterin:

11 n.m, to 1:30 p.m.; Snack bo.r: 'I a.m. to 10:30 p.m.; Lobo Room: 10:30 to 1:30 p.m.; Games: 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Boolt- store: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; ActivitiM Cent<>r:

8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Barbershop: 8:30a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; A.n.c. Bank: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Columbia Recording Artists

Simon and Garfunkel

Presented by ASUNM Popular Entertainment Committee

SUNDAY .

NIGHT

University Arena Nov. 24. 8:15 P.M.

Tickets on Sale Today

At Activities Center Ticket Booth

Next To Popejoy Hall Ticket Office 277-3411

&

3412 Mail Orders Send to

SUB

C/o Simon & Garfunkel

5.00-4.50-4.00 1.00

Student Discount In Each Price

SUNDAY

NIGHT

Page5

Statistics Show

Tuition Increases

Statistics from the 1968-69 an- nual survey of student charges from the National Association of State Universities and Land- Grant Colleges (NASULGC) and t h e American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) indicate that foUl' fifths of the nation's state col- leges and universities including

UNM have increased their fees A report issued by the Office of Institutional Research stated that a ;public college student is paying about 23 per cent more for his education than public col- lege students did in 1963.

Survey results show that medi- an rates for NASULGC in-state residents totals. $360 and $905 for non- residents. Room and board for NASULGC averages

$834. Statistics show that tuition and fees for AASCU are $303 for state residents and $683 for non-residents. AASCU room and bom·d figures average $807.

Tuition and fees and room and board costs at UNM an AASCU member for the ~:~.cademic

year 1968-69 are hig!w:fthan the median figures f or e i t h e r NASULGC or AASCU. In-state tuition and fees for UNM total

$437, and non-residents tuition fees total $1,068. Room and board figures total $858.

Fine

PICTURE FRAMING

Hundreds of

PRINTS

Photo Frames New Mexico's Largest

LANG ELL'S

2510 Central S.E.

Across From John•on Gym

THUNDERBIRD

Placitas Presents

kell •·obe.-tson

Folk- country- blues EVERY SATURDAY

TUESDAY SPECIAL: 6-8 P.M. ONLY

!1:! Gallon Draft Beer 65¢

You Must be 21 or over: We Check ID

Meet Nancy Ames

at Rhodes

In Person

Friday, November

22,

5:oo-5:3o

Miss Ames will be at Rhodes to sign autographs and give away 10 of her own recordings. Buy your ticket for "Nancy Ames and Friends" from Nancy, in person.

LIVE BROADCAST on KDEF RADIO

Tickets for the concert, $4, $5, $6. Combination Concert and Cocktail

party, $12.50. Use your Rhodes charge account.

I

.J ..

~ <.·

References

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