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University of New Mexico

UNM Digital Repository

1970 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

2-24-1970

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 86, 2/24/

1970

University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at:https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1970

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 1970 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 073, No 86, 2/24/1970." 73, 86 (1970).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1970/20

(2)

Page 8 NEW .MEXICO LOBO MQnday, February 23, 1970

I

Campus Briefs

l

National Cancer Institute at Bethesda, Md. His primary lecture will .be at 4 p.m. Fdday a~ the medical school, and will concern a genetic approach to cancer.

His visit to Albuquerque is being arranged by the medical school's department of medicine,

Support Lobo

Advertisers

Lobo Goof

The Lobo would like to correct some mistakes made on the caption of a work by Nicholas Krushenick "Untitled-1965."

The work is not a painting but a lithograph. The museum w'here the lithograph is located is in the Fine Arts Center, not in Popejoy Hall, as reported.

Concert Cellist

Joanna de Keyser concert cellist and professor at

UNM

will perform in a concert tour March 5-17 in Ecuador.

Miss de Keyser has been invited to play an accompanied solo recital in Quito, Cuenca and La Vistoria. ~he will also pl~y for an Indian village in northern Ecuador,

Highlighting the tour will bea performance of the Schumann Cello Concerto with the Quito Symphony.

In the past, Miss de Keyser has toured extensively in Mexico,

CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING

RATES: 7c per word, 20 word mini-mwn ($1.40) J)er time run. If ad is to run five or more consecutive days with no changes the rntc is reduced to 5c per word and the minimum number of words to 10.

TERMS: Payment must be made in

full prior to insertion of ndvertisement. Classified Advertising

UNM P.O. Box 20 Albuquerque, N.M. 87106 WHERE: .Tournnlism Building. Room 159, afternoons preferably or mail.

1) PERSONALS

DEADLINE for. inserting classified 3 :30 p.m.-will go m next day's Lobo. SENIOR-Be sure to have your class

pic-turq taken for the Mirage. No charge-three poses, charge-three prints. Pictures token

a:~ UNed M Photo Service. Call 277·G743 to

""" ule.

NEED HELP? A listener? .Personnl Mnr-i!J!I, Sensitiv!tY Groups. United Minis-tfles Counsehng Center. 247-2720. 3/13 MESSY ROOM, cnn't study? Cnll

messy-room-cleaner. 242-11059. 2/27

2) LOST & FOUND

BE S!JRE, to cheek the Lost & Found servu:e m the lobby of the sun for your la.t !tern..

LOST: l'ickett slide rule. Mitchell Hsll

~}~4 Jan. 13. Rcwnrd. Scott, 255-9560.

FOUND-black kitten (four or five month old),. outside College o£ Nursing the mornmg of 16 at 8:30. Contact Kcc 296

6564. 2/23

-3) SERVICES

TUTORING IN PORTUGESE offered Call Albert W. Bleau at 855-4888. 2/24' PRIVATE •wlmming ICS!ons. Qualified

in-Instructor;<. Lessons taught at a lljlaclous Indoor s.wtmmlng area here in town. No ag!' ltmtt. Be a respectable swimmer by th)S summer. Call Dave 344-3654 for de-tntls. 2/24

TYPING ~ERVICE. Term papers, theses d!.::;;:!.::.tmr.:.::::. P..:::::.:;:nnb!c D-r:,. T,., .. l·~--.. 11

296-2548. • ""' ... u ... ..., ...

4) FORRENT

PARK HAVEN, APTS. College students welcome. Fumtshed two bedroom apts fir.eplace, -walk.ins. barette, planned swird! mmg pool, dmette area, utilities paid

344-4053. 2/27 •

5) FORSALE

1956 CAD!LLAC. $150. Call 842·1364 or 243-4326. 2/24

1966 SPRITE. Excellent condition Two tops. 247-2840. 2/20 • ANTiqVE LEATHER TRUNK. Excellent

condtbon. Phone 242-1857 after 5:30

p.m. 2/23

NOR\!EG!A~ Elkhound pnppies, also stud

~"/{'"" avallable. 29~-ll375, campus 4447, HAR.LEY DAVIDSON hydraulle forb. Pnee: open for discussion. Call 345-1570 after 5 p.m. 2/23

Cli,EU&lt i959 Buick hearse. ExceUcni tl.I'es; motor, trans, etc. NeVer driven an ljnhappy mile. $475 (or more i£ )loU

lika). Phone. Grant 277·5011 alter G p.m. Mon. thru Thurs. and Sunday from

l to 5 p.m. 2/20

200 US:JilD TVa All styles. $15 up, 441 Wyomtng NE, 254•5987. 4/7

196,8 SUZUKI 200 ec-X5. Excellent eondl-tton, $350. 265-6814 after 6 p.m. 2/27

6) EMPLOYMENT

W!LL TR,ADE part-time help in a tutor• mg seryJce !or an Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamtcs scholarship. I£ interested Please caU 265-6761. 2/20

~ Nlj:ED A MAN,! We need a man who

tS brtght, nggresstve1 an~ likes helping

other )leol>J•: Parl-ttmc JOb now, could

lead to exctbng and profitable career in sales and management after graduation Salary commensurate with ability. At~ you worth Halt-Million uoUars? I£ so call: Frnnk M. TltomM, 265-6728. 2/20

7) MISCELLANEOUS

D1SCOVl'lR. FLYlNG. $5 first lesson $14 hr. a!Wr. Lee Mnson, !!68·4589. 2/27

RENT-A-TV

$1.00 il; day Fret! Pick Up And Service

No Dep..,lt Lower MonthiJr Rate

Buc;k

1

s TV

Rentals

268-45'8'9 Color Available

Europe and the United States Later in the spring, she will giv~ recitals in Los Angeles, Boston and Columbus, Ohio.

Coronary Nursing

Seven New Mexico nurses have successfully completed the state's first intensive training program in coronary care nursing.

The four-week course was sponsored by New Mexico

R~gional Medical Program with L!nda Blacklock, R.N. as project director, and Barbara Pritchard as clinical instructor,

A second course will begin March 2, Miss Blacklock said.

There is no tuition fee and

faculty will come from the School of Medicine, College of Nursing and physicians in private practice:

Less Parking

Students who have been finding additional parking spaces along the construction works on University Ave, between Central and Lomas should start looking for new parking spots. Work there has advanced to the stage where the median between the old and new University boulevard will be "off-limits" to automobiles. · The remaining driveway

approaches that serviced houses along University will also be closed off along this median.

OKIE'S Everyday

All Day FREE POPCORN

La Plante Gallery (Next to Lobo Theatre) Unique!

Foreign Car

Specialists

Repair & Maintenance On All Foreign Cars

Over 100 yrs. Combined

Experience

Free Estimates

265-5901

333 Wyoming N.E.

Genetics Program

A Minnesota family has made

poss.ible a specialized lecture program in human genetics at the l!NM School of Medich:le. The first lectures in the program will take place next week.

John Leslie Fahey, M.D. will be the first Christine Larsen' visiting professor in human genetics and will be at the medical school' Feb

27-28. .

He is coming to teach at UNM through a special grant from Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Larsen of Minneapolis, Larsen is chairman of the board of Twin City Federal Savings and Loan. They have made the gift in honor of their daughter.

Fa hey is chief of the immunology branch of the

P.E. MAJORS Kineseology ot its bestll

The Guild Art Theatre

3405 Central N.E.

Noon til Midnight Only $1.50

Welcome Lobos

Fo~ All Your Car Care Needs

Visit

JOHN'S DEEP ROCK

SERVICE

501 Yale S.E. (Just 5 blks. South

of Central)

Ask About Our 2¢ Discount Per Gallon

NEW MEXICO LOBO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

University P.O. Box 20, UNM, Albuquerque, N. M. 87106

RATES: 7¢ per word, $1.40 minimum (that's 20 words)

per word if same ad runs flve or more consecutive times $2.50 minimum (that's 10 words

5

times)

TERMS: Payment must be mode in full prior to insertion of advertisement CLASSIFICATIONS:

1. Personals

5.

For Sale

2. Lost & Found 6. Employment

3 Services 4. For Rent

7. Miscellaneous

INSERT THE FOLLOWING ADVERTISEMENT ---TIMES STARTING _ _ _

ENCLOSED$'---- PLACED

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•••

NE\N

MEXICO

Vol. 73

UMAS

Fund

Halt

Will Be Attempted

By

3

u

Senators

Lobo Index

Iroquois at

UNM __

Pg. 3

Psych. Games ----·- Pg. 4

Hippies in Park ______ Pg. 6

llllllllmnlliiiiiiiiHIIIIIIIIAIIOIRIDIHI1Hilll!ltftlnllllffiR11111ll1111HIIIIIIIIlll

Playboy, Sept.

1969

.,.,, .. "{··~ ,,: ... ~-~---"~

'

I

i

!

Tuesday, February 24, 1970

No. 87

ASUNM Senators Frank Lihn, Bob Speer, and Leonard DeLayo today will file an injunction with Student Court to freeze $8000 given to the United Mexican-American Students (UMAS) and the chicano studies center last Wednesday.

Under stipulations of the allocation, $1520 was to- be used by UMAS to attend a conference in Denver in March, and the remaining $6480 was given to the chicano studies center. The funds given to the center had no stipulations attached.

The Student Court injunction also enJOinS ASUNM President Ron Curry from vetoing or taking any further action on the bill.

Violates Constitution Lihn, Speer, and DeLayo charge that the bill violates the part of the ASUNM constitution which states, "The major allocations from the student activity fPI' shall

bP l'stablMied by vote of a majority of the students

voting in a regular election." In a statement issued last night, • the three senators said they asked for an injunction "ostensibly" because the bill is unconstitutional, but they "have taken issue ... with the way in which a decision was reached" on the bill.

The statement said that with an allocation as large as $8000, a line item statement is required before passage, and a detailed study is made on need for the money. Lihn, Speer, and DeLayo said a line item statement was received for only $1520 of the $8000 allocation.

"Came as Surprise" The statement also said the chicano studies center allocation was "as much of a surprise to UMAS and the center itself as it was to the Senate." In addition, said the statement, "the figure appeared to be arbitrary, relying only upon the sum total of the appropriation reaching $8000.

"The chicano studies center

Communications Workers of Kmerica

should not be made to suffer for the irresponsible a<!ts of those at the meeting, nor should it have to bear the criticism and responsibility that rightfully belongs to those people whose threats and intimidations caused some senators to abrogate their responsibilities to the student body," the statement said.

"The intent of this injunction is to enable a calm, unhindered, and unemotional hearing on the needs for ij\6480 by the chicano studies center, a hearing devoid of all threats and intimidations," the statement said.

"Justify Needs"

,.

The statement said a ,, hearing would allow the -chicano stu dies center a chance "to justify its needs and renounce the tactics" used at the Senate meeting.

r~onie Brau~ford, director of the chicano studies center, said last night that students are not going to like the court injunction. The Senate,

(Continued on page 3)

Union

Officials Ask

For

Meeting

The Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 8611 has sent a written request to UNM President Ferrel Heady that a meeting be held to discuss the unionization of UNM employees. The statement, summarized by Jerome Bailey of the CWA said, "Since the state legislature has failed to act, now is the time for responsible management and labor people to get together." Bailey also said "the university can bargain with us any time they want to. It's just a matter of them wanting to do it."

Heady said the administration

" w i l l be sending a communication to Bailey this week." The communication will be handled by .Lawrence Yehle, director of the personnel department. Both Heady and Yehle declined to comment on the contents of the communication, or the administration's position on UNM employe unionizing.

Bailey has asked Heady to name a time for the meeting "at his earliest convenience." He added that "we'll have to get going quickly now."

In the event that the negotiation is rejected by Heady, the CWA will "hold some kind of mass meeting next week. However, I'm not threatening anyone," Bailey said.

The Physical Plant Organizing Committee was contacted, and a spokesman, who declined to be named, saiil) "Unless the administration and CWA come to an agreement whereby neutral arbitration is guaranteed, then the Physical Plan workers probably won't go along with their decision."

Someone Fails to Seek Approval of Amendment

ASUNM To Lose

$30,000

in Fees

members to mean that even if the part-time activity fees receive BEF sanction, they could not be collected . prior to the first semester of the 1971-72 school year.

By DON BURGE 12 or more hours pay the $12

A S U N M w i I I I

o

s e per semester activity fee. The approximately $30,000 in amendment would have made it revenues next year because possible to charge pa,.t-time someone didn't follow up on a students, an activity fee constitutional amendment passed commensurate with the number in a special election last semester. of hours they are taking (e.g., a The amendment to the student taking six hours would

ASUNM Constitution was passed have ·Paid $6). ·The pa.rt·time

last November but was never sent activity fees would have been to the faculty or Regents for collected for the first time next approval. Had it been approved, year.

it would have brought in up to Now the amendment must be

$30,000 in fees from students approved by. the state Board of

taking less than

l2

hours. • Educational Finance (BEF)

Part-Time Fees before the fees can be collected.

Currently only students taking Had it been approved prior to

Feb. 15, only faculty and Regents' approval would have been required.

BEF approval of fee increases was built into , the general appropriations law passed by the I ast session of the legislature after the law makers learned that fees at some universities had increased at a faster rate than had tuition. It is believed the earliest the DEF could act is next December, and with the current feeling of the legislature being to do away with all mandatory fees, it is unlikely approval would be granted.

Legal Limitations

The law prohibits the BEF from approving fee increases unless it has legislative budget requests under review at the same time, The law reads: "No fee increase shall be made applicable within a fiscal year, unless it was approved at the time when legislative budget requests for that fiscal yeat• were under review by the BEF, except for fee increases resulting from regents' action taken prior to Feb. 15, 1970."

That language is interpreted by several legislators and BEF staff

Additional $21,000 Loss ltesponsibility for not forwarding the amendment is difficult to place. The ASUNM Constitution requires only that all amendments approved by the student body also be approved by the faculty and Regents, but it does not provide machinery

(3)

NEW

MEXICO

LOBO

The New Mexico Lobo is published daily every r,egulcu w~k of the Univer-sity year by the Board of Student Pub-lications of the Associated Students of the University of New Mexico, and is not financially associated with UNM. Printed by the UNM Printing Plant with second class postage paid at Albu'luerque, New Mexico, 87106, Subscription rate is $7 for the academic year.

WAYNE

CIDDIO

Editor

GRANT HARVEY

Managing Editor

Box 20, University P.O., UNM, Albuqverque, N.M., 87106

Editorial Phone (505) 277-4102, 277-4202

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 ne~essarily represents the views of the Associated Students or of tho Uni· versify of New Mexico,

Vol. 73, No. 87

Tuesday, February 24, 1970

Editorial

Action Could Be Beneficial

Senators Frank Lihn, Robert Speer, and

:Leonard DeLayo have initiated a Student

Court action which will place a temporary

freeze on $8000 allocated to UMAS and the

Chicano Studies Center by Student Senate

last week.

The senators contend the Senate acted

out of fear and not out of concern for the

development of the fledgling Chicano

Studies program. Lihn and Speer both voted

against the measure. DeLayo supported the

bill last Wednesday, but has since urged

ASUNM President Ron Curry to veto the

ap-propriation.

Several senators voted yes on the

appro-priation simply because there were UMAS

members and sympathizers standing behind

their chairs. One senator didn't realize

exact-ly what the Senate had approved until he

read the account of the Senate meeting in

The Lobo.

Although the court order is likely to spark

an angry reaction from UMAS, it could in

the long run be beneficial to the Chicano

Studies program in terms of public relations.

The program has already had a

tumult-uous beginning. Program director Louis

Bransford fears that the "bad publicity" the

program has received could seriously damage

its effectiveness and development as a

worth-while effort.

Any positive publicity which might arise

through the court action can only be for the

benefit of the program and the people

run-ning it.

We believe the senators involved in the

court action wish no harm to the program

and are only trying to get more information

about its project and goals before the

stu-dent body.

If

the appropriation is submitted to a

stu-dent referendum - a step which Lihn says is

required under the ASUNM constitution

-concrete and positive information will be a

crucial factor.

We would hate to see the program shot

down before it

is

given a chance to prove

itself.

'Dear Secretary Finch- Now You Tell Him .. :

Editor:

To the Editor;

In regards to Senate Bill No. 3 I voted in the affirmative for a

proposal which I felt would

benefit a cause that has been sorely neglected at UNM for a number of years.

However, upon conclusion of the voting, a nttmber of comments were made which have convinced me that the ASUNM Senate did not appropriate funds to improve an unfortunate situation at UNM, but instead gave money that will simply perpetuate the hatreds now in evidence at this institution.

As I have stated before, I believe that ASUNM's responsibility is first to the student and secondly to the community. Since there is no guarantee that the monies allocated in Bill 3 will be used for benefit to UNM students nor the chicano studies center, I earnestly ask that you veto Senate Bill 3,

Leonard DeLayo Jr. President Pro Tempore

Inaccurate Article

To the Editor:

For a long time I have been wanting to compliment you on the quality of the major editorials that have been appearing in The Lobo this year. Whether I agree or not with your position- usually I

do - I find your editorials

we 11-w r it ten and effective presentations of a point of view relating to issues that are now important.

But ... I must say also that the story in The Lobo of Tuesday, Feb. 17, page three, is one of the poorest news stories I have ever seen anywhere. The story is based on results of a questionnaire used in the 15 classes of the Undergraduate Seminar Program (USP) of Semester I, 1969·70. The writer obviously saw this document, since all his figures come straight out of it and are not available anywhere else.

ThP C!nllpgp of Art'! 1111<1 Sciences Committee on Instruction is given credit for the questionnaire, although the published results were clearly labeled as originating in the USP.

r,etle>'ll '"" welcome, and ahould he no lonl!cr tlmn 260 words

tYJlc-wrli!<'n, double apaeed. Nllllle,

wle-t

)hono numb~r and nddress must be

nolud«l, nlthoull'h name will be

wlthlw!<l upon request.

get u little general attention for eurdeular activities designed to enhance the education of students - activities, incidentally, in which students have been involved in planning and which a considerable number of students, apparently, have found pleasing, innovative, and even exciting,

I am not in the least interested in vying with anybody for credit for any activity. I would htst like to believe that some degree of accuracy and perspective, as well as the ability simply to read the heading on a document, should be expected of Lobo reporters.

Dudley Wynn, director the Undergraduate Seminar Program

P.S. The headline on the story stinks, the lead sentence is almost totally misleading (pun fully intended!), and the last paragraph of the story is sheer gobbledygook because of inadequate or no proof·reading.

"Irrational" Statements

To the Editor;

Last Thursday's Bema column contained an article from Rev. Benjamin Urshan supporting Professor Baughman's classroom regulations, I was surprised that The r...obo printed it; while there are some legitimate, though insufficient, reasons for supporting Professor Baughman's position, Rev. Urshan mentioned none of them.

Instead, his article consisted of a series of irrational or irrelevant statements, none of which merits much consideration. I don't think Mr. Urshan's comments are worthy of a response; nevertheless, because the article appeared in the University

newspaper, I feel obligated to

point out the most obnoxious of his confusions.

Most important, Reverend Urshan has equated human dignity with short hair. This seems a peculiar fallacy for someone who claims to be a Christian to make, Theological historians tell us that Jesus Christ had long hair. Would the Reverend force him to sit in the corner of th(' rhurch?

Furthermore, it is more than a little absurd to be "amazed at the . . . indifference of the youth of today" and at the same time

~

..

-:~~~~~~~::~~~~-:::~~~~~~mr~.~~~

of

'\" in the story, nor is it and

made clear that the results apply protest." It is equally absurd to only to the 15 classes of the USP. praise "the freedom that this As a teacher, I hold that an wonderful America affords'' while

activity of the sort that the USP is suggesting that one of the

trying to introduce on this audacious students "ought to be

campus ought to be of enough sent to Iran . . . and made to

importance to justify more than observe the decorum and nPatness

four totally inaccurate column of students' appearance before

inches on page three, What does their professors.''

one have to do on this campus to William Bo11ner

'Unauthorized'

G/

Papers Against War

(Editor's note; The following is the second of a three-part series concerning underground newspapers in the armed forces.)

By NANCY BEEZLEY

WASHINGTON - (CPS) - At

least part of the reason for the cancerous growth of the GI press is the war in Vietnam. GI's don't like Vietnam for the same reasons as everybody else. Plus one more. GI's are in Vietnam.

Some cat wrote in one GI antiwar paper, "Could it be that something is wrong with America?' "Is our country addicted to guns and killing and 1violence? Is there anything to call the killing of one man by another other than genocide? Did the Vietnamese invade America? Did the Viet Cong ever kill an American woman or child in their homes? Can you place the value and importance of a piece of cloth above a human life? Have you had a friend die in Vietnam? A relative? Are sick of the war?"

In answer to his questions, he said, "War. is wrong. Killing is wrong. Imposition of one's will upon another is wrong. Devaluation of human life is wrong. Lying is wrong. Double standards are wrong. Violence is wrong. America fi.ghting in

V.

Ie nam Is wrong. t . "

In January of 1968, a veteran's antiwar ,newspaper called "Veterans Stars · and Stripes for Peace" reprinted an "Esquire" magazine article called "Generals Denounce Viet War." A few quotes from it and from the GI underground press show the similarities and differences between the feelings of the top brass and the privates: "I don't think the whole of southeast Asia, as related to the present and future safety and freedom of the people of this country, is worth the life or limb of a single American." "Esquire" magazine, said by General David Monroe Shoup, 1967.

"How can I justify the death of a single soldier l send back into action? Do I tell his parents and family 'he died a hero to save political face and perhaps help a political party in the 1970 elections?' I would be guilty of allowing a death I could not justify ... I must and

will

be counted on the side of GI's to whom I' am professionally committed for the next two years." Antiwar GI press; said by a doctor-captain. 1969.

"I believe that if we had and would keep our dirty, bloody, dollar-crooked fingers out of the business of these nations so full of

depressed, exploited people, they will arrive at a solution of their own." "Esquire" magazine said by Gen. David Monroe Shoup. 1967.

"Careless Guys"

"The huts here are thatched palm leaves ... We burn their homes, personal possessions and food. Yes, we burn all rice and shoot all livestock. Some guys.are so careless. Today a buddy of mine called 'Ia dai' ('come here') into a hut and an old man came out of the bomb shelter. My buddy told the old man to get away from the hut and since we have to move quickly on a sweep, just threw a hand grenade into the shelter, As he pulled the pin the old man got excited and started jabbering and running toward my buddy and the hut. A GI, not understanding, stopped the old man with a football tackle just as my buddy threw the grenade ... After he threw it, and, was running for cover, we all heard a baby .crying from inside the shelter! After the explosion we found the mother, two children (ages about six and 12, boy and girl) and an almost newborn baby, That is what the old man was trying to tell us ... " Antiwar GI press. Excerpts from a letter of a dead GI au quoted by the father in a letter to the editor, 1968.

"Our domestic programs are grossly underfunded, especially in the poverty area, and I look on this as a consequence of the Vietnam war, and the money we're pouring in there." "Esquire" magazine, said by Lt.

Gen. James M. Gavin. 1967. "Urgent Reform"

"So we are going to Washington on the urgent business of reform before it is too late. We must have a de-escalation of the war in Vietnam and a massive escalation of the war against poverty and racism. We must guarantee that in this richest society in history, the poor, too, can find comfort and security and decent jobs and respect. It is time to reorder our national priorities." Reprinted in the antiwar GI press, Said by Martin Luther King before the Poor People's March.

"I agree with U Thant that this is a war of national independence not a case of communist aggression... I think we ought to get out the way we went in -unilaterally." "Esquire" magazine said by Brig. 'Gen. Hugh B. Hester: 1967.

"I think we should go back to the 1954 Geneva agreements and hold free elec.tions in Vietnam. I have no doubt they would go communist, but our O\Yn political

morality demands that we abide by the results of free elections." "Esquire" magazine. Said by Brig. Gen. William Wallace Ford. 1967.

"Did You Know?"

''DID YOU KNOW THAT? On

September 23, 1965, a

memorandum of law was incorporated into the Congressional Record of the 89th congress of the United States, in which American lawyers, after careful analysis of our actions and position in Vietnam, concluded that our presence there violates the following accords: the charter of the United Nations, the Geneva Accords of 1954, and the Constitution of the United Statl!s of America." Antiwar GI press. F'iller. 1969.

Reality is that you can be an American and still be against the war. As long as you're a general or a president or an important stock holder.

. !JI's who are against the war stdl. consider themselves American. "American." AMERICAN? Gl's who arc against

the. war feel just as qualified to be agamst the war as generals and priests and plumbers who are aga!nst the war, Gl's who are agamst the war feel just as human as Green Berets.

That's all reality too.

Tuesday, Februar;r 24, 1970 NEW MEXICO LOBO

At Newman Center Program

Iroquois Explain Customs

By CHARLES ANDREWS

A touring group of Iroquois Indians presented a program explaining some of their beliefs and traditions Friday night at the Newman Center.

The group's name, "White Roots of Peace," comes from a tradition concerning the Tree of Peace, From it grows four white roots, reaching out to the four corners of the world, by which all men may find their way to peace.

The Indians said the purpose of their tour is "an attempt to bring about Indian unity and strength, and to restore vitality for the old traditions. When we meet with other (non-Indian) groups, we try to show them the Indian way to peace."

Long Prayer The program began long prayer, delivered

with a in the

native language by a Mohawk member of the group. (The Iroquois Nation is a federation of several tribes.) Another member gave a translation, explaining that tradition dictated all gatherings open with the prayer.

The prayer summarized the Indian feeling of oneness with their environment. It gave thanks to Mother Earth, Father Sun, Brothers Fire, Trees, Birds, Flowers, Grass, Water ... all things which the Great Spirit created, for continuing to function as He had commanded them.

The prayer told of the Indian belief that all things on earth are living, products of the hand of the creator, and therefore good,

"If you are a black man, a yellow man, a red man, a white man," the translator said, "hold your head high, stand tall and be proud. That is the way the

NEW

MEXICO LOBO

WORLD NEWS

creator made you, and it is good."

The six Mohawks came from St. Regis, Canada, called Akwesasne in their tongue. Also touring with the group was a Cree from Alberta, Canada, an Onondaga from Syracuse, N.Y. and Choctaw from Mississippi. All were attired in traditional Indian clothing.

The group performed several of their dances, with vocal, drum, and rattle accompaniment, and invited the audience to join them. All but a few of the crowd of about 7 5 joined in.

Indian Films

Two films were also shown, both created by an Indian film company. ''The Ballad of

Crowfoot" is a series of old photographs, most from the 1800's, of North American Indians and the white men they encountered. It is accompanied by a folk song discribing the plight of the Indian, then and today.

The other film is an account of the Indian protest over the recognition of the United States -Canadian border which runs through some reservation land. The Jay Treaty of 1794

Pompidou Threatened

about 20

Jerusalem.

miles south of guaranteed the Indians free

access to both countries and the building of a customs house on Indian land brought on a demonstration in which about 50 of them were arrested.

Peaceful Indians

Page 3

A traveling Iroquois Indian peace group presented one of its traditional dances at the Newman Center this past weekend.

THURMONT, Md. (UPI) French President Georges

Pompidou, threatened wit~

protests and boycotts over hts Middle East policy, Monday began his first official visit to the United States in the quiet seclusion ?f President Nixon's Camp David retreat,

A ·spokesman for the group identified the dead woman as Mrs. Barbara Ertle, 31, of Granville, Mich., wife of protestant pastor Theodore Ertle who also was making the "Bibleland tour" of Christian holy places.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Pompidou went directly to t~e

mountain enclave after a brtef change-of-planes stop at Andr~ws Air Force Base outside Washington.

In Washington, just an hour before Pompidou's arrival, a crowd estimated by police at about 3500 demonstrated on the Washington Monument grounds against his visit and France's Middle East policies, particularly its sale of 100 jet fighters to Libya.

Other protests similar to ~he one organized by the Jewtsh Cummnnity Council of greater Washington have lJecn threatened during Pompidou's swing around the country. Several members of Congress also have urged a boycott of his speech Wednesday

to a joint sessio!1 .-.f Congress. President Nixon will otiicially greet Pompldou Tuesday morning on the south lawn of the White House just a few hundred yards from' the scene of Monday's demonstration.

Arab Attack

JORDAN (UPI) - Arab

guerrillas Monday a!flbushed :X ~us

carrying 37 Amertcan ChrtstJan tourists on a one-week tour of the

Holy Land, killing one wo~an

and wounding two more. With machine-gun fire. The Israeh tour guide also was wounded in the attack near Hebron on the occupied west bank of Jordan,

lniunction

(Continued from page 1)

Bransford said, "has condemned the program without giving it a chance," and the action "is going to reflect poorly on the center." Bransford said the Senate's motives in allocating the

" t ·

re"

money were no smce ,

and Senate acted to "nullify the intimidation at the

meeting." ...

"Innocent Bystander "The center is an innocent bystander" .in th.e UMAS·Senate act10ns, satd Bransford. He said he would have more respect for Senate if they had not allocated the money to UMAS and the chicano studies center .. last Wednesday. "If they were really scared and inti':"idated, they shouldn't have giVen the

" I 'd

money, 1e sat • . . .

Curry said last m~ht tha~ If the injunction ts .. cawed . through, "it ~ight gtve . the chicano studtes center a

A spokesman at Jerusalem's Hadassah hospital, to which the injured were airlifted by Israeli army helicopter, identified the wounded women as Lucille Draper 53, of Buffalo, N.Y., and Tabea ' M. Damico of Atlantic City, N.J.

Greater Spending

WASHINGTON (UPI)- HEW

Secretary Robert H. Finch, disagreeing with presidential adviser Daniel Patrick Moynihan, said he expects greater domestic sp~nding as the war in Vietnam slows down because the people will demand it.

"It is inevitable," he said.

As for hi~; own Health.

Education and Welfnr£> department, Finch said, programs such as medicaid, medical care for the needy, and medicare, health insurance for the aged, and for pollution problems will be greater. "They'll be increased just because the public demands it and the Congress will react to that ~ solid waste disposal, air pollution and similar needs," Finch said in an interview with Government Executive Magazine.

"There's just no question in mind that we're going to see an increase."

Moynihan, the President's top domestic adviser, has said that an expected $22.9 billion "peace and growth dividend" when the war ends would not mean much mo.re money for domestic programs.

Sought

chance to explain the program publicly to the student body

separate from the bandw~gon

white radicals who at ttmes seem to dilute the effect of

the program."

At last Wednesday's Senate meeting, several people in the gallery, who were not UMAS members booed and catcalled the senat~rs during voting.

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(4)

Page 4 NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday, February 24, 1970

Games Basis of Psychology Tests

dames sometimes are not games.

A UNM assistant professor of

psychology is conducting research into several games which have serious implications. The best known and most frequently studied of these games is the "prisoner's dilemma" game.

"Prisoner's dilemma is a game which has interested psychologists, mathematicians, political scientists, and other scholars for ·aver a decade," said Richard Harris, assistant professor of. psychology, "It's a deceptively simple situation."

"The game takes its name from the predicament of two prisoners who are geing 'grilled' in separate rooms. Each is urged to confess. If neither confesses, they both will get t:wo years for some minor crime in which they were caught red-handed. If both confess, they will both get ten years for the more serious• crime of which they are suspected, If

on~y one of the two confesses, the prisoner 'who turns state's evide:q.ce' goes free, while the 'hold-out' is given a life sentence.

Best Choice

"From either prisoner's point of view,

Humans Often Pitted Against Computers

confession is his best choice, since it

both. protects against the danger of getting a life sentence and leaves open the possibility of getting off without any sentence. Thus, if both prisoners are 'rational,' they will both confess and be imprisoned for 10 years, whereas had both been so stupid as to 'hold out,' they would have received only two year sentences," said Harris.

This classic "game" has been shown to be related to hula-hoop crazes, the stock market, theater fire panics, and international politics. A striking example of international "prisoner's dilemma" may have been provided by the United States-Russia face-off over Cuban missile sites under the late President John F, Kennedy.

Harris contends both nations could see that failure to cooperate with one another could bring a death sentence for the human race-World War III. Thus the "game" was closer to ''chicken" (a game which- takes its name from the formerly popular pastime of driving carloads of teenagers directly at one another), and cooperation was more

easily achieved,

Cooperation Room

"Perhaps the major value of research on games like 'prisoner's dilemma' and chicken,'' said Harris, "has been to show, in a hard-nosed way, that there is room for cooperation in international politics,"

Harris' research, which is carried out in collaboration with Ronald A. Flint and several undergraduate psychology majors, is funded by UNM' s Research Allocations Committee, the National Institute of Health, and by the National Academy of Sciences, These researchers have studied differences between paranoid and non-paranoid mental patients in "prisoner's dilemma" playing behavior, the effects of competition of face-to-face confrontation, the effects of different kinds of motivating instructions, and the relative importance of individual personality, and the structure of the game in determining players' choices.

All of these studies have involved two experimental players playing each other. Now, with two computer terminals on order, Harris plans a program of research By DEREK SHEARER

Dispatch News Service

in which each subject will play against a strategy which has been programmed into the computer. Harris will give his subjects information about what strategy will be employed by the computer, and what the results of each of his decisions in combination with the computer's decision will be.

Result Influences

He and his research associates will try to discover what influences the results of previous decisions in the game may have on a person's next decision. If, for example, a subject was "doublecrossed" by the computer, will this cause the subject to distrust the computer in all future competition, whether the human knows the computer's strategy or not.

"What we ultimately hope to throw light on,'' Han·is said, ','is to what extent people are able to make use of information about the probable effects of their own behavior on the behavior of others around them. Is the apparent irrationality of much of our interaction with others due to failure to reconize how 'others will react to our choices, or to inability to figure out how to use this information rationally?"

Junior ROTC Program

Draws· High Schoolers;

College Interest Drops

While college ROTC programs are under attack at many campuses around the nation, the armed forces are quietly expanding their Junior Reserve 0 fficers Training (JROTC) program for high school students. By 1972, over a quarter of a million young men age 14 and over are slated to participate in JROTC - three times the number in the college program, This year the Department of Defense (DOD) will spend $5 million for

,JROTC; by 1973, the Navy alone expects to be spending $4.3 million.

The Army has conducted a JROTC program in high schools since WWI. Nearly 100,000 high school students in approximately 500 units in 38 states are currently enrolled, with expansion to 650 units by 1971 planned.

Congress authorized expansion of JROTC in 1964. That year the ROTC Revitalization Act (Public Law 88-647) established a JROTC program for the Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps. A limit was set of 1200 units - 650 for the Army, 270 for the Air Force, 245 for the Navy, and 30 for the Marines.

program. While ROTC provides an opportunity to acquire basic military knowledge and skills," states an Army fact sheet, "its primary goal is to develop good citizens."

There is little career advantage for a student who enrolls in the high school program. He can enter enlisted service at the E-2 rather than the E-1 grade in which other enlistees must serve 3 months, and he can transfer a limited number of JROTC credits to the college program, but that's all,

....

_

•..

Popejoy

Hall

THE AssociAJ.'ED STUDENTS PRESENT

HAROLD TAYLOR

Lecture

"The Student

Revolution''

Wed. Feb. 25-

S:oo P.M.

ADMISSION

FREE

The official DOD justification for JROTC is because "a major portion of the federal budget is for the purpose of national defense."

Since all young men are subject to possible military service, it is considered beneficial that our high school students, as future taxpayers, voters, and soldiers of America have an opportunity to learn about the basic elements and requirements for national security. Young men should also know their personal obligations as American citizens to participate in and contribute toward national security," says the DOD.

As the DOD admits, JROTC is basically a citizenship training

Now is always leaving and always returning.

Mirage 1---$2

Nearly all JROTC units are in public schools - distributed throughout the country on the basis of population. A high school must apply for the program which consists of three years instru.ction in military history, tactics, marksmanship, drill, and organization, The school must guarantee enrollment of at least 100 "morally and physically fit male students."

Instructors are usually retired officers or non-commissioned officers who receive retirement pay, plus a supplement to equal active duty salary. The service and the school each pay half the supplement. Uniforms, except for shoes, and weapons and texts are furnished by the military; the schools provide classroom

facilitif'R and drill spncg.

Engineers Plan

Annual

Display

Moon rock samples will highlight the annual public open house Feb. 27 at the College of Engineering.

While the public is looking over the lunar fragments under analysis by UNM, judges will be looking over the work of students in mechanical, civil, electrical, nuclear, and chemical engineering.

This year's show is focused on man's attempts to preserve his environment.

First and second place awards will be made in each of the engineering departments, and a sweepstakes trophy will be awarqed by the New Mexico Chapter, National Society of Professional Engineers.

Mechanical engineering last year received the traveling trophy and the sweepstakes trophy.

Visitors are asked to begin the tour, gui.ded by engineering students, at the civil engineering building facing University Blvd. NE, two blocks north of Central Ave.

Conference Speaker

Lobo photo by Chester Painter Ed Delci, the VISTA supervisor at Estancia, spoke before a UNM health conference yesterday on the "doctorless clinic'' being administered there.

Nurse Runs Clinic

In Doctorless Area

If an unusal type of medical clinic in Estancia proves to be a good thing, "the question has to be asked, would it be a desirable thing for the state to appropriate funds to insure the survival of such a clinic," Dr. Robert Oseashon, chairman of the department of epidemiology and community medicine at the UNM medical school, said Monday during the opening of a four-day health workshop in Albuquerque.

The clinic in Estancia, where no physician is available, is operated by a nurse whose training has been augmented by an intensive course at UNM. The nurse, a laboratory assistant, and a clerical specialist are closely supervised by Oseashon.

"I think it's important to point out that in our preliminary analysis of the first months of what has gone on in Estancia (the clinic opened in February, 1969), we looked at the month of May, and we examined 50 consecutive people who came in for the first time. It was possible to take care of three dozen out of the 50 on the spot by means of either the orders which had been written ahead or by telephone," he said.

Other areas of New Mexico have equal needs for medical personnel, he pointed out. In the Carrizozo area, the table of organization of the health department calls for a whole staff of people, including three public health nurses. "For the best part of 25 years,'' Oseashon said, "there has only been one public health nurse, not three, and the supporting kinds of personnel simply haven't been available.

"And I was fortunate to be at a meeting at which the nursing section of the New Mexico Public Health Association gave an award after 25 years to this lone, stalwart nurse who tramped the area and tried to do the best she could under what I thought were overwhelming obstacles,'' said Oseashon.

Environmental health needs can be equally pressing. "In the mountains, in the northern part of our state,'' he said, "we find that in order to deliver water from a well which is safe, one has to deliver water from a deep well which costs something in the neighborhood of $600-$700 to put in. The median family income of a family living in northern New Mexico in one of our Spanish-American villages does not reach $700, so understandably one can not put in a proper well, though there might be a desire

to do so.

"The result is that one uses in effect a shallow well or a glorified ditch, which resll:;., ill <he iact that we have a great deal of diarrheal disease-as much in New Mexico today as when people came through the Santa Fe trail-leading to as much death and ..ll~<>h:!ity in infancy. This is really no surprise."

Several :College Papers

Cause

·r

exaco Ad Halt

LOS ANGELES - (CPS)

-Texaco, Inc. has decided to stop advertising in college papers which "engage in rabble rousing and attempt to foster anarchy,'' according toW. V:Linn, Texaco's advertising and sales promotion manager for the United States.

Linn said the action has been taken against several papers across the country, after Texaco reviewed their content. He would disclose the name of only one paper, the ·University of California, Irvine, ''New University."

Texaco had received complaints about an issue of the "New University" which contained a

story on the arrest of a local bookstore . owner for allegedly publishing an underground newspaper which urged readers to shoplift. It also carried an ad for Texaco.

In a letter to a per::on who complained about Texaco advertising in the paper, Linn stated Texaco had assumed "that the publication maintained a good moral policy in its editorial and news reporting activities. Naturally, we are quite shocked to find that such is not the case."

Such action by Texaco was not a violation of free speech, Linn said. "If we don't like what's in there, we don't have to advertise with papers like that,'' he said.

LOVe

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2312 CENTRAL SE opposite Popejoy Hall

' . I ' I

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the LOve Ring ,.,

people.

NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 5

Projeci· Funds Difficult to Obtain

Research

Big Part of U

By FRAN PADILLA

Of all the projects handled by UNM or

any other university in the nation, research

is ·among the biggest, said George P.

Springer, vice president for research.

To enable a research project to get off

the ground and eventually reach some kind

of final goal, money is needed, and lots of

it, he said.

Money needed for long range research

projects must come from somewhere, he

said, and most of the time the state

legislature gives nothing to the university

for research, so money must come from

either the federal government or private

donors.

Biggest Researher

During the 1968-69 school year, the

federal government gave UNM $1,235,000

for research; of this one-fourth went to the

medical school, which is the biggest

research center at the University, Springer

said.

All monies received and granted must

first be petitioned for, "and that is my

job," Springer said.

"I

make up a proposal

in written form stating what the research

project hopes to accomplish. Then

I

submit

to the people

I

feel will be willing to give

money for the project.

"But submitting a proposal does not

mean that every cent you ask for will be

given to you,'' he said.

"I have to fight for every penny I can

get," said Springer. "A researcher may

think he needs $50,000 for his project, but

the donor might think he only needs

$40,000. I can either talk the donor into

giving the other $10,000 or I can turn to

other sources," he said.

PaperWork

"After all the paper work is done and

the bargaining is over and the money is in,

my job is over," Springer said.

"Everything must go through proper

channels," he said, "so that the University

can have some kind of control over what is

being done in the name of the University."

In accepting the money for a research

project, Springe said, the University has to

sign a contract stating that the money

received will be used for the purpose stated

in the contract, and not for anything else.

Signing Contracts

"Once the contract is

m~de

through the

agency giving the money," Springer said,

"the only one who

can

sign the contract is

the president of the University, and no one

else.

. "If

the contract states that the money

will be spent for the research of air

pollution, or cancer or any other thing,

that is how the money will be spent," he

said, "no matter what comes up during the

course of the research."

Program For Indians, Chicanos, Blacks

Support Lobo

Advertisers

Scholarships .Given OK

· P.E. MAJORS An AS UNM-sponsored

scholarship program for undergraduate Indian, chicano, and black students was given a "do pass" recommendation by the ASUNM Senate Finance Committee Thursday.

The scholarships would provide a year's tuition, books, and . living stipend for two New Mexico students chosen on the basis of need.

The bill, sponsored by Senator Lou Storm, provides for one student senator to "sit on the selection of recipients" and stay informed of the students' progress.

The committee struck a provision in the bill concerning

possible expansion of the program.

The bill provides that the scholarships be inc! uded in the 1970-71 ASUNM budget, and be granted for that year.

Art Theses

Work completed by two UNM

art students for master's thesis projects is being exhibited at the Unitarian Church, 3701 Carlisle NE, through Feb. 27.

The Committee tabled a bill requesting $2000 to help finance the UNM concert band and orchestra participation in the Music Educators National Conference, March 4-8.

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References

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