University of New Mexico
UNM Digital Repository
1969 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970
11-11-1969
New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 40, 11/11/
1969
University of New Mexico
Follow this and additional works at:https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1969
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 1969 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 40, 11/11/1969." 73, 40 (1969).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1969/124
Page 8
NEW MEXICO LOBO Monday, November 10, 1969
tiiUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiWIIIIIJIIHII.IHIIIIIHIU~HIUIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIK*II.IIIHIIIII.IIIUI
Campus Briefs
R
' ecrur· rng
•t•
u
Recruiters repre•enting the followinll:companies or nge':'cies will
visi~ ~he
Cente. r to interview candidates for pos1t1ons:Pablo Neruda
Poetry by Pablo Neruda, read in Spanish and English, and a movie "I Am Pablo Neruda" will be presented Nov. 11-12 at the Old Town Studio,
The poetry readings will begin at 8 p.m. Admission is $1 for students, and $1.50 for adults. Old Town Studio is located on Rio Grande Blvd. NW.
Pedagogy
UNM anthropology professor Bruce Rigsby will lecture on the "Nominal Incorporation and the Ergative in a Pacific Northwest Language" Tuesday evening, Nov, 11.
Rigsby's lecture will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Anthropology building, Room 36 and is one of the seminars in Linguistic Language and Pedagogy.
New Dean
Robert Schulte has been
named assistant dean. of students at UNM.
Schulte, a 1964 graduate of Raton High School, received a bachelor of arts degree in business administration at UNM in January. He has since attended graduate courses in business for a semester and spent four months on active duty with the 'Air National Guard.
Parking
Three campus parking lots will be designated exclusively student lots within about a week, Campus Planning Committee member Tom Hogg announced yesterday.
The three student lots will be the dirt lots located immediately adjacent to the Union on the west, west of the Fine Arts Center, and east of Mesa Vista dorm. All three lots have been designated open lots so far this year.
Hogg said the lots will be graded once a week and will not
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES: ?c per word, 20 word mini- WHERE: Journalism Building. Room mum ($1.40) per time run. I! ad is to 159, afternoons preferably or mail. run five or more consecutive days with
no changes the rate is reduced to 5c Classified Advertising per word nnd the minimum number of UNM P.O. Box 20
words to 10. Albuquerque, N.M. 87106
TERMS: Pa)'lllent must be made in full prior to insertion of advertisement.
I) PERSONALS
DO YOU BITE your nails 1 Would you like to stop 1 A limited number of Peo·
Pic are being accepted in an exp~rimcnt
to stop nail biting. Under the auspices ol UNM Psychology Dept. Call Mr. Stephen, 277-2103 for appointment. 11/11 DEADLINE for inserting classified 3:30
p.m.-will go in next day's Lobo. 69 MIRAGE are now on sale for $5-rm.
205, .Journalism Bldg.
Sand and Sun in OLD TOWN is your headquarters for groovy Leather Pants, Fringe Jnekcts, Fringe Vests, and Fringe Handbags. 243-7909.
SENIOR-Be sure and have your class picture taken for the Mirage. No charge -three poses, three prints. Call 277-5743 to schedule it at your eonvenience. ROOM & BOAI\D FREE. Private kitchen
and bath and $15 exchange for babysit-ting. Five nights per week. Call 242-2445. 11/10
TWO RIDERS to Minnesota. Leave 11/21, return 11/29. Shnrc gas. 877-1792. 11/14 CHRISTMAS-shop the easy Avon way
from your campus A\•on representative. Call Margaret at 242-6407. 11/13
POETI~Y READING-8J•anish and
En-glish-movie "I Am Pablo Nerudo.u· 8 p.m. Old Town Studio, Nov. 11, 12. 11/12
2) LOST & FOUND
FOUND: leather case with key on lawn outside Sara RcynoJds Hull, morning o! Oct. 28. 842·1369.
LOST Wed. night in the univeraity area: blncl:, female kitten with olive green eyea, about six months old. No collar. Reward. 842-6418.
LOST: NOTEBOOK, MATH 265. Please call Dav.: Thomas, 242-6424, Reward. ll/l9
LOST: URGENT-Art Ed lesson plans in manila fold<r. 242-1857 evenings. 11/13
3) SERVICES
IRONING-humane rates, pickup and de-livery. Bai<Worm and W83berwoman Ltd. 247-8737. 11/6
LOVING CHILD CARE, day or night. 247-8737. 11/21
WILL SIT your small child and park your car. 1625 Roma NE. 11/21
5) FORSALE
LIGHTBULBS on sale by Phi Delta Tbctnj
Will deliver. Let the Phi Delfs light your way. 243-0066.
FOR SALE: 1942, 45 Harley Davidson with extended front end, custom seat, bar and tank set up. Top end recently worked over. Needs a. few very minor jobs done. $2I8. Owner also is looking
for a Harley rigid frame for a 74. Phone 277-5011 Grant after 6 p.m. Mon-day through ThursMon-day and SunMon-day
after-noon.
'65 PLYMOUTH FURY III, 383. Loaded. New tires. $1250. 243-7168.
1961 CHRYSLER NEWPORT. Great con-d(tion, air conditioning. 2 spkr. radio. 344-3654 after 4 pm.
1967 MUSTANG. 12,000 miles. Like new 298-4878. See anytime. Mel Daniels. 11/11
1968 HONDA SCUAMBLER 125-excellent cond. 2 helmets. $326. 243-0846, 11/10 1965 TRIUMPH 650 oc. Call 842-1816 or
842-9842 between 6·10. 11/12
TWO small wooden ART CASES with handles, $2 eaoh: one large nlelal paint-ing or drawpaint-ing case with handle. ;s: one Jnrge drn.wing board with handle and cup, $3,50. Call weekends or after 9 p.m. daily 265-6548.
6) . EMPLOYMENT
CAN USE two undergraduate men, with car to help in my work. 25 hr.-$66.91 tn
start. Call Friday 3-5 p.m. only. 247-9003. 11/6
JOB OPPORTUNITY: Mayor. Over a dozen vaenncies created this year by voluntary drop outs. Qualifications: thick skin, endless patience, Degree in Con .. frontation. Minor in Jnw nnd order nlso he]pfuJ.. Intere.itOO? Meet lour retiring
H A R P E R' S MAGAZINE, America's First 1\fonthly. On sale now.
PART-TIME Ci\1\fPUS REPRESENTA-TIVE. Put up adv. posters, earn $5-$10 Per hour. No selling, Write Univ, Pub-lications, Box 20133, Denver, Colo 80220 for details. 11/13
REPRESENTATIVES NEEDED to sell
Volkswa~en bus tours of Europe in Sum ..
mer_. 1976-$100.00 commis:don per snle. Also, opportunities available. to drive
buses ns summer employment.. Write VW
Adventures, P .. O. Box 7999, Austin, Texas, 18712.
rr=RENT-A-TV==i\
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Buck's
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268-4589 Color Available
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Experience
Free Estimates
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268-4~15
be paved because they are in areas that will be occupied by new buildings within the next three years.
Miss Wool
Entry forms for UNM cpeds who wish to enter the Miss Wool of New Mexico pageant are available in the dean
of
women's office.Entrants must have had one year of college or more by June, 1970, be 5'6" tall or taller, wear a size 10 dress, be between 18 and 25 years old, and unmarried. Two girls from each state university will be selected, said Mrs. Charles Fuller, pageant co-ordinator.
The state competition will be Dec. 5 in Roswell, New Mexico. Miss Wool of New Mexico will receive a $250 scholarship, and all expenses to the national pageant.
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CAlliNG U
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Monday, Nov. 10
College or Nursing; Union, Room 253;
2 p.m.
Town Club; Union, Room 230~ 6:30p.m. TQwn Club Pledges! Union, Room 231-D; 6:30 p.m.
Alpha Tau Omega; Union, Room 250D-E: 7 p.m.
SDS: Union, Room 129; 7 p.m.
Omega Psi Phii Union, Room 231A; 7
p.m.
Language nnd Area Center; Union Thea~
tcr; 8 p.rn.
Tuesday, Nov. 11
Reading of papers about visiting pro-fessor Michel Butor; Mitchell Hall, Room 110; 4:30 p.m.
Lecture, "Nominal Incorporation and the
Ergative in n. Pncific Northwest Language," Pro!. Bruce Rigsby; Seminar in Linguistic Language and Pedagogy; Anthropology, Room 36; 7:30 p.m.
Poetry rending and movie, -'I Am Pnblo
Neruda,": Old Towu Studio; 8 p.m.; $1 nd-mission for students, $1.50 for adults.
Violin concert, Robert Soctcns, vJolin, Minkn. Rousi.cheva, piano: Recital HaUj 8:16 p.m.; tickets available at the Pope-joy Hall box office.
CAMPUS LAUNDRY
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Welcome Lobos
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- , Monday, November10 Tuesday, November 11 .
Caterpillar 'J'ractor Company-ChE, ME, CE, EE (BS, 14S)
The Dow Chemical Company, Texas Di-vision-chE, ME, IE, EE, CE, Ohern. (BS, MS)
Computing & Software, Inc.-Math., PhYSical Sciences (BS)
U.S. Dept. of Tranaportntino, Bureau of P~blic Roads-CE (BS, MS)
Dept, of the Army, Hct~dquarters U.S. ArmY Air Defense Center & Fort Bllss-Eng·ineer, Accf;g,, Budget, Computer Prog., and/or Systems Analysis, Education, Man· agement, Ana1yais, Pet·sonne], Procur~
mcnt, Safe~y and Supply _ United States Air Force Recruiting,
Of-ficers Training Program-All majors
El Paso Electric Company-EE, ME, (BS)
Xct'ox Corporation-Bus. Admin., Mnrk~
eting, Management, Fin/Econ.
The Dow Chemieal Company, Texas Dl·
vision~hE, l\IE, IE, EE, CE, Ch(!m.,
(BS, MS)
Humble Oil & Refining Compnny-chE, ME, CE, EE (BS, MS, PhD)
U.S. Army Material Command,
Tech-nical Placement Officc--AE, IE. ME, EE,
Gen.E, ChE (BS, MS, PhD), Math (MS, PhD), Physies (BS, MS, PhD)
Pan American Petroleum Corporation-ME, EE, ChE, CE (BS, 1\IS)-Geo!ogy, Math, EE (BS, MS, PhD)
Control Data Corporation-EE, Math, Computer Sci. (BS, MS), ME, Phys~cs
(BS)
Koppers Company, Inc. & Sin,clqir-Kop .. pers Co.-chE, CE, ME, EE, Chern. (BS)
Wednesday, November 12
Pam, American Petroleum Corporation -chE, ME, EE, CE (BS, MS)
Humble Oil & Refining Company-chE, ME, CE, EE CBS, MS, PhD)
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ANNOUNCEMENT
Truman Street Chiropractic Clinic
gives special attention to
Students-Faculty
&Staff
Dr. Silbaugh-Dr. Goforth
203 Truman NE - ~or Appointment Call 2.5.5-71.55
NEW MEXICO LOBO
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' ' t I i~'
I, •/NEW
MEXICO
Vol. 73
Tuesday, November 11,
1969
No. 41
---~---~--·----,---Committee Releases
Moratorium Schedule
The November Coalition to End The War yesterday released a
st~tement and details to the final schedule for the Nov. 13 and 14 Vtetnam Moratorium .
The statement.
re~ds:
"As was our goal last Oct. 15, we again seek to keep the public m Albuquerque aware of the Vietnam situation and the terrible toll it has taken on all Americans.Against Continuation
";Although our.
~iews
are strongly against its continuation, all we ask IS that each Citizen come to an informed opinion as to whetherthis war is in the best tradition or the best interests of this nation. "The time for a decision on Vietnam is here, and we intend to participate in it as we encourage all Americans- silent or otherwise -to do."
Thursday, Nov. 13 the bell from the battleship New Mexico will toll once every four seconds until each of the 40,000 American war dead are honored, Later in the day a movable bell will be carried through various parts of the city at the same time as educationru information about the war is distributed.
San Francisco Bus
At 6 p.m. Thursday a bus will leave the campus headed for a San Francisco demonstration - tickets for the trip costing $35. The trip follows a rally in the Union.
Both Thursday and Friday black flowers demonstrating sorrow for the war dead will be distributed.
Friday at 2:15 p.m. an informal procession will start from Zimmerman field and continue downtown to the induction center on 5th a!Jd Gold where at 3 p.m. Father Baca of the San Felipe church Will read off the name of each New Mexico serviceman killed
in the war. A bell will be tolled after the reading of each name. Coffin March
A coffin will be carried from campus to the induction center during the procession and those attending will place black or fresh flowers in the coffin as part of the service at the center.
Tentative plans also include the use of two billboards one near Winrock an.d the othPr near the Lobo theater, with a plea 'for peace. The committee also hopes to sponsor a float in the homecoming parade. The theme would be "For a REAL Homecoming, bring the boys back."
New BCMC Contract
Might Be Given to U
Working control of the Bernalillo County Medical Center
(BCMC) may be turned over to UNM if a contract signed by
the UNM Regents and Bernalillo County Commission last
Saturday is approved.
The contract, which turns over all BCMC operations
except budget control to the University, must be approved
by the state Board of Educational Finance and the United
States Surgeon General before it can be put into effect.
Under the terms of the contract signed by Regent's
President Arturo Ortega, and County Commission Chairman
Ed Balcomb, UNM is responsible for staffing, administration
and maintenance of the BCMC and "its associated clinics and
emergency facilities."
The county shall be responsible for financing of the
medical center through its mill levy on Bernalillo county
residents, and have control of the budget.
A liason budget committee, consisting of one of the
Regents, a delegate appointed by the All-Indian Pueblo
Council, and a member of the County Commission will serve
as fiscal advisors to the UNM administrative staff.
If approved, the new agreement will eliminate the Board ·
of Trustees now administering BCMC operations and make
UNM the responsible legal governing board.
The contract was approved by the Bernalillo ·county
Commissioners last Monday and charges the University to
retain the "institutional identity" of the BCMC and apply the
same standards for admission of poverty patients as does the
county.
Under the agreement the BCMC physical plant and capital
equipment remain property of the count'IJ whereas all other
assets and liabilities, excepting bonded indebtedness,
workmen's compensation, and public liability claims incurred
prior to the acceptance date of the contract, will be
transferred to UNM.
The
Scourge
of The
Campus
,.
I I I I, !
NE\N
M''EXICD
WAYNE CIDDIOEditor
GRANT HARVEYManaging Editor
Box 20, University P.O., UNM, Albuquerque, N.M., 87106
Editorial Phone (505) 277-4102, 277-4202
Vol,
7~,No. 41
Tuesday, November 11, 1969
Editorial
The New MelCico Lobo il published daily every regular week of th& Univ~r
sity year by th& Board of Student Pub-lications of th& Associated Students of the University of New Mexico, and is not fina"cially associated with UNM. Printed by the UNM Printing Plant with second class postage paid at Albuquerque, Now Mexico, 87106. S~scription rate is $7 for the academic year.
The opinions expressed on the editorial pages of The Lobo or& those of th& author solely. Unsigned opinion is that of the editorial board of The Lobo. Nothing necessarily represents th& views of the Associated Students or of the Uni-versity of New Mexico,
•
Bringing Home The War
A College Press Service news release
reported yesterday the Justice Department
bas thus far refused to grant antiwar
demonstrators a permit to march down
Washington, D.C.'s Pennsylvania on
Saturday.
The New Mobilization to End the War,
the
organization sponsori!!g Saturday's
march, has indicated that the march may go
on with or without the permit and the
Justice Department has replied it will use
"the minimum force" necessary to keep
demonstrators off Pennsylvania Avenue and
away from the White House.
In short, the planned peace march is
shaping up into what could be the biggest
and most violent student-police
confrontation so far this school year. A
national Moratorium Committee member
last week discouraged a UNM delegation
from going to Washington, saying that the
march organizers expected more than one
million participants.
~d
Young, project director for New
Mobe, has declared there
will"indeed be
permits", but his declaration was shadowed
with pessimism when he added, "We have to
go ahead believing we have these
right~(to
march).
I
don't know what else to believe."
CPS
drew a gloomy picture for
the
Nov.
15 march when it said, "The march might
not be peaceful. If the Justice Department
does not grant a permit for the march which
has been promoted for months, and
hundreds of thousands of persons do come
to protest the war th'inking they will be
marching down Pennsylvania Avenue, it may
take an incredible amount of 'minimum
force' to stop them.
"But it will be the Justice Department
who brings the war home."
'Mind
If We WalkYou There?'
To The Editor:
"Free Cuba?"
To the Editor:I think that it is most interestir1g that at the same time Mr. Marlowe devoted an entire column extolling in lavish terms the virtues of Communist Cuba, six American plane hijackers decided to return to the United States and face long prison terms rather than live in Mr. Marlowe's Cuban paradise.
Could it possibly be that life in a .• ynited States prison is preterable to routine living in "free" Cuba?
Robert L. Quiset
Friends of Ojo
To the Editor:When a boycott of University Drug Store was suggested by Dave McCormick of SDS, J qpposed it
~n the grounds 'that Mr. Briley had brought no legal eviction action against the inhabitants of Ojo de Casa. Since this is no longer the case, I ain forming an ad hoc committee called the Friends of Ojo de Casa, The
objectives of this committee are as follows:
(1) To prepare and distribute literature concerning the suit to be distributed to customers at the University Drug Store and the University Book Store.
(2) To communicate with Mrs. Johnson, asking her to negotiate, informally with the Placitas Land and Cattle Co. and the Ojo de Casa residents to try to find some middle ground.
Ulyses Grant will be on campus on Tuesday and anyone interested in this issue is welcome to meet with us in the second floor lounge at the Union at 2:30 p.m. If you are interested, but can't make this meeting, you can reach me after 6:30 p.m. at Placitas, 1-867·2433. Maureen Hightower
More Sports
To the Editor:I am writing to protest The Lobo's new policy of giving the sports section only one page. I believe you are making a 1nistake with this policy.
When I read The Lobo, thii!
Lettent are welcome, and aboald be no longer than 250 warda trpe.
written, double apaeed. Name, tele-phone number and addres. muat be ineluded, although name wiD be withheld upon reQll . . L
first things I ever read are the Ivory Tower and the sports columns. Now that there are no more Ivory Towers coming and the number of sports columns have been cut in half, interesting articles i'} The Lobo are, frankly, very few m number.
Maybe I'm different from the rest of your paper's readership in wanting more than one page of sports coverage. If I'm not, though, you'll probably be getting other letters on. this same subject. John Somogyi
Goodbye
To the Editor:
(Attention: Ken Marlowe, editor of "The Tangled Wire") I am referring to your . column about Cuba on Nov. 4th's Lobo. Since you know so much about the present Cuba, and like it so well that you are willing to write a whole column to compare . the Communist Cuba's way of life to the Americans, why dor't you go and live in Cuba? We don't need you, unpatriotic American, here. Go and enjoy yourself in Castro's Cuba. Goodbye.
Name Withheld By Request
Moratorium Labeled
~subversive
Activiti
WASHINGTON -
(CPS) -The chairman of the House
CowmLt on Internal Security has charged that the New
Mobilizc:~,t;L
• Committee is "dominated by Communists," and
that the Vietnam Moratorium Committee is "part of a
propaganda maneuver designed and · organized by
Communists and other revolutionaries."
Rep. Richard Ichord (D-Mo.) said it is not surprising that
Americans "have backed away from the November
demonstrations of New Mobe" since, "90 percent of the
revolutioning Marxists in in this nation" participated in the
Oct. 15 Moratorium.
His committee, which used to be called the House
Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) has released a
"staff study" on the so-called fall peace offensive: Saturday's
march on Washington, sponsored by New Mobe, the strikers
for peace Nov. 13-14 organized by the Student Mobilization
Committee, and locally-instigated Moratorium activities.
The study says Student Mobe is controlled by the Young
Socialists Alliance, which
isthe front organization for the
Socialist Workers Party, which is the front organization for
the Trotskyite Communist Party
in
the United States, which
has been proven to be subversive.
Although many of the Moratorium leaders are "sincerely
motivated", the study says, they have unfortunately become
"intimately allied with a distinctive pro-Communist program
and leadet'Ship."
The study calls Dave Dellinger, co-chairman of the New
Mobe, a "self-styled non-Soviet Communist." Two news
organizations present at New Mobe planning sessions,
Liberation News Service and the National Guardian, are
referred to as Communist organs, proving New Mobe's
domination by Communist types.
The pattern of the fall peace offensive "is not one of
legitimate, sincere protest against presumed inadequacies in
our Vietnam policies," according to the study. "Rather, it is
one of blatant Communist manipulation, exploitation, and
subversion ...
"In the words of the Communist Party's west coast
newspaper, the People's World, 'The Moratorium is being
viewed, not as the climax or high point but the opening shot
of the fall offensive against the war.' The usage may have
been inadvertent but it is nonetheless apt; the fall offensive is
indeed a shot - a shot at the heart of America during a time
of crisis.
"Let those who continue to participate in the fall
offensive do so with no illusions: No matter what their
intentions, the result will only be aid to the cause of the
Communist in Moscow, Peking and Hanoi -
and their
adherents and agents here at home", the study concludes.
The study was paid for by your
tax
dollars.
Lobo Review
~Your
Own Thing' Is
Adolescent Musical
By FRANK BREWSTER "Your Own Thing" was done at Popejoy Hall this weekend. I don't know what your thing is but somewhere in the hodge-podge of films, flats, and flesh you should have found something to entertain you, and possibly to convince you to be yourself.
Based loosely on "Twelfth Night" of Shakespeare, the rock musical depicts a set of 20·year•old twins separated in a shipwreck. The girl, Viola survives and masquerades as ~ boy tenor to get a job with the all male . rock band, the Apocalypse. She falls in love with her. manager, Orson, who returns the favor but tries to suppress his feelings for this attractive young . "boy." The real boy twin, Sebastian has also survived the shipwreck, He too, applies for work with Orson and is mistaken for Viola and immediately accepted. However, there is no masquerade here, and when Sebastian gets . the chance to sleep with Olivia Orson's att!active (but unresp~nsive) lady fr1end, he does. Orson is
con~inced. that he must respond to hts feelings for the "boy" Viola
a~d makes some mental adJustments to the homosexual experience. He is saved from
co~plete soc}al rejection by soc1ety when Vtola reveals proof of her true identity and sex. Once she has that off her chest, Viola act:;epts Orson, Sebastian and Olivia are paired and a conventional happy ~nding is forecast for all.
Don't get the wrong idea. This is not . a seri'ims emotional drama. The dramatic treatment of the
subject is purely superficial. The theme of the musical may be that doing your own thing is a way of
overcoming artificial barriers between people. (Orson's willingness to . respond to Viola results in resolution of disguise.) But this theme is a long way from being recognized by any of the characters (with the possible exception of Orson).
• Basically, "Your Own Thing'' 1s an adolescent fun musical. It
speaks the language of the young generation. But it has all the faults of the adolescent. For instance, it assumes that if you were free to act as you chose, the first response would be to experiment sexually. Its major fault is dramatic. This difficulty shows
t~at "Your Own Thing" is really dtrected at conservatives, 1'he chief dramatic t<msion involves the homosexual attraction of Orson for the "boy" Viola. The only audience that would really respond to a tension like this is
~me which is not free enough with tts love to share it with everyone.
If you came to the musical believing in completely free love, you might even be offended at the way it is treated with lack of understanding or depth.
S.ex is not a distinguishing factor. Orson faiis in love with Viola regardless of her sex. The plot makes much of the current confusion in appearance or young people. Boys with long hair are indistinguishable from girls with long pants. Th.e adolescent notion that anatomy is the only way to tell boys from girls is frequently used in revealing and humorous ways, But there is no admission
t~at the role of the male is any dtfferent from the role of the female,
'
~---~---~---~----Tuesday, November 11, 1969 NEW ME:XICO LOBO
Washington Newsman
Urges ROTC
Study
ROTC on college campuses is desirable, said Kenneth Tomlinson in a recent article in Reader's Digest, because it keeps military decisions out of the hands of a "military elite.''
Tomlinson, a member of Reader's Digest's Washington bureau, urges that the committees established on many campuses to study ROTC ''carefully evaluate and update the ROTC curriculum. They should work with the mili-tary and university administrations to correct any faults that are found."
But it should not be abolished, he says.
It is inevitable that this nation will be faced with "significant military decisions" in the coming years, Tomlinson states. ROTC produces officers who "fully represent American society " and
"
,
are aware of the full perspective of American culture.""Radicals" calling for abol.ition of ROTC may be missing the point, sin co their challenge is based on two assumptions: 1) that ROTC "violates academic freedom," and, 2) that ROTC courses "do not merit academic credit," the author said.
The first line of attack is "glaringly unsupported by facts," Tom I in son said. "Probing the charge at eight universities, ... 1 found no 'thought control' in military classes.
"Indeed, just the opposite is often the case," said Tomlinson. One student reported that his ROTC courses were the only place he could find "a real give·and·take debate on the Vietnam war."
As to the second charge, Tomlinson points out that "colleges can demand that the
Argentine Labor
Topic of Speech
A lecture on "The Origins and Development of the Argentine Labor Movement, 1890·1914" will be given at UNM on Monday, Nov. 10, at 8 o'clock in the Union Theater. The lecture, in English, will be free and open to the public.
The speaker will be Dr. Hobart Spa.lding, professor of Latin American history at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. It will be the second lecture in the 1969-70 Latin American Series at UNM.
Prof. Spalding is widely known as an author and writer, his books deal with social and economic aspects of the United States and o£ Latin American countries. He received his A.B. from Harvard University, his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of California at Berkeley. He has been a Fullbright scholar in Argentina and taught at the National University of Buenos Aires. Prof. Spalding has also given guest seminars and lectures at Princeton University, Yale University, and Indiana University.
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courses measure up to the institution's normal standards," and can insist on "teachers of high quality."
The contribution of ROTC officers during World War II was described as "the most valuable asset we have had in this emergency" by Army Chief of Staff Gen. George C. Marshall, said Tomlinson.
ROTC has been "a critical' cornerstone in our national defense for decades," writes Tomlinson. "They should not abolish a program that has served the nation well in the past, and that will be vitally needed in the future."
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Page 4 NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday,N!Wember 11,1969
Marxist Advocates Revolution
Marcuse Criticizes Student's 'Distortion' of ·Concepi·
Records
Sweatshirts
(Editor's Note: This is the first of California campus at San of a two-part series on Marxist Diego. He is busy, but always philosopher Herbert Marcuse.) · seems available, and speaks with a tired, thickly accented German growl. After producing numerous books and articles and his most recent and perhaps too hastily compiled "Essay on Liberation," which speculators believe was a quick attempt to hit aware radicals in the community with a concise explanation of all his dogma, Marcuse conceded, "No, I
have no more book projects in the working. I've written enough in my life."
from society as a whole. In the Future
His main criticism of the Movement is the totally outdated notions of the working classes as a revolutionary force in the United States. He says the students' approach to workers is antiquated and that actually, students themselves are now as much a part of the working force conceptually as factory workers in Marx's time.
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By JIM HECK College Press Service SAN DIEGO, Cal - (CPS)-There is a story that during the May 19[)8, Sorbonml uprising, militants carried about placards that expressed solidarity with ''Marx-Marcuse.''
When American radicals saw the photos and recalled that Marcuse taught in the United States, the story goes, they hastily read his literature in the hope of deifying a national radica! hero around whose ideology the Movement could be based. With the execution of Cohn-Bendit, Marcuse is the only not-young radical who has written as extensively as Marx and who advocates revolution. But Cohn·Bendit fell into disrepute with French insurgents after his dubious role in the Sorbonne·worker riots. And so, only Herbert Marcuse was left with the potential for becoming the spokesman and perhaps precursor of a national Movement that drastically needed direction.
Recluse
But either Marcuse was too unradical, or the radicals were too irrational, and never the twain shall ever meet.
After a good year of significant exposure, Marcuse is a recluse as ever. A gruff, but really sensitive old man with flowing white hair, Marcuse spends his days comfortably in a small office overlooking a peaceful University
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It is not that Marcuse has written off the students, but rather the reverse, that seems true. Few radical groups really quote Marcuse, and hestitate to allude to his rather romantic conception of possible utopia. And the Progressive Labor Party has viciously attacked the 68-year-old professor with such headlines as "Marcuse: Cop or Cop-Out?"
"I don't take that criticism seriously," Marcuse says, which is true of practically all student ideology in the philosopher's eyes. He claims students act for actions sake and have completely distorted the concept of revolution. They are not really revolutionaries, he says, but in part only intellectuals divorced
The advanced capitalistic system, Marcuse explains, is more and more dependent on college intellectuals- without whom the system cannot possibly go on.
"I have never contended the student movement is a revolutionary force. I have always insisted that we do not live in a revolutionary situation. That it will take a long time to get there and that all their actions overlook this present fact."
He talks about the unstudent student leaders like Rudd, Ayers, Davis, Hoffman, etc. and all of them he says: "If they are good, if they really know what they are doing, if their actions and their strategy are based on a realistic analysis, then they can play very important parts is guiding the Movement." But, he concludes, dejectedly, in most situations this just isn't the case.
Board Reinstates l:dit:or
Of Arizona State Press
TEMPE, Ar.izona - (CPS) -The editor of the Arizona State University Stale Press, Larry Ross, has been reinstated. He was fired last month for insubordination when he challenged an advisor's censoring of a column which was to appear in the paper.
Ross was re·hired when he agreed to a policy statement worked out by a faculty committee which stated the paper should not employ techniques of inuendo or harrassment in its stories and should live up to the ethics of journalism. At the same time, Ross convinced the Board. of Student Publications to initiate hearings on the role of a student newspaper.
The Journalism Department has operated the State Press as a Ia boratory training ground for student journalists and has said it does not intend for the paper to be a political voice for .the students.
The firing of Ross came after the paper began a campaign against Arizona Republic Publisher Eugene Pulliam's decision not to sell advertising to non-rated and X-rated motion pictures, A column by a staff writer on the subject was censored
by the papet's advisor and the faculty head of the publications board.
Ross walked out in protest, taking ten staff members with him, and he was fired. After negotiations, Ross was reinstated. The ten staff members also returned to the p[\Jler.
" I t was a matter of compromise. The agreement was general enough that both sides could live with· it," Ross said.
As for the theater advertising issue, he said, "It's no longer an issue. Pulliam dropped the policy."
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Tuesday, N!Wember 11, 1969 NEW MEXICO LOBO
Says Rabbi Harold Schulweis
'Jew-
Obl~gated
to Morality'
The "religious obligation" to demand morality in acts of man and God is one of the "oldest traditions" behind Jewish involvement in social protest said Rabbi Harold Schulweis Sunday night in one of the lectures in the Experiments in Jewish Learning Series.
Schulweis spoke on "Jewish Theological Roots of Social Protest" in the Antrhopology lecture hall to about 200 people,
"If a man can argue with his God, how much more a
Campus
Briefs
Adam Powell
House representative Adam Clayton Powell, from New York's Harlem district, will lecture Nov. 16 at the University of Albuquerque.
The lecture will be held at 8 p.m. in the student center ballroom, and admission is $1.
Need
Tutors
Albuquerque's Technical Vocational Institute (TV-I) has announced a need for tutors in calculus. Persons interested in tutoring TV·I students should contact Alice Smith at 299-1665 after 5 or during the daytime at TV-I.
Mathematic:;
Dl'. Shelemyahu Zacks, professor of mathematics at UNM, will speak in a department colloquium 'rhursday at 3:30p.m. in Room 104 of Marron Hall.
His topic is "On a functional equation in the theory of the optimal control of a queueing process."
Humble
Grant
A $2,000 grant to UNM's College of Engineering has been presented by the Humble Oil Education Foundation.
UNM President Dr. Ferrel H('ady accepted the grant from L. H. Byrd, Humble Oil & Refining Co.'s Southwestern Division production manJger.
UNM's gift, for unrestricted usc, is part of a total of $396,000
by the Humble Foundation for 94 higher educational institutions during the 1969·70 academic year.
Nurse
Helen Ann Nance has been named senior class winner of the psychiatric-mental health nursing grant at the UNM School of Nursing.
The grant, from National Institute of Mental Health division of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, provides a monthly stipend plus tuition and registration and laboratory fees. Each winner of the award must agree to enroll in graduate school and work toward a master's degree in psychiatric-mental health nursing. .
Miss Nance is now enrolled in public health nursing classes, working especially with children who have mental health problems. She plans to concentrate heavily on psychiatric nursing during her final semester at UNM.
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responsibility does he have to argue with his gover.nment.
"One of the most important Jewish ideas is that the world is incomplete, that everything requires repair," said Schulweis. It
is the moral competence of man . that enables him to try and work
to improve that world.
"It is one of the most distinctive characteristics of the Jewish faith, the covenant with God that legitimizes protest, the religious act of defiance."
Shulweis used biblical and Talmudic examples of prophets, and "small people" who demanded that God act with the same morality he taught in the law, to illu.strate the history of "the subterranean tradition" of religious protest.
''It.'s one of the oldest traditions," said Schulweis. ''One
that I don't know if the many Jewish youths prominent in social protest are aware of.
He said peaceful protest like last month's Moratorium Day march contdhutes to the "moral health of the nation."
Rabbi Schulweis holds the rabbinate of Temple Beth Abraham in Oakland, California, and is a graduate of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He is currently visitng professor at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles.
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Page 6 NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday, November 11, 1969
Serenity Prevails at Manera Neuva in Placitas
Hippies Restore Colony Settlement
By MAUREEN HIGHTOWER Unperturbed serenity prevails on the Placitas colony of Manera Nueva, or "New Way," as the 25 settlers await disposition of a court suit filed by Alfred Briley, also of Placitas, to evict them from the property they have occupied and cultivated for the past two years.
People around Placitas call the
Across Central from Johnson Gym
~42·8935
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The settlers of Manera Nueva are considered by most Placitas residents to be hippies, a designation not necessarily
accepted by the settlers. ,
Caretaker at the Johnson ranch was Shorty Gibbs, an elderly maverick of a man, an institution of a rancher around Sandoval county for half a century.
Compatible Neighbors Apparently Shorty found the new residents compatible because
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he has continued living on the property, except for the rigorous winters when he finds it more comfortable to live in Albuquerque with relatives.
Gen!'ral!y accepted spokesman for !Janera Nueva is General Ulysses S. Grant, who considers· himself a reincarnation of the. Civil War general. He lives at the Court House, headquarters of the
colony. Not generally known is
that Manera Nueva has legally been incorporated as a religious, educational, and non-profit institution.
Despite the general exodus to and from the property by hippies over the past two years, the ranch buildings are in a better state of
~ > ., ' c ••• '
Water Supply
preservation now than a few years ago. Adobes· have been restored and paint and roofing used. This summer several acres of blue corn, beans, beets, turnips and radishes were harvested, the farming made easier by a recently renovated irrigation system. i<'ruit trees on the property have been pruned and now yield a plentiful crop of peaches, apricots and nectarines. Six horses sold to the colony by. Shorty Gibbs provide farm power' and horse riding. Thirty chickens, geese, and ducks provide eggs and meats.
The "Old Way"
On the cliffs overlooking the lovely valley of Manera Nueva
. ' :;;:74
The residents of the Manera Nueva colony in Placitas, use this water barrel, complete with figurine, as part of their water supply.
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may be found intriguing ruins of yesteryear; what the settlers believe to be pre-Columbian ruins of possibly two old forts.
Manera Nueva might be more appropriately called "Manera Vieja," or "Old Way." The inhabitants Jeject the materialistic rapacity of modern society in favor of a "Green Revolution," and raise crops and animals and educate families in a tradition of closeness to nature. Money is frowned upon; barter is preferred. The property is owned by Mrs. Jean Johnson, of Sterling, Colorado, who moved from the property about seven years ago. Several attempts have been made to evict the settlers from the ranch. During the Placitas Bubonic Plague scare in June,
1969, when one of the Manera
Nueva inhabitants contacted the disease, unknown vigilantes with flashlights searched the property. At a Placitas public meeting, even after the New Mexico Public · Health Service had assured the community that the plague in the hippie colony was coincidence, threats were made to drive the hippies from Placitas. The controversy simmered in the community until:
Legal Actions
Sept. 6, when Briley served an eviction notice on the hippies, asserting he had signed a lease · with Mrs. Johnson to graze livestock on the property, iu the name of the Placitas Land and Cattle Co. The hippies refused to leave.
Oct. 24, when Briley filed suit in District Court to evict the hippies. By terms of the agreement with Mrs. Johnson, Briley said, he was to lease the 37.37 acres for $37.37 per year for a period of five years. The Placitas Land and Cattle Co., he continued, was formed "by oral agreement among him and two Placitas neighbors, Kenneth Brown and Arnold Slusher. Briley ad mit ted he contemplated the eviction action when he leased the land from Mrs. Johnson, whom he has never met." (From an Albuquerque Journal news story of Nov. 1, 1969)
Because of the absence of the defendants, who did not appear to testify on the advice of their attorney, Charles Driscoll, District Judge Gerald D. Fowlie in definitely postponed the hearing. However, indications are the case will be rescheduled about December 1.
No Public Comment
Briley, a druggist at University Drug Store, Brown, a teacher at Albuquerque Academy, and Slusher, a salesman for University Book Store, have declined to make any public statement on the controversy,
The attorney for the defendants, Driscoll, has said his
r:::.,,·day,
November
14, 8-12
clients would be wise to effect ar
binding contract with Mrs.Johnson for the use of the
at the
property. although he is optimistic the present suit will beStudent Union Building Ballroom
~:c~~~::t~.
in favor or the The reaction of one hippieTickets now on sale at the SUB Ticket Booth:
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this country, human rights or~~~~~~~~~
~:=;:=;:=;====~~~~~~~~~=::::p:;:,roperty
rights." ' " ---~---·--Tuesday, November 11, 1969THERESA PHILLIPS
NEW MEXICO LOBO
The Lobos host Wyoming for UNM's
annual
homecoming
game this Saturday and Theresa Phillips, this week's Lobo
Lovely, hopes the Lobos will pour it on the favored
Cowboys. Theresa is pretty, personable, charming, and
seventeen.
A freshman from Las Cruces, she resides in Hokona Hall
and plans a nursing
m~or.Theresa
is
also
Miss
New Mexico
and will represent the state at the Miss Universe pageant next
May at Miami Beach. She is the daughter
of
Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Phillips of Las Cruces.
'Pokes Ride Hard
Although Wyoming has lost two football games in a row for the first time since 1965, none of the Lobo coaches expect to witness a Cowboy letdown Saturday during the homecoming celebration.
Coach Jerry Summerville scouted the Cowboys' 34-10 defeat at the hands of the Utah Redskins last Saturday and brought back the report of a rocky road for the Lobos. "Utah only got three first downs rushing the whole game," Summerville reported. "Defensi.vely, they are still a tough bunch." Summerville did not overlook the Cowboy offense and feels that Frosty Franklin is "the hardest running back we'll have faced so far."
The Cowboy's also have the
threat of a field goal as soon as they cross midfield with Bob Jacobs. Jacobs broke the collegiate field goal record last week against the Redskins, and Summerville backs up the statistics by rating him as one of the best specialists in the country. Coach Rudy Feldman is also aware of the calibre of the Laramie club but thinks the Lobos have a chance to pull the game out. "Our chances of beating Wyoming are better than they were of beating Arizona State," commented Feldman. "ASU is unquestionably a better team than us. But if we eliminate our mistakes against Wyoming, we can make it a close game. And in a close game, anything can happen."