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1969 The aiD ly Lobo 1961 - 1970

3-14-1969 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 98, 3/14/ 1969 University of New Mexico

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Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 98, 3/14/1969." 72, 98 (1969). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1969/33

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The aiD ly 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 contact [email protected]. .. Page4 NEW MEXICO LOBO Thursday, March 13, 1969 C6R.t>N Al>o 3 7 ?;. 7'6'1 SUBSCRIBE TO THE LOBO UV\3QIAJ •• Anm:lllncemcnts by the UNM. community wiU be v, 7 ~fUJI~ 0 accepted at The Lobo office. a 24-h~ur deadline is in NEW effect. />. o-r~3 Calling U ~"'"' KOPY- KORNER ..... :,'1 -.../>. c.•\ -- •(\ -- 0 <1 "'' ,"< .- • for UNM Students only 0Pt8 /.: ',e- ~ .,.1~ 3 0 \ Thursday, March 13 ment in Isro.eJI': Mesa Vista Hall 2122; ,.Decision at Delano~-" about Callfornia UNM Graduate Student Colloquium; Com­ 10:30 a.m. grape strike; Newman Ce'nter; 7: SO p.m. ~c. !$) ._oV' for Theses: 100% Cotton Fibre-Cockle (as Required) ~;, ~ binational Graph Theory; a :30; Mitchell Lecture by Dr. T. F. Lovering: "Hydro­ ·u.M.~S. invites all Chicanos. _. XEROX COPIES 8¢ each-No Minimum ' ••... '! Hall 211. thermal Alteration Related to Ore De­ La Societe du Cinema; ''The Pawn­ Vol. 72 Economics department seminar: .. jThe posita;" Geology 116; 9 :SO a.m. broker;,. Union ballroom; 7 p.m.: 75i cents Lobby-Simms Building Downtown, 4th 8. Gold 247-4406 Economics of Water Resources Develop- United Mexican-Ame!ican Students film; or by subscription. Friday, March 14, 1969 New Mexico Resistance presenting film, "The Catonsville 9 ..; 1:00 }lJn. in the Unio!'l .Theatre. In Fiesta Case Friday. March 14 ''The News Left;.. ·with Frank Marquest and Jim Kennedy; oyer KUNM; 8:30 p.m. Tickets go on Bale for drama. department's ''Volpone;.. Rodey theatre box: office (open Survey P'redicts 2:30-5:30). BIG MAC IS HERE! ''Man About Campus'" interview with Leslie Hunter, PEMM; KUNM; 2:40 p.m. and 8 :40 p.m. Senate Group nThe New Folk"" singing group P~­ formance: 8:15 p.m.; POPe.ioy Hall; tickets $1 for students. :i$1~ Saturday, March 15 CMcDonald's Corp. 1968 Professor Loss ''Saturday Happening;'' featuring the Windstormers, the Pacesetters. and Barbara LOMAS AT SAN PEDRO- MENAUL AT SAN PEDRO Leverton; Union ballroom; 'l :30 p.m .. ; ad­ 5324 4TH ST. N.W. Mission $1. Wants Action Dance sponsored by Youth Albuquerque Association for Retnrded Children; bands Finance Committee Tuesday Tony Olmi, a member of the Fi­ Hooterville Trolley and V erticle J onrney; McDonald's.. is ygyr kind ot P~:· asked ASUNM Attorney General nance Committee, said Pickel is Newman Center; 8-11 p.m.; ~1. Due to Budget Sunday, March''l6 Ernest Romero to attend next presently expected to account for Lecture by James Farmer: Johnson Gym; week's Finance Committee meet­ the receipts and records of his 8 p.m.; adults $1.50, students $1, or by ]Jy ROB BURTON subscription to lecture series. ing to explain the action to be expenditures after this year's Philosophy Club discussion; '"How Do I © 1969, New Mexico Lobo taken against Jack Pickel, ex­ Fiesta. Know Whnt I Know!"; with Ramesh Patel: chairman of Fiesta Committee. Olmi said this is a "delaying Union 231 E; 11:30 p.m.­ Financial austerity began in earnest last year for UNM, Monday, March 17 tactic," since by the time Pickel Lecture, ''The German Democratic Re­ UNIVERSITY SHELL and many professors adopted a wait-and-see attitude about would have turned in the infor­ public in the Warsaw Pact and COME­ CON"; Professor Peter Ludz; lecture hall; 2720 Central S.E. their futures with the University. Others-more than eight WANT ADS mation, graduation would have 2:30 p.m.; discussion afterwards in Edu­ passed and the incident would be cation 103. per cent of the faculty-accepted better offers elsewhere. 842-9148 closed. A survey of department chairmen and deans conducted CLASSIFIED Steve van Dresser said an in­ junction was filed by Romero ask­ FREE OFFER! this week by The Lobo shows last year's rate of loss is likely ADVERTISING ing Pickel to produce the receipts Largest Selection to be exceeded this year, and this rate may climb as high as RATES: 7c per word, 20 word mini· and records for use in the Stu­ *Poster Board Electrical System Check 13 per cent. mum ($1.40) per time run. U ad is to run five or more consecutive days with dent Court. *Colored Papers Including: · no changes the rate is reduced to 6c The information called for was *Tempera Color Three years ago, the attrition rate of professors for fi­ per word ad the mln.lmum number of Lobo Photo by Bob Lager words to 10. misplaced in transit between Ro­ *Spray Paint Battery, Generator nancial reasons was about four per cent based on figures mero and the Student Court, van With the return of spring-like weather, many students are taking TERMS: Payment must be made In *GiiHer compiled for the state's Board of Educational Finance in Spring Snacks advantage of this ledge on the south side of the Union in order""io full prior to Insertion of advertisement. Dresser said. Regulator, All Wiring He said that it is the responsi­ *Brushes 1966. eat lunch and observe a recurrence of short skirts. But don't get your I WHERE: Journalism Building. Room hopes up-KUNM predicts snow today. 159, afternoons prc!erably or maiL bility of the Associated Students Discount Prices WITH THIS AD Budget-Cutting ~·. Classified Adv~rtising to bring charges against Pickel, LANG ELL'S I UNM P.O. Box 20 and independent action could be $5 off on the purchase of any Battery Since that time, the state has entered a period of budget­ Albuquerque, N.M. 87106 2510 Central S.E. Protest Showing of Film I taken, possibly in civil courts, if Acrass Fram Johnson Gym cutting for higher education that last year pared to the bone the Student Court did not take General Tires Gold Bond Stamps the operations of this and most 1) PERSONALS action. other universities in the state. As ico State (NMSU) in the middle range of comparisons with the 80 FEMALE ROOMATE needed-UNM stu­ A closed session was held for a result, pay for non"faculty posi­ dent. 131 Harvard SE, Apt. 3, at homo the last five minutes of the meet­ tions lags seriously behind the eounter-part universities. Last 5:30·7 p.m. average in Albuquerque itself, yea1· UNl\I ranked 33rd on that Blacks Walk Out of Class ing. Van Dresser said a rumor WOULD THE PERSON who submitted concerning Fiesta was discussed. and professorial salaries have scale, but with the figures avail­ Seventy-five members of Dr. during a class meeting. an etching to the Thunderbird please get fallen sharply in comparison able now, University officials ex­ with blacks would be fake because in tnuch with the Thunderbird editor This was the third consecutive to Gilbert Merkx' Race and Cultural Violence broke out on Feb. 27 the whites did not understand the "" soon "" possible. This ls urgent. Rm. closed session on Fiesta that the other universities in the Rocky Pl!ct that UNlVI will be dropping Relations class walked out of a 158, J oumalism Bldg. back. when members of La Raza and black cause. Finance Committee .has held. ~~ Mountain region. class session last Tuesday at the the Black United Front attempt­ ROOMMATE WANTED. Clooe to campus. Last year the average salary 'Von't Advance A Failure Graduate student pre!erred. Call842-1918. request of the Black United Front ed to remove a white student White student Allen Cooper at Roclty Mountain universities "Even if we get the BEF's group. from a chair. said he felt that the class was 2) LOST & FOUND Put Your Best Face F:orward ~~~~ \ was $521 less than at UNM. The recommendation, we won't ad­ 1\:Ierkx had -scheduled a showing Call far a complimentary faeial-in Yesterday the class was run a failure, because although the REWARD OFFERED $20.00. ·Lost 1 yr. University is now only ~88 above vance, but we might stop slipping of the movie "Salt of the Earth" by the members of the Black old Collie-Shepherd cross black &: gold your own dorm or home-and see this average. baclt," Heady said. reading list c o n t a i n e d some male. Call 243-7585 or 877-6581. why we say ••• 7:30P.M. Tuesday in the north ballroom of United Front, who sat in front powerful and exciting works, they MAOCtt 15) 196~ The situation is worsened by "I don't want to push the panic REWARD $20,00 lost brown &: white bas­ 'No Woman Need Ever look 40' the Union. Before the movie be­ of the class to answer questions were still books. He also said set mix 5 mo. old female dog. 842-1319. Goldialn Stone, lftt.tt , Phone the fact that these institutions button and I don't want the fac­ gan, 15 black students stood in a and lead discussion. Black stu­ consultant for • ....,.. 'r ~ 243-2062 SOU1H l?:ALL~M are well below average in com­ that class discussion flowed'•'l:M\S5toN ~ 1. oo discussion session. Approximately identify with what you are/' he why blacks objected to the term 4) FOR RENT budget increase was less than quality of faculty," Heady said. half of the class elected to do so said. five per cent. Legislators and officials work­ Negro, Jackson answered that it UNM STUDENTs-PARK WITH us­ and walked out with the blacks. Another black student said that was a white term. "Negro is a Modern accommodations with a. large UN:M: Loses Ground ing for Governor David F. Cargo A Relative Point the blacks did not seek white as­ po.rlting lot. 243-2881. UNM President Ferrel Heady must also contend with the de­ term given to blacks by the white. Arturo Sandoval, speaking for sociation and that any attempt Black is a term given to us by 5) FOR SALE sums it up: "In this one year we mands for funds of such compet­ La Raza group -said, "We felt the on the whites part to associate have lost ground to our counter­ ing interests as building and blacks," he said. SELL, TRADE, 2~~ x 31~ GraF!ex: Roll part universities in the rest of the movie was relevant to chicanos, ' Film back, $110.00. 256-V497. OPEN HOURS maintaining the state's highways, ' 24 country." These include such but that the blacks' point was and attracting industry. more relevant." Sandoval said I' (( 7) MISCELLANEOUS 105Central N.W. 247-8662 sehools as Colorado State Uni­ 1\lood of Discouragement 'I that the moive was an attempt I' ) WANTED: Two motorcycle helmets, one versity, Arizona State University, Nonetheless, a mood of dis­ Committee Names Bakas ,: large, one small. Phone Grant Harvey at by Merkx to subvert the issue tl( and the University of Michigan. couragement was reported spread­ ' 277-4102 after 5: ao p.m. Also would like Heady said the BEF policy is because the class had not met in I' I! used motocycle trailer. ing by some department chair­ the regular classroom on Tues­ I' 'I to maintain UNM and New Mex- (Continued on pagE 8) I_\ ,'I days since a scuffle that occurred New Fiesta Co-Chairman-· I·~ :i il John Baltas has been named the jobs to all students who applied '1 II new Fiesta Committee eo-(!hair­ ,lj for committee positions." ,. man by the UNM Rally Commit­ "I Jmow that Rally Committee 1: ~{ tee. j The Bob Hope Show wants a Mexicanized Fiesta," ' I• 1, In a statement released yester­ Dines said. "It doesn't take a ,, day, Rally Committee chairman Spanish surname to know about a I, J Jim Maddox said: Fiesta." (, ?· "After an objective interview Dines added, "Next year, the (, ~I with five applicants for Fiesta '· chicanos will have more represen­ ,, 4 Committee ·co-chairman, the Rally tation." ,, Committee felt that Balms was l SEVEN ARTS/RIY STARllliiSSOCIer of UNM's United Mexi­ can-American Students (UMAS). IIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll:lllllllllllll The Pozo Seco Singers Student Discount $2.00 per ticket Benevidez was UMAS's candidate in that organization's campaign Inside Pages to establish Mexican-American ARICHARD QUINE riooualo!l ;& Suzanne's Concert Dancers One ticket per ID Four ID maximum per purchaser representation on Fiesta Com­ 'otCIIHICOI.OII' APWIIOWifll'lmll. :llSi2• Hay a kawa ---·------Pg. 2 and mittee. Available at Student Activity Ticket Office Lobo Photo by Bob Lager In an interview with KUNM KUNM ------Pg. 3 S.U.B. THEAlRE This student, obviously overjoyed by the Union's birthday celebra­ after Bakas' appointment Wed­ Lobo Merit Badge Pg. 4 The Statewide· Talent Fina(ist Record Rendezvous and Reidling Downtown Quiet Cramming tion, was observed just after he collaJlscd after )mrticipating in one nesday night, Associated Students of the many wild parties which were· held. The Union was more than President Jim Dines said he would Wrestling ------· Pg. 6 generous in handing out invaluable prizes and entertainment. "probably give Fiesta Committee Campus Briefs -----· Pg: 8

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Friday, March 14, 1969 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page3 Friday, March 14, 1969 Page2 NEW MEXICO LOBO 'Inspection' The New Mexico Lobo is published - NE\N daily every regular week of the Univer• sity year by the Board of Student Pub· Recent Events------lications of the Associated Students of MEXICO the University of New Mexico, and is not financially associated with UNM. Printed KUNM Begins New Series by the UNM Printing Plant with second ROBERT BURTON WAYNE CIDDIO class postage paid at Albuquerque, New A series of informative pro­ About Campus Series, which has cuss the organization which is Mexico, 87106. 5ubscriptic>n rate is · $5 grams, "KUNM Inspection," will gotten excellent response. Peo­ con~erned with developing self­ Editor Managing Editor for the academic year. begin next Tuesday on KUNM. ple have even come down to the leadership through extra sentory The opinions expressed on the editorial The programs will feature in­ station to ask us if they can be perception (ESP). pages of The Lobo are tho•e of the formation sent to the station, on the program." author solely. Unsigned opinion Is that dealing with subjects from the Rosalind Bell and Susan Minor Box 20, University P.O.,UNM, Albuquerque, N.M., 87106 of the editorial board of The Lobo, Theosophy Foundation to pro­ Man About Campus is a series of the Inner Peace Movement will Nothing necessarily represents the views grams released from R11dio Mos­ of interviews, conducted by James be questioned by Peter Nelson, a Editorial Phone (505) 277-4102, 277-4202 of the Associated Students or of the Uni· Funk, with representatives from graduate student in neuro-psy­ ersity of New Mexico, cow. Also featured will be con­ densations from magazines like various campus organizations. chology. Ron Bell will moderate. Atlantic Monthly, Ramparts, the The next "In the Public Inter­ The sports and news depart­ New Republic, and the Astral Pro­ est" program, on Tuesday, March ments at the station has recently Edito••ial jection. 18 will be a discussion about combined, and Paul Uhland, for­ First Programs "The Inner Peace Movement." The mer spotrs director, is now head­ The first of the condensations leaders of the movement will dis- ing the combined departments. - .., will be from an Atlantic Monthly ,, Paternalisll~ or Fellowship? article, "The Police and Us." It will be broadcast in eleven seg­ The UNM Black Student Union is pro­ sistance and special consideration given ments, and features interviews with Adam Clayton Powell, a U NM Music Major testing alleged racism at Brigham Young them. member of the House of Repre­ I University. BYU is supported by the The BYU paper, the Daily Universe, t' sentatives from ; Thom­ Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day printed an open letter to the Indian adviser as Reddin, Los Angeles police Saints (Mormon Church), which has a who had been so unhappy over attitudes of Lobo Photo by Tony Louderbough chief; Mayor Joseph Alioto of Composes Selection A pottery display by Carl Paak San Francisco, and others. policy of prohibiting blacks from assuming whites at BYU. The letter explained that Easter Eggs entitled "Easter Eggs" is now on Ron Bell, KUNM public affairs A former bio-pli.ysics student tape "generated" sounds which roles of leadership in the church. Mormons BYU offered Indians so much special con­ display in the UNM Art Museum. director, has invited interested was the composer of a selection Osterreich describes as simple, contend that this is a private matter with­ sideration that the charges of racism were persons to join the station in this for the UNM department of music transparent, and very lyrical. "unfair." Cited were "a special ward just project, and to contact him in the dance workshop which was held Osterreich became interested in in the institution, and they support full and underground studios of KUNM. last weekend. music composition while attend­ equal rights for all. for Lamanites." A ward is one of the or­ Peace Corps Recruiters Norbert H. Osterreich, a junior ing McGill University in Montreal ganizational terms of church membership. "Inspection" will be heard on at UNM from Montreal, Canada as a bio-physics student. Interestingly enough, last month the Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:40 majoring in music composition Currently he is working on a American Indians hurled charges of dis­ Ten other points were advanced in the To Interview p.m. and 8:10p.m., and on Thurs­ composed the workshop piece piece for a modified chamber or­ crimination at BYU. One week that month, letter, only one of which had anything to on Campus days at 2:40 p.m. and 9:40 p.m. which he taped beforehand in chestra which will consist of a The Peace Corps will be show­ celebrated as Indian Week at BYU, was do with what the student called "full fel­ Corps said it has nothing to do Bell said that "Inspection is fragments and sampled on tapes. solo oboe selection and electronic ing films, talking to interested with selection. meant to complement the Man It consists of oboe, flute, and sounds. ..wncluded by the crowning of a "Miss In­ lowship." Lost somewhere in the shuffle students, and giving modern lan­ John Exeter, from Guyana, ------·~-- dian BYU,'' and a "smokeless" peace pipe. was the original concern of at least two guage aptitutie tests and recruit­ South , will be available Lamanites that BYU was failing to provide ing on campus March 17 through for comment on education and With the lack of smoke went a lack of 21. economics. Janice McConnell, who fellowship. "If the things that go on on "full fellowship,'' or that racism was keep­ They will be headquartered in ha~ served in Peru with the Peace this campus were to happen on other cam­ ing them apart. by Co11rad the International Center, 1808 Corps, will give information on The obsession of BYU with programs de­ Las Lomas. urban community development. puses, it would be called racism," said the On Tuesday, March 18, a film Sylvia Patton, who has served in Hawaiian adviser to one of the Lamanite signed "specially" for Lamanites can do will be shown at 7:30 p.m. "Our Ecuador, will provide informa­ groups. (Lamanites are Indians and Poly­ little for this concern. It is all reminiscent Man in Borneo," deals with Corps tion on rural community develop­ nesians in Mormon language.) One Lam­ of the Protestant missionaries to the Pa­ work in Malaysia. ment. Lobo Review "Give Me a Riddle," a film study Applications for June and July anite student, a recent convert to the cific who, at great personal sacrifice, of Biafra before the war, will be summer assignments are also be­ church, said, 4'If these Mormons are going brought religion to the Polynesians, only shown Wednesday, March 18. ing accepted by the representa­ out on missions converting 'foreigners,' to deny them full participation until long Language aptitude tellts will be tives. after (as in the Hawaiians' case) their land GMRX: What Next? given W ednesduy through Friday Miss McConnell said that per- then those Mormons had better get ready at the International Center. The manent office hours arc being set test is 30 minutes long, and is to accept these people into full fellowship." had been taken from them. Paternalism By STEPHEN M. PART But I don't see the harm in up at the International Center. I used to determine ability to learn Representatives will be available I\ i i The reaction to Indian Week charges and patronizing concern for the "special" The other day it was mentioned calling things, in real life, not farces (and life includes The a foreign language. The results from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. I was quick enough. problems of others can only be frustrating to me that The Lobo is generally are used in placement, and the Wednesdays and Fridays. ! when offered in lieu of promised full parti­ offensive, i.e., crude. Including the Lobo), by their real names - ~,.The next day the president of the Indian review section - the offending scientific or otherwise. group issued a statement refuting the cipation and brotherhood. i ' ' word was in The Lobo review of I think most everyone realizes 1 charges and announcing that the adviser Such activities by Brigham Young Uni­ the University of Albuquerque's The Lobo is a college newspaper, Ex-CORE l-lead To Speak quoted above could not speak for the In­ versity serve to add credence to the Black excellent production of Waiting which implies mature readers with ' for Godot. The word, to save the a certain sophistication. In this James Farmer, under secretary Racial Equality (CORE), at the ~*~'.,_ dians and that he could. The president said Student Union's charges of racism on that :curious the hunt through old vein, hopefully newspapers won't of Health, Education, and Wel­ University of Chicago, Indians were only grateful for all the as- Utah campus. Lobos, was penis. find the need to set up a scarcely fare, will speak Sunday, March 16 Farmer, the grandson of a by Robert L. Short at 8 p.m. in Johnson Gym. It was suggested l'!ome infer­ disguised form of censorship as slave, eventually became the na­ "The Parables of Peanuts ence could have been made. Which did the motion picture industry Tickets are $1.50 for adults, $1 tional director of CORE, and led is filled with wonderful brought to mind a funny little with its new movie rating system. for students, or by subscription. the first freedom ride in Missis­ quotes and is a real de· News Analysis play put on at The Barn Dinner If it did, The Lobo would be at In 1942, Farmer helped form the sippi. light to read from begin· Theater in Cedar Crest. first chapter of the Congress of ning to end. I could not least an M-(parental discretion At 18, Farmer received a ba­ The play is a farce called advised for children under 16). possibly be more pleased." Champagne Complex and dealt chelor's degree in chemistry from -*CHARLES M. ScHULZ, Hayal{.awa No Success as President; with the psychoanalysis of a puri­ I would like to receive letters Wiley College, He received a creator of Peanuts® tanically hung up girl. When both pro and con, on the GMRX ,fljfue~ird bachelor of divinity from Howard Cloth, $4.95 • Paper, $1.95 • given a Rorschahh test she saw rating system adopted by most University, but declined ordina­ ~ At a II bookstores tion to work as race relations LDMfl5 fiT c. RRLI5L£p£ Ill Turmoil something she couldn't name. The theaters. Also views on censorship (J)iamond co Harper eiJ Row Educational Process Still doctor entreats, "Call it by its generally. Let 'em fly-Review secretary for the Fellowship of Reconciliation. 1817 (This concludes Monday's news ~ When Hayakawa began tell­ strike, despite the recommenda­ s c i en t if i c name." "Oh, that's Editor, University P. 0. Box 20. rfRings analysis of S. I. Hayakawa by ing people how he could speak for tions of their departments, and worse," she responds. "Oh, come I'd like to know just how wrong ,~ College Press Service's Phil the non-white community, local talks seriously about "due process on," the doctor demands. "OK," or just how right this 'ole free­ Semas.) black leaders, who stayed out 'of taking care of the radical stu­ she decides, "let's call it the dom thing il'l today, in the age of Worn wit/. pride (. the crisis before, began pouring dent problem." Monument." . Even by Ronald Reagan'l'l stan- 74% support for Mayor Daley, onto the campus to express their At San Francisco State College All in all it's quite a pleasant by Qenera!ions (. dards Hayakawa cannot be con­ support for the students' de­ a girl can can· a policeman a play-not depressing as so many 10% of the presidential vote for i sider:d a success as president. mands. ''bastard" and be arrested im­ other "entertainments" currently George Wallace, and the Tam of Y'Jrides ; He has by no means restored or­ mediately, but Hayakawa can showing around town. O'Shanter Billy Club. ~ der or the normal educational pro­ e Violence escalated rapidly The Bob Hope Show destroy private property (sound . cesses on the campus. In fact, during the first two weeks of truck wires), a college employee ,: things have gotten worse. Con­ Hayakawa's administration and can threaten a striking professor ~? sider: the escalation would have con­ with an axe, or football players tinued if the AFT picket line had can beat up strikers-and there ) ~ • When Hayakawa took over, not been so l'!Uccessful at keeping Lett.-"8 are welcome, nnd. uhould t most of the faculty were support­ will be no arrests. be no longer than 260 words type­ ' .... i class attendance low. written, double spaced. Nnme, tcle• I Hng President Robert Smith's ad­ There is only one way that men phone number and address must be f' ministration. Today the American The campus over which Haya­ like S. I. Hayakawa can be seen Editor: included, although name will be Saturday, March 22 ~ I " Federation of Teachers is on kawa presides is by no means a as saviours of higher education­ withheld upon request. i· strike, only about half the faculty paradise of truth, justice, and op­ by their repressive policies they Yellow Journalism ment in the March 11, 1969 issue \ portunity, Hayakawa arbitrarily may bring about a revolution that I , seem to be teaching their classes, is an excellent example. Not only ~· and student attendance is only denied tenure to two faculty will result in some of the changes (Editor's N otc: This letter re­ fers to the Bema article entitled, were you rude enough to break it The UNM Arena i• about 30 percent. members who had supported the that are so badly needed, II "A Mormon View of BYU," which off in mid-sentence, it seems that I was rerun yesterday due to print­ the organization of it was a bit ing errors in the first copy.) tampered too. 8:00 P.M. To the Editor: l've often heard The Lobo re­ \ ferred to as 41 The Smut Sheet, The NEWS EDITOR Grant Harvey I'd like to saY "Thank you!" Fish Wrapper, The Trash Bug,'' STAFF editors of The Lobo, for your CAMPUS EDITOR Sarah Laidlaw etc. The more I hear this, and the truthfulness in coverage of e'l'ents more I read the modified truths ASST. CAMPUS EDITOR Scott Sandlin at UNM. The Lobo is one of the written, I begin to feel that their John Moser finest examples of :y-ellow jour­ Tickets $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, &$6.00 SPORTS EDITOR nalism I have ever seen. names are much more fitting to Featuring EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR Herman Well I am an American, and 1 am your cause. Student Discount $2.00 per ticket CHIEF COPY EDITOR David Hutson proud of it. Although I can't sa:y< True, it IS your right to have an The Pozo Seco Singers I that I support the ideas of such opinion. However, it seems nearly COPY EDITORS Anne O'Brien, Bill Guthrie, George Campbell l groups as the BSU, UMAS, and unconstitutional to rudely change Suzanne's Concert Dancers One ticket per ID Four ID maDdmum per purchaser ' PROOF EDITOR Mary Allison Farley SDS, I do strongly agree with another's words to strengthen STAFF WRITERS Carolyn Babb, Gay Cook, Steve Hallam, John Russo, their right to express them, your own views. and Available at Student Activity Ticket Office Sandra Schauer, Bill Schneider, Susan Smith, Art Thomas I feel however, that it is gross­ I want to be proud of UNM1 but ((If (qm·li.1/e Ol .J). ly rude and unfair to modify state­ it isn't eaa:v when a few groups The Statewide Talent Finalist Record Rendezvous and Reidling Downtown REVIEW EDITOR Stephen Part ments made by certain people in are catered to while others are {fit .L.~m"·' /f'k !25,5·72Ui PHOTOGRAPHERS Tony Louderbough, James Funk, Bob Lager order to ridicule them and SUp• slurred or ignored, WHY NOT . port your cause. The obvious EQUALITY FOR ALL'l changing of Kent Garner's state· Herb B. Bowman r -...------

Page4 NEW MEXICO LOBO Friday, March 14,1969 Friday, March 14, 1969 NEW 1\IEXICO LOBO Page5 New Policy Statement At University of North Carolina NMSU Can Ban Speakers Police Force Students To Vacate Campus Building Two 1•ulings concerning cam­ drawn up to comply with the said students receiving federal fi­ CliAPEL IDLL, N.C. (CPS) ~ lice being called came when stu­ courses at the Liberation School. York at Stony Brook, Suffolk a $500 fine. They are to appear in pus unrest and the elements be­ latest court decisions. nancial aid might be jeopardizing Police presence forced close to a dents (Wednesday) in Manning Torcbligbt parades by whites County Police Thursday morning court Monday. lieved to stimulate it have been The regents also reaffirmed an continuation of this aid by partici­ hundred students to vacate a Hall were told to tnrn off their from Duke and blacks coming arrested 21 students who refused The students began their sit-in handed down by the New Mexico earlier administrative stand on pating in demonstrations. building at the University of sound system, which had been from North Carolina College to leave the Library-Administra­ Wednesday afternoon after the State University Board of Re­ student demonstrations involving A recommendation to increase North Carolina (NCU) while broadcasting speeches daily to the (also in Durham) to the center of tion Building after sitting in all arrest of a former student who gents. public buildings. student fees effective in 1970 was troubles continued at other cam­ campus, or they wonld be thrown town took place earlier this week. night. Some 300 students who had had been declared persona. non-• On Saturday, March 8, the re­ In cases where students occupy given to the regents by the vice puses around the state. out. The system was shut off, but After Tuesday night's rally end­ occupied the building with them grata on campus after participat­ gents adopted a policy stating the campus baildings, a statement president of student affairs, Phil­ Gov. Bob Scott had ordered the police came anyway. One hun­ ed, police chased and clubbed dem­ left after police warned of ar­ ing in a demonstration against a university authorities could veto ordering them to leave will be ip Ambrose. The increase will be NCU's Chancellor, J. Carlyle Sit­ dred National Guard and High­ onshators to the sound of break­ rests. military recruiter. invitations to speakers they feel read, they said. designated to offset losses on the terson, to clear Manning Hall, · way Patrol have been stationed ing storefront windows. A repor­ The 21 were charged with They also demanded an end to have advocated the forcible over­ new Corbett Center and Pan which students had been occupy­ on campns for a week under ord­ ter for the conservative news­ criminal trespassing, a misde­ war-related research on campus, Those who leave as ordered will ing in sympathy with by meanor that carries a maximum and public disclosure of all re­ throw of the government. be called before the university dis­ American Center. a strike ers of Gov. Scott. paper in Durham was among Speakers who have in~Jtigated non-academic cafeteria employ­ Students chose Manning Hall those clubbbed. Since then, a city penalty of six months in jail and search contracts. Putting the shot is only one of ciplinary committee. Those who On the basis of present losses, the many feminine sports planned riots on campuses or invited de­ stay will be prosecuted for tres­ ees. On learning the police had (where a counter-food line bas wide 5 p.m. to '1 a.m. cnrfew has · ·._ P(/tting the Shot struction of property can also be observers said, the increase prob­ been ordered to evict them, stu­ been in operation for a few days) been imposed. Whites at Duke u by the · women's physical educa­ passing. Arrests on such charges ably will be about $15 per semes­ banned the policy says. will mean immediate suspension• dents vacated the building. Mo­ because it was not nsed for any held an on-campus march Thurs­ ,• tion department. ter. The board will not take ac­ ments later, 86 highway patrol­ purpose (the Law School moved day night in support of the blacks , · -:- Register Now - ,, Offers Reason Federal Aid tion on the proposal until its William Darden, university at­ men and Chapel Hill Police arriv­ out last fall) and because that is in the Malcolm X Liberation ' !\ 1-: • regular meeting in May. ed and took up positions at the torney, said the policy had been The regents' statement also where the state's first Negro stu­ SchooL Mandell's Fashion Show and Drawing \ .... ~o~.... KOPY- KORNER .... ~$~ .... ~ doors to the hall and closed it. dent, Floyd McKissick. had his In other actions in North Caro­ I ' ~G~ ll"'~' -.'0 (1 rQif Fifteen hundred students then classes. line, the cafeteria at North Caro­ Sat.• March 29 - 2-3 I ~o.,~ _... oi'flf>l for UNM Students only 'lo,$, -.. 1-: RIIIHillllllllllllllllntllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiUJIIllllllllllllllllllnJIIIIIIIIIIRIIIIRIIllllllllllllllllntllllllllllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliHilllllniUUlliRIIIIIIlliHmiiMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\IIIIIIIfillllllniiiiHIIIIIIID\Rllllllllllln11111JlUlllllll\RIUIIIHffillllliUIIIUllD iol)c For Theses: 100% Cotton Fibrq-Co"tkle (as Required) V41Ji) Q.tt marched to South Hall, the Ad­ Duke University lina A&:r was back to normal, .-: XEROX COPIES 8¢ eath-No Minimum ' Nominations for Lobo Merit Awards ministration Building, to hear At Duke University in Durham, as striking nonacademic employ­ -Win- should be submitted to the campus editA!r speeches by young faculty mem­ N.C. the faculty committee a­ ees (all black) reached a settle­ L~bby-Simms Building Downtown, 4th & Gold 247-4406 no later than Wednesday of th"' week it JS to be used. Please include lllustmtion of bers. pointed to deal with proposals ment with the school's adminis­ Two $25 Gift Certificates Lobo Merit Badge subject. Picket Lines Up tration. Students there had a set by the Afro-American Society Picket lines have gone up at Thursday rejected a compromise strike of the food service facili­ (Must Be Present For Drawing) Lenoir Hall, where the cafeteria demand on the make-up of the ties in effect until Thursday. is located. Sit-down tactics have full committee to include students. Await Return CIVIL ENGINEERS been employed regularly there The previons rejection of this had At the University of North Mandell's New Spring Fashions since the employees went on led 26 of the blacks to begin Carolina Charlotte Branch, black NEW MEXICO STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT strike. They are protesting low officially withdrawing from Duke, students are waiting for the re­ Are Now Arriving Daily turn of the chancellor from pre­ pay, lack of collective bargaining, and to set up the Malcolm X Ensembles Formals and discrimination in personnel LI"beration School at a downtown senting their demands on partici­ Starting salaries, no experience: policy, among other things. church. Some Duke professors pation in decision-making. Pantsuits Cocktail Dresses have indicted· they'd teach At the State University of New Junior Engineer $8640 BS The first indications of the po- Suits Capes Assistant Engineer $9420 MS And our well-known sportswear

Challenging work in a young state going places fast. Contad Platement OfficG. JrlanJell's 520 Coronado Center , FOR FASHIONS Ph. 298-6556

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Lobo Photo by Tony Lauderbaugh The Lobo "Flood Control" award goes to the physical plant !or keeping UNM ~tudents free fx:_om such ---· ...:-: ...'; hazards as the above. Chemical engineering students wore the1r waders recel!'tly m order ,to avord a fa!e . --~ ,;) worse than death. Other locations around campus aree alsD in need of attention. The mens rest room. Jn the games area of the Union has no bookshelf above the facilitie;;, an~ one must splatter the books w1th water or other similar material. In order to save the campus, engmeenng students were rumored to have constructed a dam to stop the onslaught. llllilillllllllf,lilllllllll!HIUIUIIIIIIUIHI!illiiiiiiiiUIUUJniUilliiH\IIIIlllifillllillllllllliiiiiUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIJIIIilllllUIIIIIIIUIIIIIii!allll!!lliiiiRR1!11111l111iiiiUIIIImiiiii!HIIIIIlllliiiiiGWIIIIIIHIDillll111lllll111111HIIIlllllllU!IJ'JIIffilllillllll111lDillllllni- The New Folk, sponsored. by one of the most dynamic and penetrat­ ing movements of this generatioo. Campus Crusade for Christ Inter­ Premier's Death The New Folk ruttiorutl. will :appear Friday, March 14, at 8:15 p.m. in Popejoy Con­ BEIRUT (UPI)-Former lraq­ Student Affairs Group cert HaiL ui Premier Ali Jawdat Al-Ayoubi died Monday of a heart attack, his family announced Tuesday. He Passes ACLU Proposal UNM Mathematician was 82. Al-Ayoubi was father-in­ Andy Shaney, a member of the The committee gave a "do law of the former Iraqi ambass­ UNM chapter of the American pass" recommendation to the re­ ador to the United Nations, Dr. Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), solution and referred it to Stu­ Adnan Pachachi, who resigned a proposed at the Student Affairs dent Senate. • ;k- To month ago. DeMarr Visit Soviet Union Committee Friday that university The Student Affairs Commit­ records of students be confidential tee also gave a "do pass" recom­ Dr. Ralph De:M:arr, an associate DeMarr has already 1leen to the have "the breadth that we have in at the student's request. mendation to a request that resi­ math and statistics professor will Soviet Union on an exchange tour computers." He said that while Shaney said the University has dents of "all campus living areas travel to the Soviet Union later in 1961-62. He was then a post Soviet mathematicians have ac­ been giving names and addresses make their own governing policy." this year as part of an official ex­ doctoral fellow at Moscow Uni­ cess to the best of computers, they of students whether the student This would include the four mens' change program sponsored by the versity, where he attended sem­ have not yet applied computers to wishes the information to rem!lin and three womens' dormitories. U.S. State Department. inars and did graduate work, but the many types of jobs for which J lobo confidential or not, DeMarr will begin a four-and-a­ no teaching. they are used in the United States. !i DeMarr got his Ph.D. from the t I half month stay at the Univer­ Ragtown Marker sity of Leningrad on Sept 1. While University of Dlinois in Urbana. \- : CARSON CITY, Nev. {UPI)­ in Leningrad, he will do research in 1961, and describes his math MENS SHOP specialty as "functional analysis." '\ The state of Nevada thinks Rag­ and give lectures on mathematics. j Dellarr said functional analysis I town is worth a historical mark­ DeMarr is fluent in Russian. ,, er - even though there is no began as the systematic study of "li After his Leningrad tour, De­ Uifferential equations, but later }I such town and never was. The Marr is scheduled to spend a four­ spread out to cover a wider range i name was given by California­ and-a-half month period at the In­ bound pioneers in gold rush days of interests. "Leningrad Univer­ stitute of the Soviet Academy of sity has a good functional analysis to a crossing site on the Carson Sciences near the city of Novosi­ Largest1 River which they reached after a school," said De:Marr. birsk, in Siberia. If the Novosi­ "There is no question that the most colorfttl selection 40-mile trek across desert wastes. birsk part of his Russian tour is MARCtl 15) 196~ 7:30P.M. The rags were their clothes, hung Russians are tops in math," sai~ approved by the soviet govern­ DeMan-, "they have some very ex­ of the latest style wet and dripping :from every tree ment, DeMarr will be doing re­ SOUlH EALLT\ooM and shrub in the area while they cellent math people." in collegiate wear- -- search at the institute. DeMarr said the Rnssians don't bathed in the stream. DeMan· said that there are two on SALE now!!! things holding up approval for the 1f\E WI NDSTORMERS J t'ftESEJIERS ...... second part of his trip. One is the STUDENTS!!! ~ ~ present borde1· crisis between Rus­ AND ( ·c Oln . lo sia and Red China. DeMarr said Downtown for a show ( .. the Russian government is also or shopping? Eat at. 'EARBI\W\ l£VERION ~ Laundry .,. l'eluctant to have :foreigners re­ ( 3404 Constitution N.E. t sidiug in Siberia. .f\'DI\i',\55~01\S .$ ~. 00 ( Near Carlisle ~ ~ Study & Wash .,. Friday, Mar. 14 ~- Change Available t ( At All Times ~ 24~-6954 8:15 p.m., Popejoy Hall WB!Sfl 212 0 Central S.E. ~- 17 8 ~ Students $1.00 ~ New Washers _ Dryers Makers of Hand Made OPEN HOURS Indian Jewelry 24 across {tom the U. 105 Central N.W. 247-8662 ~ Open 24 Hours ! ~ OLDTOWN ·~...... ,...... ,...,..:"11'..,...... ~.,... '>' ,, . ,. ' ,. ~ " ,_ ',. ' ~ ,. ,. ' ,. ' ·'· .l....b..\.ajr~"))')i~:~_,·,J;'~-~ _ -"~· -"'-"-'·-·-·~~.._...;..,. . ._.,.~~~·,_-.,_-. .. ·~.:...... ~-~-..,.~""::'-'~'-:-"--"~...... _-·_-"'7:-·-:----·'"'; --;-•-;-;';":'·"::';.:'"Yr-'7\!"13l-~~"~":il~~;-?"~~~""5i~:"."l 1 ',:•,;..·~:~:..;':"~"'1-~';~-IT~~~'::1~,,.l'il'~;.;~:;l'~-;,.,-,~c.o.•l:;: ~"~'' ;.;·i·:;.-; .. ;;-_"")_'"""1·'11' ~- ;-; ·' .._, ~ ·:,.- /: ;;'; .: ;-J ~~-r.. i'l"'i;~ :--•: ~; :. ··=--.-. ~- •· .1 i• w---;.11. ·r-~,., '\",'·:, -~ . "·· •· · • · I - Page6 NEW MEXICO LOBO Friday, March 14, 1969 Friday, March 14, 1969 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 7 WAC Meet at Johnson Gym --~~--~------~~~~~~~------Wrestlers Grapple Tonight Tied for First in League Backyard r iva 1 s Brigham ference Wrestling meet, which wrestling this year by upsetting Editor: Your1g and Utah are expected to gets underway tonight at John­ Win defending national champion Ok­ Lobos Take Hockey John fight it out for the title of the son Gym. lahoma State, 16-14, at Provo in one through at 14:19, netting the UNM two-day Western Athletic Con- The fil'st round session will be- The UNM Hockey team once early February, but the Cougars SPORTS Moser again made a thrilling come from final score at 10-6. Albuquerque Falcons 3 2 1- 6 gin tonight at 7:00 p.m. Semi­ have not been as impressive since. behind performance to drop the The Lobos l1ave two remaining Saves: finals are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. They have lost to Iowa State,, games, but next Tuesday's con­ Saturday and consolations im­ Albuquerque Falcons by a score Krempansky, Falcons, 12 Oregon State, and Washington, of 10-6, in a match played last test with · the Sandia-Kirtland mediately following. Consolation and were tied by Wyoming after Rockets will probably be the most Keady, Falcons, 22 finals will be held at 7:00 p.m. and Saturday night at Iceland Arena, their victory over the Oklahomans. Trailing 5-3 at the end of the important, as these squads are Gardner, UNM, 24 championship finals at 8:20 p.m. Still, BYU is undefeated in U Gymnasts Hoping now tied for the league. Saturday evening. second period, the Lobas came out New Mexico Hockey League WAC competition with only the and scored seven times in the This one is the big one, so come (thru March 11, 1969) Wyoming and Arizona State, VI I t . Wyoming tie blotting its record. third period to equal their per­ out and give the Lobos your sup­ which have progressed well in the The Cougars have edged Utah, Sandia-Kirtland Rockets 7 6 1 formance of two weeks ago port, Tuesday night at 9:15 p.m. 7 6 1 latter stages of the season, should 15-14, and defeated New Mexico, UNM L

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PageS NEW !IEXICO LOBO Friday, March 14, 1969 Survey Predic~s Professor loss (Continued from page 1) first job than he does after 10 Farmer Believes Blacks­ men contacted by The Lobo. They years here. cite dissatisfaction with meager Depending on Patience raises as the biggest reason. Administrators and depart­ · A report prepared for Heady ment chah'man throughout the by the Univel'sity's Office of In­ Univel·sity emphasized that they Changing Identity, Image stitutional Research says that 73 have been depending upon good States only when he proudly per cent of all professors in pub­ will and patience to see their de­ By ART THOMAS grams. lic universities make more money partments through the current The new pride and identity "The average black man in a identifies with his origins," Farm­ than those at UNM. The report austerity budget. The effect of the ghetto does not want love, he er said. "He then can begin to sweeping the black communities lose the hyphen, as the Irish did, says it would have taken about budget request on which New is changing the image of the Ne­ wants respect, and he can only $183,000 more for salaries than Mexico's college and university gro in the United States, said gain respect by having the same but he can't pass it by." was allocated last year to have heads are pinning their hopes will power that other groups have," Farmer, who will be in~ugurat­ James Farmer, future assistant ed as new assistant secretary kept from losing ground in the only be to halt the downward secretary for Health, Education said Farmer, "One must. have "national picture." drop in relative standings with equal power in order to be res­ April 1, said he feels the only and :Welfare (HEW). way to close the economic gap is Losing All Around counterpart universities. The fact Speaking last night in John­ pected and dealt with as an equal." that the BEF request is a 20.6 Farmer said that "it is not neces­ to form cooperatives in disadvan­ The problem of loss of experi­ son Gym, Farmer said America taged communities. "Thus the enced faculty is more serious than per cent increase over the cur­ still fosters the "magnolia-myth sary to love someone in order to rent appropriation gives an idea deal with him as an equal." black community will not only be it might seem at first, says Frank of the magnitude of what will image" of Negroes in most pre­ able to hold jobs, but they can Angel, assistant dean of the Col­ school books, and this conditions Farmer compared the ghetto be required for UNM and the riots of the blacks with the Irish create them as well," he said. lege of Education. "New people other institutions of higher learn­ Lobo Photo by John Ca!Hnsm black children to self-rejection. won't always be of as high qual­ Farmer feels the "magnolia rebellion in the United States in In a news conference at w·est­ ing in New Mexico to make up the Imaginative pa.per ma:clie figures ereated by art education 1>tudents the 1930's. "The U.S. is not and ern Skies earlier in the evening, ity as the old ones, and we also lost ground. . image" is contrary to the new lose their ability to relate the are on display in the Edueation Complex. Pictured left to right are: a image being acquired when blacks will not be a -melting pot," Farm­ Farmer said his goal in HEW Mache Museum will be to impro\'e the delivery educational process to the partic­ I rooster, a drummer, Fidel Castro, a mosaic turtle, and Batman. see respect resulting when the er said, "but the black man is ular problems of New Mexico. We Campus Briefs power to influence a culture trying to avoid the hyphenated systems of the agency. "Health in end up losing all around," he change is given the black man. stage.'' the ghettos is terrible, the health Board Positions He said Italian-Americans re­ systems are not functioning," he said. The Student-Faculty Associa­ •--Held Over!! "Racism can be checkmated John Campbell, chairman of the only by impowering the power­ cognize their dual position in our said. tion is now accepting applications culture, as do the Polish-Ameri­ Farmer said he will stress ed­ anthropology department, said for the executive board for the less," Farmer said. "We must that raids by other schools mi. Three wield the levers of social change cans, Irish-Americans, and other uc'ation, but he feels that the in­ 1969-70 school year. Any full-time effective welfare systems must UNM's faculty is "serious". Yard> U. Lobo Photo by Tony Louderbough to minimize the capacity of :rac­ groups. But the blacks, he feels, student is eligible. Friday, also be changed. He explained Campbell said, "We've built a NSA; meeting of all li<'OPie mt­ NEW . . expensive the task of rebuilding que Public School Central Office i:ngton and Coal. S.E.; 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m. the University later. Building, 724 Maple S.E. '"Saturday Happening;"• fe:Jtarinz Ute The workshop will include four Windstormcr.s. the 1'~ :md Barb= ·:·.,?J Some Have No Problems L<;ve_rton: Union lr.illroom: 7 :3B p.m.; c.t!­ .L Some department heads told sections; Helping With Reading in nus:non $1. " Dance SI>OIL"te; 8-11 51. No. 99 mond Castle, chairman of the Helping With Math, New or Old; Stmday, Mru-olllG Monda:r. March 17, 1969 and Helping Navajo Children. Lecture by Jam.,. Fanncr; Jro!msl:>:> G:;m· Vol. 72 chemistry department, said "Our 8 p.m.; adal!s $1.50. stl'lfl6ltl sn .,. ~ salaries are good here." He said The tutoring squad needs Span­ subscription to reeture serle:;., • ish and Indian speaking tutors l'hi!ocophy GIOO di=:=Inn; "H= DtJ I his department's biggest problem Know What I Knowr; wilb. &mtsh Pnldl· was lack of adequate equipment. and representatives from all min­ Union 231 E: 7:30 p.m. • Another department chairman ority groups. :Mond;Q-, Jobttb 17 Lecture, "The Cme. AU "WC>rk to the development of an aware­ sor Henry Weihofen for another guaranteed. Close to University. 265'-4990. board. ness of Hispanic values and cul­ year. Weihofen was scheduled to Senate Receives BSU Bill WE BEAT DEAD LIONS I We also beat The original proposal was that retire at the end of the 1969 aca­ . ' ture in all citizens of the state dead linet!. Typing In 5 colors and 5 type RHC establish three $200 scholar­ demic year. styles; pltl!! tcehnieal, French, and math­ ships, but in the accompanying and to the inculcation of some of ematical I!Yillbols; '!>IIIII CDC and mM these values into the fabric of e Approval of a contract with Wit:h No Recommendation optical scanning type styles. Call 'l'nlen­ discussion it was pointed out that the College of Santa Fe in ards to handle charges initiated Type: 842·8014, eVenings. it would be impossible to equally New Mexican life.'' Steering Committee members Davison and Professor Rueben which UNM will offer four by any member of the University TYPING-R.,..onable-Call ­ A PROOOCl10il divide three scholarships between last week sent the Black Student .344·8767. RICHARD QUINE 1\:o ordiJ)aa~· Jm.t.• Htory•••• Cobos of the department of mod­ courses in education, two in En­ community, including students. 1ECIIIIICOlOII" APMAIIOIIT I'ICTII£ men and women dorm residents. glish, and two in history this sum­ Union (BSU) resolution which 4) FOR RENT ern and classical languages, calls for severing UNM's WAC Further action by Steering Curry Speaks mer. Committee included tabling a re­ At the start of the RHO meet­ said the courses are to be offered relations with Brigham Young tJN:M STUDENTs-PARK WITH us­ for the first time during the The deadline for admission solution that endorses a lottery Modern accommodations with a ~e ing, Ron Curry, Associated Stu­ to the program is May 1. Regis­ University, back to Student Sen­ parking lot. 243-2881. S.U.B.(tJfj) THEATRE .. •· 1970-1971 academic year. The first ate without recommendation. system rather than the present dents vice president, and Leon­ tration is June 7. Tuition will be draft procedure of the Selective 5) FOR SALE ard DeLayo and Tony Olmi, both semester will be Hispanic art and Reasons for the action, commit­ literature and the second semester $30 per credit hour for residents tee members said, were the in­ Service. '1000 BOOKS. 25 eenta up. Maps. Tuesday­ [fiJi) senators, addressed the council and $56.25 per credit hour ~or Sunday 10·4. 3110 A Edith NE, will be Hispanic philosophy, sci-, availability of the printed resolu­ A bill allocating $375 to the about RH C's political activities. non-residents. student-faculty association for a SELL, TRADE, 2'.4 x 3'.4 GraFlex Roll "Each year RHO endorses can­ ence, and music. tion, and lack of representation I' Film back, $110.00. ZoG-9497. In other action, the Regents • Approval of sabbatical leave conference at the D. H. Lawrence didates and then does nothing fur­ for 23 UNM professors, and from BSU and a Mormon stu­ I 6) EMPLOYMENT authorized a proposal which will dent organization. Ranch received a "do not pass" ,, ther to aid their campaign," approval of nine faculty resigna­ recommendation from the Steer­ Curry said. He said RHC must make the UNM Medical School Further consideration of the 3 EVES. & SATS. Need 2 neat male responsible :for the operation of tions. ing Committee. Sophs. & Juniors. $66.91 wkly. For ioter­ become more political because, • Albuquerque attorney Ar­ resolution will be made by the vlew call 242-4414, 4 :30·5 :30. the Bernalillo County Medical Steering Committee at a meeting The committee gave a "do pass" "this whole campus is becoming turo G. Ortega was re-elected to recommendation to a bill concern­ 7) MISCELLANEOUS more political." Center (BCMC). The proposal Tuesday, March 18, gives responsibility for financial a second term as Regents presi­ Passage will also be recom­ ing donation of a piece of con­ WANTED: Two motorcycle hclmets, one I Curry also proposed that dent. Dl'. L. H. Wilkinson was temporary art to the UNM art 4 control of BCMC to the county. large, one small. Phone Grnrtt nt ~~~' •!i Harvey •l GET t ClASSIFIED ADS RESUll. 9 mended to Senate on a resolution Greeks and dorm residents co­ named vice pt•esident and Mrs. 277-4102 after 5:30p.m. Alro would like ' RE • SUY • SELL• ~ENT • SWcAP • I-IlRE • 13UY•. SELL• RENT• SWAP • ~JRE, SUY, s • . operate in campus politics in the The Regents also approved the that would enable Student Stand- museum. USed motoeyele trt!Ucr. establishment of a liason advisory Frank Mapel, secretary. future.

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