The New Hampshire, Vol. 58, No. 39

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The New Hampshire, Vol. 58, No. 39 THE NEW HAMPSHIRE VOL. 58 No. 39 FRIDAY, MARCH 15,1968 DURHAM, N.H. I» RHAC Fails To Collect Dues Dormitory residents wishing to re­ ter, McLaughlin and Sawyer Halls to refuse to pay their money to RHAC.” Attend Workshop serve rooms for next year will have pay their RHAC dues. RHAC taxes Stevens announced Wednesday eve­ A conference of class officers from to show proof of their current resi­ each dorm resident $1 a year, but ning that students would have to pre­ the six New England state universities dency, the Residence Hall Advisory the student officials of the three dorms sent RHAC cards in order to qualify will be held here this weekend. Council (RHAC) decided last night. have refused to deliver the money-to for room draw, Fifty-six delegates from the Uni­ This decision is not particularly RHAC. “ The students living in Hunter, Saw­ versities of Maine, Vermont, Rhode shocking, but there is significance “ A majority of the students in the yer and McLaughlin will not be permit­ Island, Connecticut Massachusetts and in what the statement does not say. three residence halls have paid their ted to enter room draw until those New Hampshire will attend the Yankee RHAC attempted to grasp the oc­ dues,” said Douglas Stevens, presi­ halls have paid their dues to RHAC. Class Officers Workshop, casion of room draw to force Hun­ dent of RHAC, “ but the hall officers The decision was made jointly by Mr. “ This is the first time a conference Francis Gordon, Mr, John Curtis (di­ like this has been held,” said Jose rector and assistant director of the Fernandez, president of the Junior Housing Office) and me,” Stevens said. Class at UNH, Students Favor Calendar Changes The Housing Office withdrew its sup­ “ We’ll be discussing general prob­ Students agree that the present aca­ semester system but includes a full port from the collection plan because it lems on campus, such as apathy, and demic calendar should be changed, month for special study following the decided it did not have the authority to the relationships between students and but disagree on how to change it. Christmas break. enforce payment, according to Curtis, faculty; what the universities can do That was the finding of a student Twenty-four percent favored the 4-4 The matter was brought up at last to solve these problems, and how we poll conducted by the special Student plan, which replaces the post-Christ­ night’s RHAC meeting for a final de­ can work with the other organizations Senate Committee on Educational Pol­ mas period with a two-week reading cision. on campus,” icy. The poll was conducted to mea­ period. Representatives from Hunter Hall Delegates from the University in­ sure student preference on the four Another 14 percent did not vote led the assault on the original proposal clude: Jose Fernandez, Junior Class proposed calendar changes which will on the four proposals, but gave alter­ on the grounds that the payment of dorm President; Carmen Frattaroli, Sopho­ be voted on by the University i§enate nate proposes. Among these were dues should replace RHAC dues as a more Class President; John Hanson Monday afternoon. suggestions for a pass-fail system, prerequisite for room draw. chairman, of Campus Relations of the a cooperative system (work-study) like Only 10 percent of the 800 students The majority of RHAC representa­ Sophomore Class; Stephen Dunlap, Ju­ that of Northeastern University, and tives agreed with Hunter and voted to nior Class Vice President; Robert who voted on the changes favored the a 4-4 plan with the option of taking 4-4 plan which is sim ilar to the present drop all requirements except current Robinson, treasurer of the Junior one pass-fail course per semester. residence in a dorm. Class; Richard Contour, chairman of calendar. Most suggested starting school ear­ At present, RHAC apparently will the Junior Class Social Committee, According to Gary Dozier and Jean­ lier and getting out earlier with a take no action to force the dissident and Lew Chaikin, Freshman Class nette Roberts, members of the special month vacation at Christmas. dorms to pay their dues. Student Senate Committee on Educa­ Dozier pointed out that the voting delegate. As a result of the three dormitories’ The student delegates will be housed tional Policy, who set up the voting will be analyzed according to class table in the MUB this week, 76 percent failure to pay their dues, the RHAC by the various UNH fraternities and and college of the student. He noted budget is $590 short, according to of the students favored the three re­ sororities free of charge, and meals, that mostly freshmen voted for the Stevens, plus a banquet, will be served at the maining proposals. 3-3 plan while a reading period plan Memorial Union Building. The dis­ Twenty-seven percent favored the was more favorable to upper-classmen. He said Hunter Hall had dues of cussion groups will meet at Hamilton 3 - 3 plan, which calls for three terms Technology majors objected to the $173 outstanding. McLaughlin owes Smith, with 3 courses per term. A question proposals because “ of their curricula $122, and Sawyer has $127 of dues “ We hope the students at the Uni­ arose from many of the students who being greater than that of Liberal outstanding. versity will cooperate with the pro­ favored this plan about whether a Arts” , according to Dozier. Stevens said that if RHAC fails to gram,” said Fernandez, “ and try to tuition increase would result because The results of the poll will be pre­ collect the dues from Hunter, Mc­ be as helpful as possible to the dele­ of the extra semester. sented in a written report to each Laughlin and Sawyer this year, it gates from the other universities. We Twenty-five percent favored the member of the University Senate be­ will be difficult to collect dues from would appreciate their help.” 4 - 1-4 plan, which follows the two fore its meeting Monday afternoon. any dormitories next year. Lectures Stress Relevance of Marx to Social Sciences '‘by Janice Harayda educators from Italy and Yugoslavia, “ The publication of the ‘Economic for Eastern European Affairs” at 9:30 The relevance of the ideas of Karl focuses on new interpretations of Marx and Philosophical Manuscripts’ was a.m. in the Strafford Room. Marx to all the social sciences emerged stimulated by his “ Economic and Phi- at the same time the last and the Three professors analyzed “ The Im­ as the central theme of the Sidore osophical Manuscripts,” published for first act in the discovery of the early plications of the Early Marx for Eco­ Symposium on “ The Early Marx” this the first time in English in 1959, works of Marx,” Petrovic said. nomics” yesterday afternoon. Thomas week. Erwin Jaffe is chairman of the Sidore “ Last, in the sense that this was Sowell of Cornell University presented Professor J, P. Nettl of the Uni­ Committee, which sponsored the sym­ the last among the early works of the main lecture followed by comments versity of Leeds, England, speaks to­ posium. Paul Brockelman, Valentine Marx which was made accessible for from Leon Smolinski of the Harvard day at 9:30 a.m. in the Strafford Room, Dusek, and John Donovan of UNH reading and study; first, in the sense University Russian Research Center, in the final event of the three-day planned the Marx series. that only after its publication, the and JohnDonovanof the UNH Economics lecture series, A paper which Nettl Brockelman, assistant professor of discovery of the real meaning of the Department. will discuss examines the sociological philosophy, said in an introductory early works of Marx gradually began,” UNH students participated in a second implications of Marx, including several lecture Wednesday morning that the he continued, round table discussion last night. for the Negro in the United States. discovery of the early works of Marx Petrovic noted that Marx’s philoso­ The symposium, which also featured opened up a “ Pandora’s box of issues phy does not deal with political sci­ and interpretations with vast implica­ ence, sociology, philosophy, or eco­ Virus Downs tions for our contemporary world.” nomics separately. He called the ideas He defined “ early” works of Marx of the 19th century German a “con­ as those written through 1847, or be­ tinuous interplay” between the most Theta Chi’s fore the publication of “The Com­ abstract questions of the social sci­ About ten brothers of Theta Chi munist Manifesto.” ences and “the most ordinary ques­ Fraternity were admitted to Hood House Gajo Petrovic, a professor at the tions of everyday life.” within a period of 24 hours starting University of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, and Remarks by Guido Neri, a professor Wednesday night at 9 with what Dr. editor of “ Praxis” , the leading con­ specializing in existentialist philoso­ Richard Cilley called a virus infec­ temporary journal of Marx’s thought, phy at the University of Milan, and Val tion caused “ maybe from food” . spoke Wednesday afternoon to an audi­ Dusek, an instructor in philosophy at Cilley attributed the infection to ence which filled the Strafford Room UNH, followed the Petrovic reading. food only because so many of the of the Memorial Union. He read an They spoke mainly of the Marxian con­ brothers got sick within a short span hour-long paper on “Issues Posed by cept of alienation, a principal topic of of time. the Early Works of Marx.” the symposium. Some of thebrothers were suspicious Nettl observed later that Petrovic Five students joined Neri, Petrovic, of the chop suey they ate in the fra­ presented three important concepts.
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