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Montana Kaimin, November 20, 1970 Associated Students of University of Montana University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM) 11-20-1970 Montana Kaimin, November 20, 1970 Associated Students of University of Montana Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper Recommended Citation Associated Students of University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, November 20, 1970" (1970). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 5907. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/5907 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. montandAN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER University of Montana Vol. 73, No. 31 KnimmMissoula, Montana 59801 Friday, Nov. 20, 1970 f / n m m i Commission votes to abolish hours By SALLY JOHNSON will be allowed to move off cam­ Montana Kaimin Reporter pus earlier will be discussed next week, Carol DeGeorge, assistant to Members of Student Facilities the Dean of Students, said. Montana Kaimin photo (Frank Lazarewicz)Commission voted in a meeting Hayes said the present Admin­ yesterday to recommend to Presi­istration is paying for “overbuild­ dent Robert Pantzer that hours being” that took place in the past. Going Five students peacefully depart the UM campus for home and a 10-day permanently abolished for fresh­He said Aber Hall has never been Thanksgiving vacation. Classes end today and resume Nov. 30. man women, effective Winterneeded, and as a result of unused Quarter. dormitory space, Turner Hall was in pea Another recommendation wasconverted to offices. passed, proposing freshman women“It is currently our policy to be charged $10 for the remaining equalize all men’s and women’s academic year to finance the no­requirements with the ultimate Sociologist denies population problemhours proposal and the $15 chargedgoal of housing only those students productive area is about a tenthannually to all no-hours womenwho wish to live on campus and If all the land in the world were its present standard of living.” only on a quarterly contract,” When asked why we cannot, then,as productive as the same amountresidents be abolished Fall Quar­ devoted to agriculture, the earth ter, 1971. Hayes said. could support a “trillion” people,feed the present population, Lar­of dry land.” Herbert Larsen, visiting professor sen blamed archaic systems of food Larsen said he was “all for sta­ This money is used to pay night of sociology, said last night in distribution.a bilization of the population,” butassistants working at desks in debate with Robert Curry, associ­ Larsen referred to the current that he worries about depopula­•women’s residence halls, during theStudent rights ate professor of geology, and mem­problem of over-population as thetion. hours from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. ber of Zero Population Growth.“alleged population phenomenon.”“Witness Montana,” he said. Tom Hayes, director of resi­ The debate was moderated by Lud­ In a rebuttal, Curry predicted “Young people between the agesdence halls, and Del Brown, co­book finished wig Browman, professor of zo­regional famines by 1975. of 20 and 25 have left the state.ordinator of Student Facilities ology, and sponsored by the UM He argued against the wide­ The labor force in Butte is de­ Council, presented a list of re­ The ASUM-sponsored handbook Pre-Med Club. spread belief that “we can always creasing rapidly. And with fewer sponses to the proposal concerningon students’ legal rights will be fall back on the oceans” for soilbabies being born, there will be equalization of residence halls re­distributed after Thanksgiving va­ “We are already in a state of cation, Clayton Schenck, Publica­ incipient zero population growth,”productivity. “Productivity is con­fewer teaching jobs for today’s col­quirements made by Dan Ulvila, Larsen said. “The earth could tri­ fined to the upper 100 feet of oce­lege graduates.” senior in’ pre-med, in last week’stions Commission chairman, said ple its population and yet maintainanic area,” Curry said. “The most Larsen said depopulation wouldmeeting. yesterday. create an “inverted pyramid” situ­ Brown said the tentative time The 2,000 copies of the small ation with an increasing number oftable for allowing junior women tohandbook resulted from two-and- older people and fewer youngermove off campus is Fall Quarter,a-half years of preparation, revi­ people. 1971. The timetable for allowing sion, condensation and unavoidable Sophomore fdiscouraged9 “Old people are a very serioussophomore women to move delays,off Ken Tolliver, senior law drain on the nation’s population,”campus is Fall Q uarter, 1972. student and author of the hand­ in campus houLarsen said. Whether non-freshman womenbook, said last night. Marcia Herrin, sophomore inKathy Williams stating that every journalism and social welfare, said non-freshman UM student should yesterday she has been discouragedbe free to determine his or her $2,686 lost on Canadian opera and stifled in her attempt to moveplace of residence, and that any off campus legally. on-campus residence hall regula­ The UM Program Council re­ ently decreasing attendance at the Ballroom. He said the cost would In a conversation with Presidenttions should be uniform for allported last night that $600 moreopera. be either $550 or $650 for the one- Robert Pantzer on Tuesday, Herrinstudents. than expected was lost on the The Council also reported $717night appearance. said, “I do not believe it is moral “I am tired of having personalperformance of the Canadian Op­was netted on the classical guitar The Council also discussed con­ that I should have to live on cam­rights equated with any bondingera Company last week. recital by Carlos Montoya Oct. 31.tracting Canned Heat, but post­ pus just because of my sex.” idea,” Williams said at that Oct. According to Clay Collier, Coun­ In other business, Council mem­poned action saying they were not Herrin also is contesting the $1521 meeting. cil chairman, the opera, whichbers voted to contract the rock-certain they could meet the $7,500 no-hours dorm fee. Because she Herrin said nothing has hap­performed in Missoula Nov. 16, in­music group “Crow” to play forcost. refused to pay the fee fall quarter,pened yet as a result of the reso­curred a deficit of $2,686. He and the Registration Dance scheduled Angela Davis, a militant charged she said she was not allowed tolution or her personal efforts. “Al­members of the Council attributed for the beginning of Winter Quar­with kidnap and murder, was pre-register for Winter Quarter though I have Central Board’sthe loss to scheduling problems.ter. named an honorary member of until the fee had been paid. Shemoral support,” she said, “I’m dis­The Royal Winnipeg Ballet had Collier said the group would playProgram Council last week by a said she felt like a “cop-out” Mon­gusted with our inability to actperformed Nov. 12, just four daysthree 45-minute “sets” for thevote of 8 to 5. I’m tired of waiting.” day when she finally agreed to pay before the opera company, appar­dance in the University Center Joe Purcell, sophomore in jour­ the fee in order to register. “I can­ nalism, proposed the motion. He not decide whether it is worth it said he made the motion because to sacrifice school just to prove my point.” Davis had been named Homecom­ Herrin said she became involved Pantzer okays abolishing medical excuseing queen at Washington State actively in working for women’s University. There was no discus­ residence rights when she joined President Robert T. Pantzer has “If a student misses a class be­ ture enough to go without a writ­sion of the issue. a Central Board committee organ­ approved a recommendation tocause of illness, most of the timeten medical excuse. Program Council agreed to spon­ ized to investigate the burden abolish written medical excuses for the instructor doesn’t care and the “The instructors shouldn’t havesor the International Folk Festi­ placed on University women toUniversity students, according tostudent has to make up the workto depend on a piece of paper valto at UM Feb. 27, 1971. pay the residence halls bondingRobert Curry, director of the see if a student is ill,” Curry said. Collier said he would look into Health Service. later. The excuse has no effect on requirement. performance.” “If he wants to know bad enough,the possibility of hiring the “Grate­ The committee was formed after Curry said the excuses were a the instructor can call the Healthful Dead,” a hard rock group, to CB passed a resolution introducedthing of the past. He said college students are ma­ Service for confirmation.” perform later this year. by former on-campus delegate Keast named Baker claims sole guilt in Schlosser case LIVINGSTON (AP)—Confessing of intense anger when Schlosserbefore going their separate ways. len said, Baker and Stroup argued in complaint his cannibalism to a shockedpicked him up. Baker said Jim Baker said he was “stoned” but over which route to take. He said courtroom, murderer Stanley DeanHuggins of Big Timber, Mont., had awake when he and Schlosser MISSOULA (AP)—A 34-year- Baker crossed the highway and Baker yesterday testified he killed promised him a timber-industry pitched sleeping bags to spend theheaded for Livingston, with Stroup old Missoula man was charged a 22-year-old Montanasocial job. He said he and Stroup dranknight of July 10. going toward Big Timber, Mont.— Thursday with procuring a teen- worker in an LSD-magnified fit beer with Huggins the afternoon “When I woke up there wasaway from the fatal meeting with aged girl for immoral purposesof anger at “The Establishment.” of July 10—the date Schlosser waslightning and things.
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