new mexico lobo, volume 073, no 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "george m.," a musical...

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1970 e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 6-25-1970 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/ 1970 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1970 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1970 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970." 73, 144 (1970). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1970/78

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1970 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

6-25-1970

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970University of New Mexico

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

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1970 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970." 73, 144 (1970).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1970/78

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

PageS NEW MEXICO LOBO Thursday, June 18, 19_70.

Popeioy 70 Road Shows Set Come to PUTT-PUTT today!

'Hair,' '1776' Schecluled This ad may be redeemed for a

Twelve programs, including four Broadway musicals, four other plays and four performances by individuals and groups with an international reputation, are included in the 197 0·71 series at the UNM Popejoy Hall.

In addition to shows in the regular series, the rock musical "Hair" will play a single performance Jan. 6.

The regular 12-performance series is described by Popejoy Hall director William Martin as the costliest the theater has assembled for a season, although ticket prices are the same as they were a year ago.

Included in the series are: "George M.," a musical based

on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12.

"Zorba,'' a musical described by the New York Times as "the best musical to be seen on Broadway since Fiddler and Man of La Mancha." Feb. 16 and 17.

"Canterbury Tales," another musical, this one based on

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Chaucer's tales, which played two years in London. Dates will be announced later.

"1776," a musical treatment of the events and personalities behind the Declaration of Independence. March 12 and 13.

A twin billing of Elaine May's "Adaptation," the final hilarious word on TV party games, and "Next," Terrance McNally's story of a balding 40-year-old who is drafted and examined by a squat female sergeant. Feb. 2.

"Forty Carats," a comedy by the authors of "Cactus Flower." Oct. 28.

"Plaza Suite," another Neil Simon comedy praised by Time as "an avalanche of hilarity." Jan. 22.

"Hadrian VII," the story of a lowly British clerk with dreams of becoming the all-powerful Pope Hadrian VII. The play was nominated for five Tony awards. March 8,

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EX ICO Thursday, June 25, 1970

Apollo XII Samples Arrive

Kiel Gets Lunar Rock By CONNIE ADCOX

One of the results obtained from the Apollo XI and Apollo XII lunar landings is that "the moon did not form from the earth," said Klaus Keil, director of the UNM Institute of Meteoritics and a primary investigator of the lunar samples returned from the two probes. '

Keil announced Wednesday the addition of newly acquired samples from the Apollo XII mission and results of his earlier research.

Keil said the UNM geology department now posesses approximately 1.5 grams of lunar samples from each of the Apollo XI and XII missions, with two more rocks of three grams each. At least two more slides of rock sections will be received by the department at a later date.

"The conclusion that the moon did not come from the earth was reached by comparing the ages of the rock samples found on the two planets. The age of the lunar

samples was approximately 3.5 billion years old with some samples dates at 4.3 billion years while the age of rocks in the Pacific Ocean has been dated at only 700-800 million years old."

Less than 100 parts of water per million of rock was found in lunar samples, and a total l.ack of organic life. However, the moon is full of mineral constituents which make up a good soil capable of supporting plant life," he said.

Keil said "one of the goals of the lunar probes is to find out the origin of the solar system; and most important in this respect is the fact that the lunar samples are giving the scientists a wealth of information in this area."

"Some clues to the formation of the solar system have been found from the fact that the moon's surface was molten at one time. This was determined by the presence of highly differentiated materials, caused by intense heat. The interior of the moon is hypothesized as having had little

ASUNM President

Gives U Officials

Probation Notice

Birchite Tall<s

r.obo Photo by Paul Wilson

J. H. Hoopingarner, regional coordinator for the John Birch Society Friday accused "financial kings" of poWel' politicking.

molten activity because of its low magnetic field.

"A theory offered to explain the formation of the molten characteristics was that the early sun spun faster causing a higher cosmic ray content which would heat up the materials on the lunar surface .to melting point," he said.

No "abnormal amounts" of radioactive materials were found in the lunar samples, and it has been theorized the early solar system had an abundance of radioactive isotopes "with a very short life span."

Keil concluded the moon is "much more interesting" than anticipated because of the large amount of geological activity which took place on its surface.

He also announced that he just received permission Wednesday from NASA to put up an exhibition of the lunar rock samples at the New Mexico State Fair in Albuquerque in September.

Four UNM administrative officials have been placed on disciplinary probation by ASUNM President Eric Nelson. The notice was sent to Slwrman Smith, vice president for administrative affnil's, !~Pl'''el Heady, UNM Pn'!sident, Harold Lavender, vice president for student affairs, and Jack Cairns, director of campus s<>curity, two days after 78 st.udents arrested in the May strike had h<>en placed on probation.

Mimicking Lavendtr's original probation memorandum, Nelson wrote, "Dear Campus Officials: Each of you has been adjudged to have ... failed to inform students that ill-trained and over-equipped National Guardsmen were coming on campus, and ... failed to retain close communications with the State Police and keep informed of their plans, steps which if they had been taken would have been regarded as merely adequate provisions to avoid violent confrontation ... "

Nelson added he expects from college officials "professional, rational response to a crisis situation regardless of its origin,"

Lunar Samples

placing the four on disciplinary probation "until further notice."

Specific grounds for disciplinary probation have never been spelled out and the administration takes each case separately and decides what is to be done, Lavendar said. In the case of the 78, grounds were, refusal to leave the Union after being so directed by academic authority, and violation of a court order.

Tlw students were the bulk of 131 persons arrested on civil contempt of court chargPs for disob£>ying a court order to clear the Union Friday, May 8. The njunction ordering the Union cleared was sought by the UNM Regents and issued in Bernalillo district court.

Almost all those arrested purged themselves of contempt in district court, and agreed not to violate the restraining order for the duration of its .issuance.

Lavender in turn accepted probation in a memorandum to Nelson, "I accept the probationary status imposed ... I do this in a spirit which I hope

Lobo photo Klaus Kiel, UNM geologist,

studies lunar samples brought back on earlier Apollo missions. His research shows little water on the moon.

would motivate the students placed in a similar status by my June 2 memorandum-a spirit which recognizes that errors of judgment and misinterpretation of fact can occur at every turn, but which also dictates that one must accept responsibility for l1is own actions."

N elso received no replies from . ;.. the othe1' three officials on probation.

Basically, explains Lavender, thf' administration pluCl'S a student on disciplinary probation to "Jet the student know we've taken note of what has occurred, and should we meet again, that would certainly have some bearing on the situation." From the administration's viewpoint it serves as a warning.

The subject of disciplinary pt·obation is, in Lavender's words, a "g;ray area." There are no clear-cut rules on it, and it is not mentioned in the UNM catalog leaving terms of the action to the discretion of the administration.

Lavender said he does not believe the subject was omitted .. from the catalogue "deliberately."

Birch Coordinator Suspects World Governmental Web

J. H. Hoopingarner, of the John Birch Society, said, "the real lackeys of the imperialists are the leaders of the revolution" in a lecture Friday.

Hoopingarner coordinator of the John Birch Society for New Mexico and 11 Colorado counties, was speaking before a crowd of about 40 at the Free University as part of its lecture series.

Hoopingarner stated that "high government officials" and "wealthy industrial capitalists in the United States and abroad" are conspiring to create a world-wide totalitarian dictatorship through monetary rule by ''using the Vietnam war to demoralize the people/' having "no aversion in dealing with Communists" for their own economic gain and by supporting revolutionaries to create chaos. He cited here the fact that Bobby Seal and "other black radicals were federal employees under the Office of Economic Opportunity,"

They are using the unrest created by revolutionaries as' an excuse to establish a national police force similar to Hitler's Gestapo and Communist Russia's KGB. Such a force would create tight security that would ultimately eliminate free thought and individualism, he said.

Hoopingarner said "indirectly, financial kings like the Rockefellers supported Hitler to gain power and in the same token destroyed him so that they could retain this power."

He said this "elite clique" of conspirators had been established in the late 1800's at the formation of the Rhodes schola1·ship progi·am. He said many of the Rhodes scholars form the membership of a little known committee, the Council of Foreign Relations, comprised of 1400 of the most elite names in government, education, law, science, finance and labor. Hoopingarner asserted this council has staffed most of the high U.S.

government positions, holding such men as J. William Fulbright, Frank Church, Dean Rusk and Walter Rostow, all Rhodes scholars, as its members and aims for a world government which would be a dictatorship.

Hoopingarner holds "that the only way to combat this sinister plot to ta:ke over the world by the ·" Rhodes scholars and Council of Foreign Relations is the written word, and not by the violence, force and coercion of so called revolutionaries."

When asked what was one to do with "truth" of the written word, Hoopingarner replied the Birch Society "left that up to the individual,

"If people know who these 'conspirators' are. they will vote them out of office and power, and will restore 'thE' constitution to. protecting the rights of the individual. The reason we have minority rule is that most of the people do not know it," he said.

Page 3: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

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Page 2 NEW MEXICO LOBO

Nixon Signs Voting Act; Would Lower Age to 18

unconstitutional. . million Negroes were added to the President Nixon Monday signed a bill lowering the voting age to 18. However, he said he believed the bill, affecting all federal, state and local elections, to be

LUTHERAN & EPISCOPAL

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He ordered Atty. Gen. John voting rolls in the South. Mitchell to seek a court ruling, The courts can strike down one "An early (court) test is part of the bill without affecting essential," said the president, other parts of it. Thus if the ''because of the confusion and voting franchise is found uncertainty surrounding an act of unconstitutional this will not doubtful constitutionality that affect the extenslon of the Voting purports to extend the franchise." Rights Act,

Expecting th_e cou~ts to strike Congress passed the bill last down the btll, Ntxon _urged week. If found constitutional, it Congress to push ahead wtth an will enfranchise an estimated 10 amendment to the Constitution so to 11 million young people the voting age can be low~red beginning Jan. 1, 1971. without unnecessary delay. Ntxon The voting age already is 18 in said he signed the bill in spite. of Georgia and Kentucky, 19 in his reservations about lowermg Alaska, and 20 in Hawaii. Political the voting age, so as not to scientists have said they expect invalidate the other part of the little change in election patterns bill which extends for five years as a result of younger voters, the 1965 Voting Rights Act. though Democrats may gain some Under this act more than one strength.

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Why not Peace?

In the wake of the Cambodian invasion and the Kent State tragedy a nation-wide effort was launched. Its purpose is to make known to our elected representatives the views of those people desiring:

0 No further military involvement in Indo-China

o The reassertion of constitutional authority by the congress.

To this end the National Petition Committee is working to collect a national goal of 20 million signatures and $10 million to be used for:

• Congressional lobbing for Peace legislation.

0 Peace information campaigns through the media.

Dr. Salazar Praises Dr. John Salazar, a possible

independent candidate for governor, praised the formation of The Free University during the sixth special event discussion, entitled "The Need for Penal Reform in New Mexico," sponsored by Amistad.

Salazar, who recently resigned as Secretary of Corrections for the State of New Mexico, said, "I think Amistad is an important and vital process, and that there is nothing better to bring the community together where they can at least talk things out, if they can't agree."

In the U.S. something called education is thought to take place in a building called a school, in a room called a classroom, and if students go to a place called Amistad they won't learn, he said.

"I believe education should be meaningful and relevant; expose the children to the realities, experiences and fun in life," said Salazar. Children don't fail to learn, teachers fail to teach, he contended, and students drop out because our educational system fails them.

A 19 47 graduate of UNM, Salazar suggested the UNM student body should have a minimum of one elected student on the board of regents who "may not be able to do much, but at least he could let us know what's going on-when they are going to call out the National Guard."

On the topic of penal reform Salazar said that penal systems were basically cruel. "The state penitentiary is one of the best in terms of physical aspects, good

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Former secretary of corrections, John Salazar, discussed the penal system in New Mexico at the Free University.

Amistad food , television, clothing. My main objection is that the men are stripped of their dignity, integrity and self-image and made to conform." he said.

"Everyone thinks I was paid a million dollars for taking Lovelady out. I wasn't," Salazar said. "18-year old youngsters are helpless in prison-they get homosexually raped, and the way things are, if you've got to keep them, why not at the honor farm?" He said 55% of the families of New Mexico since 1912 have had representatives in the "Big House."

Salazar also discussed the formation of a third party in New Mexico, the Independent Party. "I intend to make myself available for governor as an Independent Party candidate," he said.

To establish a third party, 15,000 signaturca must be obtained by Sept. 1 Salazar said. He plans an August convention to hammer out platforms and planks for the party, which he describes as an "unpolitical, people's" party supporting humanist rights. One of the party's mottos would be "Dare to Care," he said.

The Independent party will not accept large contributions from anyone. Salazar said, "I've already turned down a contribution of $200,000 and I am limiting what any person can give so that no single individual can have any claim on us." He said he would rather receive $1 from a lot of lit· tie people than $15,000 from "one person-bought, sealed and delivered."

o Support of Peace candidates in the November elections.·

If you can help the Albuquerque branch of the N.P.C., call us at 265-4878 or mail in the form below.

COLL.EGE HAS A KEY ... ... IT'S READING

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Thur!lday, June 25, 1970 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 3

Noise: A Mounting Pollution Problem One of the Most Pervasive Sources of Irritation

(Editor's note: This article is the third of an eight part series dealing with the problems of the environment locally and nationally.)

By DAVE BRANDS With waste and pollution

growing proportionally with America's gross national product, noise has also proved to _be a mounting problem,

Theodore Berland, a freelance science writer, said in the 1970 World Book Yearbook that peopie with normal hearing begin finding noises about 85 decibels aversive. The sound emitted by street jackhammers or jet aircraft is between 85 to 145 decibels.

''This is considered a discomforting and dangerous range, Berland reports.

A decibel is one-tenth of a bel (after Alexander Graham Bell). One decibel is equivalent to the faintest sound that can be heard. The safety range, from zero to 85 decibels may be compared to a rustle of leaves at about 10-15 decibels, to a busy street at 85 to 90.

In the home, bedrooms are probably the quietest of the living quarters at 55 decibels. However, adding the nearby noise of a

flushing toilet with the hum of a ventilating fim and the noise level jumps to 72 decibels. Noise can be shattering in the living room. 'relevision and stereo phonographs when used can account for 70 to 80 decibels on their own and an occasional clean-up with the vacuum cleaner adds another 80 decibels. With neighbors sometimes on the other side of sound tunnel walls in their own living rooms, the "living room" can be unbearable.

The kitchen is probably the noisiest room in most homes because of the many mechanized mini-helpers. With several appliances in use at one time, kitchen noise can reach the same level of a subway or air terminal-in the 100 decibel range.

From the outside, homes are plagued with the clanking of garbage cans, barking dogs or whining cats and the constant rumble of motor traffic. Since piston engines work on the principle of properly timed and contained explosions, Berland regards motor noise as "the most pervasive noise in our civilization."

State•s Voting Trend Decidedly Republican

State Republicans running for offices this year may be encouraged to know that, in 1968, 23 of the 32 New Mexico counties went Repbulican, Bureau of Business Research (BBR) statistics show.

The nine counties in the state which did not follow the Republican trend in 1968 were: Grant, Colfax, Hidalgo, McKinley, Rio Arriba, Sandoval, San Miguel, Santa Fe, and Socorro.

The HBR figures further show that of the 23 counties which went Republican in 1968, only three voted Democratic in the 1964 presidential election year. Statistics were compiled for the selected years of 1920, 1948, 1960, 1964, and 1968,

A total of 105,542 voters registered in 1920. By 1968, the figure more than tripled to 327,281 persons, including those who registered as independents,

The number. of independents rose sharply in 1968 as opposed to 1964. In 1964, of the 328,126

registered voters, 1067 were independents, but in two years, with 327,281 registered, 27,508 did not indicate party affiliation. In fact, during each of the selected years surveyed (except 1948), the number of independents never rose much above the 1000 mark. No statistics on this point were available for 1948. ·

Nine counties in the five selected years generally have voted Republican. The remaining 23 counties have voted Democratic a majority of the years surveyed. Hidalgo is the only county consistently affiliated with the Democratic party during the selected years,

VALLEY CYCLE Bridgstone-Cima.tti Also Used Cycles

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BLUE DOME An Experiment a I Theater Group

Since 1967 the Blue Dome has been perfonning in New York City (off-off-Broadway) and in Woodstock, New York, producing eight productions that have experimented with ways to combine theater and technlogy, through the use of plastic forms and modules controlled by the performers.

The current production, "The Conquest of Mexico," is created to a script outline by Antonin .Artaud. It has been praised for "totality of conception," scenic beauty and strong performances by Sam Colman in "Show Business" (February 7, 1970). The company was also written up recently in "Dance" magazine. Dur­ing the spl'ing, Blue Dome has toured colleges in the East, such as Smith, Colby, and the University of Bridgeport, and they will be playng at the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival, Cape May, New Jersey at the end of July.

Blue Dome will perfonn "The Conquest of Mexico at the Uni­versity of New Mexico in the Mexico Union Ballroom on June 30 and J,lly 1 at 8:15 PM. They will aluo be conducting some work­shops for professional actors and theater students as guests of Albuquerque Theater Lab. 314% Second St. SW. Anyone interested in participating in one o£ these workshops should contact Anne· Kirschner at 34•\-!1624. For further information about the June 30 and July 1 performances, phone the New Mexico Union Activities Center at 277-4 70().

Union Ballroom on June 30

and July 1 at 8:15 PM.

Overhead, jet aircraft have been shocking citizens with noise since the end of World War II. Not until the 1!;l60's did disturbed citizens begin taking their complaints to court concerning the noisy winged speed demons. Aircraft engineers tl'ied combating the noise by installing suppressors. Unfortunately, engine thrust was reduced so much that pilots were forced to add power to compensate which, of course brought the noise to its previous level. Efforts for silencing jumbo jets and airbuses during the next decade will merely consist of lining the turbine inlet ducts with sound deadening material. Last September, Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe assured the public that overland supersonic flights were ruled out until the sonic boom- could be remedied. Presently, supersonic flights over Europe are so restrictive that such speeds can legally be obtained only over the oceans. Some aviation experts are willing to give up supersonic transport, Berland said, until the sonic boom is definitely solved.

"In no field of environmental quality is there a greater opportunity for dramatically effective action than in noise control." This is a statement from the August 1969 Citizens Advisory Committee Report on Environmental Quality for Presidnt Nixon and his Council on Environmental Quality. Most noises-from the roar of buses to the clatter of jackhammers-are not even in the first stage of being suppressed. The report contends these and other noise sources can

-~

be silenced with present technology. What is needed, the report said, is a realistic means of enforcing noise suppression.

Once again, another environmental problem can be solved through proper legislative channels with substantial appropriations, It would be ironic though, if millions of dollars were spent on a successful noise suppression program only to have those millions matched by people willing to pay to lose their hearing at rock concerts,

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Page 4: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

p.

NEW MEXICO

CASEY CHURCH Editor

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

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

Vol. 73, No. 145 Thursday, June 25, 1970

Tho New Mexico Summer lobo is pub­lished weekly every regular week of the University Summer Session by the Board of Student Publications of the Associated Students of the University of New Mexico, and is oat financially associated with UNM. Printed by the UNM Printing Plant with second class postage paid at Albu­querque, New Mexico, 67106.

The opinions expressed on the editorial pages of The Summer Lobo qre those of the author solely. Unsigned opinion is that of th" editorial board of The. Sum· mer Lobo. Nothing necessarily represents the views of the Associated Students or the University of New Mexico.

Voter's Best Investment The concerned conservative voter's best

investment this year is wholehearted support of the current amendment, statutory or constitutional, that would lower the voting age to 18.

By making the disaffected young into disillusioned voters he will have assured a much quieter future for the nation.

The laxness of the voter to exercise his franchise is proverbial, and political fortune tellers are quick to assure us the 11 million young people who will be given the vote would behave very much like their elders.

The decision to enfranchise so many young people however carries certain dangers, a younger electorate might give impetus to a third party or at least a coalition of renegades from both major parties. It may add a pressure group to the several hundred in existence now that could campaign, lobby, and fir the first time deliver votes for candidates.

Giving the vote to young people would mean he would have no justification for requesting direct action solutions to social problems, no excuse for refusing to serve in Vietnam and no earthly reason for protesting the policies of the government or industry.

With the experience in organizing, coercing and persuading many young people have picked up in working with "the movement" for however short a period of time this possibility is not an unreal one.

That is where the real uneasiness lies, in the possibility that through mastery of the technique of democratic power acquisition the younger voter and his demands might just become legitimate.

Lobo Review

People~s Park Photoessay By STEPHEN M. PART

The Museum of Albuquerque, located in the old airport building at the end of Yale, is rapidly becoming an important source of intellectual sustainence in the rarefied cultural-artistic air of New Mexico.

Letters To the Editor:

Your reporter has taken my remark about "violence brought

·about social change" (New Mexico Lobo, June 18, 1970) completely out of context, a practice I thought was confined to the "establishment press."

Now, thanks to UNM faculty member Jim Kraft and the cooperation of museum director G. F. Crabtree, this stepchild of a museum is hanging a show with tremendous impact-a photojournalistic compilation of the violence which arose over the "People's Park at Berkeley in 1968.

There are striking parallels between the distrubances over the park and the recent hassle at UNM-except that the Guardsmen acted with great restraint and sympathy for the involved people (from little old ladies who like flowers to students to small children) while the police killed ·a young man with a blast from a double·o loaded shotgun and wounded many others, again with shotguns and, of course, with clubs.

SEA Meets The Students for

Environmental Action will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. in the Free University, on the southeast corner of Stanford and Central, to discuss current projects, opposition to the SST, and recycling UNM's trash. All interested persons are welcome.

Reading the report: of Judge Robin's meeting, one would think 1 &pproved of' violence as a means of bringing about social change.

" Nothing could be further from the truth.

The show was put together the same way UNM's Visual Coalition seeks to document the. events up to and including "Bloody Friday" (May 8)-a long tedious job of contacting photographers, both amateurs and professional, obtaining permission to use their negatives, editing out the best, and finally printing for exhibition.

What I said was, "Anyone who does not recognize that violence has helped to bring about social change would be a blind idiot; however, the problem with resorting to violence is that violence usually results in co u n ter·Violence-the cycle escalates-then how do you turn it off?"

Crabtree, with the realization that the show is "one sided social comment," has hung "People's Park" because "this is what happens when people stop communicating and that is the point the Museum wants to make."

Ballantine Books has published a fine paperback presentation o£ the exhibition ($3.95).

Lobo Commentary

Activists Nationwide Leary of Coalition

(Editor's note: Lobo staffer Susan Stern was one of the seven students touring colleges in the East with the National Student Coalition. Today's article is the first of a series on national developments and trends in student activism.)

By SUSAN STERN A group of seven UNM

students, sponsored by the ASUNM Senate, left New Mexico on Monday, May 25 for the purpose of setting up the N atiopal Student Coalition for Peace. He:!ded by UNM student Carl LoPopolo, coalition national co-chairman, the group visited colleges and universities around the nation.

The coalition, formed during the national student strike, hoped to set up a communications network connecting all university campuses. The New Mexico contingent discovered resistance to a national organization serving as an umbrella for all universities.

The head of communications at Brandeis college, Neil Feldman, expressed doubts about the desirabilitY:' of such an organization. "The basic idea," Feldm!!n said, "is to keep decision making on a personal level. We don't want to allow powet decisions to be made by a handful of people. The movement must remain at the grassroots level."

On the basis of the resistance to the national coalition idea, co-chairman LoPopolo modified its aims, making it more regional in character.

"The coalition is now working to organize New Mexico. Brandeis a 11 ready has a functioning information center and publishes a weekly newsletter,'' LoPopolo said.

The invasion of Cambodia and the killings at Kent appear to have activated many students who may have been previously aware, but were largely non-vocal. This sort of sweeping activism was best illustrated by the events at Ohio Wesleyan.

The strike and the issues it stemmed from seem to have imparted at least a measure of unity to the sporadic and isolated student protests of the past. All the nation's colleges were confronted with Kent and Cambodia. The decision may have been not to strike, but the question arose simultaneously on all campuses.

Finally, UNM's strike was among the more violent of those across the nation. The racial undertones that culminated in the stabbings of thrl.)e UNM students around the Johnson Gym flag

pole on May 7 appear unique to this institution.

The two week tour became primarily an informational exchange program and fact finding trip. The following is a recapitulation of the strike events as they occurred at other campuses in the nation.

Washington University A Washingt.on University

student and ex-police officer, Gary Grantham, characterized the St. Louis strike paradoxically as being both violent and humorous.

"The ROTC building was burned to the ground,'' Grantham stated. "But generally the tone of the strike was prankish. Students took over Chancellor Thomas Elliot's office and utilized it to send telegrams to their parents."

Grantham, who has served on a riot squad, felt that the Yippie·prankish attitude on the part of the students served to avert possible violent confrontations with national guardsmen.

"The students here would push until the guard came, would then break up and regather in another area," Grantham said. "They never allowed things to go to the boiling point, but they made their point."

The campus SDS organization disbanded during the stdke over disagreements on the use of violence as advocated by the Weatherman. "Over 20 underground newspapers haH• sprung up as a result of · '" strike," Grantham said. "They a.t• in the same humorous, Yippie vein.''

Antioch College Antioch, a small private college

known for its highly experimental views on education, had a completely non-violent strike. Located in Yellow Springs, Ohio, a community where 95 percent of the residents oppose the Vietnam war, Antioch appeared isolated from the main stream of political protest. Only one building, a dormitory, bore the familiar signs of the strike.

"People here are very reasonable and too democratic," Bob Fishbone, a worker at Antioch's communication headquarters, Savah, said. "Being super-liberal you tolerate anything."

Antioch's faculty easily passed a resolution against the Cambodian invasion. The board of trustees agreed to terminate the school's defense projects.

Most of the students said they felt no incentive for political action in the Antioch community.

(Continued on page 6)

Photo by Bob Hlrshficld, Courtesy Museum of Albuquerque

I believe young people should be activists, and use every possible means to improve the system; however, I do not, and never have approved of violence as an instrument for social change, for the reason stated above.

The book by UNM's Visual Coalition on the events here should be out in the fall.

Communication Stopped A police officer uproots one of the trees planted

in People's Park in Berkeley, Calif. in 1968. Whether he was under orders or acting on his own is unknown. David D. Coopel,"

Thursday, June 25, 1970 NEW MEXICO LOBO

Job Training. Education Program

Welfare Mothers' 'WIN' The Work Incentive (WIN)

program "is the best opportunity anybody could ever want", said Mrs. Nellie Rodriguez, a welfare mother and WIN enrollee.

WIN is a basic education and job training program for mothers on welfare, Most of the women enrolled in the program lack a high school iliploma.

Mrs. Rodriguez, 39, has raised her five sons on welfare for the past 16 years. She is enrolled in the Santa Fe WIN program, and will take her General Educational Development (GED) test in July. Her goal is to become a teacher's aide and work with retarded children becauAe her eldest son, who is 19, is retarded. "I am so proud of him,'' sh!l said, "because he finished special (training) school and is working now."

For Mrs. Rodriguez WIN is the chance she has been looking for during the past 16 years. She said she never completed grade school because she went to work. "I figured 'I've got a job now, so I don't need to finish school'.

"I've been trying to get a job for 16 years, but without high school, I couldn't get a job.

"I couldn't this far without this (WIN) program," sa.id Mrs. Rodriguez.

Mrs. Delores Duffer, an Albuquerque WIN graduate, is head of the Santa Fe program which began Feb. 16. She said 45 women are enrolled; the program is funded for 60 persons by the Employment Security Commission.

Three staff members, two of whom are welfare mothers, are available to the women at all times if they need advice or help with their lessons. "They are trying to bring the staff up through the ranks," said Mrs. Duffer,

She described a typical "school day" for WIN women: Study from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. with intermittent breaks. At 9 a.m. each woman gets her notebook in

which she does her lessons. Next she gets a task or lesson to

work on, does the task, and grades herself. Each task takes approximately 30 minutes and the student must make a grade of 70 percent or better before she can go on to the next task.

After completing a set of ta~ks, the student takes a progress check which is a cumulative quiz. She then talks to the education manager, takes a break which is "sort of a reward", and starts on another task.

"It is a self·education process, and completely on their own,'' said Mrs. Duffer. The students study at their own rate.

Mrs. Linda Montoya, 20, thinks this aspect is one of the best parts of the program. She dropped out of high school three years ago and has two small children, ages two

· and three. "It's really great, you know, because there's not someone standing over you all the time. You do it all on your own."

She said she finds the work a little difficult, but believes she is learning more because she is working on her own. Also, she likes the fact that "you don't take it home with you."

"I can go home, watch television, be with my kids, and not have to worry about doing homework and what I have to do for tomorrow," said Mrs. Montoya.

Women with young children are provided babysitters free of charge while going through WIN. They can either find their own babysitter, often a relative, or select one from a list provided for them. Babysitting is in the home, in the babysitter's home, or at a day care center.

The enrollees are also paid $30 incentive pay monthly, and get travel pay, said Mrs. Duffer.

Katy Doctor, one of the three staff members, is in the process of setting up a tutorial program with students from the College of Santa Fe. At present, only four

persons are participating as tutors because not too many students are around during the summer, said Miss Doctor.

She feels the tutorial program is educational for both parties. "The whole thing is a learning experience,'' said Miss Doctor.

In addition to the WIN education program, women have the opportunity to attend business or beauty college. This is handled by the WIN team, a· separate but equal program connected with the WIN educational program.

River Running Canyon1 s Geology· Lecture Topics

''Time and the Mighty Colorado,'' a talk illustrated with numerous slides taken on river trips through the Grand Canyon, will open UNM's summer lecture series Monday evening at 8 in the Union ballroom.

The lecturer will be D. L. Baars, associate professor of geology at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colo.

The talk, in layman's language, will stress the stratified ·rocks exposed in the Grand Canyon, but will include the thrills of river-running on the Colorado.

Baars worked· as the exploration geologist on the Colorado Plateau for 10 years and as a research geologist for a year before he received his Ph.D. in 1965. He taught geology at Washington State University for three years before joining the l!'ort Lewis faculty two years ago.

He has written 20 technical articles on the geology of the Colorado Plateau, edited "Geology and Natural History of the Grand Canyon Region."

Page5

Maxwell Museum Enlarged A $300,000 grant from the

National Science Foundation has cleared the way for an addition to UNM's Maxwell Museum of Anthropology.

The $300,000 will be added to UNM funds of $500,000. The half-million dollars is from state bond issues and individual contributions to UNM.

The addition, which will add 21,200 square feet to the museum, is expected to be completed in late 1971 or early 1972.

The addition will include a new gallery to be operated along with the older gallery plus offices and rooms for processing artifacts.

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Page 5: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

Page6

Acti.vists Leary • • • (Continued from page 4)

"We go to Dayton to canvass," Charles Messner, a student government representative, said.

Ohio Wesleyan University A private university with an

enrollment of 2500, Ohio Wesleyan was charaeterized by one student as ''a place where parents could send their daughters and know they wouldn't get into trouble.

The Jcilling of six Kent State students by national guardsmen brought one fourth of the student body out on strike. Previously only a handful of students had at any time participated in political

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activities on the campus," John Reis said.

"Our school has been very conservative," Reis said. "There have never been any SDS members on campus."

"The Wesleyan strike began almost as a joke," one coed from New York said. "A couple of people said they were going to burn the ROTC building. We all went down to watch. Ice cream was sold to the crowd."

But classes were cancelled for two days. From the strike came the Ohio Wesleyan coalition. "The purpose of the coalition is. to organize action committees. We have compiled a 30 page history of the Vietnam war and distributed it to the Delaware community," Reis said.

Ohio State University On Thursday, May 28, Ohio

State was still embroiled in a strike over the shootings at Kent 60 miles away. 5000 national guardsmen were slowly being pulled from the campus. Entrances to the university were sealed by guards still on duty.

The commercial center opposite the university was filled with students distributing leaflets and seeking donations for those students who were arrested. Windows were boarded and taped. Businesses with no visible glass bore signs saying "Open as usual."

The tone of the Ohio State strike was violent. At least fourteen students were arrested and several were injured.

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NEW MEXICO LOBO

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Hare Krishna

Lobo photo by Mike Rowland Hare Krishna, a self·named meditation group,

pa~sed briefly at UNM yesterday on their way to Calif. and urged people to join their chanting.

Four Individuals Sue Cargo Over May 8 Guard Incident

Governor David Cargo and New Mexico Guard officials were charged with violating thP. civil rights of two UNM students, an Albuquerque resident and a Santa Fe school teacher during Guard action on campus May 8 in a suit filed Monday in Albuquerque.

The suit has named Cargo Adjutant General John P. Jolly: guard commander; Martin Vigil chief of state police; Don L: Doane, senior guard officer in the unit, and Thomas Taylor, guard officer who allegedly gave the order to unsheath bayonets during the guard action.

The four plaintiffs were among those present on the mall May 8 when the National Guard cleared the area after state police enforced a court injunction to remove students from the New Mexico Union.

The suit charges that that National Guard deprived the plaintiffs of their rights "to equal protection of the laws ... to peacefully assemble and to associate with others .•. to be secure ... f.rom physical

attack ... not to be subjected to summary, corporal punishment" The plaintiffs seek $25,00 in damages.

Damages The suit is also seeking

$125,000 for each plaintiff from Cargo, Jolly, Vigil, Doane and Taylor for failure on their part to "properly train and discipline guardsmen."

The plaintiffs, William M. Swartwood, Steven Sullivan, Steven Part and John Dressman have charged that the governor alerted the National Guard before May 8, and that Vigil ordered the guard on campus at Cargo's instruction.

The suit alleges The plaintiffs and others were "lawfully and peacefully standing" in the mall on the east side of the Union Building when the guard arrived.

Swortman was in the southwest part of the mall taking pictures when, the suit charges "three members of the guard brolce ranlcs and rushed the plaintiff, slashing at him with bayonets."

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Dressman, the suit alleges, was on a retaining wall on the east side of the Union and guardsmen "left formation to jab at him with bayonets' He moved away along the wall without offering resistance, then jumped off the wall and continued to move away. However, before he could get away two members of the National Guard pursued him, jabbing at him with bayonets."

The suit alleges that Dressman was stabbed in the leg by a guardsman.

Sullivan Story The suit charges that Sullivan, a

strike marshal, was trying to help a man on crutches that guardsmen had approached. Sullivan, the suit says, went to the man's side and "pleaded for a chance to move the man out of the way. A guardsman knocked the man down. Sullivan pleaded for a chance to pick him up, the guardsman then stabbed Sullivan in the right arm,"

Part, the suit says, was at the Union as a photographer for The Lobo. He was wearing a helmet with the words "press" on it and was holding up a press card while shouting, "press, press."

The suit then alleges that the stabbed Sullivan fell in front of Part. Part, "then knelt down to stop the bleeding. While .kneeling to help, the plaintiff Part was stabbed in the back by a member of the National Guard."

Attorneys for plaintiffs Dressman, Shortwood and Sullivan is the law firm of Sutin, Thayer & Browne. Representing Part will be B. Leonard Levy.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs will accept donations for the cost of depositions for the suit.

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NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 7

King· Completes His Best Recruiting Season Ever

Kruse, King Lobo Head Basketball coach, Bob King, is

shown at right at 7 ·3 high school star Paul Kruse signs the national letter of intent to play at the University of New Mexico next fall.

Four Lobos Named To All-Star Squa·d

UNM third baseman Larry Minarsich was one of four players picked unamimously to play on the WAC all·Southern Division baseball team, Commissioner Wiles Hallock announced recently.

An unprecedented five·way tie for the second and third outfield positions, and a deadlock for the first base position resulted in the 14·man team being named. Normally, league coaches select a 10·man team.

Besides Minarsich, there were thee other unanimous picks: shortstop Lenny Randle of Arizona State, outfielder Steve Mikulic and pitcher Leon Hooten, both of Arizona.

New Mexico also landed three other players to the all-star list. Hurler Jim Kremmel, who no·hit Arizona's Wildcats in Tucson early in the season, was one of the three and wru: joined by outfielders Rick Wicks and Bob Faford. Arizona State added first baseman Jeff Osborn and outfielder Roger Schmuck, while Texas·EI Paso added outfielder Bob Prokopowicz and second baseman Juan Sandoval, wUh Miners Tim Peden and Marc Bombard landing honorable mention posts.

Other Arizona players named to the team were first baseman Rod 0 'Brien, outfielder Dave Prest and catcher J. Ray Rokey. Prest's selection marked the third consecutive year the outfielder has made the all·star team, and is joined by Sandoval, Osborn and Krcmmel as returnees from the 1969 list.

O'Brien and Osborn tied for the first base post with two votes each, while Prest, Schmuck, Faford, Prokopowicz and Wicks all were deadlocked for the second and third outfield positions. Prokopowicz hit .508 to establish a conference season batting average record.

The official team, with batting averages in parenthesis, included O'Brien (.328) and Osborn (.293) at the first base pl>sition, Sandoval

(.315) at second, Randle (.371) at the shortstop slot and Minarsich (.393) at third. Outfielders were Mikulic (.444), Prest (.367), Schmuck (.323), Prokopowicz (.508), Faford (.306) and Wicks (.277). Catcher was Rokey (.274) and the pitchers were Hooten with a 3.71 earned run average and Kremmel with a 3.55 ERA.

Two other Lobos, backstop Ricky Laub and second sacker Glen Schawel, were named to the honorable mention listing.

In the northern division, Brigham Young placed seven competitors on the list of 13 all-stars, wtih first baseman Doug Howard leading the way. Howard, an academic standout during the four years he spent at Provo, was also a top·rated hoopster, leading the Cougar scoring averages for most of the 1969·70 season. He batted even .500 for the 1970 spring baseball campaign, and was a unanimous pick by league coaches. Two other Cougars, Richard Fairbanks and Dane Iorg, were also unanimous choices.

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By ROGER J. RUVOLO Lobo Sports Editor

A lot of people talk about basketball percentages. All kinds of percentages-shooting, rebounding, winning, losing, etc. But not too many people talk about recruiting percentages.

People are going to start talking, mainly about the threesome of Norm Ellenberger, Jim Johnston and Head Lobo Basketball Coach Bob King, as far as recruiting is concerned.

Disguised as regular college basketball coaches, these three men roamed the country, from Wyoming in th~ north to Virginia in the far east, to establish what probably is one of the finest

. percentages that could be obtained in college recruiting.

King said in an interview that it was extremely difficult to pinpoint the recruiting into one percentile, because recruiting goes through so many different phases. "First, we contact a lot of people early in the year, and as time goes on, we find out who we are really interested in," said King. Some of these prospects might be from the west and want very badly to go east. Others, who might be from the East, might want to stay there. "This makes it very hard to say what our real percentage is," commented King. "But we feel we had a very successful recruiting season. In the junior colleges, we really seriously were interested in four kids, and, of two of these, we wanted only one," King said. "So we were really interested in bringing in three, and we got three. As far as our freshman group goes, we feel we got a great group of competitors."

King wasn't kidding. Out of Lusk, Wyoming, Paul Kruse, one of the tallest basketball players in the nation at 7-3, signed the national letter of intent with

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lTNM on June 10. The graduate of Niobrara

County High School in Lusk will enroll next fall at the University of New Mexico and thus become the tallest player ever to compete at UNM.

Contacted by 118 colleges throughout the nation, Kruse led his Cla;;s A high school to the Wyoming State championship and a 20·3 season record. Before choosing New Mexico, Kruse narrowed his college choices to seven schools including Wyoming, Miami, Duke, Maryland, Wake Forest, Boston College and New Mexico.

The son of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Kruse, the Wyoming giant scored 20 or more points 18 times this past season and finished his senior year with a 23.8 scoring average and 15.6 rebounds. His single high in carroms was 29 for Coach Dick Price. He scored on 61 percent of his field goal attempts hitting the nets on 219 of 361 tries. A great shooter, he has a prep career field goal percentage of .600 hitting 381 of 638 attempts.

Named to the Sunkist all·American squad, he was also an all·Stater according to both wire services, all county, all-district and all-conference.

King said that the "sky is the limit for Paul. I'll tell you. This signing put the icing on the cake for our recruiting at New Mexico."

In Norfolk, Virginia, Ellenberger found a two·time All-American hoopster that scored 82 points in a single game this season. The competitor, Roy Ebron, a 6·9, 220·pound graduate of Booker T. Washington High School, signed the national Jetter of intent to enroll at UNM next fall. Ebron was ranked among the top three big prep men in the nation last season along with

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The highly sought prepster was contacted by almost every major college in the nation and had his choice narrowed to five schools (UNM, Kansas, California, Indiana and Florida) before finally deciding on New Mexico. At the end of the recent season the state sports writers voted Ebron the "Best High School player in Virginia History.''

Averaging 39.1 points per game this season, Ebron turned in an 82·point evening to boost his season scoring total to 782 points. During the high·scoring night he scored on 38 of 50 field goal attempts. He averaged 24 rebounds per game this season as well. During his junior year Ebron averaged 24.1 points per game and in his three seasons at Booker T. Washington scored 1607 points.

"Ebron has the potential of being one of the great players to play at New Mexico. He is a great leaper and rebounder," said King. "He has great quickness-he leads the fast break on occasion. He not only is a great inside shooter but can score from the outside," added King.

Aside from signing Harv Catchings and Mike Faulkner from the junior college ranks during the academic year, the New Mexico recruiting staff also signed Harold Little, a 604 JC transfer from Compton, Cal.

But that was by no means the end of their work. Turning to the local area, they found three upcoming freshman prospects.

(continued on page 8)

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Page 6: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 073, No 144, 6/25/1970 · 2020. 3. 2. · "George M.," a musical based on the life. of George M. Cohen. Oct. 11 and 12. "Zorba,'' a musical described by the

Page 8 NEW MEXICO LOBO

Car·npus Briefs

Recruits (continued from page 7)

Beginning with Highland High-Albuquerque prepster John Fifield, King and staff then signed Mark Saiers, 6·5 scoring ace from crosstown Manzano and also signed Gabriel Nava, a 6-2 scoring star who averaged 20.4 points per game last season for El Paso-Austin high school,

Film Fare Friday evening's film fare will

be "The Fixer," starring Alan Bates, Dirk Bogarde and Hugh Griffith. "The Fixer'', based on the novel of the same name by Bernard Malamud, is the story of a falsely imprisoned Jew in Czarist Russia who demands he be tried to prove his innocence.

The movie will be shown at 7 and 10 p.m. in the Union theater. Admission is 50 cents.

Brass Ensemble The New Mexico Brass

Ensemble will offer selections by various composers Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. in the Fine Arts Recital Hall.

Performing will be James Whitlot and Bonnie Hu:;tler, trumpet; Wayne Sharp, french horn; David Frazier, iTombone; and Jeff Nelson, tuha.

The recital is free and open to the public.

Summer Tutoring Tutors are needed for a

volunteer summer project sponsored by the Mid-North Valley Community Center and the Albuquerque Public Schools.

The program lasts six weeks, and classes for elementary school age children meet twice a week, Tuesday and Thursday, from 9 to 11 a.m. The program will cover regular academic subjects.

Information on the program is available from the Mid-North Valley Community Center, 344-2412 or 344-2719.

Recreation Program The UNM children's summer

recreation program will be June ·

Summer Lobo CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING RATES: $1.00 for the first four lines, 10¢ Jler additional line.

DEADLINE: Noon Wednesday TERMS: Cash

1) PERSONALS - -

HELl' the bayonet victims! ClruJ<; suit u;:minst Guartl is CCJ;1tin?. $UOOO. Send rontributions to "'Bloody l>~rldny" e/o At ... t()!"lley Levy, 3624 1\Ienaul NE. Contribu­tionr? returned if w~ win. PC'UCI:!"!

'="---TUTOR NEEDED-Spanish 252. Review

for course credit te;t. Preferably grad student. Call Kane Gr039 at 277-2953 be­tween 7-11 p.m.

ALL WORK submitted to the THUNDER­BffiD during the previous year may now be picked up at Rm, 206 J()urnalism Bldg. 9 n.m.-4 p.m., Mon.-Fri.

3) SERVICES COLLEGE INN BARBERSHOP-sum­

mer hours: Tues.-Fri. 9:30-5:30. Satur­day 8:30-5:30. Long hair is welcome. 303 Ash NE. Phone 243-003.

4) FORRENT APARTMENT for quiet University boy.

Bedroom, kitchen and bath, $50 mo. utilities pnld, 11 blocks from Unlv, 243-0209.

5) FORSALE NO BARK, NO BITE, LOTS OF SPEED.

Greyhound Puppies. Make your quick l!'etnway for $15 with puppy gbots. 265-6548.

GARAGE SALE: Tent, baby equipment, women•s & baby• clothes, furniture, mis­cellaneous items, GlO Dartmouth NE, Sat. June 27, 9 a.m. on.

PURSES, SANDALS, L E A THE R CLOTHES & JEWELRY, Things Open, 2000 Central SE.

MALAMUTE-GREAT PYRENEE PUP­PIES. Both male & female. All shots 1<lven, $25, •rwo puppies free (Great Pyrenees 'not father), Call 256-0688 after 5·p.m.

200 USED TVa. All styles. $15 up. We buy & sell portables, working or not. Also used furniture. 441 Wyoming NE. 255-5987.

MIRAGE-Parts I & II now on sal<> $2 each or by subscription. Journalism Bldg. Rm. 205, 9 n.m.-4 p,Jll,

FOR THE AUGUST GRADUATE, excel· lent gift. New 14kt. white gold, 17 jewel, ladies watch, with 10 single cut diamonds, Coat $87.50; now $65, Call 247-2545 or 243-3349.

6) EMPLOYMEN'f TEACHERS WANTED. Entire West. Good

salaries. Southwest Teachers Ageney, 1~03 Central NE. Our 24th )•enr Pindng teachers.

ATTENTION STUDEN1'S- Need a Jew students for display & delivery work. I<'ull or part time. Good pay. For interview appt, call 277-2531. •

NEED wom: ? J<'ull or Pnrt-tlme. Good PaY J Call 265-6~2~.

7) MISCELLANEO"Uf:i MINIBIICES. KARTS. l' ARTS. · Albuquer­

\tue 1\rlniblko & Kni't1 4609 Lomru~ Dlvd. NE. 268-8250.

22 to August 5 for children ages 5·12. The program will include both educational and recreational activities in and out of doors. Ft;t! more information, conta<'t the activities center in the Union, 277-4706.

Benefit Films Two films on the day to day

life of the Vietnamese "People's War" (produced by Newsreel) and "A Day of Plane Hunting," will be shown Sunday evening.

The films are sponsored by the New Mexico Venceremos Brigade and the UNM chapter of Women's Liberation.

The films will be shown at 7 p.m. at the International Center, and at 9 p.m. at .the home of Bainbridge Bunting, 5021 Guadalupe N.W.

Admission is $1.50 and will go toward expenses of the Venceremos Brigade which is sponsoring student excursions to Cuba to work harvesting cane.

July 4 Holiday All campus offices and facilities

will be closed Friday, July 3 for July 4 weekend.

Classes will resume July 6.

Nine UNM students have been installed as members of Pi Kappa Lambda, national music honor society.

Students honored were Dennis Eppich, Norbert Osterreich, Diane Siegel, John Cad·y, Lavinia Livingston, Donna Madhosingh, Kathleen McVicker, Karin Pugh and Georgia Neun.

John R. Green, UNM physicist, has been awarded a $48,100 research grant by the National Science Foundation,

The grant will finance a continuation of Green's studies into dielectric properties and phase transformations in plastic solids,

The grant renewal becomes effective June 15 and 1·uns for approximately two years.

In Jeffersonville, Indiana, 605 Bob Watkins ;yas shooting 51.8 per cent from the field for a 24.0 scoring average last eeas.:>n. Watkins also will attend New Mexico.

Devoted to Basketball King, Ellenberger and Johnston

show their devotion to basketball early every summer by hosting teenage yo\lths fro:m Nevada to Iowa for the Bob King Basketball Camp. This summer, there were two sessions, one June 7-13, the other June 14-20.

Located at Vallecito Lake, Colorado, 20 miles north of Durango, the camp was placed at Scottie's resort on the lakeside.

Those enrolling for the camp receive housing, meals and excellent facilities for $108.00, tuition inclusive. Boys eligible to enroll include all boys who will be entering the 8th through 12th grades and no boy who has graduated from high school will be accepted. In 1969, the camp was forced to turn away ov~r 100 would·be enrollees, due mainly to the crowd.ed conditions that would have ensued.

Each day the camp saw two morning hours and two afternoon hours of basketball fundamentals and application, as well as an ho1•r of lecture and another hour of watching films of college games followed by another chalk-talk.

King, the camp's head instructor, boasted a college coaching record of 145-66 and a high school record of 205-75 when camp commenced June 7. King's philosophy in the camp is "go from the bottom up"-We begin the camp assuming that the participant has no prior knowledge of basketball fundamentals."

King, Ellenberger and Johnston will be taking a brief rest before plotting out the plans for the 1970-71 Lobo Basketball.

The motion pic~ure that will melt your colate bar.

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stamng

Brian • Ernest • Suzanne Keith Borgnine Pleshette

,. •t""'sTom Eweii·Bradford Dillman Ivan Dixon·Arthur O'Connell• Don Ameche

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.,. ----~·-·--··----------------- ------·----

Thursday, June 25, 1970

NO BARK, NO S'ITE, LOTS OF~ --

GENUINE GREYHOUND PUPPIES . . $ M/U::E. YOUR QUICK f£fAYAY FO~ 152> WI~ S-1015

265·6548

"HOW TO SUCCEED WITH SEX"

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Starting Fxicl.ay ·· .. f' (1'

7:.30 9:00 10:00 COLOR

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fEATUilE AT

Mon. thru Thurs. 7 :25-D :·15 Pri. 7:40-10:00

Sat. & Sun. 12:35-2:ii5-5:15-7:40·10:00

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Thursday,

July 2, 1970

Vol. 73 No. 146

Students Query Candidate King

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Bruce King Tuesday night said he favored term appointments for state university regents, and said he would "consider" a student for the two UNM Regents slots soon to be vacant,

King, and running mate Bob Mondragon, fielded questions on chicano problems, the University, and state response to the Indochina war at a Free University sponsored discussion which attracted an audience of 100.

"It would be entirely different if regents served at the pleasure of the governor. We should keep appointments for definite terms of office, I believe in the complete autonomy of the University," King said.

In discussing the replacement of two UNM Regents whose terms expire soon, King said he would "consider a student or an educator."

"We will have to find someone workable with the faculty, students and the general community. That will be hard," he said.

A majority of the questions directed to King and Mondragon during the hour and a half long session concerned chicano problems in the state including settlement of land grant title disputes, bi-lingual education in the pub lie schools, and the appointment of Charles Graham to the presidency of New Mexico Highlands University (NMHU).

Land Grant Study Mondragon said he favored

establishment of a study commission that would include in its makeup "heirs of descendents or heirs to the Spanish land grants" to review land grant claims.

"If the land has been taken under false pretenses, or stolen there should be compensation," he said.

Questioned on whether he would appoint a chicano to the U.S. Senate if Sen. Clinton

Anderson retired, King said he would "prefer to use a special election" rather than appoint a man to fill the vacated seat.

King said he would enforce the constitutional provision requiring p"ublic schools teachers to be bilingual "where needed."

"Perhaps there will not be sufficient (qualified) teachers at the beginning," King said.

Highlands Presidency Mondragon said he was "let

down" because the Highlands regents "went out of the state" to appoint a president.

Charles Graham, a Wisconsin State University administrator, was appointed to the NMHU presidency late in the spring amid charges of ethnic discrimination against a Spanish-American up for the position, John Aragon, director of the Cultural Awareness Center at UNM.

"I am let down because the regents went out of the state. It was not necessary they appoint a Spanish-American. The first consideration should have been somebody who knew about the problems in New Mexico, and , particularly northern New Mexico.

"If Aragon was equally or better qualified and they did not appoint him on the basis of his race, it was wrong," Mondragon said.

Touching on the Indochina war, King said he "personally felt the war was wrong," but said he did not have "as complete a knowledge" of the situation as the nation'alleadership.

"If the Supreme Court finds the Massachusetts draft bill constitutional, I favor a similar law for New Mexico," King said.

The law passed by the Massachusetts legislature forbids servicemen drafted from the state to serve in an "constitutional" war. It is being tested in the courts.

Upon the conclusion of the session King was presented with two fishing poles made of wood and string.

Lobo photo., Gubernatorial candidate Bruce

King talked about his position on chicano problems, the University, and clean industry in a Free University lecture Tuesday night.

July 3 Holiday Due to the July 4 holiday, no classes will be held

Friday, July 3. All University administrative offices and libraries will be closed through Sunday.

Classes and regular office hours will resume Monday.

Actors Quit Broadway to InnoVate

By CONNIE ADCOX

The Blue Dome theater group was founded when its originators became "completely bored with straight theater."

The group, now with 11 members, formed in New York in 1967 after members had studied with Stella Adler, tried the Stanislowski method and worked as extras in "Naked City," and in on and off Broadway shows .

Mark Margolis, spokesman and one of the founders of the group, said "straight theater is too limiting."

"You have to run around six months out of the year to get into a play. This way you can be in. a play all year around.

Blue Dome Rehearses

Blue Dome Group Uses Plastics, Dance

"We really dig what we are doing and wouldn't want to go back to regular stuff," he said.

The Blue Dome experiments with ways to combine technology and theater, by utiiizing plastic forms and modules controlled by performers with rear screen lighting used as a backdrop. The style of the group comes across as dance theater. '

The Blue Dome was initially influenced by the "people who did happenings in the early 60's which was primarily a 'painter's theater'," Margolis said. "Painter's theater" is people who were rejected by the theater as directors so expressed their ideas by making happenings in Pop Art

and Op Art, an extension of painting, he said.

"The Blue Dome was inspired to use their media by observing that the colored screens on their apartment windows looked cool and went from there to combine the plastic forms with theater," Jackie Margolis, co-founder, said.

The group now holds a membership of 11 people with 5 of them present in Albuquerque, including Susan Solomon, and Thomas and Patricia Hilmer. The Blue Dome was invited to perform in. Albuquerque by the Albuquerque Theater Lab.

Jackie is "sort of the director, conceiving alot of the plays" with members contributing ideas as they go along, Margolis said.

Lobo Photo by Plilul Wilson

The three women of the five member Albuquerque contingent of the Blue Dome experimental theater group rehearse with plastic forms in their warehouse workshop.

Many of the plays are based on astro-logy like "Special to Sagittarius." The 'Winter Dialogue' was done completely in Japanese with three Japanese actors, in an attempt to capture the quality of foreign films. The group would later like to go into films doing some of the same things that they do in the . .. plays, he satd.

The Blue Dome has received assistance from the Kaplan Foundation in New York and in the spring toured colleges in the East. It will be appearing in the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival at the end of July and the directors are currently waiting to see if they can get an engagement in Mexico.

We are considering staying in New Mexico for a festival in Taos if anyone is willing to donate a place in the mountains where five people can work in relative seclusion. We hop2 to go to Japan or Europe next year to perform," he said.

The group is currently working on a new play called "Terrain" and performed "The Conquest of.. Mexico" at the UNM ballroom June 30 and July 1. The group chose to do "The Conquest of Mexico" after reading a book by Antonin Artaud which contained an outline of the script. The Blue Dome also conducted workshops for professional performers and students as guests of Albuquerque Theater Lab headed by Anne Kirshner.

· One critic said that if Antonin Artaud had seen the Blue Dome's production of "The Conquest of Mexico" he would have been very uncomfortable in his grave. A Blue Dome menlber commented, "if Artaud were given a pipe of opium he would have grooved on the whole scene."

..