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'RUM AND COCA-COLA' IS OUT THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, December 1. l970 Big changes are coming in Latin America By Jorge Bustamante A U.S. reporter, recenUy returned from Latin America, gave a reveaUng account of his encounter with local poUUcos: the reporter asked why democracy never seemed to "work* south- of-the-border. Is really very simple - we have yet to get the U.S. ambassador to run In our elections! From bitter experience we have found around here. Perhaps you could talk to htm about It?* The American reporter was correct In seeing this ironic America — political, social and Cuban RevoluUon began In e tlon of American companies was proceeding rapidly and was greeted with enthusiasm elsewhere on the Continent. The possibility of a wave of natlonallza-' by In Vietnam.) (not I I all • governments which would he less open to American Investment had become a real danger. Following the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion In the spring of 1961, the US government moved quickly on two Ironts to stem the tide of revolutionary agitation. On the one hand an "Alliance for Progress" was proposed, with a founding Conference held at Punta 1961. This Alliance wa * USA. And when you look back over the last ten years ofUS-LatlnAmer- Ican relations, the patterns and problems that emerge are food During the summer of 1960. lt became apparent that the traditional relations between the US and Latin America were about to development of Latin A through US private Inv projects. On the other 1 tries. Their role was to prevent the successful waging of a guerrilla war. such as had just taken place In Cuba (and less onvious- see that both of these policies have been disasters for Washington. President Richard M. Nixon has declared the Alliance for Progress a "failure," confirming the judgment of experts who have seen the program limp along over the decade. The antl-guerrllla warfare program has had limited vara in Bolivia In 1967 being Its high point. But the focus of guerrilla activities has now shifted to urban areas, wheredarlngkidnappings of officials and bank evident sympathy of large sectors of the population. One group, the 'Tupamaro Commandos" In Uruguay, have been particularly successful In ■ eluding capture, although the e and tryslde a '.•1 in i li the Army and squads of. secret ■anti-Communist Commandos." Indeed, the Intensity of political repression In Brazil has pointed up another embarrassment for the US - besides the economic fallings of the Alliance, the social and political ;. The n !S (reported by o Is now The ( if Dr. I ;, like Bra all's carrying food to the port of Recife must have armed guards aboard to prevent looting by the starving In the towns along the route. A legal form of slavery has actually developed In Brazil — the starving put their 'X's' on labor contracts and are shipped Into the tracts are often put up for ai tlon to the highest bidder, I plantation guards carry subn stay tl -JJtdlU Those who can escape such rondltlons flood to the cities and Incamp In the surrounding villa nlserla (often the city dump). American companies like ESSO r the which o In Latin America, find It Incomprehensible that they are now being held up as- responsible for the continuation of these conditions. But It Is not too hard to see that If big corporations can ride roughshod over local feelings In, say, Santa Barbara, then they could have almostnoconcern at all In the 'banana republics" where the wishes of the local populace count for nothing. When President Nixon closed the era of the •Alliance,' he told the Latins that they should rely more on themselves for their future. They were prophetic words. For whether Initiated by guerrilla warfare, elections or coup The days ol 'rum and Coca- Cola," the "manana* mentality, If they ever really existed, are rapidly drawing to a close. THE DISTAFF REBELLION By Jeanne Strang 'People should not be slaves; women are people too!' • • . ie of the slogans used ruled by a military junta (whom some Argentines mockingly call the 'gorillas*) and, a return to parliamentary elections seems unlikely In the near future. There have been military takeovers In Peru and Bolivia, as well, but these have taken a slightly 'left" turn; unlike Brazil and Argentina, to encourage the safety of US capital, the Peruvian and Bolivian generals have nationalized American-owned oil wells (ESSO and Shell) In a gesture which has Riven them both popular support and a public sector and their policy, of course, is the continued existence of the Cuban Revolution - theCastrogovernmenthas been able to weather the worst part of thc storm, and while It is surely not going to be srnooth sailing for a long time (the tight US economic blockade of Cuba will remain in effect), American analysts now believe it Is clear both that Castro has the support of the majority of the population seems likely for the mld-seven- tles. This would be bad news enough for Washington. If It were not for the fact that the cultural Isolation of Cuba from the rest of the Continent, which the US was able to enforce In the early i. is now breaking down. that the majority c this country I d byti o farming. Agrarian systems needed .workers to be profitable so the number of children per family, In the 1600s, ranged from id children i e this land was i, by the time this country of economics, religion and law. Tradition Following a Judeo-Christian high. d In tt country, religion tried to keep women subservient and faithful to But St. Paul advocated that men and women should marry because performed within marriage. However, males had the social power to successfully keep their wives locked upwhllethey visited prostitutes at their discretion. Women kidnaped Some of the early settlers left England after attitudes toward trcmely oppressive. Others came to America to escape debt or I religions of most colonists were based on a bellefinorlglnal sin and predestination. 'Next to common law, the most potent subordinate position was religion," wrote Miss Flexner In her Miss Flexner added that although Ihe colonists were dissenters from the Church of England, all agreed that women were limited in mind and body. Women, they ! t (or II Allende to a President of Chile ha; popular support In an open election for this socialist program, Allende has renewed Chile's re- Peru are soon likely to follow Chile's example. This will enable the Cubans to make contact more easily with all those elements in these countries which see In Cuba a model for tacldlng their own problems of unemployment, disease, illiteracy and cultural backwardness. And, Indeed, the problems are enormous - the annual population Increase In most Latin American countries is Urge enough to wipe out any advance In real GNP. Inflation Once settled I suffered 'civil death,' having no right to property and no legal to 'use up" five wives or more before he died. Women oftendled before they were 30 from too many chlldblrths and too much manual labor. This country needed a population to *grow up", so reUglon, society, laws and the governments ensured, through force and coercion, that women fulfilled their roles as reproducUon ma- could not divorce her husband If he had sexual relations wllh a single girl or a prosUtute. New York state. Just recently, rescinded adultery as the only grounds for divorce. (ConUnued on page 7, Col. 1) of Eve. Women whipped Some religions advocated the beating of wives If they did not yield graciously to the wishes of Ihe husband. In some instances, .men to beat their wives regularly to Instill the proper attitude In Women, they believed, were the husband's or father's chattel, and If they did not show the proper respect for the male, they husband's or father's death. The ownership was passed on to the oldest male In the family. No divorce Divorce was out of the question. Women could not divorce without permission. In some areas a woman could divorce her husband for aduUery because adultery Is defined In religion as ivlng sexual relations Frost gets non-retention notice staff of the English Department (Continued from Page 1) that the chairman of the department is Involved In all personnel matters. Without Dr. Zumwalt present I would have been In violation of the consultative proet, Rea re- *(3) Acting Dean Rea expressed the judgment that there was nothing Professor Frost has done t with r 3 give Ing non-retention, and I still don't have them. tenured Engllsh faculty who did go Into see Rea Individually, and put them all together, you get some pretty Irresponsible reasons for his recommendation." yesterday to Ihe Dally Collegian, which was sent to Baxter on Nov. 23 by Zumwalt detailing the reports given him by faculty who met with Rea on an Individual "In their reports of those dls- that Acting Dean Rea expressed the following reasons for his recommendation not to reappoint Professor Frost: ■(1) On the whole Acting Dean Rea agrees with the department's evaluation of Professor Frost's professional qualifications and abilities, but he asserts that, the department could 'do bet- could hire a man with less qualifications who would be a better faculty member if he had a better image. *(2) The college cannot afford to keep Professor Frost because his political Image Is damaging Image, but he was the sort of person who eventually would. *(4) Acting Dean Rea caught a passing glimpse of Professor Frost (last spring) addressing students at a pubUc meeting. He says that faculty members should not address such pubUc meetings; they should not encourage students to do anything about their complaints; they risk the danger that, however responsible they might be, their remarks might lead to Irresponsible student action. Poeple believe Professor Frost has sltrred trouble, that lt might not be the whole story that Professor Frost cautioned students against violent and foolish behavior, but lt is difficult to prove these things. "(5) In regard to Professor Frost's right to speak out on Issues, Acting Dean Rea says viable position at the present ttme. Professor Frost's making public statements about matters of controversy Is wrong. No faculty member should ever do this because lt damages our public Image. No faculty member should write letters to editors about mailers of college or public controversy. "(6) It Is wrong to ever discuss faculty or campus controversies with students, either In or out by the President, and Professor *(7) Professor Frost haa been engaged indraft counselling. Acting Dean Rea says that there is nothing Improper or illegal about draft couselllng, and that it has been a belt to the college administration, but lt is wrong for any faculty member to do draft counselling on the grounds thatlt damages the college's pubUc Image because the public thinks draft counselling Is an aid to draft dodging. A faculty member Women are people A few religions, i Quakers, did allowwc In their own destinies equal rights, hut they usually did not survive the governmental persecutions. The Ideology of these groups was just too strange for the Puritans to accept. Most horrible to the Puritans was the fact that some groups actually allowed women to vote! Anne Hutchinson shocked the Puritans when she challenged the Puritan theocracy of Boston by advocating that women be allowed to have a voice In church affairs. Miss Flexner pointed o ened man. This lone male was a champion fighter for human rights and human dignity. Tom Paine was probably the first to describe and condemn the posl- "Even In countries where they may be esteemed the most happy, constrained In their desires in the disposal of ..their goods, robbed of freedom and will by the laws, the slaves of opinion, which rules them with absolute sway and construes the slightest appearances Into guilt; surrounded on all "I by judges, who are at once and 11 of religion and Miss Hutchinson asked that she be given the chance to think for herself about God. The Puritans said she was attacking religion and thereby attacking the state. For this violation of authority she was put on trial. The trial was a mockery since she was not allowed to Introduce evidence in her own defense. The revolutionary woman was ordered to leave the colony for this brazen defiance. Later when her followers joined her to hear her preachings, the church ex- Enlightened man ' One /efreshlng voice In the wilderness of the malei for power came from on tyran Who d< Paine could have written those words today for they still ring true and the Injustices have not been righted yet. Erasable equality- Women began to take a baby step for equality. The laws had not changed, but a few men, exposed to various other religious life styles, began to throw a few crumbs of freedom to their slaves. Some fathers and husbands started to educate the women. A few communities opened ■suitable for women to learn* schools. A few even allowed them to'enter "boys* schools. But these were token gifts and the men could cancel the privileges at any Ume tfiey chose. However, as the colonists began to fight for their freedom they needed the women to win In'----~- s light, i is began to change. The idea was spreading that If man should be free and equal - why not women too! Women, today, are shedding the 'feminine mystique'and quite a few enlightened men are shedding the "masculine mysUque.* -Reprinted from The Spartan Dally San Jose State CoU<-ge Job, and would not have been worried If he hadn't been guilty of something. •(12) Professor Frost and the department had objected so strongly to the allegation that Professor Frost had been involved In a piano burning Ust year that he was beginning to think there might be something to the story after all: 'Where ■ *(13) It Is necessary to 'clean house' because of public hostility toward higher educaUon, and trary. capricious, illegal, not In keeping with tbe standards of tbe profeaslon and not in keeping with the minimal standards of the AAUP (Association of American University Professors). 1 feel the Baxter administration has concealed InformaUon. It has repeatedly refused requests for meetings to discuss Everett Frost's case, and on the basis of the information this depart- *(8) Faculty members should not discuss college business and especially college controversy In the classroom even when such by the stu; dents. Professor Frost has done "■(9) Professor Frost has been engaged In political and organizational activities that should disqualify him from being retained; Acting Dean Rea stated that Professor Frost was 'free, white, and 21', and should be smart enough to curb his political activities to protect his Job. Acting Dean Rea refuses to describe these activities. Acting Dean Rea says that the Department knows all about these activities, but did not report them because the department approves. Acting Dean Rea says the formal departmental evaluations of Professor Frost are meaningless fictions. He said that tenured members held back InformaUon because they were afraid of being sued; so their evaluations were untrustworthy. *(10) In regard to favorable Frost, Acting Dean Rea says that students have no right to be interested In college personnel matters, and ought not to make evaluations of faculty. Student evaluations are Irrelevant. *(11) Professor Frost had a guilty conscience. When Professor Frost came in with his chairman to witness the Dean's actions regarding retention he such people as Professor Frost. •(14) After the Acting Dean's recommendation had been made. Acting Dean Rea says that Pro- fessor Frost was wrong to mention his non-retention to students.* Zumwalt concluded the memorandum by saying, *In considering this memorandum, President Baxter should know that these expressions of Acting Dean RoVs reasons came from the careful reports of a number of tenured faculty members. They are exact and responsible reports repeated by so many men that their validity cannot be questioned.... Professor Frost has not been given substantive due process. Rea, Baxter, and Schorllng could not be reached yesterday by the Dally Collegian for com- a fair oi unity either to hear the charges exactly stated or to reply to them.* Zumwalt said yesterday, "I made by the administration not to retain Everett Frost. 4 feel given by the Acting ' Dean of lh CAR INSURANCE DUE? COMPARE CLARK V. CARRIKER Immediate CASH! 50% Sell your used books up TO (IF BEING USED DURING SPRING "EMESTER) FSC BOOKSTORE Lower level Win a Ski Week at JACKSON HOLE fc with Suzy Chaffee and Pepi Stiegler Imagine skiing the "Gentle Giant," Jackson Hole, with Suzy Chaffee and Pepi Steigler. It's pari of SALOMON SKI BINDING'S special college contest. Includes round-trip air fare from your hometown to Jackson Hole, room, all meals, lift tickets, lessons and a free pair of SALOMON SKI BINDINGS! Glamorous former U.S. Ski Team member Suzy and Olympic gold medalist Pepi will be there for personal instruction or just fun-skiing. Enter today. •b. am 1 10 UK SALOMON BINDINGS v. .cW AHH~.. ^Stam "'JEST^AaVj;SKI COMPANY
Object Description
Title | 1970_12 The Daily Collegian December 1970 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | December 1, 1970 Pg 6-7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1970 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | 'RUM AND COCA-COLA' IS OUT THE DAILY COLLEGIAN Tueaday, December 1. l970 Big changes are coming in Latin America By Jorge Bustamante A U.S. reporter, recenUy returned from Latin America, gave a reveaUng account of his encounter with local poUUcos: the reporter asked why democracy never seemed to "work* south- of-the-border. Is really very simple - we have yet to get the U.S. ambassador to run In our elections! From bitter experience we have found around here. Perhaps you could talk to htm about It?* The American reporter was correct In seeing this ironic America — political, social and Cuban RevoluUon began In e tlon of American companies was proceeding rapidly and was greeted with enthusiasm elsewhere on the Continent. The possibility of a wave of natlonallza-' by In Vietnam.) (not I I all • governments which would he less open to American Investment had become a real danger. Following the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion In the spring of 1961, the US government moved quickly on two Ironts to stem the tide of revolutionary agitation. On the one hand an "Alliance for Progress" was proposed, with a founding Conference held at Punta 1961. This Alliance wa * USA. And when you look back over the last ten years ofUS-LatlnAmer- Ican relations, the patterns and problems that emerge are food During the summer of 1960. lt became apparent that the traditional relations between the US and Latin America were about to development of Latin A through US private Inv projects. On the other 1 tries. Their role was to prevent the successful waging of a guerrilla war. such as had just taken place In Cuba (and less onvious- see that both of these policies have been disasters for Washington. President Richard M. Nixon has declared the Alliance for Progress a "failure," confirming the judgment of experts who have seen the program limp along over the decade. The antl-guerrllla warfare program has had limited vara in Bolivia In 1967 being Its high point. But the focus of guerrilla activities has now shifted to urban areas, wheredarlngkidnappings of officials and bank evident sympathy of large sectors of the population. One group, the 'Tupamaro Commandos" In Uruguay, have been particularly successful In ■ eluding capture, although the e and tryslde a '.•1 in i li the Army and squads of. secret ■anti-Communist Commandos." Indeed, the Intensity of political repression In Brazil has pointed up another embarrassment for the US - besides the economic fallings of the Alliance, the social and political ;. The n !S (reported by o Is now The ( if Dr. I ;, like Bra all's carrying food to the port of Recife must have armed guards aboard to prevent looting by the starving In the towns along the route. A legal form of slavery has actually developed In Brazil — the starving put their 'X's' on labor contracts and are shipped Into the tracts are often put up for ai tlon to the highest bidder, I plantation guards carry subn stay tl -JJtdlU Those who can escape such rondltlons flood to the cities and Incamp In the surrounding villa nlserla (often the city dump). American companies like ESSO r the which o In Latin America, find It Incomprehensible that they are now being held up as- responsible for the continuation of these conditions. But It Is not too hard to see that If big corporations can ride roughshod over local feelings In, say, Santa Barbara, then they could have almostnoconcern at all In the 'banana republics" where the wishes of the local populace count for nothing. When President Nixon closed the era of the •Alliance,' he told the Latins that they should rely more on themselves for their future. They were prophetic words. For whether Initiated by guerrilla warfare, elections or coup The days ol 'rum and Coca- Cola," the "manana* mentality, If they ever really existed, are rapidly drawing to a close. THE DISTAFF REBELLION By Jeanne Strang 'People should not be slaves; women are people too!' • • . ie of the slogans used ruled by a military junta (whom some Argentines mockingly call the 'gorillas*) and, a return to parliamentary elections seems unlikely In the near future. There have been military takeovers In Peru and Bolivia, as well, but these have taken a slightly 'left" turn; unlike Brazil and Argentina, to encourage the safety of US capital, the Peruvian and Bolivian generals have nationalized American-owned oil wells (ESSO and Shell) In a gesture which has Riven them both popular support and a public sector and their policy, of course, is the continued existence of the Cuban Revolution - theCastrogovernmenthas been able to weather the worst part of thc storm, and while It is surely not going to be srnooth sailing for a long time (the tight US economic blockade of Cuba will remain in effect), American analysts now believe it Is clear both that Castro has the support of the majority of the population seems likely for the mld-seven- tles. This would be bad news enough for Washington. If It were not for the fact that the cultural Isolation of Cuba from the rest of the Continent, which the US was able to enforce In the early i. is now breaking down. that the majority c this country I d byti o farming. Agrarian systems needed .workers to be profitable so the number of children per family, In the 1600s, ranged from id children i e this land was i, by the time this country of economics, religion and law. Tradition Following a Judeo-Christian high. d In tt country, religion tried to keep women subservient and faithful to But St. Paul advocated that men and women should marry because performed within marriage. However, males had the social power to successfully keep their wives locked upwhllethey visited prostitutes at their discretion. Women kidnaped Some of the early settlers left England after attitudes toward trcmely oppressive. Others came to America to escape debt or I religions of most colonists were based on a bellefinorlglnal sin and predestination. 'Next to common law, the most potent subordinate position was religion," wrote Miss Flexner In her Miss Flexner added that although Ihe colonists were dissenters from the Church of England, all agreed that women were limited in mind and body. Women, they ! t (or II Allende to a President of Chile ha; popular support In an open election for this socialist program, Allende has renewed Chile's re- Peru are soon likely to follow Chile's example. This will enable the Cubans to make contact more easily with all those elements in these countries which see In Cuba a model for tacldlng their own problems of unemployment, disease, illiteracy and cultural backwardness. And, Indeed, the problems are enormous - the annual population Increase In most Latin American countries is Urge enough to wipe out any advance In real GNP. Inflation Once settled I suffered 'civil death,' having no right to property and no legal to 'use up" five wives or more before he died. Women oftendled before they were 30 from too many chlldblrths and too much manual labor. This country needed a population to *grow up", so reUglon, society, laws and the governments ensured, through force and coercion, that women fulfilled their roles as reproducUon ma- could not divorce her husband If he had sexual relations wllh a single girl or a prosUtute. New York state. Just recently, rescinded adultery as the only grounds for divorce. (ConUnued on page 7, Col. 1) of Eve. Women whipped Some religions advocated the beating of wives If they did not yield graciously to the wishes of Ihe husband. In some instances, .men to beat their wives regularly to Instill the proper attitude In Women, they believed, were the husband's or father's chattel, and If they did not show the proper respect for the male, they husband's or father's death. The ownership was passed on to the oldest male In the family. No divorce Divorce was out of the question. Women could not divorce without permission. In some areas a woman could divorce her husband for aduUery because adultery Is defined In religion as ivlng sexual relations Frost gets non-retention notice staff of the English Department (Continued from Page 1) that the chairman of the department is Involved In all personnel matters. Without Dr. Zumwalt present I would have been In violation of the consultative proet, Rea re- *(3) Acting Dean Rea expressed the judgment that there was nothing Professor Frost has done t with r 3 give Ing non-retention, and I still don't have them. tenured Engllsh faculty who did go Into see Rea Individually, and put them all together, you get some pretty Irresponsible reasons for his recommendation." yesterday to Ihe Dally Collegian, which was sent to Baxter on Nov. 23 by Zumwalt detailing the reports given him by faculty who met with Rea on an Individual "In their reports of those dls- that Acting Dean Rea expressed the following reasons for his recommendation not to reappoint Professor Frost: ■(1) On the whole Acting Dean Rea agrees with the department's evaluation of Professor Frost's professional qualifications and abilities, but he asserts that, the department could 'do bet- could hire a man with less qualifications who would be a better faculty member if he had a better image. *(2) The college cannot afford to keep Professor Frost because his political Image Is damaging Image, but he was the sort of person who eventually would. *(4) Acting Dean Rea caught a passing glimpse of Professor Frost (last spring) addressing students at a pubUc meeting. He says that faculty members should not address such pubUc meetings; they should not encourage students to do anything about their complaints; they risk the danger that, however responsible they might be, their remarks might lead to Irresponsible student action. Poeple believe Professor Frost has sltrred trouble, that lt might not be the whole story that Professor Frost cautioned students against violent and foolish behavior, but lt is difficult to prove these things. "(5) In regard to Professor Frost's right to speak out on Issues, Acting Dean Rea says viable position at the present ttme. Professor Frost's making public statements about matters of controversy Is wrong. No faculty member should ever do this because lt damages our public Image. No faculty member should write letters to editors about mailers of college or public controversy. "(6) It Is wrong to ever discuss faculty or campus controversies with students, either In or out by the President, and Professor *(7) Professor Frost haa been engaged indraft counselling. Acting Dean Rea says that there is nothing Improper or illegal about draft couselllng, and that it has been a belt to the college administration, but lt is wrong for any faculty member to do draft counselling on the grounds thatlt damages the college's pubUc Image because the public thinks draft counselling Is an aid to draft dodging. A faculty member Women are people A few religions, i Quakers, did allowwc In their own destinies equal rights, hut they usually did not survive the governmental persecutions. The Ideology of these groups was just too strange for the Puritans to accept. Most horrible to the Puritans was the fact that some groups actually allowed women to vote! Anne Hutchinson shocked the Puritans when she challenged the Puritan theocracy of Boston by advocating that women be allowed to have a voice In church affairs. Miss Flexner pointed o ened man. This lone male was a champion fighter for human rights and human dignity. Tom Paine was probably the first to describe and condemn the posl- "Even In countries where they may be esteemed the most happy, constrained In their desires in the disposal of ..their goods, robbed of freedom and will by the laws, the slaves of opinion, which rules them with absolute sway and construes the slightest appearances Into guilt; surrounded on all "I by judges, who are at once and 11 of religion and Miss Hutchinson asked that she be given the chance to think for herself about God. The Puritans said she was attacking religion and thereby attacking the state. For this violation of authority she was put on trial. The trial was a mockery since she was not allowed to Introduce evidence in her own defense. The revolutionary woman was ordered to leave the colony for this brazen defiance. Later when her followers joined her to hear her preachings, the church ex- Enlightened man ' One /efreshlng voice In the wilderness of the malei for power came from on tyran Who d< Paine could have written those words today for they still ring true and the Injustices have not been righted yet. Erasable equality- Women began to take a baby step for equality. The laws had not changed, but a few men, exposed to various other religious life styles, began to throw a few crumbs of freedom to their slaves. Some fathers and husbands started to educate the women. A few communities opened ■suitable for women to learn* schools. A few even allowed them to'enter "boys* schools. But these were token gifts and the men could cancel the privileges at any Ume tfiey chose. However, as the colonists began to fight for their freedom they needed the women to win In'----~- s light, i is began to change. The idea was spreading that If man should be free and equal - why not women too! Women, today, are shedding the 'feminine mystique'and quite a few enlightened men are shedding the "masculine mysUque.* -Reprinted from The Spartan Dally San Jose State CoU<-ge Job, and would not have been worried If he hadn't been guilty of something. •(12) Professor Frost and the department had objected so strongly to the allegation that Professor Frost had been involved In a piano burning Ust year that he was beginning to think there might be something to the story after all: 'Where ■ *(13) It Is necessary to 'clean house' because of public hostility toward higher educaUon, and trary. capricious, illegal, not In keeping with tbe standards of tbe profeaslon and not in keeping with the minimal standards of the AAUP (Association of American University Professors). 1 feel the Baxter administration has concealed InformaUon. It has repeatedly refused requests for meetings to discuss Everett Frost's case, and on the basis of the information this depart- *(8) Faculty members should not discuss college business and especially college controversy In the classroom even when such by the stu; dents. Professor Frost has done "■(9) Professor Frost has been engaged In political and organizational activities that should disqualify him from being retained; Acting Dean Rea stated that Professor Frost was 'free, white, and 21', and should be smart enough to curb his political activities to protect his Job. Acting Dean Rea refuses to describe these activities. Acting Dean Rea says that the Department knows all about these activities, but did not report them because the department approves. Acting Dean Rea says the formal departmental evaluations of Professor Frost are meaningless fictions. He said that tenured members held back InformaUon because they were afraid of being sued; so their evaluations were untrustworthy. *(10) In regard to favorable Frost, Acting Dean Rea says that students have no right to be interested In college personnel matters, and ought not to make evaluations of faculty. Student evaluations are Irrelevant. *(11) Professor Frost had a guilty conscience. When Professor Frost came in with his chairman to witness the Dean's actions regarding retention he such people as Professor Frost. •(14) After the Acting Dean's recommendation had been made. Acting Dean Rea says that Pro- fessor Frost was wrong to mention his non-retention to students.* Zumwalt concluded the memorandum by saying, *In considering this memorandum, President Baxter should know that these expressions of Acting Dean RoVs reasons came from the careful reports of a number of tenured faculty members. They are exact and responsible reports repeated by so many men that their validity cannot be questioned.... Professor Frost has not been given substantive due process. Rea, Baxter, and Schorllng could not be reached yesterday by the Dally Collegian for com- a fair oi unity either to hear the charges exactly stated or to reply to them.* Zumwalt said yesterday, "I made by the administration not to retain Everett Frost. 4 feel given by the Acting ' Dean of lh CAR INSURANCE DUE? COMPARE CLARK V. CARRIKER Immediate CASH! 50% Sell your used books up TO (IF BEING USED DURING SPRING "EMESTER) FSC BOOKSTORE Lower level Win a Ski Week at JACKSON HOLE fc with Suzy Chaffee and Pepi Stiegler Imagine skiing the "Gentle Giant," Jackson Hole, with Suzy Chaffee and Pepi Steigler. It's pari of SALOMON SKI BINDING'S special college contest. Includes round-trip air fare from your hometown to Jackson Hole, room, all meals, lift tickets, lessons and a free pair of SALOMON SKI BINDINGS! Glamorous former U.S. Ski Team member Suzy and Olympic gold medalist Pepi will be there for personal instruction or just fun-skiing. Enter today. •b. am 1 10 UK SALOMON BINDINGS v. .cW AHH~.. ^Stam "'JEST^AaVj;SKI COMPANY |