to Orgam at MSC sigma and Ci professional ■nities. will i. Wednesda] of the Mem at any stwi( ertising, no najor, will 'ting,” saidi it of ADS. for the year all active 3 come at If .re requested nale coun also recmt ★ Organize r; r ciub i attended Fish Caiif have or nave orgar. . e fall semej do when their necks itch ? The answer comes from this photo taken on loordinator ibership ijj campers, ngs give U ce to diet Kenya, Nairobi, grame preserve. (AP Wirephoto) eston note icen split: A cold p; it the stait k 'ommi olio >ollo 11 screened blic-free rci orial Stud nittee. nan Rick a ted the ie in the iroviding visitors mm, color the hisl DOUBLEHEADER NTSU (Continued from page 1) almost any other field of en- nd world-r avor,” he said. "In the academic community, '■ of the m ithority rests on the ability of executive to gain the con- meet on al: it and concurrence of those he uld lead.” One of the severest limits, he , is in tenure granted to fac- o topics li ;y members. “You simply can’t he young r e people because they disagree th you. Secondly, by the very ogram is ilture of things, faculties are ac- stomed to exercising consider- control of the decisions lade.” ut Kamerick said this free- of the faculty to criticize id take part in decision mak- can also be a plus factor. '“Any organization must be ppable of renewal, and for that t must create the appropriate illectual climate for the in- idual,” Kamerick said in a ch to Texas college and uni- Irsity presidents this past sum- r. "If the organization is such lat it discourages individuality the members of the organiza- n, then of course the capacity change is enormously dim- ihed. is wisl > movie nembers. >vie was ;ee presei Radio G sd Witlifi !o, he ii| ineering tee opei .C from m-wide« ■ks in es and I s for am rt’s Thai ■ Teatf it MSI >r Select 3 Memo!' and Tlit invited s they obligat i execat • of lead ssioned ny, a ister q 11 senior ^ ig if lie ;er Can ption P said tti> te the •rvice, bhhmbmhhh “ . . . Ordinarily those who run organizations . . . cannot trust themselves or others to be ade quately critical. Therefore, those who criticize must be in some way protected from the dangers of retribution, and the only pos sible protection is to create an atmosphere in which anyone can speak up.” The changes at North Texas are just part of the overall ed ucational goals that Kamerick believes should guide American colleges and universities. “We need emphasis on the de velopment of a different kind of excellence than we are current ly developing,” he said in a re cent speech. “We may need to develop bet ter professionals, better special ists, better technology, but our greater need is to spend more time on the cultivation of wis dom in more human beings. “Soon man may be able to determine the genetic character istics of a human infant—in short may be able to determine what kind of humans are produced. But the question of whether this should be done, let alone the aw ful question of what kinds of hu man beings should be produced, is not a question for biology to decide . . . “In a free society, it should be answered, intelligently we hope, by all of us. But all of us are not prepared to answer such questions simply because we are alive. We must have had some experience in attempting to an swer the fundamental questions of human existence,” he said. Kamerick said society has de pended upon universities to pro vide the training of humans to answer such questions but too often universities have been too busy training people for socie ty’s short-term needs. “We are concerned only with making better specialists or bet ter professionals and this is as true in the arts and humanities as it is in the sciences and so cial sciences,” he said. “ . . . We should decide first that the primary goal of a good educational system is to produce an intelligent, civilized human being, and secondarily, and at a different time probably, to pro duce the specialist or profession al.” In a free society, Kamerick said, the role of the university must first be to help Students to gain enough knowledge to make the wisest possible choices. “Only thus can we decide what kind of world we wish to create.” Tt-XASA&MUNIVERSrry ' JliIlllHH . MB YOURS YET? ..... aillltt u ”" 1 ' ' 1 " isite . lllfili A'l; V .urct m. JPEL a s &^L, Braley tour, .... troj for professional travel servUe call 846-3773 . 30 .lax charge account mailable. s> . free delivery of tickets C