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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository

1967 The aiD ly Lobo 1961 - 1970

9-28-1967 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 8, 9/28/1967 University of New Mexico

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Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 8, 9/28/1967." 71, 8 (1967). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1967/75

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The aiD ly Lobo 1961 - 1970 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1967 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 3 7 'f) ' '7 "8>9 Page 8 Wednesday. September Z7, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO U1" 3~'­ v. 11 V\0,'8' NMSU Priest to Talk I-I ere WANT ADS C!o f~ '2.. OLAS.SIFIED ~VERTJSING RATES: ------~PE=.RS~O~N~AL~S~------A new presentation of lectures, 4 Une ad., 65--4 tim.. , ,2.00. ~~~~~ ordination. He feels that they ager for the National Orchestra must be submitted by noon on day ...,.ore PERSONALITY POSTERS, PSYCHA­ slides, and music describing a face "deep emotional conflicts, Association. But he gave up his publication to Room 159,· Student Publir.a­ DELIC POSTERS 6 BUTTONS. If we New Mexico priest's efforts to tions Buildlns. or telephone 277-4002 or dl>n't have them, then you don't want often pulled, by their vocational music career to work with young 277-4102. them. Send for sampleB and list, MA­ EXICO make religion more meaningful and personal interests away from people as a Dominican priest. ROOM&BOARD DAM BUTTERFLY'S Gift Shop, 4609 for college-age people will be the religion of their youth." E. Colfax. Denver, Colonu!o. 80220. given at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, THE COLLEGE INN still has some ac­ The Newman Chapel at NMSU commodations available. 20 meals a w~ LOST Our Seventy-First Year ol Editorial Freedom Sept. 80, at the UNM anthropolo­ maid & linen service, co!<>.• '1N, s~­ was built entirely by . students. ming pool, laundry fBCJiities, pnvate LOST PUPPY. Reward for information gy building. Designed by Albuquerque arch­ parking walking distanoe to campus. leading to recovery of male Maltese-Ter­ Vol. 71 The show describes the pro­ Moderaiely priced. 803 Ash NE. Phone rier. Charcoal & White, long . ~hort teet Gerald Gasparich, the chapel U. Women's Group tail Near University. Name: 11Jeff~r- · Thursday, September 28, 1967 gram of the Newman Center at has a handsome altar supported 248-2881. son"". White face-black nose & e:vm. SERVICES Call CH 3-5730. 9/27, 28, 29; 10/2. New Mexico State University, by black granite stones from the ' Las Cruces, which is led by the nearby Organ Mountains. TYPEWRITER Sal"'! & Services, all Rev. Blase Schauer, a native of makes. 20 pereent discount Wlth thiS .ad. The altar is frequently deco­ Pions Sportsdoy Free pickup and delivery. Open until 8 LAUNDRY FOR LOVERS Gallup. p.m. on Manday 6 thunday. E 6 E rated with native New Mexican Typewriter Service, 2217 Coal SE, Phone We have some ot the cutest lrirlll The presentation will be spon­ plants such as yuccas and tumble­ The Women's Extramural 243-0588. who come to our laundry and coin-op sored by the New Mexico Coun­ weeds. New Mexico folk songs in Council has begun organization dry cleaners-honest I .Just ask one of FOR SALE the male ~~ottendanta who Is iBIWIIl'll on Value of NSA Congress cil of Churches and the liturgy for the first. sportsday of the year Spanish are often sung by the 1966 YAMAHA YA-6 Motore;vele. Ex­ duty-be"D tell :vou. Guys-face it I committee of St. Thomas Aquinas students. Father Schauer also in­ to be held at New Mexico State cellent condition. can ·Bob, 24ll.oo66 You not onlY wa!lt a cute lrirl-but after 6 p.m. 9/25, 27, 28, 29 one that is reasonablY clean. Resular Parish at UNM. It is titled, "The volves the students in working University Oct, 6. attendance at our lanndry Is :vour Winds Thy Messengers, the with Indians at the nearby vil­ Organizational meetings will FORSALE • surest guarantee of meeting a cute, 1956 RAMBLER MetropOlitan, rmmmg e~ea.. girL That girl is t1010 (or has Flaming Tongues Thy Servants," lage of Tortugas. be held this week for the sports­ condition. $150. Call after 5 p.m. phone just left. perish the thought) at from the 108rd Psalm. day, which will include both in­ no. 268-4906. 9/27, 28, 29; 10/2. SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY CEN­ Debated U. Delegates Father Schauer received a by TER which is across from the Safe Tickets are available at Reid­ bachelor's degree from the Uni­ dividual and dual sports. Women ALASKAN Malamutes, PU.PPies and atud way Store on Central, which is acrQ6s By WAYNE CIDDIO ling's downtown and at the UNM versity of California and a mas­ interested in tennis will begin service. Phone 247-2602. 9/,27, 28, 29; the .street from tbe Lobo Theater, WidE!ly varied and conflicting Drugs 'Health Problem' Newm;m Center, 1815 Lomas ter's degree in musicology at practices this week, with a bad­ 10/2. ' which is across the street from • • • opinions on the value of the sum­ The drug resolution stated that STUDENT Representative tor PLAYBOY it's h!lrd to explain but the address is state legislatures should consider N.E., at $3 for adults ad $1.50 Columbia University. He spent minton interest group scheduled Magazine now hilS special rates for lovers I Wherever you are I mer's National Student Associa­ for students. for Tuesday, Sept. 26, at 4 p.m. UNM students. Call 247-9082. 9/27, 28, 107 Dartmoutb S.E. Come Young tion Congress were voiced by drug addiction as a health prob­ several years with the Robert 29; 10/2. Father Schauer has worked Shaw Chorale, and later was Ji­ in Room 15, Carlisle Gymnasium. Congress delegates in reports lem instead of as an unlawful with college-age people since his brian a11d music personnel man- Other sports included in this given to Student Senate last act. Martin said, "I went into the first sportsday are bowling, swim­ night. debate completely against the use. ing, golf, ping-pong, volleyball, of drugs in any form but after Feb. 3, April 6, July 6 Jim McAdams, elected to the hearing the medical facts I took a basketball, ·softball, dancing, ski­ Varsity Barber Shops National Supervisory Board of ing, field hockey, track and field, very different view.'' NSA. during the Congress, aaid, Martin told the audience that and gymnastics. "The Congress was .. a complete U. Seniors Planning to Teach School The Women's Extramural participants in the drug debate bust from the administrative and were warned not to speak to any­ Council works to provide the 2 LOCATIONS organizational viewpoint, but women athletes at UNM a chance one about the debate because "we Should Take National Teacher Exams NSA is working on some fantas- · could be subpoenaed to lVashing­ for practice and competition, and tic projects that everyone can The National Teacher Exami­ by several states for certifica­ is also responsible for organizing 2408 Central SE - Phone 243-4267 benefit from." ton to testify on the 'drug con­ nations for college seniors pre­ tion or licensing of teachers. women's sports for intercollegi­ ference.' We were instructed to McAdams, former vice-pres­ treat everyone as though he were paring to teach school will be Some colleges also require all ate competition. Basement of Student Union ident of the Associated Students administered Feb. 3, April 6, and · seniors preparing to teach to a cop.'' Northwest Corner - Phone 277-4815 of UNM, spoke after three other "I will have to say that the '· ' July 6, 1968. take the examinations. delegates had given their impres­ Prospective teachers at UNM On each full day of testing reports given by the delegates sions of the Congress as "disap­ were inaccurate. The only delll­ should contact the school systems prospective teachers may take the Monday Cues Start pointing, unorganized, and a com­ in which they plan to seek em­ Common Examinations, which plete fiasco." gates who can give an honest ployment, their college, or the measure the professional pre­ evaluation of the Congress are "WAlT UNTIL DARK," a melodrama written by Frederick Knott Bill Carr, ASUNM vice-pres­ myself, Steve Black (NSA Co­ Placement Office for specific ad­ paration and general cultural Of Pool Tournament ident and one of the delegates to vise on which examinations to background of teachers, and one 8Dd starring Phyllis Kirk, will be pres(!nted at the UNM Concert ordinator), and Rusty Bauman, The Union games area will spon­ KDEF the Congress, said, "I felt that because we attended all of the HaD Oct. 16. The play opened first in New- York on Feb. 2, 1966, take and on which dates they of 13 Teaching Area Examina­ sor a billiards tournament begin­ great headway was made in re­ should be taken. tions which measure mastery of to the acclaim of critics and audiences, and continued for 374 per­ debates and were fully aware of ning Monday, Oct, 2, at 7:30 p.m. formanees to Dee. 31, 1966. Shown here in a scene from the gional cooperation but the Con­ what was hapepning," McAdams The Educational Testing Serv­ the subject they expect to teach. gress as a whole was a great dis­ said. ice, which prepares and adminis­ in the games area. play is Phyllis Kirk, right, and her only aUy, Gemma Dennis, in Constests in men's 14-1 and her lraUle against three brutal crooks. appointment. I do not believe that ters the tests, announced recently ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO the role of NSA, is to draft re- "Congress Is Not NSA" that the examinations will be three-rail billiards and women's Homecoming Dance 14-1 billiards are scheduled. An "The NSA Congress is not given at nearly 500 locations in All students interested in serv­ necessarily the NSA. Facts were the . entry fee of 50 cents will be distorted by the news media and ing on the Homecoming Dance charg~d. . LOBO FOOTBALL Results of the NTE are used Committee are asked to a meet­ isues such as black power were by many large school districts in Those interested are asked to looked on with distaste aimplv ing tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room contact Bob Cook in the games Parking Space Adequate, .Police Soy because the term "black power'' the selection of new teachers and 250-E of the Union. area or show up Monday night. By SALLY McCOY gain of approximately 900 new · has· bad' ·connotations. The balllc iiiiiiiiii There are enough parking parking spaces, the largest sin• "We realize it is an incon­ Instead Yale has been closed part of the black power resolu­ spaces for students on campus if venience for the students to have to through traiDc, allowing atu­ tipn, that ot turning the gtlid- ··.J#I gle addition being the Lomas Jot to walk from the lots east of they are willing to utiijze the lots with a 640-car capacity. About dents to walk to claBBrooms and ance of the Negroes' destiny over which are open to them, a recent Johnson Gym to a class in the the Union without interference to the Negroes, was misunder­ 300 spaces were lost, leaving an engineering complex," Chief stood as was much of what act­ UNM police survey shows. addition of 600 parking spaces from drivers seeking parking WELCOME UNM STUDENTS There were 360 vacant spaces Planner Robert Riley said, "but spaces. Lots on Yale are now ually went on," he said. to be found around the campus. if parking is permitted in the Black said, "I frankly voted in the new Lomas Blvd. lot at 11 The parking difficulty arises used by the faculty. a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 19, the sur­ interior section of campus, class­ against the black power resolu­ because UNM is a commuter uni­ room buildings would then have Students do not want to have Get Your vey disclosed. Nor is the lot filled versity. Eighty-three per cent of to walk to classes because New "(Continued on page 2) on Monday, Wednesday, and Fri­ to be constructed around a cen­ the students live off-campus and tral parking area. This would Mexico is a "community of park­ day mornings. therefore parking is a major ing at the door," Riley said. But This year there was a total cause too great a distance be­ Special Pizza Ticket consideration. tween the classroom buildings.'' perhaps if the student realizes that the University is arranged as it is in order to allow him 'Visibility' Theme and Save Meal Money more closely situated classroom areas and more pleasant walk­ Plans for Union of St:udent:s ing conditions within the cam­ Of Thorson Tolk pus, he will be willing to walk a ' few extra blocks from where he Associated Students President parks, he said. John Thorson postulated his ad­ Bog at: New. York Meeting Cars or People? ministration's theme of "visible By ROBERT A. GROSS with administrators over issues The UNM campus can be suit­ government" in his State of the BROOKYLN, N. Y. (CPS)­ strations on various issues. "Even able for . either people or cars, Campus address last night before of student life, curriculum, and if there isn't one issue on which Plans to set up a union of stu­ other matters. but not for both, he said. 9 deci­ Student Senate. · "'· FRANK'S dents in New York City- an idea you could all agree to demon-· sion must be made soon as to Citing many programs already PIZZA Steve Black, NSA coordinator strate, administrators would be implemented this summer, and of­ originally proposed at this sum­ for UNM, said last night that which shall be preferred, he con­ mer's National Student Associa­ damn scared if separate demon­ tinued. fering several concrete plans for the UNM delegation voted against strations were held on five or six tion (NSA) Congress-are mov­ ·the idea at the congress; hence Though for the present the the upcoming year, Thorson· said 2600 CENTRAL SE ing slowly, campuses at the same time," be parking situation seems to be un­ that "students will know this year UNM has no plans to ~articipate said. that student government is pres­ At a .meeting recently student in any subsequent conferences on der control, the lack of available representatives from 10 New But although most of the stu­ land near campus poses a major ent and working on campus." the issue. dents at the session agreed with Thorson said he worked ac­ York City colleges set up an in­ Dravich suggested that a union, problem for the future. formal committee of campus or­ calls for student power, they de­ tively for five months preparing 247-0066 & 243-0939 whose chapters would be financed cided only to set up an informal Possibly by next year and cer­ to assume the office. ganizers as a possible first step by a "head tax" on students at tainly by 1970 there will be more toward forming such a union. coordinating committee, whose cars on campus than spaces to ASUNM presidents have his­ When Out each school, was needed to pro­ members would meet regularly to torically delayed assumption of But at the same time, the mote student power on city cam­ park them. Up until now the group stressed that student gov­ exchange information on student parking difficulties have been the office until the school year WEST puses. power activities on their cam­ starts. ernment and "student power'' Lack of Support Noted puses. taken care of on a yearly basis. leaders must build strong consti­ But now, Riley said, a thorough Thorson said the International He noted that an eight-day. boy­ Approximately 75 students from Center and the Alert Center are tuencies on their campuses before cott of classes by BrooklYn Cen· evaluation of the parking sit­ Try Franks any city-wide union could be ef­ 15 campuses attended the meet­ uation wil lhave to be made to operating in full force, and many fective. ter students last spring drew lit­ ing, but the number fell to less plan for the future. other concrete programs are in PIZZA tle support from students at other than 50 after a four-hour discus- motion as a result of lengthy ef­ First Plan Vetoed city schools and ultimately failed. . sion of the relative merits of 11top­ Shuttle Bus Discussed forts on the part of personnel OPEN 10 AM to 3 AM The students rejected a propo­ A shuttle-bus system from the ' The boycott, supported initially down" versus "grass-roots" or­ acting this summer. No~ 2 sal that a city-Wide union with by most facult members at LIU, ganizing among students. At the lots near the stadium building is For example, students were chapters on each city campus be was held to protest the firing of end, most representatives agreed being discussed. saved $180 this summer when the 5700 Central SW FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY established immediately to ;pro­ Brooklyn Center provost William that the level of student con­ Another possibility is the cost of student directories was vide funds and manpower to sup­ C. Birenbaum, as well as other sciousness varied so ·greatly building of more parking lots completely eliminated by negotia­ 242-0811 port protests at local colleges. issues. among students at New York near the campus if land can be tions with a firm who took over The proposal for a union was Dravich argued that if students City colleges that forming a re­ obtained. · The cost of under­ the cost in exchange for adver­ arge made by Jay Dravich, student ground parking areas or above hours: 2 p.m.-II a.m. to 4 AM from other city campuses had gional union would be premature. tising. in the publication, he said. body president at Long Island joined the picket lines, the LIU Some members of the group ground parking structures is un­ In regard to upcoming pro­ for University's Brooklyn Center. He boycott might have succeeded, "I questioned whether students were reasonable, Riley said. For un­ grams, Thorson called for a cam­ Fri.-Sat .-Sun. FREE had orgqnized the meeting, the want to see us now organize a really committed to achieving stu­ derground parking the cost is pus-wide Viet Nam referendum Tomato & Cheese first of a series to be held around movement in the city so that stu­ dent ;power. "A student strike approximately $4000 per space in the next few months. He also 2 p.m.-3 a.m. & fAST the courttey to discuss the union dents aren't treated at other probably isn't valuable unless and for a structure about l2000 indicated that there is a strong of student ideas. per space, he said, DELIVERY schools at they were at LIU/' he you're really willing to dig in," possibility that Stokeley Car­ PIZZA $ At last month's National Stu­ told the meeting. said Paul Mitman, of the New The problem is that money for michael will be among the list dent Association Congress 1,200 Along the same line, NSA Pres• York regional office of Students these facilities cannot be taken of campus speakers tllis year. students from· mo1•e than 330 col­ ident Ed Schwartz suggested to for a Democratic Society. "One from the; building or landscaping The list also includes Dr. Mar­ leges called for local unions of the gt•oup that they might co­ weapon students have is refusing funds alteady established. No tin Luther King, Jr., F. Lee students to bargain collectively mattet• what the solution, parking ordinate their own local demon- (Continued on page 8) Bailey, Dr. Joyce Bt•others, and will have to pay for itself, Mchbishop Jame$ Pike, : .,,~ ' A, < •• .., ... ' . ' ... ----,...-~"":"''!"-~.~-..':"'.... ---~~~-:----':"""'----~----':"""'-':"":"'-----...... ------!!""'~... 11!'!"'!!!!'!""".'!'!' •. -.'!'l!.!!'!~--!!l, ~ ...... ---....-~...... ,.._,...... - ----.

Th_u,ri!IJay,.S.ep~ember 28, 1967 Thursday, Sept-ember 28, td67 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 3 Page 2 NEW MEXICO LOBO --~~------USAF Cancels Pro/·. ect at U. of Minn. ~~~;:~e;: ~-=· Attorney t:o Challenge Marijuana B MIK . Carlos Montoya in the UNM Law Y • E ANDERS~N The regents originally approv- courage such projects. most of it involving biological and Concert Hall on Saturday, Oct. ·By JOE PILATl ish but essentially dignified atti• valid exercise 11f police power of upon the Uniform Narcotics Act, ing to say it leads to LSD. This Collegiate Press Service ed the secret contract withQut Many universities, including chemical warfare was a major 21, are $1 less than general ad- Collcginte Press Service tudes Oteri carries into the case; the Commonwealth in that it brain-child of the vnerable if is curious, because it amounts to MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. _ The any publiction Jan. 14, 1966. · Harval'd, ''have met the question source of controv~rsy on college mission rates. Student tickete BOSTON-Over the next few lettered in the serifed style, of seeks to control activity which vulnerable Harry J. An slinger, saying marijuana should be a Air Force has ca.ncel!ed a re- The contract began in March of bead on" and refuse to accept any ca.mpuses during last year, most are $2.60 downstairs and $2 in weeks, Boston attorney Joseph S. ''B" Westerns and embelUshed has not been shown to pose a seri- one-time head of the Federal felony because it leads to a mis­ search project at the University 1966: Univer,sity Business Vice· aecret work, Moss said. notably at the University of the balcony, and are on $ale at Oteri might become one of the with the curlicues and chiruscorD ous and immediate danger to the Narcotics Burea\1, if the Massa­ demeanor-which, in any case, of Minnesota which was so secret President Laurence Lunden is the Secret government research, Pennsylvania. the Concert Hall ticket office. most admired-and maligned- artwork, it says "Honest Lawyer: public health, eafety or morals'' chusetts statute is declared un­ it doesn't.'' that the University's newly se- highest official who knows details ----..::...----~· ____:_ ___:._ _ _;______.:.::.:;__::.:::=::.::..:.::=...::=::...:.::==- figures in the American legal pro- Two Flights Up." Oteri is by no and that it would "deny to the coJJstitut\onal, ''it is reasonable lected president didn't even know of the secret contract, since Moos fession. stretch of the imagination (and defendant his rights to life, Ii- to expect other states to follow what it was. has not yet been cleared to handle Over the next few years, be no bending of the mind) a '' berty and property, without due along.'' .. When the president, Malcolm sec!et ~nforma~ion, He became might become the primary insti- lawyer"-but he's a hip lawyer, process of law, as well as the Others Start Proceedings Mooa; found out about the project, Un1vers1ty pres1dent Sept. 1. gator of a ~recedent which (if and more importantly, he's angry. right to security, privacy and thl! "I've received more than 50 WM!iil ,he objected strongly, and said he Important to. Defense ~pr~ underground optimists are cor- Laws Exclude Leaders pursuit of pleasure, in violation letters from other lawyers in at Maker~ of Hand Made didn't want the Univeraity in- Lunden sa1d the pro~~ct fbord­ rect) could literally make this He feels that present marijuana of the Fourth and Fifth Amend- least ten states, who have started Indian Je..,ehy volved in secret government re- er~ ~m the health area and was America of duplicity and incon- laws "run the risk of. excluding ments ( ...) as they are applied the same kind of proceedings," OLDTOWN search or1gmally approvf;ld by Moos' sistency go up in a cloud of fi!U- perhaps 25 per cent of the future to the states by the Fourteenth ·Oteri added. Many earlier cases · ' . . . pre4ecessor, 0, Meridith Wilson. phoric, metaphoric smoke. leader:; of this country, branding Amendment." brought to Oteri himself, prior But the A1r Force sa1d 1t can- Lunden said the project is ''very, celled renewal of the, two-year, very important to a defsne ef­ ' And Oteri-a legal rationalist of them as "drug addicts." He says States Expected to Follow to that of Leis and Weiss, are also t • the old school who even looks a he is having trouble convincing And it goes. on: present law held in abeyance pending a deci- $200,000 contract because of fort" and both the government bit like Darrow-is simply "doing people ''I'm interested in a legal "would deny to the defendant the sion in the next few months. (/~ "~ack of funds," not Moos' objec- and the peraonnel working on the this thing." In his own words: problem, not a medical problem. equal protection of the laws in Oteri emphasizes that he con­ HOUSE OF HALLMARK t1ons. The lack of funds was sup- project wanted it continued "Five years ago, I began defend- There are an awful lot of lives that it has singled out posses· siders marijuana to be "a very posedly cause~ by the Vi~t Nam At the September regent; meet­ OFF~RS .. The Mmnesota Dally the ing, Lunden asked the board to ing kids accused of various mari- ruined by virtue of this law, and sors of ( ...) marijuana, while harmful substance at the present T~e largest Selection of juana violations. I've been singu- I'm trying to compel the courts the laws permit use, sale, and time, because it's illegal. I would campus newspape~, has learned '111ct on faith alone" and renew Hallmark Cords · that th? contract. mvolved meth· the contract fot• two years. larly impressed with these people and the Congress to take a long possession of substances far more strongly urge everyone not to Halloween &, P.arty Items --decent kids, not criminals, not look at this problem.". harmful than marijuana, to wit: use it, but not to give up the ods of mterrogat10.n that humans His recommendation was ac­ Wedding· lnvitc:llions were use!i as .subJects,_ and that cl;lpted without opposition, except violent, full of life and . As you watch Joe Oted sitting alcoholic beverages and cigarettes fight to change the law.'' To and All Paper Gt~od~ Lawyer to Challenge Law in his swivel chair with his feet containing tobacco .. .'' Finally, Oteri:s thinking, "the .only su~- the campus pohce were mvolved. from Moos, a former speechwriter expert Monogramming. "Each one told me the same propped on his well-polished ma- the motion points out that present ~tant1a~ argument agamst marl­ Secrecy Attached for Preeident Eisenhowel'. Moos story-marijuana is not addictive, hogany desk, gesturing with a law "would impose on the de· Juan~ 1s that we. don~t need to Yes We Have Our New . The contract with the Univer- said he was "disturbed'' about not harmful, a relatively innocu- giant cigar ("less harmful than fendant excessive and cruel and legahze another mto:x:1cant. But Xmos Alb~ms in For 1967 s1ty was 70 per cent subcontract- secret work at universities and ed. to North Star Research and wanted "the minutes of this ous substance. I started checking tobacco cigarettes, and legal1'), unusual punishment (five-to-ten- why P.ut people w~o c~oose ~o 3501 Lomas N.E. 255·4989 Development Inst~tute in Min- meeting to reflect my concern.'' into it and decided that the next you're aware almost instantly year prison terms) in violation of ~s~ ~ th1s particular mtox1cant m neapohs. The maJQrity of North Moos Discourage Projects time we got a case, we would that for him, "this problem" re- the Eighth Amendment to the Ja!~· challenge the law.'' fers to anachronism in American Constitution, as incorporated into And ~~w that the argume~t Star's WOI'~ ha~ some ~ecrecy "Basically, I am opposed to The challenge is here. It goes jurisprudence more than it does the Fourteenth.'' that mariJUana lea~~ to ~erom attached to 1t, satd the Daily, such reaeareh because it tends to by the name Commonwealth vs. to nascent anarchism in the lack Oteri noted that since most has bee:: shot dow!!•. Oten sug. The year of the Officials from North Star In- guide the direction of free in· Leis and Weiss, and pre-trial of respect for present anti-pot states' marijuana laws are ba$ed gested, the authonttes are start- stitute, the University, and the quiry" within the academic com­ U.S .. Government ·Defense. Con- munity and concerns an area in • · hearings, e:x:pected to last for laws manifested by American YAMAHA tract Administrative Service have which "you know so little and several weeks, have begun in Suf- youth. confirmed the existance of the have so little control " Moos said folk Superior Court in oston. Not Legalizing Marijuana Drawings of the 60's Shown Here proj~ct but have no comment on He agreed that th: government Attion to Rise "We are not advocating legali- Three contemporary exhibits Lithographs by Paul Wunder· specifics. . . . has to conduct research, The actual trial of Leis and zation of marijuana," he stressed, are now showing in the Univer­ lich will be' shown in the print At a meetmg on Sept. 15, the but said it should be done in Weiss, two former· students "but we say that it could be regu­ sity Art Museum in the UNM room from Oct. 22, through Dec, university's board of regents "think tanks" or by private in­ caught green-handed at Boston's lated, with prohibitions on age fine arts building, "L.A.-N.Y.­ 3. voted unanimously over Moos' ob- dustry. Moos said that he is "on Logan International Airport, will groups that can get it, and so Drawings of the " will run jections t,o renevy- the classified the side of the angels" on the be the second act in Oteri's forth," he says. He drew the fa­ An exhibit entitled "Tiepolo through Oct, 8 in the upper gal­ to Goya" is tentatively schedul· psychological testmg program for issue and that his position as drama. If he has his way, the miliar analogy between current lery. two years. president definitely will be to dis- "action" will still be rising, waft- anti-marijuana laws and the Pro­ ed for Dec. 3 to Jan. 7 in the UP• Works of Cady Wells will be per gallery, and the UNM faculty ing inexorably toward the U.S. hibition amendment of the twen­ on display in the lower gallery Supreme Court, after these local ties: "Prohibition dealt with a exhibition will be shown Dec. 10 through Oct. 15, and an exhibit -Jan. 28, in the lower gallery. The Twin Jet 100 is the Letten are welcome, and hurdles are cleared. downright dangerous and addict- entitled "The Print: Processes should be no lollller thir.n 260 In an interview at his office, the ive drug: even now, fully three The Museum's permanent col­ swingln' thing for Spring. words tn>ewrltten, double and Media," will be on view in lection of nineteenth-century Double everything ... 2 spaced. Name. telephone num· 36·Year-old lawyer said he and :percent of the population is ad· the print room until Oct. 15. Letters ber and addtoea must be in· his associates have lied up 23 dieted to alcohol. On the other prints will be on display in the cylinders, 2 carburetors, 2 cludedi althouah nllllte will be ' The annual purchase exhibition print room .Dec. 10-Jan. 28. withhe d UJ>On YCQ11011t. expert witnesses who will attest side of the fence, we have the will open with a reception for the exhaust pipes •.. for more GO. A young photographers exhibit The styling has that . ;~ to the unworkability and probable much more innocuous substance Friends of Art at UNM on Oct. ' unconstitutionality of current called marijuana-can we afford 22, and will run until Nov. 19 in is scheduled to open Jan. 28 and no-nonsense look, lean and TV SET-sorority its programs the same. A soror- anti-marijuana statutes. The wit- to prohibit it?" run through Feb. 26 in the upper racy like a 250cc World Grand Comparison ln'VaJid ity is a group , of individuals the upper gallery. gallery, and a children's exhibi­ nesses' names cannot yet be made Unprecedented Step The lower gallery will feature Prix Champion Yamaha. If you Dear Editor: each possessing her own person­ ~ public-although compendia of Oteri's arguments for dismis­ tion will go on display Feb. 11. ality. calligraphy by Ralph Douglass can ride a bicycle you can ride In reference to Mr. Roehl's names from the more level-beaded sal of charges against Leis and and photographs of l'enaissance Engravings by Pieter Bruegel a Yamaha. So'stop in and ride article of 9/21/67 entitled "The 2. Many rushees have very recent anthologies and artcles on Weiss, codified and couched into sculpture by Clal'ence Kennedy will be shown in the Museum's out on a Yamaha Twin Jet 100. Greek View From Here": we little and often very faulty pot provide a set of excellent the cumbersome sentence-struc- Oct. 22-Dec, 3. print room Jan. 28-Feb. 25. strongly feel that his covert com· knowledge about sororities when hints. tures of the legal brief, would be Then you'll kntlw why Yamaha, they start rush. Visiting every with proven oil-injection, is parison of sorority rushees to 'Prosecution to Have Help familiar to readers of the under- prospective color television set house gives the rushee an oppor­ Oteri's firm-Crane, Inker, and ground press. But their assertion the top-selling 2-stroke in the buyers has no validity for the tunity to examine every group Oteri-has offered the attorneys in a court of law (perhaps espe­ NSA Congress Value Debated U.S. See us today. following reasons: and then to decide in which group for the prosecution, Hale and cially in Massachusetts, with its she would feel the most comfor· (Continued from page 1) ilication of student views and 1, All television sets1 regard­ Dorr (who are also attorneys for heritage of witch-hunting both tion simply because it would have stands. The stands of the NSA less of the brand, televise the table. A rushee who knows very Boston University) "full mutual literal and figurative) represents been taken out of context and are thus made clear to the public," same programs; only such fea• little or nothing about the soror• disclosure of witnesses before the an almost unprecedented progres­ misconstrued by the public., McAdams said. tures as the actual color, cabi· ities on campus cannot possibly hearings begin.'' Hale and Dorr sive step. A proposal aimed at forming BOBBY J'S net, etc., may vary. The person­ pick out one or two which she have not yet responded to the The defendants' motion con· student unions completely inde­ alitY. of. the television set has would like to join with any de· offer. tends that the Massachusetts sta· In case some of you missed it, MOTORCYCLE SALES pendent from administrative con­ the spelling is now M-a-r-c Reed. little leeway for flexibility. A gre of accuracy. Spearheading the prosecution tute is "arbitrary and irrational trol was voted down by the UNM sorority, on the other hand, is 3. A color television set can will be attorney James D. St. and not suited to achieve any "K stands for strikeouts and C 6316 Domingo Rd., NE delegation, said Black. for completions," says Arizona involved wi.h the human element easily be exchanged for another; Claire, who was Joseph Welch's valid legislative end in that it "The value of discussion on Phon• 255-0237 -it does not project the same a sorority cannot! assistant in the 1954 Army-Me- fails to properly distinguish be­ major resolutions is in the pub­ Sports Information Director, image as the other eight nor are -Name Withheld by Request Here's the mean one. Honda earthy hearings. St. Clair was tween marijuana and so-called licity NSA receives and the clar- Frank Soltys. appointed a special assistant for 'hard narcotics,' such as cocaine, Scrambler 160. Designed mean the case by District-Attorney opium, and morphine, and it im- and rugged for rough riding, sharp Garrett Byrne. poses harsh penalties upon mere Oteri Is Hip Lawyer possession of marijuana or pos- and cool for the eampus. Clean, Oteri estimates that the pre- session with intent to sell, or be­ ·NM War on Poverty perfectly balanced for easy handling. trial hearing will take three to ing present where marijuana is four weeks at the very least. ''We kept, without showing that use of And Honda's dependable OHC may eut our 23 witnesses by five this substance i)resents a threat or so, just to speed it up," said to the public health, safety and Receives OEO Grant 4-stroke engine delivers up to 116 mpg. one of his assistants, who also morals. Performance? Speeds up to 75 mph. intimates that the attorneys for Claims Refuted by Evidence One 9f New Mexico's most sue- cently. the prosecution are having trouble "The claims of grave danger • cessful War on Poverty programs The project has brought ap­ Initial price, upkeep and insurance are I finding witnesses, not to mention are contradicted by the weight of BERMUDAS---SURFERS---SHORTS---SKIRTS • -the Home Improvement Project proximately $600,000 in stipends I and salaries to the trainees and impressively low. Parking? No problem. '·I reputable data1 which would sup- -scientific evidence, which is being - has been continued through I port existing laws. , ignored by the government, and '· next F~bruary .with a grant of their immediate supervisors - Make the scene at any of Honda's 1,800 I Oteri's office in downtown Bos- hence the statute under which de· Skirt Suits---CAPRIS---BLOUSES~--Siack Suits $184,063 from the Office of Eco­ who, like the participants, also .. nomic Opportunity. The project are selected by their own local as­ dealers. Take a safety demonstration ride. I ton, lushly carpeted and panelled, fendant is prosecuted, and the I is as subdued and conventional as entire statutory schemes, violates ' is administered by UNM. · sociations. And the total value of homes repaired - or, in some Watch for the Scrambler 160. You'll agree the lawy~r himself is not. A wood· the due process of law guaranty PRICED FROM New financing will permit HlP en sign hanging on his office book- of the Fourteenth Amendment... " cases, built ft·om the ground up-:. it's a mean machine-at .a lowdown price. to take in 80 more school drop- now· stands at about $760,000, cases bursting with legal tomes is The motion further argues that s1oo TO s4oo ' outs between the ages of 16 and indicative of the somewhat puck· the statute "goes beyond the Roberts said. ' 26 and give them training in basic Members of neighborhood as· home building and repair skills in sociations select the homes of the NOW 3 STORES addition to rudimentary mathe­ very needy in their nreas to be :HOlVDA. matics and English instruction. Former D.H. Lawrence Fellow at U. repaired. The HlP trainees1 work­ Star• No. 1-1441·A Eubank N.E.-Princess Jeanne Shopping Center Youths to participate in this ing under professional supervis­ Shapes the world of wheels phase of the project will be se­ ion, make the repairs, generally Publishes Collection of 70 Stories Store No. 2-1720·A Bridge St. S.W.-GoH Plaza Center lected from tu"eas in the South using donated materials a n d year at the D. B. Lawrence See the "Invisible Circle;' color film at your local Hond~ dealer. Pfck ups color brochure and Jascha Kessler, a D. H. Law· Store No. 3-4210 4th St. N.W. .. Vallet e:x.tj)n.ding .as .fal' as Belen •. learning their skilhHln the job. ·· · · · safety Pa'iriphre~; or Wr1te: 'Atfleric·a·n -HOnda MOtOr CO.,"lriC:,··o·ept· C~9; ·eoX'SO, GarOena; C81il. 90247; 01967; J\HM." ·· ·· ·· ·· · · · · ... ··• .. renee Fellowship recipient from Ranch near Taos, which is owned Participants are chosen by their "We have had excellent cooper­ UNM, has just had his newest by the University. OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 10 TO 6 own neighborhood associations. ation from many local firms," book published. The volume is a Kessler's b o o k contains 10 During the two years the proj­ Roberts said. collection of short fiction entitled stories, primarily concerned with ect has been in existence, more The current phase of the proj­ "An Egyptian Bondage and Oth­ the American Jewish scene. Some Coming soon • • • • • than 800 young men have received ect wili be the last one funded by er Stories." of the stories are graphic deaerip­ training in the basics of sueh OEO, which set the program up WHEEL WORLD HONDA The fellowship includes a trust tions of a resort hotel, and are New Store in UNM area. skills as carpentry, masonry, and on a demonstration basis, Roberts • fund raised from the sale of written with naturalistic details plastering. Most of the former said. Funding i<~t :Cutu1•e efforts will manuscripts contributed by con­ that suddenly become freighted trainees aro now gainfully .em· temporary authors w h i c h is ployed, L. E. Roberts, adminis· be sought from :fedet•al m:mpowm: 2736 matched by University funds. 'l'he with moral and symbolic mean­ "Titiuk of us lit-st'' trator of the project, said re- t,t•aining !n'IJ$1;'.':•n-,:<, 'h•· f!atll. Carlisle NE 265·5745 recipient lives and worl«! for a ings. Page 4 NEW MEXICO LOBO Thursday, September 28, 196'1 Thursday, Sept~amber 28, 196'1 N:Jffl' MEXICO LOBO Page 5 NEW MEXICO LOBO 15,000 Per Year Find Canada Studen~s Meet, Talk, Dec. 9 Violinist Arturo Delmonti, J>qblillhed Monday, Wedn~day, Tllul'8day and Ffiday of the re&rular Ul!iVe,.lty year by the Republicans Plan St11qent Publications li~H~rd of the Aasoeiated St11dents o( the UniversitY of New MexiCQ Second class postage paid at Albuq\lerque, New Mexico. Printed by the University Print- F l d F D ~ ing P)ant•. Subscription ra. te. :.$4,50 for the scbool:~>ear, PaYable In •.conscription, Can­ persons who may be seeking to against blacks, though not as Non-credit courses will be of­ ty" which will further be des­ By 'CARL T. ROWAN ada is easy to make the transi­ service is offered by the Baptist fered in conversational Greek, cribed in a campaign case study, avoid induction into the armed venomous as in the States, and Student Union, 409 University tion to. About 15,000 Americans services and, therefore, providing there are the perennial little old Japanese, and Swedish. career seminars, and a llession on move to Canada every year. S.E., which ministers to 1000 Bap­ "Discussions on international party organization. they meet immigration require­ ladies who write nasty letters to tist students at UNM this fall. On Closing the 'Credibility Gap' Until recently this migration ments we have no basis in law the newspapers. affairs will also be held so stu­ Successful state candidates will has been more than matched by Noonday WOl'Bhip services are dents may come together to inte­ talk about the nature of their WEST CHESTER, Pa.-11l'm convinced that Lyndon Johnson will for barring their entry.'' More generally, a bare major­ the 'brain drain' Cana.dians worry Asked about American efforts ity of Canadians l!eem to be op­ held twice weekly at 12:40 in the grate social and academic ef­ campaigns, what it took to win, settle only for complete surrender by Ho Chi Minh and the Com­ about - the severa.l thousand cha.pel at the cente1·. Programs munists," the young professor said. "I'm convinced that no other end to prosecute draft resisters, Ex­ posed to the American war forts,'' Ba.kas said. and other factors. nurses, teachers, imd production ternal Affairs Minister Paul Mar­ (though the government is a involve community people and Sponsored by the Nationa.l In­ A Republican senator, congress­ to the is acceptable to him," students. workers who move each year into tin said that Canada does not member of the International Con· ternational Affairs Commit~e, man, or other prominent party I looked down the dinner table as a couple of !ltudents at West the States. But this year, for the Chester State College nodded weakly, as if inclined to agree, but not "feel under any obligation to en­ trol Commission in VietNam, and John Robert Baker is the new the !-Center was alotted $7000 leader will conclude the confer­ first time since the war, it is force the laws of any country in lhence stri~tly neutral), either dh•ecto1·. He is completing his this year. About $600{) in mater­ ence in a session devoted to dis­ quit!! sure. expected that migration to Can­ "But how does that make sense?" I asked, "when you have just that regard." from principled opposition to its doctorate in theology from South­ ial donations were also made, cussion of national issues. ada will outweigh immigl'atioii Immigrants Must Be 18 illegality and immorality or western Baptist Theological Sem­ The Center wil lserve a.s a meet­ The ''Opportunities Unlimited" told me what A totally political animal Lyndon Johnson is? And to the U.S. when you have said Johnson is in deep political trouble because of An American who wishes to through a feeling of nationalistic: inary, and comes to the center ing pla.ce not only for the 361 program was started last Dec. 10 at the University of Wisconsin, il this war? "' * "' Escape Taxation become a citizen of Canada en· superiority to the U.S. These peo­ after several pastorates. Miss foreign students on campus, but If the U.S. is the home of the ters as a landed immigrant by ple therefore suppo:rt draft evad­ Marie McKinley, the assistant also for approximately 450 more Madison. "Wouldn't logic suggest that a politically sensitive President, desir­ brave and the land of the free, filling in the appropriate forms. ers. director, is serving her second non-student foreign visitors dur­ In addition to the conference ing re-election, would want out of this war almost as much as he wants Canada is the home of the pea.ce­ from the Department of Citizen­ Americans Welcomed year. She is also a graduate of ing the year. at UNM, 11 other conferences to breathe ? " ful and land of the free. Retired ship and Immigration and either Southwestern Theological Sem­ will be held during the fall and This led to a discussion of the recent controversy over the claim by Since Canada has a chronic "The stereotype of foreign peo­ people come here to escape. the mailing them to Ottawa, the cap­ shortage of skilled labor, employ­ inary. Lela Beth Criswell is the ple as impossible to communicate winter. former editor Harry Ashmore that the President undercut a major high taxation of the warfare ital, or presenting them at the worship coordinator. peace effort by Ashmore and Miami editor William Bagge by dispatch­ ers welcome Americans, who are with should be eliminated, and it state, The middle-aged move to border when he enters Canada. generally be t t e r educated and Ea.ch year UNM's Baptist Stu­ can be with a place to familiarize Patronize ing a tough letter to Ho. There was talk of other alleged "peace rejec- similar jobs in a place where A would-be immigrant must be dent Union, working with the five tions'' by Washington. "' * "' trained than other immigrants or American students with cultures they can take a sa.fe stroll at 18 years old (though his wife Canadians. Draft evaders here other student groups at colleges and ways of life far different Lobo Advertisers Then a couple of dinner guests chimed in with comments that "JQhn­ night and where the police don't need not be) and not a member report little difficulty in finding in New Mexico, sends summer from our own," Bakas said. son is in an impossible dilemma"-that however badly he wants peace brandish billies. Guns, if they of one of the "prohibited classes." missionaries to work in various are carried at all, are kept in jobs, and none have had more "There is a tremondous need in Viet Nam, he must get it on terms good enough to prevent the Prohibited classes are defined by than occasional friction with parts of the world. This past for cooperation between people. Republicans from filling the 1968 campaign with charges that the holsters out of sight. Section 5 of the Canadian Immi­ jingoes and hawks. summer Rosslyn Mynatt from Democra.ts are "soft on communism." More recently - and this ac­ gration Act to include idiots, the UNM went to Pe1·u, and Lela The world today is no longer a counts for the change in direction The student council of Univer­ world of powerful nations, but When the talking was all done, it was clear that most of the people insane, convicted criminals, and sity College, representing 2000 Beth Criswell worlted in Jamaica. of the weak ones also. Every na­ at that dinner believed President Johnson really wants to solve the of the brain drain-young Amer­ those who are likely to become student at the University of Tor­ Two other UNM students icans are more and more moving public charges. tion has something valuable to VietNam war only by giving the Communists a military drubbing. onto, last week voted 1\Uppo:rl of WQrked under the auspices of the offer,'' he concluded. . * * * to Canada to evade the draft and Those jailed for civil rights a campaign draft evaders in Can­ Home Mission Board of the This I found both surprising and disturbing, particularly in view involvement in the war. Canadian activity are not likely to be bar­ Southern Baptist Convention. The I-Center is now open from ada. The resolution, supported by 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. every weekday of the fact that only hours earlier Ambassador Arthur immigration officials have no red, and any healthy, .honest the Student Christian Movement Sharon Raper served in Illinois Goldberg had said to the General Assembly: record of the number of immi­ young man with either a job of­ and B'nai B'rith Hillel, the two and Kirby Clark worked in Cali­ and all day Saturday and Sun­ u, •• This conflict can and should be ended by a political solution at grants who were 1-A before they fer or enough money to survive fornia. day. arrived, but Marc Satin, who largest associations on the earn­ , the earliest possible time. A military solution is not the answer. For on is likely to be admitted. News­ pus, gave $250 to provide temp· ...... -·- TAr•• O••"~· our part, we do not seek to impose a military solution on North Viet runs the Toronto office of the papers here have from time to orary shelter and assistance for ...... Nam or on its adherents. By the same token, in fidelitlf to a political anti-draft program, says he gets time commented that the certi­ American students who are re­ solution, we will not permit North Viet Nam and its adherents to im· about half-a-dozen draft-evaders fication 1~A is a pretty good sisting the draft by going to Can­ pose a military s11lution upon South VietNam.'' through the office a day, and guarantee of the quality of an ada. * "' * says that the load is about the immigrant, Psychology Pr11fessor Martin These students and faculty members to whom 1 talked at dinner same in offices in Montreal and Anyone May Visit Wall of University College said were no wild-eyed placard bearers, no irrational demonstrators. They Vancouver. There are also eight Almost any An:terican may visit a continued effort will be made were just ordinary Americans, troubled, confused, looking for help in small offices and groups helping Canada. Soldiers in uniform are to raise money from other stu­ Sweaters Set staking out an area of true belief-and not finding enough help from draft evaders in other cities. required to produce leave papers dent associations and to inform their government. Thousands. of others simply cross at the border, but others pass An:terican students ab11ut the pos· It seems to me that there is a lesson in their suspecting the worst the border as landed immigrants into the country after only cur- sibilities of going to Canada. A Classic about their president and their government-even in the fact of those pretty plain words by Goldberg. Tha lesson is that if Americans found the Goldberg speech unconvincing, so did foreigners at the UN .Example and the decision-makers in Hanoi, Moscow, and Pe~ing. . * • * Groups Aid Draft Resisters The truth is that millions of Americans have come to think that the U.S. plays the game of foreign nlations the Mme way the Russians TORONTO (CPS) - The cents. This pamphlet covers all man Street, New York, 10038. following groups offer assis­ facets of migration to Canada. ' , do: that we talk one track, even as we roll resolutely down another. tance to American draft resis­ "Handbook for Conscientious The people seem to think that, with deliberate cynicism, we talk ters contemplating emmigration ''Immigration to Canada and Objectors" is available for $1 peace even while delivering death in ever-larger doses. to Canada: its Relation to the Draft," a from the Central Committee Thus, it is easy even for Americans to believe that Goldberg could pamphlet !)Ut out by the Van­ for Conscientious Objectors, deliver his peace appeal, for propaganda efl'ect, with a certain kno:wl· West Coast: Committee to couver Committee to Aid Amer­ 2006 Walnut Street, Philadel­ edge that Hanoi would reject it, And· this rejection would become jus­ Aid American War Objectors, ican War Objectors, is avail· phia, Pa., 19103, ot 514 Mission tification enough :for further escalation of the bombing of North Box 4231, Vancouver 91 British able on request. Street, San Francisco, Calif. VietNam. * • • Columbia; phone 604-738-4612. . 94105. Central States: Anti-Draft Pro· "Guide to Canadian citizen­ Well, there surely was no doubt in the White House or State De• gram, 658 Spadina Avenue, ship" is a summary of Cana­ Edmund Wilson's "0 Cana• partment that Hanoi would respond negatively. To ask Hanoi publicly Toronto 4, Ontario; phone 416- dian history and politics put da," (New York, Farrar, to pledge peace talks if the U.S. stops the bombing is equi"alent to 92'1-6851. Eastern States: Mon­ out by the Canadian govern­ Strauss, and Giroux, 1965) is a asking Ho to beg for mercy in front of the whole world. It just isn't ment for new immigrants. It is survey of modern Canadian lit­ going to happen. treal Council to Aid War Re­ sisters, Box 231, Westmount 6, available on request from the erature, meant for Americans. Everyone knows that's the only way to hove something left over. I said months ago that if the U.S. stopped the bombing without any Canadian consulates in New Montreal, Quebec; phone 514- Canadian Citizenship Branch of And there are a lot of special occasions corning up: Homecoming, implied threats--or promises-we would get a real Clue as to whether 931-3007. the Department of Citizenship York, Chicago, Denver, San · a political solution is possible. I said we could make our next moves in and Immigration, Ottawa, On­ Francisco, and Los Angeles Christmas vacation, maybe (I trip or lwo. Some time during the good conscience once we had .made an honest, bold move that many Publications of interest to tario. have immigra.tion personnel Qn year, you C!re bound ro get the "shorts.'' But not if you open an wise men say is the absolute key to peace. I said that the potential draft-eligible men might in­ clude the following: their staffs. Other consulates account with .the AmeriCC!n Bonk of Commerce. You'll hove the benefits far outweigh the potential dangers. I still believe this. "ltp Tight with the Draft?" money for the futurll-whether it's fiesta, graduation, marriage or 'l'l'ied and true handsom~ is a survey of draft alternatives are in Boston, Philadelphia, A major potential benefit might be the restoration of the credibility "Escape from Freedom," a a baby. Ye$, baby, sC!ve, Do it at the American styling takes you to of the President and of the United States government among people 24-page pamphlet published by from a pacifist perspective, New Orleans, Cleveland, De• like those l -saw here. And that is a benefit not to be passed over the .b.nti-Draft Program at 658 available for ten cents from the troit, and Seattle. The embassy Bank of Commerce, downstairs in lh" Union dasses and through irri;. lightly. Spadina Ave., Toronto 4; 50 , 5 Beek- is in Washington, ]).C. 'BUilding. portant extraeurrjcular activities. Cardigans, I'Ve:. INVE:NfESD HeY You elJ\"s! EVERYBODY! Mock Turtles and pu]l. r~e overs·.•. ligh~ "eight . fHE NAILt WrlAf Tt-let HSCK lS A NAIL., 'THO~'!" AMERICAN NA\l.... ! ... f~ INVENTe:D THE NAIL J . but big on Wafmlth. BANK of from fll ·COMMERCE Third and Conlrol llownto•n PHONE 241-1021 • Puritan • Arrow Union lulhlln,, Unktnlly ollie" MCiiCo • PettdJeton • WickbUl'3 , .... Page 6 Th"rsday, Scpteltl'ber 28, 1$67 NEW MEXJCO LOBO Thursday, September 28, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO );'age 7 Over 200,000 New Mexicans For facts and inforl'!mtion on lntramura Is have clinical arthritis. This is Rheumatoid Arthritis, write for more than all other diseases com,. your free bQOklet from the Arth­ Underdog Lobos, Stone Lead in Passing bined, ·reports the Arthritis Foun• ritis Foundation, P. 0. Box 8022, Pikes, SAEs Roll dation. Albuquerque, New Mexico. By NOOLEY REINHEARDT failed to win the league's "back touchdowns. Running back Book· :!' ~~~eboro'lf~ASU i 1: m ~ Jta~:r RECEIVING G No. Yds. N'ew Mexico an eight-point of the week" honors. ert has handled the ball 39 times •D;e l~ert; NM ~ 89 140 1 •Ace Hcnd~~~· NM ~ Ig m Over Opponents underdog to Iowa State this . Stone's only help in the back- for one TD ~nd ;1.40 yards. ~: x~~:S..n, ~\u ~ i~ m l ~=~e D:&~';;y, Wyo. 2 n m weekend goes into that game field comes from another trans- Casas Best K1ck Returner Bruce Loe Arl~. 1 11 113 1 J, D. Hill, ABU Utah i 8 ~0 with sor:.e pretty impressive ere~ fer, David Bookert, who leads Joe Casa is the other Lobo that ~imk KJ~kWYihah f i~ m g ~r~uft:~~'U"ei. NM ~ '1 186 In Football Action dentials. · the conference in running. Book- shows up often in the WAC '"' e e, · Hub Llnd~'y~yo. ~ ~ m Tom Hooker ran ~ck an inter­ Stone Leads Nation ert .came t!l UNM from Cisco, state!!. He is first in kiekoff re- RUSHING b~k0 ~;:Yette, BYU 1 6 88 cepted pass 60 yards, and Mike UNM is the No, 1 pa!!sing team Texas. Junior College. turns, averaging 60.5 yards per ::~~ Bookert, NM ~ P~:' it;· 'l'~S PUN'l'RETURNS Conway passed £or two touch­ in the nation Quarterback sensa- Hendncks Grab~ 11 return and one touchdown. Max Anderson, ASU 2 aa 118 l! Player No. Yda. Avg. TJlo downs as Pi Kappa Alpha lived tion Teny Stone heads the nation The biggest surprise of the The senior, who switched from ;Jim KHiick• WASYUo. 2 26 105 o Vic w~hln11NtoMn, Wro. 14 174 12.4 1 · · L b tt k · l't d A H · b k t d f . b k J. D, I11 , 2 ~ 98 1 •Joe 0Mllll, 8 105 18,1 0 u·p to its favorite role in defeat­ in forward passing yardage and o o a ac lS sp 1 en ce en- runmng ac o e enstve ac CharHe Smith, utah 1 20 84 o Jim street. Utah 4 so 20,0 o ing l'bi Delta Theta 21-0 yester­ is second in total offense yardage tdri.cks hast changd tthis sebeasoh'!• dis in re- day in the first day of intramural ~ho 1 pAosit~onst dsefcond~ punt~ 1 t: ~ll\l'::.O., A~~o. i U ~~ ~ ~~~ B='lirn!'Y~YU ~ ~~ ~~;g g and in the pass completion cJ~te· WJce smce a!! season. gatns urns m e en mg na 111na Jack Gehrke, Utah 1 12 56 o Wally Scott, Arl,, 2 26 lB.o o football action. gory Brigham Young he caught. 11 champion Vic Washington of Steve Molner, Utah 1 u 52 1 Curley Culp, ASU 1 24 24.0 o In other action Sigma Alpha Racks Up- 441 Yards passes for 195 yards to set WAC Wyoming, Casas has returned for PASSING KlCK OfF RETURNS Epsilon trounced Phi Sigma Kap­ The Baylor University triUIS• single-game marks. 105 yards (13.1 average) and Player G Att. Ool!>P. Int. Yds. TDS ~1" ~layer NM 11°· it· ~6if; TY" pa 33-0. Sigma Phi Epsilon edged OtVtSION QF' "REAT.A RP.,NCHES. INC. fer has 441 yards of total offense The split end, via defensive Washington bas run punts back •stone, NM 2 lg ~~ ~ :;~ ~ 0 vrar~n. ASU 5 9& 19:8 0 Alpha Kappa Lambda by a touch­ •d Special Rates to to trail Florida State's Kim Ham- back and fl~nker positi?n.s, he~ds for 1'14 yards and 12.4 average. i::~~:; .!':~ ~ •a 25 3 801 1 f ~~YJ~"fsuWyo, ~ ~~ ~=;~ g down and Phi Gamma Delta best­ H R mond who has racked up 470 the league m pass recetvmg wlth WAC INDIVIDUAL STATS. Lyons, BYU 2 14 9 o 158 2 o Blake, NM 2 (9 2U o ed Kappa Alpha by a 7-0 score. ay I . es Campus Organizations yards: Hammond, who led FSU 13 for 264 yard!!. TOTAL O;FFENSE E'dh's, BYU 1 16 9 o 87 1 reception:;~ ~ ~!,~~:~~.. ~ ~~ ~::8 g Fou:r teams were in action in UNM Students with 10 Cards Will Receive 25% Discount on to a 37•37 tie with third-ranked Ston~ has completed 34 of 70 ffi,~ Stone, NM ~ P~J'" ~ti· TfR C'U'n11, Utah 1 JS B 1 108 P the Dorm League and all victories Horseback Riding Fridays. Alabama, has completed 38 pass- pass tr1es for 441 yards and two Paul TO!lcano, Vfyo. 2 ~9 410, 7 Lee~·~Ar!!i"'~-.!.1_1:::0:_....:!.6-~1....!'11~4-!..1 __•__:N:;.:.e:.::w_:M::""'::':.:;c<>:;.______were shutout~!. Navajo won over es to 34 for Stone. Arizona's football team is the Comanchero 1-0 by forfeit as Co­ Four Hills Ranch Rood SE 299-7078 But in yards passing the UNM smallest and largest Arizona· manchero failed to show, Chimayo star has compiled 497 yards, Flamenco Guitarist team in the last couple of dl)cades. was led by quarterback Larry Hammond trails with only 407 Confused? To clear it up, the Ray who passed to Gary Ray for yards in that statistical division. Wildcats are the smallest in the onl score of the game which Shatters School Records To Appear at UNM numbers and the largest in phys­ saw Tewa beaten 7-0. Stone shattered school passing Carlos Montoya, flamenco gui· The final score of the Kearny­ records as the Lobos came of age ical size of any Arizona team in Pueblo game was 12-0 with quar­ tarist, will perform in the UNM recent yeara. with an aerial attack against Concert Hall Saturday Oct. 21, terback Larry Swachez skirting Brigham Young University last at 8:15 p.m. left end for both scores. Pueblo Saturday. His record perform­ A Spanish gypsy, Montoya was held Kearny four times within ance came in his second varsity the fir s t flamenco guitarist to the ten yard line to post their appearance in a Lobo uniform. present solo concerts. His debut -~~~f.iti~ IT'S 1H~ RAGE shutout. Kiowa downed Mescalero Concert Holl First Year For Air as a concert soloist was preceeded C:: REGULAR 14-0 in the final shutout. Until this season New Mexico by years of accompanying flamen­ MODEL was almost notorious for being co dancers La Argentina, Vicente a running ball club and then Escudero, and Argentinita. "'-~::;;_~~~ANYLINE TEXT $2 · · L"BSLlE WEBSTER, 200•Pound Iowa State tailbaek, wl.ll return Wolfpup Hurt Coach Bill Weeks unlea!!hed 'Jllcke.ts are now available at Tho finest INDESTRUCI'IBLE MErAL to the lineup for Saturday's game against UNM. Webster was the Bruce Hennington, a freshman POCKEr RUBBER SfAMP. 'It" I 2.". Stone while the running back the Concert Hall box office at Send eheek or money order. Be No. 6 ruaher in the Big Eight last year and missed the Cyclones tackle from Belen, is injured and blocked or l!tood around to watch, $3.50 downstairs, $~.50 balcony, sure to include Y<>Ur ZJp Code. No first two games this year beeause of an injury. ISU lost its open· will miss the Wolfpup!!' opening Special Concert Hall 1.0. Cards which Stone has lost' 56 yards on and students, $2.00 in the baleony. postage or handling charges, Add ing games 34-3 to South Carolina and 52·0 to Texas Tech. game against New Mexico State play!! when he has kept the ball, sales tax. here Oct. 14 and probably the re­ All seats a.re reserved. Promt~t ahlpment. S.tl.toctlon Gu1111n1Md unable to get a pass off. Those THE MOPP CO. mainder of the season. Henning­ entitle you to 50 per cent discount on tickets yards would have boosted him to p. o. 11ft 111623 Lenox Squ.re Sbtion No WAC Play Saturday ton, the younger brother of Lobo the head of the national stand- A1U11TA, GA., 30326 co-captain Rex, we n t into fall ings. listen to KUNM practice at 6'1" and 215 pounds. Set WAC Records Too He was a football standout at Be­ are now being issued free at SUB Box Office After the first two weeks of Utah Heads WAC St:ats len High. action, Stone leads the Western Athletic Conference in passing Attention Bowlers! Help the arthritic help himself. Please present Activity Ticket when re- and total offense. He set or help­ The Arthritis Foundation has a ed to set, a flurry of UNM and -and those who haven't yet started In Tot:al Offense, Rushing free booklet, Aids to Indepen­ WAC records last week and still CO-CAPTAIN AND starting eenter Dennis Marr who mo•ed up -or are out of practice DENVER - Utah, which lost is in rushing offense, where Utah dence. Write to: Arthritis, P. 0. questing 1.0. Cards. a one-point thriller to rugged enjoys a juicy 105-yard per game B o x 802~, Albuquerque, New ' from. the second unit should be • big as11et to the UNM Lobus if When the S.U.B. lanes are crowded .or .. I' they are to improve on this year their 1966 season. Matt already Minnesota Saturday and meets lead over Wyoming (225-120). Mexico. I has two seasons of varsity ball under his belt at New Mexico for the low budget date off campus another tough opponent this week I Military Institute. (UNM photo.) in Oregon, is the only team in Cowboys 1oscqno the Western Athletic Conference Among thejobs held by WAC LOMAS BOWL INC. to lead in two conference stati8.; football officials: court baiUft, 7400 Lomas Blvd. NE 268-3396 tical categories, Commissioner Wins WAC Honor 'Shop,' 'Ship of Fools' employment interviewer, teacher­ Paul W. Brechler said Wednes­ coach, insurance agent, bank of· is providing day. Paul Toscano, who Wyoming Are Weekend Films ficial, sporting goods salesman, The Utes, who lost to Min­ moved from safety to quarterback farmer, high sehool princi~al, in­ SPECIAL UNIVERSITY RATES nesota 12-13 on a touchdown pass this season, is the Western Ath­ "The Shop on Main Street," a vestment counselor and researeh . ' with 77 seconds remaining, top letic Conference back of the week tragicomedy about two persons chemist. .. · the conference in total oifense after completing 16 of 24 passes in Czechoslovakia during World and rushing offense after the firl!t HEY! EVE BABY! for 196 yards and £our touch­ War II, will be shown at 7 e.nd 10 and includes rental shoes for ull two weeks of action. downs to lead the Cowboys past p.m. Friday in the Union Theater. o~"" bowling day and night Five of the six league teams the Air Force Academy last Sat- Admission is limited to prsons frolll 9 A.M. to closing-upon lead in at least one category and What you need-We've.Got! urday. . associated with the University. presentation of your UNM II) , the sixth ranks second in one One of the top prospects for the Katherine Anne Porter's aile· card. category. ,£. weekly award was UNM's Terry gorical tale, "Ship of Fools," is Free instrudlon ancl spedal Non-Conference Games Stone who leads the WAC in pass­ slated :for '7 and 10 p.m. Saturday Demanding ing this season and helped to set and again Sunday at 5 and 8 p.m., on bowling equipment The Latest and Greatest 12 school records in the Lobos' also in the Union Theater. Vivien are also available to unlnnlty No conference games are on pe11011neJ. schedule this weekend (that • 44-14 loss to Brigham Young over Leigh, Simone Signoret, and Os­ won't happen again until at an Fabulous Fashion for the weekend. kar Werner are in lead roles. Toseano's 16 completions and least 19'71), but the non-confer­ lo\lr touchdowns tied :Wyoming ence slate is heavily demanding. CAMPUS WEAR school records and his 263 yards Two teams seek to bcome the of total offense broke the record first WAC elevens to defeat a set by star quarterback Rick Eg­ Big Ten opponent. Arizona State, and EVERYWHERE 1-1, travels to Wisconsin while ll)ff last year as he guided the .} Cowboys to a 10·1 record and the Arizona, 0-1, meets Ohio State Sun Bowl championship • ·A Welcome Back to School Gift at Columbus. Brigham Young, 1·0, :hosts like (for instance) Western Michigan of the Mid­ for UNM American conference and New Students Mexico, 1-1 ,tackles Iowa State Skirts of the Big Eight conference at Ames. TltwHPB As you begin another important year of your education, remember to provide time for your UNM Is Best in OtfeltBe MOTORCYCLES The other game involving a GO WITH THE LEADER spiritual education. To help you, the College and Career Department of First Baptist Church has conference foe? It's Wyoming, a gift for you. · 2-0, attemtping to avenge its lone Cu\\oiteS · GO loss of 1966 against Colorado State at Laramie. TRIUMPH ~hen you visit the College and Career Department, 123 Broadway 'SE on Sunday. October 1, Arizona State leads the WAC in passing defense, Brigham 200 C.C .. TO 650 C.C. at e1ther 9:30 a.m. or 6:00 p.m. you'll receive free your choi~e of one of the following books: Young tops the league in rush­ ing defense; New Mexico is best Belts in passing offense; and Wyoming beads the list in total defense. .. The Gospel According to Peanuts .. Widest margin between first .. World Aflame and second places in a category P.J.'s ...... ~· ...... ····-·--~"-' ..~ .. ·-· _...... "' .... ·- ...... ~ .. ,_, ...... Arizona State's football team, 2931 MONT! VIS1'A ILVD., N,l! • from the head coach through the .. None of These Diseases team itself, . reported lean this AT fall. "We feel we have the backs to outquick some people this Just off the Cotner (If Girard MOFORSPORr fall," says coach Frank Kush. at Central !'OJ'IM~Iii.Y CUSHMAN MOTORS BONUS: You•n also. receive a copy of the popular New Testament translation "So we have to insUl'e that the linemen can keep puce.'' Curley 331·333 SAN PEDRO DR., N.E. "Good News for Modern Man." . Oulp, the Sun Devils' Ali~Amcri­ can canqidate at lniddle guM·d, , PHONE 265·6531 dropped from 2'70 in the spring to 245 this fall. • "!~ ••

Page 8 NEW MEXICO LOBO Thursday, September 28, 1967 --- Fad diets are of little use to Quackery and quack cures for the control of arthritis. For a arthritis drain millions from our free copy of Diet and Arthritis, economy. Over 100 times the 4252 U. Students Get Aid write The Arthritis Foundation, amount spent on research and re­ q,.· Nearly half of UNM's full­ scholarship, grant, work, and loan P. o. Box 8022, Albuquerque, habilitation is spent needlessly, time students last year received the National Defense Student New Mexico. reports the Arthritis Foundation. programs. The full-time enroll­ Loan program, Sheehan said. A some financial nupport througl1 ment last fall (undergraduates EW total · of 983 students received EXICO the office of student aids. carrying at · least 12 semester The percentage will be about $555,860 in NDSL money -low­ hours and graduates with at least interest government loans, pay­ the same or a· little higher this nine hours) was 9950. year, Charles J. Sheehan, director able over ten years after comple­ Our Seventy-first Year of Editorial freedom Sheehan estimates now that tion of school. of student aids for UNM, ;pre- dollar volume of aid will go. to dicts. . about $2.4 million·this year, help­ The defense loans are designed Vol. 71 During the 1966-67 school year ing some 4800 students. to help persons from low income Friday, September 29, 1967 4252 students drew a total of The biggest single category of families who might not other­ No.9 $1,896,363 in aid under various wise be able to attend college. aid, by dollar total last year, was · "Last year," Sheehan said, "624 or approximately two-thirds of Student Power­ all of the National Defense stu­ (Continued from page 1) Rate Increases Seen ident loans we processed were for NSA Represents, to pay tuition until their demands students from families with in­ are met." comes of less than $3000 a year.'' In Veteran Payment The next most popular source Another student added, "Forget .of aid was the state-guaral)teed about student strikes, sit-ins. Veterans now in school will loan program, in which students How many people will put their soon receive automatic increases Says Carr, But Is can make long-term, low-interest education on the line by not reg­ in their GI Bill education checks, loans from their own banks. istering for school? This is the the Veterans Administration an­ Sheehan's office reported 1096 of question we have to answer our­ nounced today. selves"! these, totaling $467,252. Eft'ective Oct. 1, t h e new University and sponsored schol­ Only One of Many No one was ready to answer amounts will be included in checks arships went to 589 students in that question, however. "I don't scheduled to arrive in November. an aggregate amount of $333,050, Bill Carr, Associated Students elected in any specified way. Dele­ think we would get very honest The rate increases were pro­ and 193 students received $8250 Be sophisticated: drink Schlitz vice-president and delegate to the gates are appointed 'and this could National Student Association answers if we took a count of vided in Public Law 90-77, signed in Economic Opportunity Grants, Have the gall to call your Rolls-Royce account for the large number of this," said one student. last month by the President. Sin­ which do not have to be repaid. (NSM) Congress last summer, liberals representing universities gle veterans taking full - time by its last name. Introduce your wig­ last night clairified his statement at the Congress," Carr said. Courses have been increased from maker to guests at your next beerbust. "I don't think the NSA repre­ Weeks Praises Players $100 a mon.th to $130, veterans The Western Athletic Confer­ l3rag about going on safari in evening sents anyone," given in Wednes­ Not All Students ence received the best composite dress. And all because Schlitz has shown day's report to Student Senate. He said, "My main objection to New Mexico football coach Bill with one dependent from $125 to $155, and veterans. with two de­ rating of any conference in the you the light. You've learned well, you Carr said, "When I made that the consideration of major resolu­ Weeks has high ;praise for three comment,·I meant that NSA was tions such as black power, student of his players. "David Bookert is pendents from $150 to $175. An country in the recent Football little Schlitzkins. You've always a goodly additional $10 will be provided Writers of America facilities­ supply at hand. You know when you're only one of several student or­ power, and the Viet Nam issue is going to be a great back," he tells services survey. Of 12 grades, ganizations and certainly not rep­ that it goes on the books as ac­ you. "He does some things on the monthly for each dependent in out of Schlitz, you're out of beer. Stay in. exces~ of two. Proportionately WAC schools received 11 A's and resentat\ve of all students and tion taken by the NSA. People neld that you don't ordinarily see. colleges across the nation.'' one B+. No other conference c 11'66 Jot. Schlitz lr... Jng Co., Mllwauku, wr .. get the impression that these re­ Defensively, we've got two ends smaller allowances will be paid "Delegates to the Congress, and solutions are the stands of all who are going to be as good as could match this. A tip of the hat for part-time training. to the six WAC sports informa- this is true at UNM too, are not students, and they certainly are we've ever had. They have the not.'' same last name - Silver (twin "The UNM delegation was more brothers Danny and. Donny)." In­ interested in studying and seeing cidentally, all three players were the continuance of the student members of the 1965 Hobbs, N. lovelace lecture services program, something that M., football team whieh was state has a direct affect on the stu­ runner-up. dents," Carr said. Tonight at 8p.m. McAdams 'Valuable' Wyoming Sets Mark CONCERT I-IALL When asked if he thought the The first William Randolph A quick check of conference and Lov'elace II Memorial Lecture Congress was worthwhile, Carr records shows that Wyoming set will be given tonight at 8 in the said, "If we were there to get TIDS GROUP of nine students, the UNM cheerleaders, will be one of the two pep groups lending Jim McAdams elected to the Na­ a league standard for most con­ The Cultural Program Committee-Associated Students spirit to all Lobo football and basketball games this Ye!ir. The che~rleaders are (from left): Gary Concert Hall. Dr. Robert C. Sea­ secutive conference "li.ctoriea when mans Jr., deputy administrator tional Supervisory Board then I Cone Connie Chase Greig Magnuson, Jaynee Fontecch10, Carol Ellmtt, and John Barbour. The other would say we were very success­ it defeated :Arizona, 36-17, Sept. pep which win be appearing at all Lobo home games is the Chaparrals. (UNM photo.) of the National Aeronautics and 1.6. The Cowboys now have won present ~roup Space Administration. (NASA), ful. Jim is very much interested six straight conference games, wil lspeak on "Man's Role in in the student services aspect of starting with their .28-6 triumph Space Fligltt." . NSA .and Lknow that he will be THE AUTUMN PARADE OF ENTERTAINMENT This lectureship has been es­ very 'valuable to NSA.'' over Arizona State last year. "As for getting anything de­ They shared the previous mark Cheerleaders Boost Spirit tablished as a tribute to Dr. Wil­ limn Randolph Lovelace II by his finite. done," Carr contii1.JJed, "it of five with the 1964-65 New By YVONNE LOPEZ the spring on the basis of appear­ man, three-women squad include was too much of an administrative Mexico teams. The start of the football sea­ professional colleagues at the ance, personality, and skill, are the sale of freshman beanies, Lovelace Clinic and Foundation. fiasco for that. The distracting in­ son at UNM signals a new year bMked up during the football booster buttons, and the red fluence of Students for a Demo­ for UNl\f cheerleaders, who lead These annual lectureships will Sept. 28-7:30 p.m. ITS A WIDE WIDE WORLD season by the Chaparrals for Coach King crying towels during be in the humanities and sciences cratic Society ( SDS) certainly Utah Receiver Speaks the student body in support and more participation by the stu­ the basketball season. was a hindrance to the Congress." sportsmanship. dents. Speedy Thomas, Utah's ace Gene Wianco and his Film. Men cl1eerleaders for the '67-68 SDS Speakers Conflict pass receiver, likes to think ahead MYSTERIES of the BALKANS The cheerleaders, selected in Special projects of the three- sd10ol year are John Ba1·boUJ: on his patterns. ''When I line up (head), Ga1·y Cone, and G 1' e i g Carr mentioned at the Student Senate meeting Wednesday that on a pass play, I try to figure out A personally narrated full color adventure-in-depth into the little known recesses of the Balkan States­ Mag-nason. a s-pecial fake pattern against a Noted Criminal Lawyer Girls un the squad are Connie SDS scheduled speakers (one of particular defensive halfback," A splendid entertainment. Admission-Travel Series Subscription or Adults $1.50 UNM STUDENTS $1.00. Chrlced, 308 Aah NE. Phtllle Admission by Performing Arts Subscription late Jack Ruby; he has his main ident and director of the Love­ 1 2-43-2881. Admission-Theater Series Subscription or Office-Seekers students and adults are in­ or Adults $2.00 Children 'Y.z price office in San Francisco, and his City lace Foundation for Medical Re­ vited. SERVICES Reserved Seats-$5.00, $4.50, $4.00, $3.5() daughter is a UNM graduate. search and Education and served l'YPEWRITER Sail!!! & Services, aU The latest defense effo.rts of closely with Dr. Seamans in makl!l!. 20 percent discount with this ad. UNM STUDENTS $1.00 To Appear on KNME Free Pickup and delivery, Open until .8 UNM STUDENTS % PRICE Bailey ended in failure when Dr. NASA. He worked first as a con­ To Read Paper p.m•. on Monday & th111'1!ilay. E & E Carl Coppolino was convicted The nine Albuquerque City sultant for NASA, and finally Tn>ewriter Senice, 2217 Coal SE, Phone Dr. Shlomo Karni, associate 243•0588. April 28 of the murder of his Commission candidates will ap. as director of space medicine for professor of Electrical Engineer­ wife with a poisonous anesthetic. · pear in a special hour-long tele­ that agency. ing at UNM, and James E. Steel­ FOR SALE The May 7 New York Times re­ vision program to be broadcast He held this position until his 986 YAMAHA YA·6 Motorcycle, Ex­ man, a graduate student,,~ill de­ cellent condition. Call Bob, 243·0066 OCT. 31-AII Hallow's Eve-7:00 and 9:00 p.m. ported that the drug, succinyl­ by KNME·TV, Channel 5, this death in December, 1965. liver a paper, "Synthesis. of after 6 :l>.m. 9/25, 27, 28. 29 choline, was thought to be im­ evening at 8 p.m. Each candidate Dr. Lovelace has been called Bashkow's A Matrix for the Gen.,. FOR SALE possible to detect. will appear individually for about a great patriot, humanitarian, eral RC Case," at the Fifth AI· 956 RAMBLER MetroPOlitan, running Giant SIN-IN and WITCH WATCH Bailey protested the second de~ six minutes, and will be asked philanthropist, scientist, and lead­ condition. $150. Call after 5 p.m. Phone lerton Conference on Circuit and no. 268·4906. 9/27, 28, 29: 1012. gree murder verdict and called it questions about the emerging is­ er. He was influential in helping Systems Theory, University of From the underground Crypts "a joke 11 sUes in the campaign. ~LASKAN Malamutes, puppies and stud F. LEE BAILEY to solve many of the nation's Illinois, Urbana, Ill.;, on ~ct. 4-6. serv1ce, Phone 247·2602. 9/27, 28, 29; He later went on the NBC ••To• Leading the panel of question~ problems during both World War 101 2. The SINS of the FLESHAPOIDS night Show" and said that the ers will be Jess Price, Director of II and the Korean conflict and iTUDENT Representative for PLAYBOY toxicologist in the case, Dr. C. J. Mirage Pictures the Division of Information and through much of the pioneering Corky Gonzales Magazine now has special rates for and Assorted Live(?) Entertainment Umberger, had indicated to him Publications at UNM. Rounding UNM students. Call 247·9082. 9/27, 28, tndividual pictures for The age of aviation and space medi­ Rudolfo "Corky" Gonzales, 29: 10/2. Admission By Experimental Film Subscription or Adults $1.50 that the jury was incorrect in Mirage, the UNM yearbook, out the panel will be Bob LaW­ cine. rendering a guilty verdict on the rence, -editor of the Albuquerque controversial Spanish-Amer­ PERSONALS will be taken next week in the Dr. Seamans, who has been ac':' ican civil rights figure, poet, UNM STUDENTS $1.00 basis of ·his (Dr. Umberger's) photo lab,· room 215 of the News, and Dick Krause of the tive in the fields of missiles and ERSONALITY POSTERS, PSYCHA· testimony. KNME staff. aeronautics since 1941 was as­ and editor of the Denver news­ DELIO POS'l'ERS & llUTTONS. It we Journalism building. Times 1 paper "El Callo'1 will speak on don't hnve them, then you don't want Umberger replied by threaten· This s p e cia I broadcast of are 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 3-4 and sociated professionally with Dr. " Power" tomorrow them. Send for samples .and list. MA. Tickets To All Events Now Available at Box Office ing a slander proceeding against 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Oct. 5-6. The cost 11Candidates' Press Co~erence: Lovelace at NASA. DAM. BUTTERFLY'S Gift Shop, 4609 Bailey. afternoon at 3 p.m. in Mitchell E. Colfax, Denver, Colorado. 80220, for a picture in the Mirage City Commission Oandiates '67" Dr. Seamans' address will be Hall 101. The discussion is be­ quoted Umberger as saying ••He plus one 2ux3" print is $1.50 will be repeated Monday after­ published in the journal of Aero­ knows damn well that I didn1t ing sponsored by the Thunder­ with a student ID card. noon, Oct. 2, at 2 p.m. on Channel space Medicine. Reprints will be bird, UNM literary magazine. ~~ay al)ything like that." 5. made available. \..