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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository

1967 The aiD ly Lobo 1961 - 1970

9-13-1967 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 1, 9/13/1967 University of New Mexico

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Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 1, 9/13/1967." 71, 1 (1967). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1967/68

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]. 37~. 7Y'l '\1\ \11) Page 8 t) 3 Q NEW MEXICO' LOBO Friday, August 4, 1967 Y,7f~.l • Christian Science ~'3. I 1n 10 U.S. Men Is ·Homosexual 5 UNM Students (Continued From Page 1) Washington hotel is the site fot• in the armed forces where some rights. They liken their organiza­ their horrible shame as they slink the "Ac11demy Awl!rds," when said they had discovered their tion to the· NAACP, Dr. Frank To Attend Meet into a dress shop, whisper their hundreds.. of homosexuals expert­ homosexuality, It could very well Five members of the UNM .Our Seventy-first Year of Editorial freedom needs to a sales lady, and try on Kameny, its president, had very ly make themselves up to resem­ be that the army's segregated (by few complaints about police Christian Science Organization the dresses hidden in dressing ble movie stars. The community sex) life and authoritarianism harassment. He pointed out and their faculty advisor, Prof. Wednesday, September 13, 1967 rooms. I added snide remarks and showed me many pictures of the help these fellows "discover" K. T. Feldman, will be among No.1 raised eyebrows. One problem­ Miami and Los Angeles as. cities last one. It was hard to imagine homosexuality. where policemen were unfair to 5000 college students attending no such problem: most middle that the tall, thin Negro male I asked every homosexual I homosexuals. a conference at the Christian Sci­ and higher priced boutiques are sitting next to me on the couch talked with whether he consider­ ence Church headquarters in Bos­ very used to and dependent upon had so altered his appearance at ed himself 11 hippie, what he Preference or Disease? ton this month. the "queen'' trade. Consequently, the Awards that I had exclaimed thought of hippies, and whether Of course, it will never be on a politeness and openness reign, The student conferences, which "Lena Horne?'' before I was cor­ hippies were homosexuals of a par with heterosexuality in the were first held 12 years ago, have A queen is a homosexual who rected. new order. public's mind until homosexuals attracted Christian Science stu­ prefers dressing and acting the Such a very formal affair is Hippies Not Homosexuals decide whether their condition is dents from more than 887 colleges female role. There are three dif­ "high drag." "Medium drag" pre­ The answers were surprisingly a preference rather than a dis­ and universities and 36 nations. ferent kinds: drag queens, who vails at luncheons and cocktail similar: hippies reflect the cul­ ease. Most answers to this ques­ "flip" between playing a male parties, where the women's busi­ One of the objectives of the con­ ·mination of a modern rejection of tion were ambiguous: "Of course ference is the exploration of the role in men's clothing and a fe­ ness suit and cocktail dress are in a dependency on sexual role-play- it's a preference..•. I never got male role in women's dress (when order. "Low drag" involves the along with my father. I was very relevance of Christian insight as ing. Consequently, virile, hetero­ a radical healing force in the c .· .. · ·.. ~"" a person is wearing women's casualness of slacks, skirts, no sexual men actually prefer to close to my mother." But that :r~ . clothing, he is said to be "in makeup, etc. sounds like neither preference nor whole range of human experi­ ...... -. . ' wear their hair long and to wear ence. The group will discuss the drag"); flame queens, who wear Changing one's sex is a very gay clothes. But they do not, as disease. That sounds like over­ ...... ­ women's makeup, eyelashes, and complex and frightening thing­ "new morality," birth control, the -·~~-- .. compensation for a childhood even for a homosexual. For a a group, alter their sexual roles ."death of God" theology, the prob­ hair-do even when dressed in -men still prefer women, and vacuum. men's clothing; and closet queens, man to lose his penis and develop lems of emerging nations, world vice versa. At any rate, I no longer feel peace, and other topics, who masquerade as heterosexual female accoutrements, when all quite so smug about my knowl­ his sexual pleasure and drives LSD and marijuana are as males with al !their acquaint­ are as popular among homosex­ edge of and disdain for homosex­ ances, prefez·ing to pursue their have centered around his penis- uality, Do you 7 when his very personality and uals as among hippies, probably homosexual lives with strangers, because both groups are intensely Listen to KUNM often in another city. identity ond beauty have been de­ .,;....,;..,.. creative, having let go of out­ ...... veloped as a man over a quarter -;A... ~ .. ••·• Prizes A warded moded taboos and accepted new Each year a large, well-known of a century or more-is a major, not lightly taken step. Consequ­ pursuits. Most homosexuals I Remember the Arts & Crafts Fair Aug. 4-6th ently very few homosexuals ever talked to disliked hippies' habit­ alter their sex. ual poverty, uncleanliness, tribal­ ism, and mysticism. Liaisons Temporary OLD TOWN PLAZA Police Cause Problems There are about fifteen Wash­ Central at Rio Grande NW l. ' WANT ADS "Hustlers" are homosexuals qLASSIFlED ADYERTISING RATES: ington "gay" bars. The mecca for c!IJf",..... 4 !me ad., 65¢-4 hmes, $2,00. Insertions homosexual activity, curiously who will offer their bodies to must be submitted by noon on day before other men for money. Entrap­ publication to Room 159, Student Publica­ enough, is the same area in which TOYS from tions Building, or telephone 277-4002 or ment and violence dog their foot­ 277-4102. servicemen and travelers gather OldTown -13th Street and New York steps. Several mentioned run-ins SERVICES with the police in which their civil TYPEWRITER storage during the •um· Avenue, N.W. There are three gay Indian mer. Insured and bonded. Also type­ bars in a block there. liberties were completely disre­ writer sales & service. aU makes with Trading Post 20% <:fiseount with this ad, Free pickup Denizens of the area have a garded. Several members, almost & dehvery. E I< E Typewriter Service very logical explanation of why always in drag, claimed to have The 2217 Coal SE. Phone 243-0588. ' been picked up by policemen in The eldest lndion Shop an the plaza HELP WANTED that area is the all-night meeting squad cars, driven to secluded United Lacated between La Placito and GIRLS over ~8 ~vanted to demonstrate ground for homosexuals, travel­ New . Cosmehe hne: Complete training. ers, and servicemen. Homosex­ s~ots, and forced into having sex Nations La Hacienda Restaurants Partt1me or full bme income will de .. WJth them. They mentioned by Pend on ,You. Call Mr. Telles 3-7 p.m. uals thrive on numerous social Center We deal only in seloct for appomtment, Monday thru Friday.. contacts, and accept the fact that name five Washington policemen Phone 255-0413. 7/U-8/4. who they say are homosexuals. Indian Crafts TEACHERS wanted, Southwest entire most liaisons are by their nature \Veat_ and Alaska. Salaries 15400 Qp. Fret: temporary; travelers seek out One theorized that the same fac­ ... rcgistTattan. Southwest 'I'eachera Acen· tors mentioned above exist in 242-6044 cy, 1303 Central Ave. NE. f~iendly (and at home often for- · J.osephine Shasky btdden) companionship of a tem­ both the army and the police I FULL TIME PART TIME force. pora.ry and anonymous nature; Girls over 18 for New Line: New Train­ serv1cemen, because of their pent­ Homosexuals, like any minority '> ~ng: Extra high pay: Can be supervisor group, have massive legal prob­ r 10 2 months. Minimum pay $100 per ~P sexual needs and segregated Contemporary I· montb. Call: D'Amico Enterprises' 265 Sates of Spain I 4541. 7/7-8/4. • • hves, have learned that other lems to overcome in a. society which tends to enforce restrictive Southwestern FOR SALE men can gratify these needs. Spanish and Mexican legislation on those whom it fears Crafts-Imports­ Wrought Iron and Gifts i BSA MOTORCYCLE 350 cc 1965 Model 50 Per Cent Are Catholic or dislikes. The Mattachine So­ B-40 • . SS. 90. In perfect condition. Cali Tw? interesting facts add. light Objects of Virtu 255-8436 after 5 p.m. 7/28, 8/4. ciety was formed to educate the 102 Romero I to this phenomenon: it is estim­ I '58 CHEVROLET. Standard OD w/Hurol public about homosexuality and 28iJ VB. Tudor. Excellent gu and oil ated by at least one sociologist to protect homosexuals' civil mileage. Sharp, Call 242-0267 after 9 :30 that nearly fifty per cent of the P.m. weekdays, 242-0881 Sunda)'ll 7/21, 28. • country's . homosexuals are (or J~J4 3 BEDROOM, H~ bath, Brick contempo. were) Roman Catholics, whose rarr. Located on Netherwood Park near strong emphasis on segregated INDIAN ARTS ~ U'!•verslty, 51h'h FHA loan. Luxury BUDGET neu

", .. if you read but one book this year, Dr. Frankl's 'T.l:is ~~s ~t:x· ·Fcif!'m:&­ book should be that one." -Los Angeles Times 'l;im; ~ nf J.;S S!DrJ~ .ES Tijuana Brass Will Play l-lere ':riit;r:T!t'.it '¥..::!.. ~r· F-'!' =:: :11£-~ By BOB STOREY :ncim- ~!llt: ~!mmnl !1m ~­ Herb Alpert and his Tijuana shows I've ever been forced to ~ IimF i';rrm~ Pi lm,s Brass, creators of one of the fast­ watch," said one dedicated non­ Man's Search for Meaning :Smile ~ :W:t!!m: in!? 'iiief.. es.t rising soul!-ds in the country, television watcher after taking the show in. VIKTOR E. FRANKL "'=r, .-1!5: .!l5DD ~lztnm: ~ BOOKS Will be the mam attraction at the ..z2ef: -:e'T' ~ ·rll:t :is g=·, ,,~ -rm UNM Homecoming this year. Herb's music varies from the A famous psychiatrist vividly describes. his ex· haunting, mellow sound of it}le periences in Dachau nnd Auschwitz and his formu­ = .=:pus, ::·.,., ~ SlllW :ena NEW USED Alpert and his six-man band lation of an existential psychotherapy bnscd on m -.!.n,T.!i']iinr'l -r~nn, ptf1 ~ "Lonely Bull" to the foot-tapping, a dynamic and humanjstic view or modern. man. will play to students, alumni, and "A gem o! dramatic narr~tive, focused upon the ~ L:J ih:i:r Im-~:ms :is 'LX; 'im­ ... heart-skipping tune of the "Ti­ , townspeople Saturday, Oct, 14, at juana Taxi.'' deepest of human problems , •• a compelling in· ,.nss:-ne irih~"'· ~ mn. great savtngs 9:30p.m. in the UNM Arena. His traduction to the most significant psychological ... ~ ::n; :sr~ s::niium:s ~ LF Tickets for the Herb Alpert movement of our day. H-Gordon Allport. Harvard concert will begin immediately concert may be purchased at the University 70-w£. 'Z!\ m sr~ rri~~ after the UNM-Arizona State ;n~ :rem~ .. :nr sDrVJ;!E 'l:.P 'i.Ti:; football game, Union ticket office and Reidling a WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS paperback 60¢ Music Company. Student tickets W642 ~t 3m iT·~- ;v;;et: ~ smC THE BDOifCA5E Herb's distinctive blend of dual .., ------~ ...... ' are $5, $4, $3 and 2, Public tick­ E""~XZ:t:::i!O.'lL... n;m..nr 7.lm:. 4. .!:: .!<. 't 2608 CENT~A!!. S:E trumpet mixed with a mellow ets are $6, $5, $4, and $3. 'i•h:r:-a:•£ in~ "l:l::w ~a~~ Washington Square Press Is also pleased to announce guitar and swinging rhythm the publication of the selected papers at Viktor E. Frankl: tl:Utili:.::-tL...: 0'-rinn::i:::Rir~ acs ~ rB .C.i!!.._,.) cxp1~:=-n~ 11 turns out a happy sound enjoyed +:pnl-- r:Z i!ff. ::::m-:p•t -~ tgr.- 51:rr:j.r..,..~ "Dffir:l: .dmo :::l:tf' lf::l'.eclr ;;ysu,m to by each of its million listeners. COORS FLORAL ~·~ ,..._:;:r;,l"""T'tn;; -; 1n ::-:J"izn:.·, ..!".:!!£ .L PSYCHOTHERAPY AND EXISTENTIALISM ... ~ ~~~·:..:;,;-- ...... "'" - i_ 5!'D"Ql 11£ f::""L.si'..JnE.D Ll .l:tl ID!'­ "Bull" Stormed U.S. SHOP "Frankl expresses m an illuminating manner that which is properly mu].::;T~ ~iEr-...t.::=::!' ~ !!.t: ~:.I:.~ i&_·ti. .'zl:iii m~ril::g ~ K:::.:fue:J understood as the existential qllestlon.''-Gobriel Marcel SJ!:l!: ::: ihf ~;:;!:m~ 5£ "'!!:--.~ L..";­ E.L:.J ~ onih:~:r.. .l[¥.Jle Jeane~ cyf The group's first hit was the 649 Coors Blvd. S.W. • ~~:: ..L :'FV; :::"im:-;r-;~ 1\(.£_~ 7J('i­ ~ ~:irn:·. if~nm ]!!;:) SM! "Lonely Bull" which stormed the 242-9940 - 242·9230 .,.... "Wf - ~, Dill M.:t:r country with a new mariachi =nt:" 'Z ;;.I::-~ ti!" =~l..!" ~n~l:mL"r". ~-::.p;gs,, -!.!.L-.F U.Jnl"::lf'_.,.. . -.. - Student prices on corsages :r!i~:: ~ ! ''!:!"~~=.~ :J: :;~~ TLY E£:·. ~·L!....~ f..::rr -tL~ band effect. Other h i t s like -~,_::JmS. ~tirm ;C"t:e"•:tt= 2.£!::l!Y "Whipped C rea m," "Tijuana ..... r: ir~.·£ 71tc ~ il!l:T~ ii_:-1 Jl2nme:r.v SE.ii! 'lriertttiOll eune Taxi," "Zorba the ·Greek,'' Span­ :S:tm!"~~!:....~ IT: :rnt £~ t:1-·i~ T~ d ish Flea," "What Now My Love," Sales& .of :&S ~ .,ith BIJ :per .eeirt Phone =!".ut',;Y·rr.LI:.-.r:rl~~z 'l!LE..nilt.t::-::;.. "" :p.t;.."'"ti:::p.anoll frnm :iw.nlcing I Service 4~r-~ s.r;!iL "-] e:~-;;1:1 _Lis::, se= rrsi.men. i"Phif..o 'by 2\.n1ultl) J I OLYMPIC CYCLES 256-9190 i~ !n::.l ;;;..,:no ~ :!!lr·=-.: :-!l:m:s ~ • All Makes .sr;:t:1e:t !!LZif w~ 5bJ't ii£.TI.> ~~11.'~ .E.70~ !!'::v~ Je.aiie:"S. 1031 SAN MATEO SE A :-n:c.w-::n :::£:~ :mst. ;y:ruz's Bicycles "'JT!'"",..-..;;: ~_...E.!-~~ -:::,:-;J~ ":W'ES =- .:... _£... -:::r:.~= &g35h h1ssses js Regents Protest .:~:::; ~:~ -~~~ :n~:!rl~ZiBJ :.n t.bf' ... ~-~ ' ~·- ALBUQUERQUE ____ - -- .. :!. ib:m=rn hf' w.mild ~~"';lnr -wm; :aaae~ r.Brigj;&tc.:rs ~:;,;.... S&]d ~~e g~:r~ ~O'Df"t:: z:f ixf51=z:m.e, E.5k n::r"T".;ssl:r.ZJ icr ,r,ri~tatr:.l"S t..=J N. M. UJB ~:s. 1:.i i.b~ .sez:t J~t"""~ ~ :g:J ~;:t:J E!l.g':ssb cla!lses :af'"uer ::he ~ lzt:!l,.,..--=~g ~5'!:rrtt:TJ -:w:re ~ -reg:.:::s to as£: '~= Ethnic Grouping ;abo:rt t.!le st"-..d.::-...!1ts' re&eti:;~ t.:~ SALES & SERVICE ~W...Je~ ~· tbe zrl:!:ta:C;!' :fr~ A card requmng students to . ri= t!ley :reccrre:l Jett-::rs. t.be ee".:hes. ""Y::e :Shew see::ned tD go The ethnic classification is re­ "The best idea. I'v-e heard yet . quired by the U.S. Department of Welfare was at first adamant ~ ~ T<-..:1 and mor:Ded is H·at Etadents be giv-en tmee but a method is presently being :III..'":!'e St:de::;!;s ~ 'l'i'.i:i&t is go­ " Health, Education, and Welfare ho;;.n' eredit f~Jr gomg il:lrough (HEW) from all higher education worked out through my office to i:ng !!D ~ ~1e -;.;; ~.. ~ti.o~" he ·.Ud. provide them with the necessary ~sz.'ia. (lobo) Men•sshop institutions receiving federal aid. ~ - t.o bs 1;he statistics. The findings will be ""T"xe T~-!. S"rt:l:W-'"'XBT' f:rer:tmerts biggest :fez.r, he said. Chairman of · the Regents 2120 Ce!mal s.e. Thomas Roberts expressed resent­ presented to the Regents for their KLEPPER FOLDAWAY BOATS-SINCE 1908 'lf'2E .Jl; ~ = the ~ ''"'We h~ .tbzt wht ;we lli"e:re &1:Ue Z::i±::=y CL~ "'TO:::g:"!:t ~ 2C3-695( ment about the structure of the approval at the next meeting on ~ grre them today ....s:l help them · questionnaire and added that "this ~ l!o :t!--C-..ee ~ d'5clzis Sept. 24.'' West Germany's Kayak-Sailing Specialists ~"he aid. is an amazing thing to be con­ fronted with." The card originally asked stu­ dents to classify themselves as "American Indian," "Negro," "Oriental," "White," "Spanish­ American," or "Other." When the Regents objected to these classifications on behalf of students, HEW said that another classification could be used: ''Ne­ gro," "White," and "Other" (in­ cluding Spanish-American, Ameri­ Rattan can Indian, and Oriental). Baskets The Regents expressed greater dissatisfaction with the latter HAS ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS structure and chairman Thomas Roberts commented that he would rather distribute cards to students Shirts Greek leaders Hold Skirts ! I U. Fraternity Rush UNM fraternities are currently Sweaters conducting a week-long campaign for new members with bid distri­ bution scheduled from 1 to 3 p.m. Knits Saturday, Sept. 16. Inter-Fraternity Council presi­ dent, Dave Phillips is in charge, Date Dresses and Bill Ross is rush chairman. Men's organizations include Al­ pha Epsilon Pi, Delta Kappa Al­ Coats pha, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gama Delta, Phi S!g­ ma Kappa, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sig­ Slacks ma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi and Sigma Phi Epsilon. There are four *Note: listed as colonies, Alpha Tau Bermudas Haske Omega, Alpha Kappa Lambda! Junior Junction Delta Sigma Phi and Omega Ps1 Handbags Phi. does not provide Culloftes Shop eligible young Belts. Slips Try-Outs for Talent Pantsuits• men ••• Panties. Bras. P.J•s Two Locations To Be Held Sept. 23 We just can't HaTs Two auditions are scheduled :for etc•• etc., etc•• etc all-University talent on Sept. 23, have you depending Umbrellas. Shoes 53 I 8 Menaul NE both in Room M·17, the Choral Room o£ the Fine Arts Center 265-5951 ,. from 3 to 5 p.m. !.lnd from 7 to on us for 10:30 p.m. d An aecompanist will be on han Everything. but studiilits trying out are urged ~); to bring their own. Instru'!len­ talists and singers, especmlly those of folk·. tunes, pop tunes, • Dixieland and Broadway.. show 2937 MONTI VISTA BLVD., N.E. ~ I , melodies, are urged to participate.

~ ~ • ·"'" ,., "' ., .. ... e ,. '"...... "' ; '"" ...... , .... . Weclaetlda1, Septeaber 11,1117 Wednesday, Septe~ber 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO NEW MEXICO LOBO ··N··sAC ·· . . d NEW MEXICO LOBO 0 =!i~~=::rt:~=*s~.~D*il~;~~~~~ Newman Center to Offer 2 Courses . ongress ·. ppose ing Plant. Suboeription rate: $4.60 !or tbe ~I rear, ~arable m advan~ AU Edit.oriall "Key Christian Ideas'' and Thursday from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. formation and formation are a "Marriage and the Family" are man person," Father Flynn said ~t ~rea='&:.f';:';"o;-t;t,;1i~v:f.l~~ wnter and not neceaarily thooe o! tbr St.~· This course wm meet for the first necessary dimension of the hu- recently. eon the two accredited courses plan­ time on Oct. 5. Sister Aquin will Editor-in-Chief ------·------Chuck Noland ned by the UNM Aquinas New­ also hold an inquiry class for PoWer S 0 ,l man Center this seme11ter. Regis­ ·prospective converts on Tuesday BIa Ck R. e lu Managing Editor ------Melissa Howard tration begins at the Center to· :from 7 to 8 p.m. Looks great..• Business Manager ··--··--··-----··.. --.. ------.. ----.. -- Richard Pfaff day. "We see our accredited and By BOB STOREY not become so bad that we can't NSA continued its anti-ad­ Associate Editor ------Chuck Reynolds The courses are accredited by non-credit courses as a supple­ The majority of the delegates work with them." ministration stand by calling for Sports Editor ------Nooley Reinheardt UNM and the Univer&ity of Al­ ment to the student's enrichment to this summer's National Student The first thing to hit the NSA abolishment of all non-academic Cartoonist ------.. ------Frank Jacome buquerque. at the University. Religious in- writes great•.. Father James Barnett will Association Congress did not sup­ congress was the president's re­ regulations, The student group Staff ------Wayne Ciddio, Yvonne Lopez, port the controversial resolution pol;t on the CIA crisis that shook wants more voice in establishing Greg MacAleese, Bob Storey teach "Key Christian Ideas" on supporting black power. the organization early this year. rules which affect students. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday That's what UNM's Associated Delegates looking :for a :full ex­ from 12:30 to 1:20 p.m. at the From Coast to Coast is great! Students President John Thorson planation of the CIA-NSA tie Center. Father Thomas Flynn will the Leader in serving = teach "Marriage and the Family" believes after reviewing the reso­ were divided into two groups, the Insurance Needs lution which supports black pow­ those who wanted to drag out E on Tuesday and Thursday from er "and any means neces.sar}T to the issue and force a cleansing 8 :30 to 9 :20 a.m. of College Men see' it.s end." and purging, and those who just The Center will also offel:' two and Women Delegates Opposed wanted to forget it and try to The Exiles and non-credit courses, one on "Icono­ ''I don't think most of the dele­ start over, Thorson reported. graphy" taught by Sister Helen gates supported that "any means Report "Shocking" the Revolution O'Connor, which will survey the necessary'' cls!llle," Thorson said. "Fortunately those who wanted Bema systems governing imagery. The "We were all sympathetie to sap­ to forget and start oYer won out," i; class will meet on Monday, Wed­ porting the Negroes' eau...«e, hut he said. nesday, and Friday from 12:30 we were not in :f:a;-cr ci them do­ Even so, the report of Eugene By NELSON P. VALDES tion decreases, when there is We believe that for strategical to 1:20 p.m. Sister O'Connor will ing anything to acll.!e..-e it.'' Groves, NSA president, is a Aeschylus wrote once that he more liberalization that any re· and humanitarian reasons the also teach a course in "Group United States should change its "Tee Irlght t!le bl:ii.'k power ::;b~ and tragic drama of the knew how men in exile :feed. on volt is possible. Dynamics" from 7 to 8 p.m. on policy. But the problem is how l"ES~:nt:~n c:sn:-e uu t!:e c-.m:gress XSA's fight to rid itself of the dreams. We could say the same What can we Cuban exiles do Wednesday. to :foster a liberalizing process in can the United States make such ..-.:,:e:! cl:e "any n:e~s r:E-~::;sary" CL~ taint. Groves's report reads thing of the Cuban exiles today. Weekly discussions led by ~ac_~ c':it o:.f ·U:e res.cluti:o:l on a like .a dime mystery novel, com­ We have become victims of our the Cuban revolution"! a change after so much friction? The solution to this problem can Father Stephen Shimek on Tues. rcl!l-ea.l.l ..-~~." TI::orsc.n Slid. plete with international espio­ own wishful thinking, and we * • • day from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. will The answer to this question is only be given by the Cuban exiles 7Ze J?-~u_~ supporters we:re nage, hurried meetings in back have lost touch with reality. Our focus on "Bible Issues," Sister themselves. Accro!s From Campus Central o& Girard ah!e ro get a:ough support to ask :rooms, and constant :fear of re­ closed minds have made us be~ closely related to the United Thomas Aquin will conduct a for ra~deration. Cnder the prisal from the CIA. lieve that we had incontrovertible States position toward Cuba. • • • "World Theology Dialogue" on 265-1669 Congress bylaws there had tn be Groves describes the fate of truths, and we became faithful From 1959 to the present the But first we should keep in a twc-hour -wait before reconsider- Richard Starnes, NSA's interna­ followers of wrong ideas. We American position has gone :from mind that the Cuban revolution ation, Thorson said. • tional vice-president, a Phi Beta have become fanatic and intoler­ an attitude of wait and see, to an is in a transitional phase, It can Quick Vote Taken Kappa from Stan:ford, and a dip­ ant. We do not allow anyone to attitude of open conflict, and to go into Stalinism, where the Cu. Used Books for Sale COMPLETE SHRIMP DINNERS 95¢ & up - "They adjourned the session lomatic hopeful. He got a call in challenge these dreams. one of de facto limited coexist­ ban people would find themselves EBERHARD FABER'S before the two hours were up and the middle of the night from a Our ideas have been a mere re· ence. It is only the fact that Cuba in a terrorized society, or it can CHICKEN SPECIALS- then voted on the clause the first voice saying that he was no long­ flection of United States polic~ is in this hemisphere that keeps move into the liberal phase. At In Soccer field Tent thing the next morning," he said. er eligible for government service. and we have lost our own iden· the United States from having the present time the leaders of A temporary tent has been set 2 PIECES OF CHICKEN 85¢ NO BLOT® DESK SET "biost of the delegates were still Domestic Programs Stressed tity. As a result we have not been the same kind of relations that it the revolution are talking of in­ up on the soccer field north of 3 PIECES OF CHICKEN $1.10 getting ready or on their way to The congress adopted a new able to communicate with the has with the nations of Eastern stitutionalizing the revolution and Johnson Gym for students wish­ with your college emblem the session when the vote was plan to try to build a new image Cubans in Cuba. We have not lib· Europe. There the United States moving into liberalization, but ing to sell used textbooks during 4 PIECES OF CHICKEN $1.35 & up taken." by concentrating on domestic erated our country because we :follows a policy that strengthens this has been merely promises. registration. Students may price Two famous NOBLOT Baii·Point The split-session tactic is often problems rather than interna­ have been wrong either in our the national autonomy and the Liberalization does not mean their own books, and the bookstore Pens-one black, one red-set used to pass controversial legisla­ tional affairs, the Collegiate premises or in our strategy, and domestic liberalization of those complete democracy, but it is just owners will keep ten per cent of in modern chrome holders on tion in the Congress, Thorson Press Service repol·ted last week. we do not want to reappraise states. In Cuba the policy is dif­ a more liberal state of aifairs. the profit for operating expenses. deep-lustre black base. said. The new NSA ·president, Ed either one. We want to keep re­ ferent. There "Communism is not We Cuban exiles could foster this A group of UNM students have (with emblem) "I was impressed with the Schwartz, has promised to ex­ peating the same mistakes, and it negotiable.'' liberalization process if we were opened the cooperative bookstore HAMBURGERS Handsome, handy, perfect for at college bookstore only strong support given to a pro­ pand the educational reforms is too difficult to think anew. To­ We believe that it is time for to begin a dialogue on the Cuban in an attempt to offer a better and all Popular your desk. posal that student governments undertaken by NSA, it said. day the United States has no real the United States to revise its revolution. A dialogue does not deal on used textbooks than that Sandwiches Pick up an Eberhard Faber TR 35® writer, too. With Perma·moistnl tip. detach themselves from any con­ The delegates at the congress policy toward Cuba but neither policy. It is a fact that exiles are imply capitulation, but flexibil­ offered by the Union Bookstore's Writes with a thin, strong line every time! Black. blue, red, greeD. 49~. nection with the University," demanded action instead of words, do we. not allowed to take any action ity. Martin Buber sayll that a resale program. Thorson said. CPS continued. • • • against Castro. It is a fact that dialogue "does not mean giving The group will reopen its reg­ BREAKFAST ALSO SERVED Supporters of this legislation Schwartz was one of the We find ourselves at an im­ the United States has no plans up one's own principles and con­ ular store at 18081h Central Ave. EBERHARD FA were so veh em en t that they strongest supporters of the stu­ passe resulting in conformism, regarding Cuba. Either the Unit­ victions or becoming indifferent NE next week. wanted to throw NSA affiliates dents' union organization. How­ desperation, apathy, and indiffer­ ed States must allow thr. Cuban to truth, but it concems itself ,·A1t of the organization if they ever he predicted that it would be ence. We have failed in achieving exiles to do what they consider with others, listening to them, didn't end their connections with at least 10 years before the stu­ our goal, and today we merely necessary to remove Castro or getting into touch with them to their administrations by next dents' union approach becomes live doubtful and confused lives. else the United States must seek benefit both parties." February, he said. accepted in the nation, CPS said. We feel powerless, and as a re· a way to develop domestic liberal­ • • • "These people wanted to set Anti·Draft Stand suit our involvement has de· ization in Cuba. We do not consider a dialogue up the same type of students' The congress made a stronger creased. Today all our hopes are • • • with the Castro regime a sur­ union that exista in Latin Ameri­ stand against the draft and voted put on those inside Cuba since We believe the United States render to Communism but a move ca," Thorson aaid. "They wanted to organize a more efficient thev are the ones whD are sun­ could create a liberal climate in that could bring about liberaliza­ hodes to act as bargaining agents for means of fighting it. A resolution posed to overthrow Castro. Can Cuba if she would trade with tion. A dialogue could find .. the students against the univer­ con

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Page 6 NEW MEXICO LOBO Wednesday, SeJltember 13, 1967 Wednesday, SeJltember 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO Abortion Discussion Set Page 7 A panel discussion on abortion, ness, marketing, and farm reports highlighted by a long-distance The Alert Center also subscribes International Center Dream are received on wire-service tele­ telephone conversation with a to about 90 newspapers and maga­ Becomes Reality types. The latest reports are post­ By BOB STOREY Professor W. Warren Wagar Cali:t'ornia pro:t'essor, will inaugu­ zines. Joh'n Bakas's dr(lam and that eign dignitaries visiting Albu­ asked them to take advantage of rate the UNM Alert Center's Tela­ ed on a bulletin board just inside of the history department will .querque. tions ar!l represented by this ; Volunteer staffers are needed to of a lot of other people came true the Center and its services, to year's enrollment, he said, refer­ Lecture :t'acilities this month. the north door of the Union. The teach an informal course in world He emphasized that the Center elip and post news bulletins and this summer-they got their In­ government for interested stu­ meet foreign students on campus. ring to the Center as a miniature The discussion will be broadcast Center itself ia located just to the file periodicals, Noe said. Anyone ternational Center, is open to all UNM students and Foreign students from 70 na- by the Union's public-address sys­ right of the Union's Music Listen­ dents, And there are plans for a United Nations. interested iri working should con­ The Center will be open to both resource center with books, mag­ tem, and microphones will be set ing Room at the northeast corner, tact him at the Center. up to allow the audience to ques­ foreign and American students. azines, and foreign publications, It has been dreamed of for many The Center will also show for­ tion the pane]. Representatives of years, but John, with the help of the UNM :t'aculty, administration, eign films on the patio and hold and religious groups have agreed ·C. Woodrow Wilson Pharmacy many friends, saw it become a receptions for foreign visitors. to take part in the discussion, reality this aummer when the Bakas said he would also try So you're chairman which is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. 3100 Central Ave. at .Richmond University donated a house. to schedule appearances for for- on Thursday, Sept. 28. C. Woodrow Wilson (Owner) Dr. Garrett Hardin, a biology in charge of professor at the University of Men's & ladies' Toiletries California and a supporter of Weekdays 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. legalized abortion, will speak :t'or building the float, 15 minutes and will be available Sundays 9 a.m. to I p.m. & 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. :t'or questioning. Dr. Hardin has Open most Holidays lectured and written articles in Free Delivery decorating the house, national publications explaining Dial 255.5581 his stand on abortion. One of Albuquerque's Oldest Reliable Rx Departments Prof. Joseph D. Hassett of the dressing up the party ..• UNM department of philosophy, Richard Elliott of the Luther House, and Father Kelly and Father Shimek of the Newman Now what? Center have agreed to be on the SIX WEEKS" panel. Representatives of the UNM Law School and the School Get flame-resistant Pomps. You can do all kinds of dr.corating o:t' Medecine will also be asked to GUITAR participate, an Alert Center repre­ jobs with Pomps and do them better, easier, faster ••• and sentative said this week. COURSE more beautifully. Pomps are economical, too, and ready to use •.. cut to the size you need and available in 17 beautiful colors The Tele-Lecture-the newest .. addition to the Alert Center­ ' ",' THE PATIO, as well as the that are virtually colorfast when wet. Use them for indoor or permits students to arrange long­ $1250 outdoor decorations. Ask your local librarian for the booklet rest, of UNM's new Interna­ distance press conferences. Alert For the city/country life ... essential neo-classic tional Center at 1808 Las Lomas "Tips on How to Build Better Floats and Displays." If she Center representatives are con­ NE is all but ready for the more tacting nationally known political ED CURl'S niceties in pure wools. Easy, young, very much with doesn't have it, tell her to write us for a copy. the current scene, and scrupulously tailored by than 350 international students figures for future discussions, and expected to be at UNM this fall. ,,, I'VVIU'MI• have scheduled other panels on IUSIO John Myer. The skimmer, exquistely appliqued, The Crystal Tissue Company • Middletown, Ohio ~- ,..,. I...,... campus topics. in wool flannel. $32.00 (Photo by Storey) Located across from the New­ The Tele-Lecture costs the As­ • Classes begin week of sociated Students $35 a month Sept, 18th • , • limited to • Ages 8 to aor Tartan Sunday suit, the jacket lightly curved, the man Center at 1808 Las Lomas plus fees for the long-distance eight students each for · • No m u a i a baclcoround skirt a pleasant modified "A". $45.00 NE, the International Center is telephone calls. Student groups ·individual attention. needed. designed to serve as a hub for can rent the equipment for their • This course. gives you in­ • PRIVATE INSTRUCTION. , social activities and a home for own discussions. charge accounts invited foreign students and their friends. struction baSic: to Clas­ • GUITAR-RENTAL-SALES The function of the Alert Cen- sical, Folk and Pop Guitar or convenient layaway The living room was refurnish­ ter is "to keep the students up to ed by Modesta's Interiors after date on what is happening," Chuck 20 I Romero NW John used some of the salesman­ Noe, coordinator, said last week. ship he has been using on every­ FOR INFORMATION CALL • • • 298-2058 one else to get donations and help World, regional, and local news, KHFM llclg. 5900 Dollliago U. N.E. "Historic Old Town Plaza" as well as sports, weather, busi- from the store. Dial243·7909 The Associated Students Na­ • tional and International Affairs Committee was given $7000 last year by Student Senate fol' the International Center. It has been repainted and re­ eo-- asstc ''ctti)~I} modeled to serve as a "cross­ roads" for more than 350 foreign No op! No pop! No jazz! students at UNM. The Center contains a reception room, office, two classrooms, a kitchen, a bath, and a new outdoor patio. If any one asked where John was this summer, the answer was John Meyer clothes move likely to be: "He's digging in his with the times but they're back yard, cutting weeds, and laying the foundation for the always themselves. They're brick patio.'' classics in modern dress-done The "patio cafe" will serve American coft'ee and beverages as with wit and wisdom ... subtlety well as foreign drinks and foods. and eclat. The patio is covered with a color­ ful awning, Intuitively, John Meyer Classes in conversational lan­ takes his cue from the tastes, guages are planned as well as discussion sessions on interna­ manners and personality of tional problems. the young women who wear his clothes; neo~classic individ~ 7:30 in Ballroom ualists who refuse to let clothes or anything get in the way of AWS to Present their individuality. If you're a neo~classic and \ Pow-Wow Today an individualist, you should New women students will be see John Meyer's new Fall honored tonight at the traditional niceties. They're now being want to do our port for the college scene, naturally, since Pow Wow sponsored by the UNM Y\1~ Associated Women Students in shown at discerning stores we re part of that scene. Start your year right-by opening an the Union Ballroom at 7:30 p.m. everywhere. account at the . University branch of the American Bank f New women students will be Cor:nmer~e. If you write less than 25 checks a month, ask abo~t welcomed by Beth Famariss, Thrr~check, the sensible way to handle a small account. large president of A WS, and Suzanne dedtum .or small, we Want your business-next to the bookstore' Aldrich, AWS new-student cool'­ own. sta~rs at the New Mexico Union You'll hav h ' dinator, Other speakers include d . . . · e money w en- presidents of the three honor­ JoHN MEYER. ever you nee tt-parttcularly on Friday afternoons/ aries for women: Paula Kraemel' of Spurs, Rusty Dlttbernel' of Las Campanas, and :Rosalyn Mynatt of Mortar Board. oF NoJtYIIcll AMERICAN BANK of I' COMMERCE Tllird and Contra! Downtown PHONE 247-1021 Albuqutrqut sunport ••• featuring Union IUIIdinr, Unlvonity of Nt,. Mlxleo • JOHN MEYER of Norwich ' I '' J~

... • • " " • ot ' • r , 1 , , • , , , • .II • " • 4 ,. • , f ...... Page.~8~------·------~N~E~W~M~E~X~I~C~O~LO~B~O~------~lV~ed~n=e=~~a~y~·=S~ep~~=m=·==r=1=3=,=19=6=7 NEW MEXICO ~OBO

T ut:oring Council Requires Aid SEE US AT THE The Albuquerque Tutoring privileged children, "shut-in" STATE FAIR Council, an organization devoted ial Advisory Board, a 15-member bers must have been a tutor' for ;~. children and children in special 1 to helping underachievers find a education classes. administrative board. Board mem- one semester. " BOOTH 22 fresh incentive to continue formal An orientation session for all · fiNDLiSTRfAL education, needs tutors, Campus UNM tutors will be held before co-ordinatol' for the ATC is Sand­ the program begins. Further in­ . BUILDING ra Buss. formation will be available at the Established in the fall of 1964, schools to which tutors are as­ the ATC ended the 66-67 school signed. Transportation will be year with 835 volunteers helping provided. over 1000 tutees. Over half of Serve 9 Schools OPEN 9:30-&:00- FRIDAY 9:30-8:00 these tutors were from UNM. The UNM tutors will serve in six Council hopes to have 500 tutors elementary and three junior high this year. schools, most of them in the UNM SLACKS No Requirements Listed area. There are no specific require­ Participating are John Marshall, , '1, • ments for the tutors except the Lowell, Riverview, Eugene Field, Solids .....UP HEADQUARTERS desire to help a fellow human be­ Longfellow and San Ignacio ele­ MODIU... ing-usually a child-and a sin­ mentary schools; Ernie Pyle, Lin­ Checks DISP:U"' ·(RAFt & cere concern for the child's pro­ coln and Washington junior highs. Quality·named HOW CAN YOU DO "NBW MATH" PROBLBMS WITH AN "OLD MATH" MIND? gress.. Interested students are asked Sta·prest ··HOBBY Volunteers are ·asked to give to contact Sandra Buss in the one day a week for an hour (or NSA office, Room 251 in the Union traditionally· SNEAKERS IIATERIALS more if they wish) from October or call 277-4016 or 277-4406. through April, under teachers' styled Applications may also be picked Found in supervision. ATC serves under- up in the NSA office for the Tutor- Blue, Navy, DISCOUNTS TO UNM Faded Blue, Peanuts Homecoming SlUDENTS & FACULTY Olive, INSTRUCTION BOOKS Louis Vrattos Faded FEATHERS Green Date-Book Queen Jewelers BROGUES CREPE Applications for 1968 Home­ &pert on ~wiss and Black TISSUES Calendar coming Queen may be picked American WatChes bySERO up now in the Activities Cen­ Career Club Midnight Olive WIRE ter of the Union. fiATCHES- GIFTS Under this year's rules DIAMONDS STAMENS drafted by the Homecoming Stripes committee each sorority and Solids {lobo) Men•s Shop MOLDS women's dorm is entitled to Double Tattersall 2120 Central S.E. run one candidate. Independ­ Herringbone DYES ents may also run. If there are 243-6954 Petanuts more than five independent ap­ LIQUID RESINS plications a screening commit­ tee will select candidates. COOKING CRYSTA~S Pull-Overs The deadline for application CANDLE HOLDERS for Homecoming Queen is Peanuts Dolls Sept. 19. ~~BEE BOOKS FIGURINES HOBBY KITS FOR HANDBAGS, ANGELS, Listen to KUNM A ''WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL" GIFT FOR UNM STUDENTS SANTA DUSTERS, ETC. SWISS STRAW 90.1 Mcs. GLASS AND PLASTIC TEAR DROPS BEADS BY THE FOOT YARN You're beginning another important year of preparing for life through education but you will be CANDLE MOLDS only half prepared for life if you don't provide time for spiritual education. The College and Career WICKING & SCENTS Dept. of the First Baptist Church wants to help you with your spiritual education. We have a small gift r ANYTHING p; PEARL PARCHMENT that you can use to further your spritual education. 1'-' 1•: SWISS STRAW FLOWER KITS YOU WISH ~,.,. I' 235 Colors 4 oz. Wool 1.. BURLAP ANGEL KIT When you visit the College and Career Dept. on September 17th (at either 9:30 AM or 6:00 PM) you !,', -YOU'LL FIND AT BURLAP CHRISTMAS TREE KIT 75 Colors 4 oz. Orion will be given a copy of one of the following books. BURLAP THREE WISE MEN Coats & Clark, Red Heart DRAPED ANGEL KIT American Dawn & Majesty "The Gospel According to Peanuts" Complete Color Range in 2 oz. Orion Wintuck­ "World Aflame" Mohcora, Mohspun, Antron/Wool and Rug Yam. "None of These Diseases" FREE Every Size Needle Made. Knit or Crochet. Single, OJOD~ DIOS Double, Circular or Jumper. 11 Your God is Too Small" Instruction Sheets (Eyes of God) HUNDREDS OF KNIT OR CROCHET PAnERN BOOKS (Your choice as long as the SUJ;~plies last} :"'k.I!S!'an~~ ~.":.' ...... 17 C Bonus: You'll also receive a copy ot the 590 page book "Good News for Modern Man" ~o::,~ ...... 99c Food and Fellowship-College and career fellowship at 5:00pm Sept. 17-Church dining room. Come :..c;~~~~~~-~ ...... 67 c for snack supper (only 25c) and stay for Training Union at 6:00 ptn ___ ..,. ___ _ FREE ------' Ojo de Dies Instruction Sheets Clip this coupon and bring to: (Eyes of God)

College and Career Dept. First Baptist Church NOB HILL 123 Broadway, S.E. NEW CHUCK KLEINS From Carolina Soap & Candle Co. I am a student at the University of New Mexico and accept your gift of two books.

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Wednesday, September 13, 1967 Page 10 Wednet!day, September 13, 1N7 NEW MEXICO LOBO NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 11

... ' . . 1., 'New Papers Seek Suspicion~ ·Editor Says ,. By CHUCK NOLAND ticle as reportage or satire," where an organ of outside control usurped the editor's powers were with his hand covering his groin A main purpose of the new Krassner said. "Those who don't (such as a· publications board) censured by resolution of the con­ in a Buddhist religious sign, and wave of underground newspapers want to believe (what they read) exists, the body should: 1) con­ gress. The first was Texas A & a publicity picture of a clown ia to get people to evaluate for won't," he said; sist· of a majority of students; :M: University, at which the board with the name of a former Ore­ DOWNTOWN • NOB,H~~~ '• · themselves what they read, Paul "Changing Perceptions" 2) serve in an advisory capacity of publications fired the editor of gon legislator who had sponsored 'l'l1ree f/IIUIJtit/.. a defeated plan to reward out­ Krassner, editor of The Realist, · Alan Katzman, editor of the only; and 3) allow the editor of the student newspaper, seized \f.f' 'fl f ',l' 1! told delegates to t he United East Village Other in New York, the paper to define his relation­ control of the paper, and install­ standing undergraduate teachers. • t;,-, States Student Press Association reinforced Krassner's statements: ship with the body. ed its own editorial staff follow­ . r ,; (USSPA) congress in Minneapo­ ''I want people to think about No Controls Exerted ing a dispute over pre-publica· . DIKOUNlS 10 UNM lis recently. what they read. You have to look These resolutions in effect tion censorship of articles to ap­ STUDENTS & FACULn "We (the underground press in at it and examine it," he said. mean that USSPA feels that no pear in the paper. general) want to make people as The panel discU!!!lion on the outside controls should be exerted The second was Portland State Louis Vrattos '"'"OS ~ ,.... ~ ...... ,_._ auspicious of the daily press as underground press was a high­ on the paper, but, recognizing College, at which the president -.-- Jewelers ' . ~ ,, ', ' .... THE COORDINATE SUIT-· they should be of us," Krassner light of the six-day USSPA con­ that many such situations do ex­ of the school seized all copies of r.J ~- ~ told the delegates. "My purpose gress, which brought together at one issue and suspended publica­ .. ist, attempt to give the individ­ Expert on Swiu and . ~-· ~& to make people examine every­ the University of Minnesota more ual editor the tools with which tion of the school paper. .American Watches thing and decide for themselves than 200 delegates from many of to bargain for the best possible The issue which was confis­ ALLTHIJ\IBS • • what is true," he said. the organization's 300-plus mem­ working relationship he can per­ cated contained matter which the WATCHES- GIAS Stories Not Labeled ber papers. suade the supervisory body to president said made the paper DIAMONDS Krassner, editor of one of the Congress delegates attended allow. "journalistically i r responsible.'' TDDNEMAN country's foremost underground workshops and discussion group::; The resolutions also recom­ Among the items: a picture of papers, said he refused to help on problems of newspaper pro­ mend that, once an editor has Allen Ginsberg, scheduled to the reader out by labeling any of duction, coverage of news on and been allowed to define his rela­ speak at the college, showing the The Realist's stories as reportage, off the campus, and current is­ tionship to the supervisory agen­ poet naked from the groin up satire, or opinion. The Realist sues relevant to the student press. cy, guidelines clearly outlining often runs a story that is a com­ Freedom Affirmed that relationship be drawn up to plete fabrication and treats it as In legislative action, the dele­ prevent the supervisor's usurpa­ a fashionable foursome .•• a straight news story, or runs a gates affirmed their stand of last tion of the editor's powers to straight story written from an year that campus newspapers conduct the paper's editorial af­ the versatile angle so different that it comes should be editorially and finan­ fairs freely. out sounding like a fabrication, cially :free from administrative Schools Censured Krassner says. or faculty control, and passed Two schools at which super­ "I'm not going to label an ar- resolutions stating that at schools visors in the delegates' opinion FOURDROBER" Use of Computer Increased The computer will be impor­ IBM 360/40 computer at the on computers," but rather it is tant in several math classes this UNM Computing Center and per­ intended to provide an introduc­ fall at UNM. mit students and teachers to com­ tion to computer science and has . One purchase • • • four outfits • • • how's Some 100 students who will be municate directly with the com­ as its main objective "an under­ . that for versatilitY! Our Fourdrober auit taking calculus this semester will puter for .problem solving and standing of the relationship be­ do some of their work on the com­ other applications. tween mathematics, computers, plus color-coordinated veat and alacks puter, and freshmen who enroll Dr. Julius Blum, chairman of and ·problem"solving." It will be in Math 175 will get an elemen­ the mathematics department, open to all freshmen, regardless -is always ready for duty. For dress tary introduction to computer said eight consoles have been de­ of what major field they plan to or casual wear. depend on the young­ science. livered to the campus for use im­ enter, he said. The University earlier this year mediately. Another eight will in-build Fourdrober. Spirited was awarded $50,000 by the Na .. arrive in December and the final I I . tiona! Science Foundation in sup­ eight are scheduled to reach cam­ • co ortngs and single-breasted pus next spring. port of a computer program for natural shoulder ltyling. Mathematics instruction. UNM is The first group of consoles $90 putting up matching funds for have been set up in the Computing the acquisition of 24 remote con­ Center for student use, Dr. Blum soles for the program. said. ~ The consoles are tied into the Dr. Stoughton Bell, Computing PAINT POT Center director, will use the con­ soles also in the freshman course ' (Math 175) which he will teach. 'i' The course is called "Algori­ I' thms, Computation and Mathe­ CAN'T BE UNDERSOLD matics-An Elementary Intro­ II duction to Computer Science." Dr. Bell said the class "is not de­ SPIRITS DAMPENED?. signed as a quick 'how-to-do-it' Every company operated PAINT POT store is pledged to meet or beat any verified price on NEVER••• Listen to KUNM any article in our stock. IN A STROMBERGS ALL-WEATHER CDAT

STUDENTS AND FACULTY will receive an ad­ The fact that these distinguished MICKEY SHERMAN Presents ditional 10 per cent savings from our LOW DIS­ coats.are water-repellent doesn't make them only foul-weather friends. Stereo In Your Car COUNT prices not only on art supplies but on A collection of handsome coats to every item including paint, glass, picture frames wear weather-or-not, and always be i):r 4 Track 14: Home Machines prepared for sudden storms. Select i):r 8 Track etc. your favorite style and outwit the i):r Accessories weatherman. Solids and patterns. i):r 4-8 Combinations i):r Speakers Unlined, lined and zip-out PRESENT YOUR I.D. CARD liner styles. NOTE: Paint Pot DOES NOT, emphatically DOES LONDON FOG 12,000 Tape Selections ALL WEATHER COATS NOT raise the prices iust to show· big discounts­ $35.00 to $62.50 Free Recording Privileges that went out of style when the government BEST ALL WEATHER COATS Bits of Cheese With All Tape Purchases cracked down on certain. unscrupulous car deal­ $25 and $29.95 ers years ago. It could happen in the art supply IT'S ALL HAPPENING HERE DRESSAN,D business-but not at the Paint Pot. A word to the SPORT SHIRTS ARE MORE THANA Teen Credit Installation wise is sufficient. MATTER OF COURSE Plan on Premises • Browse through our collection : of traditional dress and sport shirts and you'll have THERE IS A PAINT POT NEAR YOU to admit we've made a scholarly 2515 4th St. NW 1617 Eubank NE achievement. Permanent press Styled and tailored and wash and wear cotton fabrics. 2723 San Mateo NE 1515 Central NE* by ARROW, GANT, ENRO, Fine patterns and solids DONEGAL AND WICKFIELD. in short and long sleeves. From $5 4909 lOMAS, N. E. • ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEX. • 265-7244 *Ju1t down from UNM Santa Fe - 557 Cordova Rd. I it" c '• I t 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 ' ' I ' t ' I I ' J I 0 1 I I • 0 f '' I 0 0 ' I ,. I f I ' 0 I • t I I I I 1 . I 1 ' ' I 1 I • 1 I I I

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ROSS PERKAL GEORGE VAUX UNM Sophomore JESS SANDOVAL UNM Soph. in Physics Beginning rate: 366 wpm-65% comp. Beginning rate: 586 wpm-63% comp. End rate: 1305 wpm-85% comp. UNM Senior End rate: 1875 wpm-72% comp. 280 wpm to 2088 wpm "I've used it on almost any type of material. Use is the key, because you regress without a pacer. I've been · I

able to cover important work outside the required ·ma­ YVONNE::.ROUSSEL""f'"-,~ ..... _-·--. . CAROLYN GIBBS ... ..,.,...... ~ ~- ; terial in a course-of definite value!" Jess was awarded UNM Freshman 8· UNM Freshman a Fullbright at the International University of Pe~u in 0 Beginning rate: Beginning rate: 345 wpm-36% comp. Spanish and government. 135 wpm....;SO% comp. IS 2944 wpm-86% comp. End rate: 1055 wpm-..80% comp. t:1:1 End rate: 0

JAMES MEARES ARTHUR HAYMAN UNM Grad. Student UNM Freshman Beginning rate: 244 wpm-80% comp. Beginning rate: 3]0 wpm-77,% comp. End rate: 2676 wpm-76% comp. MYRA GOETZ End rate: 1090 wpm-77% comp.

UNM Grad. Student KAREN I:>OANE · 394 wpm to 2000 wpm CAROLYN BIGGERS "The Dynamic Reading technique has allowed me to UNM Freshman go through more material and given me confidence in UNM Sophomore Beginning rate: 212 wpm-86% comp. retaining the material I now cover quickly. It is also Beginning rate: 391 wpm-60% comp. End rate: 2265 wpm-76% comp. valuable because of the variety of techniques that can End rate: 1963 wpm-76% comp. I~ be applied to the different types of reeding material for which a graduate student is responsible." Myra is a NDEA Fellow in American Studies. J LARRY BECK LARRY CLEVENGER UNM Senior UNM Junior Beginning rate~ 380 wpm-55% comp. Beginning rate: 351 wpm-64% comp. I.... End rate: 1364 wpm-SO% comp. End rate: 1780 wpm-71% comp. • Ji- ,·-,.--.,~·: ".~.. - ~·~ . ~~.:MARGO JORDAN BILL JOHNSTONE DIANE DAL SANTO ~ UNM Sophomore UNM freshman ~ Beginning rate: Beginning rate: 411 wpm-77% comp. UNM Junior in Architecture 302 wpm-77% comp.1t End rate: 2453 wpm-70% comp. End rate: 3333 wpm-84% comp. 571 wpm to 1844 wpm . : . . .!: "I think this should be in the public schools ... it ought • to be required for everyone. If I would have had this in high school, I might have learned more. I didn't have JAY FEDER time to go into related subjects and greatly extend my DON PAGE background." Bill was high school valedictorian. I.... UNM Grad. Student UNM Junior ~ Beginning rate: 487 wpm-73% comp. Beginning rate: 317 wpm-59% comp. End rate: 1250 wpm-72% comp. End rate: 1900 wpm-72% comp. i

THEY ARE ALL RECENT GRADUATES OF THE EVEYLN WOOD READING DYNAMICS COURSE Until recently these people read about 200 to 400 words over 250,000 people, like you, have taken to improve fore and then tell in detail what he hos read. ACHIEVEMENT WARRANTY per minute .. That's about average. Now they read be­ their reading rate and comprehension. You will see a documented film that includes actual in­ We guarantee to -increase the reading efficiency of each student AT LEAST tween 1000 and 3400 words per minute with under­ Attend a free demonstration of this unique reading terviews with Washington who have taken the course. 3 times with. good comprehension. We will refund the entire tuition to any You will learn how we can help you to faster reading, student who, after completing minimum class and study requirements, does standing and recall. They have completed the Evelyn course. You will see a Reading Dynamics graduate read not at least triple his reading efficiency as measureCI by our beginning ana Wood Reading Dynamics Course ... a program that at amazing speeds from a book he has never seen be- with improved comprehension, greater recall. ending tests. ~ ~ ; 8 ~

,...._, __. WHILE YOU ARE WAITING TO REGISTER ·lr~·-..- Q Wed., Sept. 13, Thurs., Sept. 14, Fri., Sept. 15 Daily at 9:30a.m., 11:30 a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m., ~ 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. ATTEND A FREE DEMONSTRATION ••• THEY ARE INTERESTING AND INFORMATIVE • • • • •To: • EVELYN • WOOD• •READING • DYNAMICS• • INSTITUTE• • •• USE 207 Dartmouth NE Evelyn Wood • Albuquerque, N.M. 87106 L 913 • COUPON Please send descriptive folder. • TODAY I understand that I am undr.r no obligation and that • READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE • no salesman will call • • Name • MIDWESTERN OFFICES • • Street Phone • KANSAS CITY OMAHA ALBUQUERQUE WICHITA DENVER COLO. SPRINGS 3706 Broadway 119 So. 19th St•. 207 Dartmouth NE 5301 E. Central 1575 Sherman 1605 S. Tejon 531-4320 345-8600 265-6761 685-1374 292-1495 473-2464 ·.~ty ••••••• ~p······ l f: ' =

I ·- ~- '

Page14 NEW MEXICO LOBO Wednesday, Septem~r 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 16 listen to KUNM 90.1 Mcs.·

.. ; ' l .. THE MOST UNIQUE. IDEA 1 ~ .

WELCOME BACK ~ " Check Our i! ...: - IN SHAVING COLOGNES. :l Grocery Department New Mexico Lobos IS HERE! for Evening Snack Supplies . Bread, Cookies, Milk, ANNOUNtiNG A collection of nine different fragrances imported from nine different countries to fit Sandwich Items OUR LUNCHEON SPECIAL WELCOME any man's particular mood. Live Oak from Germany, Clear Spruce from Sweden, Royal Saddle from England, Dry SOc PIZZA {BA(J(!'>SCIIOOL, Citrus from Italy, Aromatic Tabac from Brazil A 6" Pizza with Your Choice and others from France, Ireland, Hong Kong and Spain. Choose the one that fits of one Ingredient BONUS your mood or mix your own unique blend. PEPPERONI Available in collections of 2, 3, 4, 6, or 9 FREE Cigarettes, SAUSAGE and individual flasks. From $5.00·$15.00. Free Delivery Candy, Cokes GREEN CHILl Nine Flags Shaving Colognes 0 for and Coffee TOMATO & CHEESE Food and General Needs Saturday to all Sept. 16 also Serving the Best in Italian Cuisine Dorms and Houses 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. FOUR HAPPY Town Club pledges at UNM signup and plan for fall activities on campus. All except Specially Prepared with our Claudia Kirby, third from left, are graduates of Albuquerque Highland High.: ;Claudia is from St. Pius X. The others are, I to r., Kit Leach, Virginia Ann Atencio, and Lena Gentz: Rush ended Saturday Home Recipes with 196 girls pledging the six Greek letter sororities and Town Club. Town Club is just for girls who live in Albuquerque, while the other social organs are open to all university girls. (UNM phot()) SERVING YOU, THE LOBOS, FOR OVER 14 YEARS U. Sororities Pledge 196 FREE DELIVERY CALL UNM's nine women's social or­ henour, Donna Fossum, Kathryn Hart, Pi Beta Phi's pledges Include Martha STARTING AT 5 PM 242-8413 ganizations kicked off this year's Jo:rce Hawthorne, Bett:r Jeung, Jeanie Bandon!, arbara Benton, Elizabeth Bergen­ INSTANT Kuliasha, Colette Lang, Maribn McGee, er, lllary Bessette, Susan Boyd, VIrginia activities with formal rush ses­ Mar:r Lynn Me:rer, Virginia. Newell, Anne sions last week. A total of 196 Crav:>rah Millikin, Linda Platt, Judith Prince ·~ ... ~olrlllton, S~~~an F. Knla'ht, Donna Mac­ Tracy Fftz, Joanne Hollada:r, Lucinda Linda lleed, VIvien Rodri8uez.llena, Car­ rnder, Linda llanhaD, Sheila MeCiooq, Lefler, Catherine Lightner, llar!raret Me men Ro:rbal, EU ..beth Bbee, Patt:r Smith, Donna GaU llcDoopJ, Debonh Klaldmins, Coy, FeUz Parkard, Jlal')' ~ ane Prater, Kim Ann Tboml*)n, Jud;v UpPdJkamp, Becky Knere, Karen Polaneo, Gllnda Debbie Robb, Shirley Runyan, Karen Sell­ and Catherine WoSeieboeld. Sturceo, Debb)' Swartz, Christine Wenk, en, Marcia Smith, ~ ane Tbomu, and An· and liU YubroUKh. drea Weboter. Alpha Delta PI pledged AUce Anderson, Kappa Kappa Gamma Pledaeo Include lnd¥ L. Clark, Linda B:rbU llaeo, MarilYn S111an Albrla'ht, Lnuanne Abruma, llary .M. llllner, MeRua Oweno, and Barbara Bass Wataon. Ann AIUaon, Mlehele CornaU, ~an..t Dean, Diane Dal Banta, Leigh Gallacher, Martha ' Chi Omega Ple

Open to all Students • 2-Stroke 11.5 HP alloy Daily Spec;ials cylinder rotary valve engine Section No.1 M.W.F. 1:30 p.m... • 18 ln. wheels Section No.2 Tuesdays 6:45-9:45 p.m. • Seamless tank • Candy apple paint • Double cradle tubular frame Weighs only 179 lbs. · • SUPERLUBE-No messy Bible 4373- pre-fuel mbdngl , • 12 month/12,000 mile Want to hear Great Bible Doctrines factory warranty, PRICE a good clean story? Prerequisite: Junior Standing WEEJUNS ARE A 6:45-9:45 p.m. Thursdays $419.00 WAY OF LIFE Listen. Revlon's 1Natural Wonder' Lotion is tender to skin, yet gets skin naked clean. DRill$ All classes will be taught at the FOR HIM: CARDOVAN OR GOLDEN HAR- Removes makeup, grime, excess oil~ helps Christian Student Center CYCLE Need Cash? VEST GRAIN ...... 18.95 rout blackheads! Does more to stop blemishes 205 University Ave., N. E. As a service to you we cash· all UNM Students SPORT than a whole routine of costly creams and 1820 Lomas NE FOR HER: BROWN, ANTIQUE, NAVY BLUE checks for cash. Ali you need is your Student I.D. astringents! 4o~r.2.00 8o~r.3.50 16oz.4.50 Card. E'nroll at Centar S..,t. 1.,_16 or at lim d­ 247-3954 OR GOLDEN HARVEST &RAIN ...... 13.95 Far credit, ,_ Is $5 a coune Revlon's'Naturol Wonder'Medicoted Makeups helpyou lahl'ndSAE tool Tube, liquid, Pressed Powder or Coke. 1.65 each. Open Until Midnight - Free Delivery Auditors may attend fr" of charge Coronado Center Haul& an lomas 2142 CENTRAL SE AT YALE PHONE 243·5124 Open Mon., Wed., Fri. 10-9. ' • Tues., Thurs., Sat. 10.6 ,~., •. ..~~.~.~.~.------~------....J Open a charge account 298-&711 Store Name

"'/•. ~. ' ..... '" # .... f,.; •• ', ...... ~~~------J .. ~l'•••···~~·· • ..." ol ...... lilt • .. ~ .... ' Page 16 Wedneaclay. September 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO Wednesday, September 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO New U. Courses Will Stress PATRONIZE lOBO ADVERTISERS -~., Small, Personalized Classes • The UNM stQdent body this fall courses entails lectures before Sonnino in working out the de­ will be larger than last year's. large numbers of students by the FURTHER YOUR SPIRITUAL EDUCATION AT FIRST 'I There will be more buildinga on tails of the phm, one of seevral at! professor, followed by smaller efforts of the college Committee Through Christian training, fellowship, campus, and the faculty will be quiz sections directed by grad­ larger. But the trend isn't entirely on Improvement of Instruction, and an offer of free books. uate assistants under the super­ Dean Trowbridge said, in the direction of increased size. vision of the faculty member. See pageS. It's the life of mature. co-educational living that affords you the opportunity of meet­ The College of Arts and Sciences Other members of the commit­ this semester is introducing a Bock To Teach Anthropology tee include Profs. John Campbell, pilot program in three courses, Prof. Philip Bock will teach the anthropology; Roy Caton, chem­ ing new people, participating in a variety of social. athletic and cultural events, and emphasizing small, more person­ pilot section in anthropology. The istry; Donald Dubois, mathemat­ alized classes in areas where big­ chemistry course will be taught ics; and Katherine Simons, Eng­ ness is the norm. by Prof. Milton Kahn, and Prof. lish. studying in an atmosphere that was designed especially for college students. You'll Dean Hoyt Trowbridge an­ Albert Rosenthal will teach the Students who are interested in nounced that small, enriched sec­ political science class. participating in the project should find life af The Ccsltege'lnn'~ill bifan f11itir'ely new experience in collegiate living. We tions of regular freshman survey The small sections are aimed at contact their University College ATTENTION courses will eb offered in the de­ "flexibility and variety in method, advisers. partments of anthropology, chem­ for instructional exchange not invite you'to'~eo-rn'e':·by-"nbw\in-a:i~·~··rh'i~taUi e ·Inn: Some excellent rooms are still istry, and political science, available in large sections," Trow- 9 bridge said. · available. Study More lnten,se The project will be administered Male and Female Students The three sections, he said, will by the instructors, meeting as an parallel in scope the usual larger informal committee chaired by Dr. classes-which also are scheduled Barrett Beer, assistant dean of the this year. Subject matter will be College of Arts and Sciences. The more intensively studied, with group will make a final evaluation Interested in earning $6.00 for a 20 minute practice greater specific demands made on at the end of the year. interview? both teacher and student. Grad­ ing "will not necessarily be more Sonnino Suggested Class rigorous," he said. The approach was suggested by The sections will be open to any Prof. Paul Sonnino, a member of Headquarters, AT&T, will conduct a Bell System Re­ the history faculty.. Political sci­ student on a first-come, first-serv­ ence Prof. Helen Ingram assisted cruiter Training Conference at the Western Skies Motel ed basis. ~ The anthropology course-"De­ from Oct. 8 through Oct. 14. Studeni·s at the sophomore velopment of Culture"-will be level and above, including graduate students, are need­ limited to 30 students. Maximum student load in the "General Chem­ ed for practice interview sessions. istry" small section will be 50, TAKE A TRIP and in the "American Govern­ ment" course section in political Learn to fly at DIAMOND M AVIATION Gain the experience of an actual job interview and science there will be a limit of 30 students. New Cessna Trainers. Fly with Lee Jennings, Class of make money too!!! History Course Planned '69. Contact Lee at 265-6305 or Call Diamond M 243- The history !lepartment will at­ 9691 ' tempt a related effort toward the You Will Be Paid in Cash at the Termination of Your same objective in a course in the Interview! "History of the United States." Special Ground School Starts September 15 Professor William Dabney, in­ structor of the large lecture sec­ Class will Prepare you for Private Pilot Exam. Transportation will be provided from the Student Union Building tion in the course, will also direct a special quiz section. to the Western Skies and return. The three special sections will Total Cost $5.00 be taught by the regular course instructors without the aid of SEE YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE AT ONCE FOR FURTHER DETAilS graduate assistants. The usual Call Diamond M Aviation 243-9691 presentation of freshman survey

BALLS or J.IVBLY gear for the trek back to books

If enroute to enrollment, a visit to this Establishment is mandatory. Here be the suits, the casual clothing of spirit. And the furnishings to fin­ ish off. the whole with flair. Counsel• ing daily.

NEW LOCATION ••• 314 Gold Avenue, S.W. Next to the Bank of New· Mexico Building. Check These Outstandins Features: 0 Exce-llent food and diversified menus (20 meals 0 Comfortable homelike furnishings, designed exclu- per week-seconds availabl~). sively for The College Inn. 0 Recreational lounges with ping-pong and ~pool 0 · Private dining rooms. tables, 'rv:lounge. 0 ·Laundry ·r~cfilities, ·maid 'anC:t linen service. 0 Wall-to-wall carpeting and double drapes. 0 He~teel 's~imming pool. 0 "Quiet'' lounges. 0 Air:;dohHitioned throughout. 0 Private, off-street parking. 0 Prtv~te an~ semiprivate rooms and baths. 0 Close to campus.

Monday thru Friday 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Saturday

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Wednesday, Septembel' 13, 1967 Wedlleaclay. September 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 19 Registration This Week Sw-ingline UNM Community College Portugal Knights To Open Evening Classes UNM's Dr. Lopes How about learning arc welding a.m. to 12 noon, 1 to 5 p.m., and one night each week, or maybe 6 to 8 p.m. on~z!l~ s!bt!:'Je~urr~ly tions with Portugal have brought Te$t yourself... oriental brush painting, or south- The Community College, start­ knighted by th ca - as en many noted Portuguese writers, What do you see in the ink blots? western ethnology, or apeed read- ed in 1947, provides infonnal Portugal for h' e govke!Dmthentdiof scholars, and lecturers to lecture . , • ' ts wor m e s- at UNM, as well as a scholarship ing or tailoring? study opportunitie~; on a non- semmatton of Portuguese Jan. for a UNM student to study in rThe UNM Community College credit basis; Students in some vo­ guage and culture. , Portugal. , The scholarship is un­ is offering about 60 cours~s this ca!'ional a!Id ·business courses re­ [t] Acockfight? semester dealing with a vanety of cetve certificates awarded by the Dr. Lopes has ~een knighted as derwritten by Henrique Pinto, subj\lcts Division of Extension when work , a 9ommendador 1n the Order of owneJ' of the Livraria Port11gal a DR. AJ,BERT R. LOPES (center), a UNM professor, is shown at A moth? Pnnce Henry the Navigator. Lisbon bookstore, ' his ktdghting as a Commendador in the Order of Prince Belli')' A moth-eaten The ~mmunity College courses is satisfactorily completed. Most The ceremony was conducted in . the NavigaWt- last month in Lisbon. The honor was authorized are open to any adult. Fees range courses !'leet only o_nce a week, Lisbon on Aug. 7. The order is one Tomlins to Teaeh by Americo Thomaz, president of Portugal, •nd presented by lb;, tockfight? :from $15 to $25. Registration be- usually m the evenmgs. of the highest the Portuguese gov- During World War II, Dr. Lopes Jose Luis Archer (left), who represented the Portuguese Minister gins today and continues through ernment can bestow on an iii- went into the services as an army of Foreign Affairs. An aide (right) afti:les the award. THE UNM CONCERT HALL WILL PRESENT six professional theater productions during the 1967· dividual. p:rivate-but the NaVY stepped in and claimed him as a PortugUese 68 season. Called one of the finest, best equipped theaters in the nation by a New Yor}i: critic, the Con• Friday. Followed Exploratitm The Community College office L•1sten to KUNM scholar and gave him a commis· Make This Shop cert Hall seats 2,094 people. The Hall features some of the newest innovations in accoustic design. is in room 208 of the Administra- Dr. Lopes was in Lisbon as UNM students may obtain special discount tickets to plays, musicals, operas, and film series to be tion building and is open from 8 sion and sent him to Annapolis to part of his current travels fol­ teach Portuguese. presented this y.ear. Included among this season's presentations are "Hello Dolly," "The Roar of the lowing the paths blazed by ·15th Greasepaint--The Smell of the Crowd." "Tosea," and the film version of ''Swan Lake." When Dr. Lopes ·retires this YOUR KNITTING [2} Giraffes in high foliage? and 16th century Portugue~~e ex• fall, his teaching chores will be FURTHER YOUR SPIRITUAL EDUCATION AT FIRST plorers. He bad visited the en­ undertaken by Dr. Jack E. Tom­ Sc110ters in a head-on Through Bible Study (Co-educational classes) claves Portugal held in Asi-· lins, one of his students, Dr. Tom­ HEADQUARTERS collision? Macao, Gao, and others-and had lins received his B.A. degree in TOT Staplers 1 and Music, and an offer of free books. gone to Lisbon. From there, he is 1951 and his M.A. degree in 1953. IN ALBUQUERQUE UNM Concert Hall Series rror Staplers! 1What in ••• ) See page 8. traveling in the African posaes­ Others who will teach Portuguese ' " ' sions of Portugal, Angola and are Alice Carmona Morgan, from We are authorized dealers for, and offer a complete sel~ion of, Moza~nhique, Portugal; Acyr Salgarello, from This is a Dr. Lopes came to UNM in 1939 Brazil; and Carlos Nogueira-Mar­ SPINNERJN, BERiiiiAT, UNGER and FLEISHER YARNS & PAKS. to underta'ke the building of a tina, a Ph.D. candidate from the Come in and look over our. full selection of the new Fall Kits and S~ingline Includes 'Hello Dolly,' Others Portuguese program. UNM now Azores. Welcome New and Returning has one of the finest Portuguese Sweater Pale!. A series of six professional Film Series Planned tion-at prices they should be STUDENTS programs in the nation, a Univer­ Tot Stapler theater presentations, including The Associated Students budget able to afford." sity spokesman said, with a li­ lDavid Merrick's production of gives a subsidy to the Concert Built in 1966 at a cost of $2.2 ANP REMEMBER IT'S brary of more than 10,000 books New Anthro Exhibit Buy for that first sweater now. f'Hello, Dolly," will highlight the Hall to provide these pl.'ograms million, the Concert 'Hall opened and emphasis on literature, gram­ 1967-68 season at the UNM Con- at a reduced rate for students. Oct. 1, 1966, with a performance mar, and history. Dr. Ulpes is SPECIAL PRICES ON OUR MOST POPULAR YARNS DURING cert Hall. Students may use their aetivity Honors u: s Dr. Hill by the Utah Symphony, conducted credited with teaching more than STATE FAIR WEEK-.Sept. 14-23 "Hello, Dolly," starring Dorothy cards to pick up a free Concert by Maurice Abravanel. 3,000 students, and is nationally A new exhibit at the UNM An­ Lamour, will be on campus Jan. Hall discount card. Designed by Holien and Buckley and internationally noted as a thropology Museum is dedicated YOU .DON'T KNOW HOW TO KNIT? 11-13. Other Concert Hall programs Architects of Santa Fe, the 2094· specialist in the fields of Portu­ to Dr. w. W. Hill, who retir-ed 98C last year after 30 years as a UNM Come in and register for fall classes Other productions S£heduled :for B£heduled for this year include seat hall bas a stage 160 feet wide FQr Fine FashiQns guese culture, language, and lin­ (inducling 1000 staples) the theater series and perform- "It's a Wide, Wide World," a and 38 feet deep. The forestage is guistiC~~. He has also taugbt professor and chainnan of the Beginning and advanced Lar1er sir~> CUB Doole ance dates include: "Wait Until travel-adventure film series nar­ 60 feet wide and 14 feet deep. 520 Coronado Center 298-6556 French and Spanish, anthropology department. Stapler 011ly $1,69 The exhibit includes objects Dark," a new play by Alfred rated by such famous adventurers Will Write Book Uncopditiottlllly IUIIranteed. :Knott, author of "Dial M for Mur- as Lowell Thomas Jr. and Gilne 14-Ton Ceiling selected by Hill's colleagues and At lliiY llationery, variety, or book store. After his current African tour, WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION OF der," Oct, 16; "The Impossible Wianco; the Performing Arts Film The concert shelL can hold up students arranged against a baek­ C':"=! __ _. __ ._if.__ ~ he is planning to write a book on ground of Navajo blankets do~ COLORS FOR OECORAnVE PURPOSES Years," a comedy starring Tom Series, a group of five films fea­ to 100 musicians or a chorus of _::::>~INC. Ewell, Nov. 17-18; The American turing such presentations as the 250. The shell includes a. sus­ the Portuguese pos~~essions in nated by Dr. Hill. LONG ISLAND CITY, N.V.11101 Folk Ballet, Feb. 5; "The Roar first full-length film version of pended steel ceUing weighing 14 Africa. At UNM he has served The Museum is open from 9 Nancy-Scoff Uniform Center as director of the Language Area a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through IIIUJI!1J"&pll ~UJ 011 Pl""'\1 of the Greasepaint--The Smell of Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake," star­ tons-the largest movable piece 1\oA: :u'ltdtqS .LOJ, 'Al!IJ8Apll pno;t no&: the Crowd," the Anthony Newley- ring Margot Fonteyn and Rudolph in the world. Center for Latin Ameriea, and Saturday. It is located at Roma :l.'d!Pt1lO:t •J.0\00:)9 ••a!JUJaAp.11 ll11!111• '.Leslie Bricusse bit, Feb. 29; ancl • Nereyev; the Ars Musica chamber has co-authored a publication for and University NE. 8AP\I 1\oj; lllaJJ•J!ll •'1.1. "l; 1"'1'\,_ 1\oA: Successful acoustics in the Hall improved techniques in the teach­ 625 Amherst Dr., N.E. 256-7064 -aa ·~os :.1-~~ ua.,~q)ow v •aAJi "the American National Opera seriea, f~turing renowned cham- make it ideal for musical pro­ Uniforms , ~ u,tvJii. :t(lOUI V •aAtaadh 9.s.,t\O&. Company performing Puccini's · ber-muste groups such as the grams of all types from symph· ing of Spanish. His long aasocia- Read the Want Ads ·~'III!PP'» • - no& n ., •lila'aa'aN.V "Tosca" in English, March 16-17. Budapest Quartet; and the Ex­ ony orchestras to soloists. The perimental Film Services, a pro- Mens and Ladies Lab Wear quality and distribution of the .of..-~ Discount Offered gram of films from the new cine- sound have been praised by 'Such UNM students may get tickets ma and the undergro11nd, includ­ internationally famous musicians Wel,come Back Students for any of the theater series pro- ing a Halloween program. :fea· as John Barbarolli, Maurice Abra· 2516 Central S.E. 242-6591 ductions on a single-performance turing "The Sins of the Flesh­ vanel, Alfred Deller, and Eugene or subscription basis at almost a apoids," a science-fiction sati:re Ormandy. 75 pe:r cent discount, William J. about Hollywood 2000 years fl.'om Remember To Take Advantage of Henry's Martin, Concert Hall direetor,ISaid now. -FAST SERVICE- last week. $:lFeeSet "The students are underwriting Ct-IICtcE:I'I ----·-·------·----·-··------·------·····-·······--ir~c: t() ~~.~ Again, UNM students may buy WELCOME BACK STUDENTS & FACULTY our programs when they pay their tickets to any of these programs activity fee," Martin said, "and at a substantial saving. For ex­ APPLE TURNOVERS ------·--·····-······--·-·----·-·------·-·----···--·20c this is what they're paying for­ ample, subscription tickets to the your old hosts Bob &Jane Daugherty are back the chance to see first-class pro­ travel-adventure series or the per­ as Owners and Operators of Okie Joe's I 00% PURE BEEF I-lAM BURGER -·-·------·····------····-·-····-·--•sc: fessional programs at a fraction forming arts series cost the pub­ of. what, they would cost other- lie $6 each. UNM students may with Special Food Prices for Students BIG t-IENRY t-IAMBURGER ·-···-·--···---·-··------·----·------····-·-·50c: WlSC. subscn'be to either of them for $3. DELUXE t-IAMBURGER-Meal ()n a Bun ------·------·---.. ------·--29c The new programs at the Con­ Naylor Retires cert Hall this year represent an OKIE JOE'S As Anotlier Favor CREAMY CHEESE BURGER ·------·------·--·· .. ···-----··---·---.. -- ...... 20c attempt by the University to ex­ Bar & RedaurCint pose students t.o a wide range of 1~20 Central Ave. SE (acra~~ from th• Univeraity) we provide BLUE WATER HOT FISH SANDWICH ------29c: Hein to Command excellent cultural programs, Mar­ tin said. I-lOT ooc:; ------··-----·------··-----·--·------·------·----·------·------·2sc: Hall Opened in 1966 MEL TED CHEESE SANDWICH ------·-···------·--·------20c: Air Force ROTC "People have to realize that ·~ARTY SUPPLIES Major Carl R. Hein, USAF, has there's more to college than go­ CRISPY FRENCH FRIES -·-----·------·-·-······---·-····-··------15c: been assigned to replaee Lt. CoL ing to classes all day and then go­ ·FREE William c. Naylor as commanding ing home . at night," he said. officer of the UNM Air Force "We're trying to show them just St-IR IMP BOAT ·····---····------·------··------J·------··--·-· 79c: ROTC. one more side of a liberal educa- COtcE --·------·-·--·--·----·------·------·-·--·-·----·-·----·----·------1 Oc: - 15c: Colonel Naylor retired :from the Gl.asses, Ashtr~:~ys, ~Air Force, and will remain at Houst"ng Needed 'ORANc:JE ---··-----·------····-·----·-·-·---···---·------·-·----·--~------1 Oc: - 15c: "UNM as assistant dean of men. Tubs for Kegs, , Major Hein comes to UNM Any Albuquerque landlords ROOT BEE.R ------·-··-·-··-·-·------···--·------······--1 Oc - 15c ifrom an ast~ignment with 11th with rooms, apartments, ·· and Champagne Fountains. "<' Weather Squadrrtn at Elmendorf houses available are asked to con­ • COFFEE ------····-······------· ...... ------·-···· ------··---' Oc AFB, Anchorage, Alaska, where tact Dr. E. James Smith, UNM etc. ~he commanded the weather sta>- director of housing. Off-campus SUPER MILK SHAtcES -·------·----·-······-----··-· ···-·---····-······--·-··--·25c ;tion in an Alaskan NORAD Re- residences are needed to house o:wr·.~~'. (.Moil Combat Center. incoming student~;~, especially mar- Students Always M ILtc ---·--······-·-·-·--····--··-·-··---·-····-··------···----·····---·····-··········12c He received a B.S. degree in ed- ried couples. UNM has facilities ~.,.~ . ucation from the Southwest Texas for about 30 married couples, and , 'State College, San Marcos, and a last semester some 4000 ntanied Receive Extra master's in business administra- students were enrolled. We Make Your Date Special . ccmsideration 1916 CENTRAL NE tion from George Washington . r==:;::;::=::;;:;~;;;;;:;::;;:;:::;;:;; Unive:rsity in 1964. J? . , I · 1. Want to impress an "extra-special" date? and fc:tvors OPEN ·'1'le4HQJia, This is the place ••• your favorite drink Cit Theater Tryouts House OF HALLMARK and our pleas

October. AU interested UNM Xmas Albums In FOI' 1967 ' " ·.• · ~ " : • " OPEN 10 AM tlll2 AM '" students are invited. 3501 Lamas N.l:. 255-4989 ' . ~ ...... • 11 , r ... . ·- - ' • -~~-: f.' .~~~~~•·•~u~~~*~~~··~~~-~~·~~-~ ' (, • ~ I! ' II' I J • 1 -t 1 J 1 # , J , t # I ~ -1 ·j t "I I I I' ~ " l i' " • ·~ .. "' 'I o. 4;- t. 4 'I ll & Jo. 4 i' "" • ~ • 11- ... • 4> WI .... Y' "" "' ol< "',... 11- ..- <" " ..... ~ ... ""W .. ,, 1 1 1 ".,jj \:It"' ·""· ... "r

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Wedneeclay, September 13, 1967 j NEW MEXICO LOBO Pap 21 • • assoc1a ore comes tu ents

Good Grades

-!,' Come Easier 6U AUG•66 M.P.$' '' -· with the I 2 4 e 7' e 9 10 Class Books College Outline Series A A Reference Books

..." Dictionaries a --- a '. ICLILII II ••.,. Language Guides IJIIIJI.. lllf1 .. 11'l' "ILIIIII •

IIU'IIIIf'l' ..JLIIIII IIIII C:Hin'III:?ICII m;J c Jno c and Records .... to Collidge Paper Back Books over '·• 0 0 '' ro.ooo titles

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CMI "'•· ... ~ mli . £.2 J mm<>Usm Building tl'i5) •• • : •••• • ·.:.... :. J'.3'' (Pharmcxy Building 1191 ...... , .... : ..... H Registration Hours CMI [ 'I' ,.,.... - t \ -I (1010 E-11 ICI'" (691 ...... ·.. .. • • • • .. .. • .. • D6 Phyo~<>-A~~ronomy Building (207) • , .. • c... • M c-- 1W - f.5 KN.\11·111 Building 1151 ,...... ,. ... , , , , , • C3 ProoidonYa Home (51) ,. •" • .. •" • • .. • • .. C4 o..-..1. !toljM..~ oaaf!1i~.. . E-1 Law !oildlng li!raHon Halll tsn ...... c.s ~~osoon:h c.ntor (1531 ...... N, - ...... IIIIa) . , ~ ltduiO Holl (6) ...... M 1111• lange (2051 , ...... • • • .. • M • ~ ,• ..,. 1101.._ :-.. l6Sl , , 04 . Obrol)', Zimmerman ~53) ••• , •• , •••••••. , Do5 Santa Ana Hall (Women'• Dartolfory) 17111 • • ~ u..-a-- ...... 161! Do5 Ma-il• C.nler Santa Claro Holl cw-·• Dartolfort) (61 • • "' Sept. 13, 14, 15 -.,.. 011<...... _. tllll · ' C.S (Educotienel Laboratory) (70) ...... W $ala laynahh Holl (104) ...... ·., .... • f.3 .~ ll'li •••• .....,. til II : • ·. ~ f./1 ~-~~II (lloportmontol Ofi'!COt) (9) ..... f.3 Sevtnt"n Sawold totn 11atoa 1~1 ..... ·" •• ~ ll al :• "4 - U! . • . • . , f.3 ,_.,on~ Engln"rlng Building (107) .. .. E-2 . S-" lui lng I201 ...... • • ~ l••-~• e- lilY.! , .. .. Fll Modlonkol Engln"rlng Sh"''t' (1081 .. ., .. f·2 Stodlum Building (52) ...... ~ 8:00A.M. to 7:00P.M. 1ft Am ~ !U) . , • f.5 Madldnl, School of Slato Pobllc Haohh Lobafary (10'1) , • , , , • F-2 ·. Unl ..""V Stadium (3011 •• , •• • • Sollth Caorplll 8:00A.M. to 5:00 P.M. "'- )• "-~ "" ' · c 1 01\ofe Holl (Mon's Dormlt~ (156) ...... D·9 Unlwralty Thootro ll!ackr. Holl) (101) • .. • .. f4 '--~-~--~ftiU~~~tlt...._._ Am ...... ~\It:"' ~ ~- ... ' C..!" 0 rloge He 11"~-'-,..,.,.rn on d Nicol u••I (II) , ... • .. " "• .. •;., .. •" •" "•" '""~ • ~ o, """' •- · " " ' f..! lo!!iuogu) (8) • ., .. " ...... , ...... 1).3 • Yatolca HoU (8•~- Admlnltlrotlanl(7) .. .. D-4 ~ ._f"""' ''"' ' '. Po!:l!!!l•J:!qlll3l , . , • , , • , ._.... : ...... E-3 Two T...,.ly-OM Unlvoralty 1120) .... , .... • E·l . .,.,, Gro!lo.. associated students I ~ ,.b~okst9re. · The bookstore is the campus headquarters fOr Stationery, . Greeting Cards. Gift Wrap­ n .~ .... Ground Floor New Mexico Union ping. Novelties. Decals. Drug Sundri.es, Film Processing Service. Engineering and Drc1fting Regular Hours 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Equipment, Art Supplies. Official Gym Clothes. National Magazine Subscriptions. artd in- Telephone 277-2826 numerable other items. · ·

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Page 22 NEW MEXICO LOBO Wednesday,- September 13, 1967 September 13, 1967 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 23 3 Musicians Join Faculty Works of Cady Wells Definitions Bog Student Policy-making Three well-known instrumen­ in Miami, Fla. Fine Arts Dean ment, they toured Mexico. talists will join the UNM Col­ Clinton Adams said the classical Study Included Paris By BARBARA STALLINGS lege of Fine Arts faculty this Shown at U. Museum college-to-be at Old Westbury on a returned Peace Corp!! Vqluhteer campus. Each will be assigned to real planners? Why should stu­ guitarist's appointment to UNM Miss de Keyser studied in Paris Collegiate Press Service Long Island. Last January Samuel from Goddard Colleg~, : helped w6rk with a senior staff member dents be involved at all? fall. was made possible by an anony­ under a Fulbright grant, and a New insight on the life and rather than with the exotic qual­ ·OLD WESTBURY, N.Y.-The Gould, chancellor of the SUNY draft curriculum propo~~s; ·in ·in the fields of admissions, fac­ The stalemate at Old Westbury Classical guitarist Hector Gar­ mous donor, Garcia's stipend. will Rockefeller Fellowship from the work of Cady Wells is provided in ities of Northern New Mexico. onc·ePt that students should par­ system, told the new college to Dialogue Useful . ' ultY recruitments, or high school is esp!!cially. discouraging because cia has been named "artist-in­ be paid through the contribution University 'of Chicago underwrote a retrospective exhibition of the residence" as the first in this Wells also worked in patterns in academic policy-mak- "review all the conventional in­ The students' m11.jor effect, how­ consulting. the ideas being discussed there to perpetuate the classical Span­ performance of contemporary artist's work which opened Sept, created by calligraphic lines, crea­ gredients such as admissions pol­ category for the music depart­ ish gnitar tradition in New Mex­ has advanced to the stage ever, came through the~ro partici­ Unfortunately Old Westbury and the people discussing them music. 10 at the UNM Art Museum and ting such works as "Badlands.'' students have been invited icies, grades, course systems, and are some of the most exciting in ment. ico~ Don McRae, assistant dean of will run through Oct. 15. pation in the "dialogue'' on the thus far has little advice to offer Cellist Joins This period ended about 1935 help plan a new college here. academic divisions, and to break college, acting as gadflies and other collegl)s on the use of stu­ education today, and much of the 12 Is Limit the College of Fine Arts, noted The show consists of 46 water­ whatever barriers lie in the way." Joanna de Keyser, who has at­ Dr. Walter Keller, acting chair­ when he began modeling to build But this experiment with stu­ criticizing the ideas of the senior dent consultant~xcept that it vitality of the college is being that Miss de Keyser had received colors . (almost exclusively his three-dimensional forms. Because To carry out this mandate the unnecessarily drained. tended several master classes man of the music department, the highest praise from Gabor consultants i::; running into staff. creates good publicity. The ques­ given by world-famous cellist medium) and is scheduled to go on he translated New Mexico geog­ pro!llems. The faculty and college has ~100 million for build­ "We hoped that these students tion of what role students can and The debate over "full partner­ said that Garcia will teach no Rejto, cellist with the Alma Trio, tour soon as a major exhibit ar­ ings and a senior staff of eight Pablo Casals, will leave the mu2ic more than 12 students this semes­ raphy into undulating hills and want to hear stu­ would start with us in intense should play in the planning of a ship'' is largely irrelevant. Stu­ a noted group that appeared last ranged by the University. clouds, Mrs. Duncan ocmpares people. The president is Harris faculty at San Fernando Valley ter. Selection will be made year with the UNM Orchestra un­ ideas and students want to form the dialogue of discontent new college was never answered. dents do have power, probably State College, Calif., to teach Although he was an important Wells's style with that of Georgia them, but they have had dif­ Wofford, formerly a special as­ stirring most of the best colleges more than in almost any other through audition of those apply­ der the baton of Kurt Frederick. sistant to President Kennedy and There was no answer to such cello, member of the Santa Fe-Taos O'Keeffe. communicating. and universities. We have not questions as: Can a faculty or an university in the country. ing at the music department office. Bowen Studies at Yale most recently· associate director The third, Frank Bowen, flutist, Miss de Keyser holds a bache­ group, Wells sought isolation as a been disappointed; it has been a administration, however, "liberal," actually can be persuaded. Holder of a bachelor of music painter. Little had been written Inspired by Chartres laririeJ~s Ordered Broken of the Peace Corps. appeared at the Fine Arts Center lor of mm;ic degree from the Uni­ degree from the University of meaningful exchange," ::Wofford work with students on an equal Full partnership does become on his work in New Mexico until Wells's final works, inspired by The college is the newest branch 5000 Expected with The Amsterdam Baroque versity of Southern California Illinois, Bowen studied flute with the State University of New said. basis? What kind of students-ex­ relevant, though, when it so pre­ Trio in July. He will come from with a magna cum laude in cello. his death Nov. 5, 1954. the windows of Chartres Cathe­ The college will eventually have Larry Resnick, one of the two perts or generalists, radicals or occupies people that they can do Charles DeLaney ;md did graduate dral, led to experimentation with (SUNY), an experimental Texas Technological College, Lub­ While still a student there she work at Yale University. He has Student Opes Research about 5000 students and consist of faculty members, also saw the conventional student leaders-best nothing else but talk about it or bock, where he has taught flute colored inks on gesso, a technique several cluster colleges. It will students playing a significant role. voice student views? Should stu­ when they feel that their ideas played with piano student Marilyn also studied with Carl Petkoff of Inspired by Van Deren Coke, and theory since 1963. Neeley, and in 1959 at the Inter­ taught by the late Taos artist probably open in 1968 with a class "Their main effect was in reduc­ dents be resident "specimens'' for are so impotent that they might Illinois Wesleyan University, Al­ chairman of the UNM art depart­ Thomas Benrimo. Donations Pay Stipend national Competition in Geneva, bert Tipton of the Detroit Symph­ of about 100 who will continue to ing the number of requirements experimentation or are they to be as well not present them. Garcia, Cuban-born and trained, Switzerland, they were unani­ ment, Kate Corbin Duncan, a Two other exhibits now showing plan the college. The first full we had been considering, creating ony Orchestra, and W alfrid Ku­ UNM graduate student in art his­ came to Albuquerque about four mously selected winners as a so­ jala of the Chicago Symphony in the gallery, located in the UNM class will arrive in 1970. a more flexible curriculum," he years ago after his release from a tory, undertook extensive research Fine Arts Center, are "L.A.-N.Y. Partly because of the Peace said. nata team. Two years later, un-. Orchestra. on the artist. Castro prison and a short stay der auspices of the State Depart- From 1961 to 1963, Bowen held -Drawings of the 1960s" and Corps orientation of many of the Frustration Felt Interviewing Wells's associates "Prints: Processes and Media." · staff members, the college will The students, too, saw their ef­ two consecutive Fulbright scho­ and studying his journals, she larships for advanced study in The Hours are noon until 5 p.m. daily, stress experimental education. fect in terms of the general dia­ . '. has filled nearly 100 pages in a except Monday and Saturday. Students will spend several semes­ logue. "Our influence on the gen­ Netherlands. While there be master's thesis about his life. Music Department Opens toured with the Netherlands Wind ters off campus and will be en­ eral planning atmosphere has been Wells's multiplicity of styles couraged to spend a year "in the considerable," said Ralph Keyes, Ensemble and formed the Amster­ reiiect his restless searching dam Baroque Trio with Veronika world" between high school and former Antioch student body pres­ BULLETIN! throughout his life for an unat­ Hampe and Anneke Uittenbosch. college. Many other experimental ident, though the student consul­ Sales of Concert: Tickets tainable inner peace, Mrs. Dun­ ideas are also being considered. tants feel a great sense of frus­ can said. listen to KUNM A new "package deal," a $6 music department's Performance In his statement, Gould also said tration over their lack of direct THE BOOK STORE IS NOW FEATURING subscription fee for major con­ Series include concerts by the Taos Painter An accomplished watercolorist, that students are to be "admitted power to implement proposals. certs of the UNM music depart­ Wells used transparent water­ to full partnership in the academic In June a second group of stu­ UNM Orchestra, conducted by colors during the 1930s. In the Despite ment, will be charged to students Kurt Frederick. Soloists Arturo 90.1 Mcs. world" at Old Westbury. dent planners from the State Uni­ THE ONE BOOK YOU'LL USE FOR this year to cover the cost of per­ 40s and 50s he added gouache and fiendish torture versity arrived for a three-week Delmoni, violinist, and Toby Saks, Stroh Will Teach colored inks. 7 Original Planners formances in the Concert Hall. cellist, will highlight the first per­ dynamic BiG Duo Seven students arrived on the workshop. These students had ALL COURSES I The package deal includes tic­ formance on Oct. 13. Structure Stressed lwriih~~ first time, campus in April to be part of the little experience in the area of kets to the UNM Opera Work­ Other performances of the 2 U. Art Courses planning staff for three and a half educational reform, and the ideas shop productions Jan. 11-14 and "He explored the possibilities every time! being considered at Old West­ Orchestra will be Jan. 10 with Earl Stroh, a Taos artist, will of watercolors to a degree which months. They were from experi­ Save yourself from crippling errors in .reports and the Dance Workshop scheduled for Morton Schoenfeld, UNM pianist, be teaching two classes in art ap­ me's rugged pair of mental colleges- Antioch, God­ bury were new to them. In spite of March 8-10. few artists have approached," this difference, they, too, became theme writing. Save time and avoid the tedium of and a March 4 concert featuring preciation for the UNM exten­ Mrs. Duncan wrote. He was con­ stick pens wins again dard, San Francisco State, and Other events scheduled on the Karine Georgian, cellist. A joint sion division this fall. in unending war Berkeley. All were sophisticated bitter and frustrated over the correcting mistakes. cerned with the structural aspects "full partnership" promise. They concert with the UNM Chorus, di­ Carrying three hours credit, the of the bold, rugged landscape against ball-point in the field of educational reform, rected by Douglas McEwen, is Santa Fe course will open Sept. skip, clog and smear. had done much thinking about ed­ felt that they were being used for Equip yourself now with a permanent lifesaver by scheduled for May 15. 20 at the Folk Art Museum. The Despite horrible ucation, and had been involved in public relations purposes and that U. Will Offer Course Taos classes will begin Sept. 21 punishment by mad decision-making at their own uni­ the 'Senior staff was paying no at­ buying the one desk dictionary that won't let you Dr. McEwen will also direct tention to their ideas. the chorus at its Dec. 12 concert at the Harwood Foundation, a scientists, BIC still versities. down. It's Webster's Seventh New Collegiate- ,-e. UNM holding in the northern writes first time, every From the beginning students Solutions Vary and the UNM A Cappella Choir quwetl or ,-ecomm~ed In Driving, Car Care on April 8. New Mexico art colony. time. And no wonder. and staff clashed over the "full To some extent this charge was by your English department.. A r.pecial claer. in defensive Stroh will place special em­ Pic's "Dyamite" Ball partnership" clause. To President true. Many staff members felt Three performances of the phasis on comparative study of driving, motor vehicle mainten­ UNM Concert Band under the is the hardest metal Wofford this phrase meant that they had already heard "the stu­ This is the only Webster with the guidance you ne~d ance, freeway driving, and emerg­ ancient and modern art as a clar­ made, encased in a students .have the right to try as dent view" from the first seven baton of William Rhoads are list­ ification of the revelance of many in spelling and punctuation. It'!! the latest. It 10• ency repairs will be offered this ed for Jan. 15, March 25, and May solid brass nose cone. hard as they can to persuade the consultants. And, as one staff year by W. B. Lewis, UNM safety 6. great art traditions to modern Will not skip, clog decision-maker (Wofford) of the member explained, "The students' eludes 20,000 new words and new meanings. coordinator. man. He will use slides to illus­ or smear no matter value of their ideas. ideas reinforced rather than radi­ Orders for subscription are be­ trate his remarks. The twelve two-hour classes will what devilish abuse Students Want Vote cally changed ours." Owning your own copy is much easier and avoids the ing accepted by the office of the The artist is represented by an "Partnership is neither a mat­ Neither the students nor the be held on Saturday from 9 to 11 music department in the Fine Arts is devised for them hazards of guessing. So pick up this new dictionary Center. oil, "Trio," in the newly opened by sadistic students. ter of ideas nor of votes, but of senior staff were satisfied with a.m. in Johnson Gym. The first the experiment with student con­ class will meet Sept, 23. City of Albuquerque Museum. Get the dynamic responsible participation in many now at the bookstore for just $6. 7S indexed. It will me Duo at your forms in the dialogue that is mak­ sultants, but each had a different Registration begins at 1 p.m. still be a lifesaver ten years from now. campus store no''~·• ing the college," Wolford said, ad­ solution. today at the Community College ding that he had felt himself a Senior staff members believe Office in the Administration Build­ "full partner" both. of John Ken­ that in the future students must is in Room 208 of the Administra­ WE'RE SORRY STUDENTS­ '91.:-Wj nedy and Sargeant Shriver. To be given specific assignments in­ GET YOUR OWN COPY TODAY. tion building. stead of being allowed to be gad-.. THAT YOU MUST WATERMAN·IIC PEN CORP. the students full partnership MILFORD, CONN. meant a vote on policy decisions. fly generalists. "They have to be STUDY AGAIN The effect of this continning willing to take the responsibility WEBSTER'S SEVENTH NEW COLLEGIATE Jonson Gallery conflict was to make the students for their recommendations," one The Raymond Jonson Art Gal­ bitter and frustrated. Some felt said. The students, on the oth~r You'll recogaize if hy the bright red jaclcet. lery, 1909 Lomas NE, will be BUT-IF YOU MUST- that they had been lured to the hand, felt that the answer lay m closed until late October or early LEARN and RELAX college under false pretenses and their achieving voting power in November for construction of ad­ said they would not have come the decision-making process. ditional storerooms. with a- had they known the actual sit­ One of these assumptions will uation. be tested in the fall when several TAPE RECORDER In spite of their apparent lack new student consultants arrive on WESTE·RN CRAIG, SONY, AMPEX, ETC. of power, the students did have 'REVIEW an effect on Old Westbury. Some STEREO PHONOS attempted to take part in specific ON ALBUQUERQUE: ''phy•ically like areas of planning. Donna Michael­ 50me primitive organi•m, an amoeba, KLH, SCOTT, ETC. son, who had helped start the Ex­ perhaps." perimental College at San F.ran­ ON BIRTH CONTROL AND POVERTY: COMPONENT SYSTEMS cisco State, worked extens1vely "lm.positian of birth control by private GARRARD, SCOTT, KLH, BIC Fine Point 25C with the architects, and Ken Beck, or public agencies, without regard to ELECTRO.YOICE, ETC. cultural, religious, or moral cansidera• lions, is anti"person, not anti·poverty/1 STEREO KITS archbishop of Santa Fe. "The high priests of the fertility cult need re-ed· DYNA, SCOTT DECISIVE THE COMPETITOR. ucation." George Hagmaeier, C.P.S., St. Paul'• College. FM-AM RADIOS A suit for getting things done ON SAcRED COWS IN EDUCATION: PANASON IC, Kl.T, ETC. ·Canterbury Chapel for those who are on the ''the auumption that the more educa­ · · · Strong but subtle. In 100% tion cauroes the better;" Max Rafferty; STEREO TAPE$ Wool plaid, Apple Green .. $50 coachM as teacher.; freshman English. 20% SAVINGS PLAN ~ Anglicans gentle slopes. ON THE WAR AGAINST POVERTY: •t "Assign job quotas to industry and AUTO CARTRIDGES • UNSELF-CONSCIOUS busineu to absorb the unemployed."­ Ill IU I1_1 Illllfi11111J Ill Orthodox also warm enough Fioyd Hunter of the Social Science One of those Easy trans-season Re!earch Corporation, Berkeley. shifts, In which you might forget Episcopalians LINGUISTICS: "It Is hard tor mid· WHOLESALE NET PRICES for two if the die-aged man to admit that his lang­ what your're wearing-but no­ uage Is in some respects thirty years Just East of the University body else wllff Blue or Green • • out of date." occas1on ar1ses CA!OPS FOR LATIN AMERICA, "Re­ Fortrei/Cotton ...... , .. $2~ Serving Students Since 1949 search in arid fonds agriculture is THE VILLAGER the key to progress in much of Latin Sunday Eucharists America and Africa; yet research re­ is an AMERICAN TRADITION mains non-existent." lO:OOAM 5:00PM ALSO ART BY PETI:R HURl>, SHORT SOUND by 7:30AM STORIES (ABBEY), POETRY, BOOk 448 Ash N.E. (lobo) Men•sShop REVIEWS. $1 at the Associated Stu­ Near the University JUST8 dents Bookstore and at aU Albuquer­ Fr. Crews, Chaplain 2120 Central S.E. que book shops, Open Fridays Until9:00 3011 MONTE VISTA NE MINUTES by Pacific Trail 2~954 . , , .. , . , , , .. .C~~ .t.h~•. Triqn,g,f';) . , , . , .~55-16?~. , • from CAMPUS .~~~--~~~···~d " • .. "' ~ < ' ' • - • .. • .. ... - •• • ... ·+,. •• " ...... q ...... 1 ~ • ---· -· l ...... •.•• t •••• ' ' Ul'tN '9:00 A~MJ4:30 'P.M:: MON. "THRU FRI •. • I

Wednesday, September 13, 1987 Page24 · NEW MEXICO LOBO NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 25, ·· Advantages Seen in Impersonal Classes Nixon said. Nixon, who is one of d!lnts like you.'' He said Nixon By NANCY HARDING sities, Ian Thompson, a WICHE !ems pa~ticipants agreed. the founders of the Experimental showed the qualities of an admin­ The Collegiate Press Service staff member j1.1st out of school, M~Keachie put it this way: "college (one of the earlie'>t--:-and istrator, rather than those of a said that students' awarenesl'! has "Giving students a wide choice be­ student. BERKELEY, Calif.~ Elimina­ most successful-free umver­ CO CERTHALL been extended to a global area by tween types ·of structures (per­ tion of large classes and colleges, sities), emphasized the need for LaUer, another college pres­ the electronic era and that many ' sonal ~.authoritarian; lecture vs. careful planning and the generat­ ident demonstrated the student• fewer computers, and more con­ of them do not worry about the discussion classes) may be ~he tact between teachers and indivi­ ing of guiding ideas before be- administration gap. He looked at impersonality caused by the size ' only way to really. pe.rso~ahz~ the lounging students and hippies dual students are often seen as 1 • ginning. of a college. "After all," he said, ·education in large. mstltutJOns. on Telegraph Avenue, near the ·CiAUocJtdeJ. ways of making higher education "the smallest workable unit stu~ As for cooperatiOn, students, But the gap between students more "personal.'' Berkeley campus, and said, "They dents will deal with after grad- faculty, and administrators must and other members of the aca­ should all be sent to the front in But the real solution may be uation will be the world.'' work together to radically refol'!'l demic world is one of the most Viet Nam.'' keeping college programs flexible · Computers? John Caffrey, di- universities if they are to avOid difficult things to eradicate. One ,.. ' enough to allow education to be rector of the Commission on Ad- becoming obsolete, conference college president told Nixon; ''I tailored to the needs of individual ministration of the American delegates agreed. very much fear that the majority Patronize students, In fact, big classes and Council on Education, says they Energy, Idealism Praised. of students are neither intelligent ...... P-RESENT computers may be effective tools "can be as personalizing as mov- James P. Dixon, president of nor articulate. We need more stu- Lobo Advertisers in this process. able type and the printing press.'' Antioch College, praised. stu~ents' "The ideal educational system Computers Beneficial "enormous energy !'nd h1g~ Ide.al­ is not one in which each student Computers can be used to re- ism" as their mam contrJbUtion has individual attention," says duce drudgery, speed up sched- to the work of pulling down the Four l:xC~tiAg ~eries of Film and Music,~. Wilbert McKenzie, a University of uling, instruct· students, review system. Michigan professor. Many stu­ and monitor records, and solve "Education is becoming wra~­ WELCOME dents perform better if professo~ problems beyond human capacity. ped up in creative custody and m leave them alone, he adds. Best of all, Caffrey said, they can politics," Dixon said, "ra~her Contact Questioned free administrators to spend more than in the battles of humanJty." BACK I. The PERFORMING''ARTS FfA~~~RLM II. IT'S AWIDE WIDE WORLD ·~~ Students benefit most from per­ time With students. He suggested the minority (ad­ sonal contact with the instructor if "There is a sign on the door at ministrators) should . serve the SINGLE ADMISSIONS: TRAVEL-ADVENTURE FILM LECTURES :. :,~:;;' they have low motivation, a fact­ Stanford which says: 'The object majority (students), and that SUBSCRIPTIONS: ual orientation, a high level of of computers is insight, not num- both· should ·work together to (If AVAILABLE) . . STUDENTS $3.00 , ·;,f,;: sociability, and a high need for SUBSCRIPTIONS: ,.,,, bers;" Caffrey said. revolutionize the universities. STUDENTS $3.00 STUDENTS $1.00 FACULTY $4.00 >\·;,_: affiliation, McKeachie adds. Conference participants em- ,. Jiitnes Nixon, former stu~ent UNIVERSITY SHELL McKeachie was talking to 80 phasized a flexible educational body president of San !-"ranc_1sco FACULTY $4.00 FACULTY $2.00 . '"<, college presidents and deans at a system and cooperation among State College, ag1·eed WJth DJXon 2720 Central S.E. recent conference on personalizing students, faculty, and administra- on the need to involve studen~s, at P.M. higher education sponsored by the tors as keys to personalizing ;faculty:, and administrators m 842-9148 OCTOBER 5-6 m p~ 7:~0 Western Interstate Commission higher education. change, thereby forging again an NOVEMBER 9 for Higher Education (WICHE) THE INCOMPARABLE Experiments Needed academic community. OPEN HOURS and the University of California's A college must be willing to try Change From Bottom 24 Laurence Oiivier's SEPTEMBER 28 Center for Research and Develop­ Rudolph Nureyev-Margot fonteyn new ideas, sucli as breaking a uni- "The most important thing is to General Tires Gold Bond Stamps 11 ment in Higher Education. versity up into small cluster col- remember that change cannot Gene Wianco- Mysteries of the Balkan World .. Bigness Not Harmful leges and modernizing the currie- come f1·om the top down, but it IN NEW FULL LENGTH VERSION Of "OTHEllO" As for big classes and univer- ulum to deal with current prob- has to come from the bottom," NOVEMBER 15 "SWAN LAKE" Lowell Thomas Jr.-11 Destination-South Pacific" JANUARY 6 APO Serves, Has Fun Too NOVEMBER 29 & DECEMBER I JANUARY 19 Students going to the Union the lobby of the Union on a con­ presenting gifts and sponsoring Lawrence Harvey's Production "LA BOHEME" Cliff Kamen-"The Philippines .. can take advantage of the coat tract basis with the Union. a party at the Las Lunas School and book check service offered by FEBRUARY 23 Serve As Guides for Retarded Children 20 miles LA SCALA OPERA the Alpha Phi Omega service south of Albuquerque. · The APO, which has an active PRODUCTION Ed Lark-"lsrae\-Rebirth of a Nation" fraternity from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 Fraternity members also help -K~~------= membership of over 30 members, "THE WINTER'S TALE" p.m. Monday through Friday. also provides a number of services clean up the Coronado state monu­ The fraternity, which is the ment in Bernalillo 15 miles north APRIL 5 local affiliate of the National for the campus and community. WELCOME BACK of Albuquerque. 11 Alpha Phi Omega service frater­ They serve as guides for visitors They ring the victory bell at MARCH 8 Stanton Waterman- 3000 Years Under the Sea'' nity, operates the coat check in to the campus and work with the HAROLD LLOYD'S HILARIOUS COLLECTION FROM SILENT FILMS -:' . Dean of Men in providing tTans" football games and place the lumi­ portation service at terminals for naries throughout the campus for TO SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW ON SALE AT the Homecoming Celebration. Production in '68 incoming freshmen. "THE FUNNY SIDE OF LIFE" TABLE IN STUDENT UNION, BENEFIT Of "Our main goal is to provide To ~leet Thursday INCLUDING INTERNATIONAL CLUB •t• J • hf service, but we also try to have a Murphy said that any student THE CAMPUS AU d I IODS ODIQ lot of :run," said the fraternity's interested in joining APO, includ­ .. THE FRESHMAN .. AND AT CONCERT HALL BOXOFFICE president, Don Murphy. All FILMS TWO SHOWINGS NIGHRY BEGINNING AT 7:00 P.M. ing those who are already mem­ FIVE ADMISSIONS GOOD ANYTIME UNM Opera The fraternity is open to any bers of Greek fraternities, should For UNM male student who feels that attend the rush meeting Thursday Auditions for the two operas to he can offer a contribution to the night in the Council Room of the be presented in January by the University and has the time to Union at '7 :30 p.m. UNM Opera Workshop will be help, Murphy said. Persons not able to attend the CHAMBER SERIES held at 7 :30 tonight in the Choral Sponsor Christmas Party meeting sJ-.... uld contact the frater­ THE TRADITIONAL LOOK IN Ill. ARS MUSICA IV. EXPERIMENTAL FILM SERIES Room, M-1'7, of the Fine Arts Other projects undertaken each nity at the Union coat check Center. semester by the fraternity include booth. SUITS FOUR INTERNATIONALLY PROMINENT STRING ENSEMBLES JOIN TO FROM THE NEW CINEMA AND THE UNDERGROUND MAKE A SPLENDID SERIES FOR THOSE WHO LOVE GREAT MUSIC. andAll members interested of theUNM faculty students and lf~~===~~======-~iiiiiiiiliiiiliiiil~iiiiliiii, SPORTCOATS staff are invited to audition. Ac- companists will not be provided. Albuquerque's SWEATERS WARSAW QUINTET JANUS FILMS PRESENTS The two operas, "The Medium" THE SINS OF THE and uThe Bishop of Brendisi," First Far Out SHIRTS NOVEMBER 6 PROGRAM I ..... both by contemporary composer QUINTEr .•.•.•.•...•...... , •.•..••..... , . . . . BRACEWICZ FLESHAPOIDS Gian Carlo M:enotti, are sched- Film Club PERMANENT PRESS uled for presentation Jan. 11, 12, QUINTET IN E FLAT MAJOR •.....•....•.•.•...... SCHUMANN THE ARCTURUS COLLECTION Of 13 and 14. They will be fully SLACKS QUINTEr IN F MINOR ...... • . . • ...... • ...... • BRAHMS A SCIENCE FICTION SATIRE BRILLIANT SHORT FILMS staged with costumes in the Re­ ACCESSORIES cital Hall of the Fine Arts Cen­ Every Saturday OCTOBER 31 DECEMBER 19 ter. Jane Snow, director of the CHIGIANO SEXTET Opera Workshop, will have parts At Midnight JANUARY 4 7:00 AND 9:00P.M. 7:00 AND 9:00P.M. available at the audition for all voice classifications. We Will Present SESTETTO CONCERTANTE IN .A MAJOR . . . . . • ...... 80CCHERINI SEXTET FOR STRINGS • . . . . . • • . • ...... • ...... MARTINU JANUS FILMS PRESENTS JONAS MEKA'S A Collection SEXTET IN A MAJOR . • . . • • • ...... • • . . DVORAK PROGRAM II THE BRIG hag'gle/hag-el/vb. Of Unusual ZAGREB QUARTET 2. to annoy ar exhaust A FILMING OF THE SENSATIONAL Experimental JANUARY 25 THE ARCTURUS COLLECTION STAGE PLAY with wrangling QUARTEr IN A MAJOR . . . • ...... • . • ...... JARVONIC Films . " !Webster's Collegiate Ed.) ''• QUARTET IN E FLAT MAJOR .. , ...... SCHUBERT JANUARY 5 MARCH 28 .:_:.;~-~ QUARTEr NO. 1 ...... BARTOK Which Have. 7:00 AND 9:00P.M. 7:00 AND 9:00 P.M. ·. •' . -· HAGGLING IS NOT . I •l' :. • '• '-.,,._ J DEAD Been Well PRAGUE QUARTET MARCH 23 Received By Radios-1.95 up­ QUARTET IN F MAJOR ...... • . MOZART SUBSCRIPTIONS (FOUR ADMISSIONS GOOD ANY TIME) QUARTET, OP. 92 NO. 2 ...... PROKOFIEV Goers 3124 CENTRAL EAST Record Movie Around The Country QUARTET, OP. 132 ...... • ...... BEETHOVEN Players 12.00 up- NOW AVAILABLE AT CONCERT HALL BOX OFFICE · Turn Out To Turn On To This Series ALL PROGRAMS AT 8:15 P.M. STUDENTS $3.00 Prices vary according OPEN DAILY TILL 6:00 PM SUBSCRIPnONS (4 ADMISSIONS GOOD ANY DATE) NOW AVAILABLE AT CONCERT to haggling ability FRIDAYS TILL .9:00 PM HAlL BOX OFFICE . o . . • This Week Featuring Andy Warhol's"KISS" STUDENT5-$3.00 FACULTV---$6.00 FACULTY $4.00 BLACKJACK'S Additional Weekly E'pisodes of the serial "THE PHANTOM CREEPS" CENTRAL PAWN PHONE 255-2684 TICKETS FOR ALL FOUR SERIES NOW AVAILABLE AT 200 Central SE Wh~~· ~qggllng It fl,radl~ dally f il • .. CONCERT HALL BOX OFFICE-TEL. 277-3121 ~ ·' ,. ~ ll ,, ~

'J'~. ~-~. ( J2"1' '...... :OPEN A~M:.-4:30 ~P:.M;:,MON. THRU FRI •.... ,...::.:.· ' ' ' ' < ' ' ' I I > ' ~ e 9:00 ik .. Page 26 NEW MEXICO LOBO Wednesday, September 13, 1967 -~~------~~~~~~~~------~~~----~~ Wednesday, September 13, 1967 1m Hopeful Lobos Open SPORTS NOTES By NOOLEY REINHEARDT Season Saturday UNM has selected co-captains Rex Hennington, a 6'1", 227-pound the spring game against the The UNM football team will alumni. to have much more speed at all for the 1967 season, a change from defensive tackle from Belen, and also be the season opener for the bunch. But if the Lobos falter in past patterns by CoQch Bill Weeks. put its hopes on a new offense, Before injuring a knee, the positions. Weeks expects this to Idaho State Bengals who were .Jim Boller, 5'9", 205-pound line­ four new coaches, and a handful be a major asset in the New the opener, it could be another The new co-captains are seniors backer from Corpus Christi, Tex. Baylor University transfer hit 3-7 last year. The Lobos were 2-8 one of those years. of experienced players when the four of six pass attempts for 38 Mexico attack. . and 3-7 in 1965. 'l'he Lobos aren't exceptionally Lobos open the 1968 campaign yards. He too is a junior and is Idaho State is facing what it Tentative Tw~Deep- Lobo J!,ere Satua-day night against from Albuquerque's Highland big this year. The offensive line calls its "roughest schedule in Lioe-lJp Don't laugh at High. averages 213 pounds and the back­ Idaho Stllte of the Big Sky Con~ history," but the Lobos are the OFFENSIVE TWO-DEEP ference. Game time is 8 p.m. field 174. On defense the line Vallez, the top pass receiver only established collegiate ath­ '.I'E-,Bo Emilio Vallez, 85 Nann Kreuter Charles Van der Hoff's The contest is virtually a must averages 211 and the secondary ?."1'-1;o Steve Avery last season, is back to start at 175 pounds. letic power the Bengals will face. game for Coach Bill Weeks and tight end. The 6'2", 210-pound TG-73 Paul Vasquez, 62 Greg Saraovc~ The Lobos couldn't have picked G-55 Dennis Mar:r, 50 Tim Scanlon JUNIOR QUARTERUACK RICK BEITLER (No. 16 above) is big ears. He can hear his 58-man squad, In two years senior from Belen set three Smith, Hennington Strong a better opener to build morale SG-66 :r erry Pollard, 64 Ron Heyer New Mexico has won only five school records last year, playing The strongest point on the team TS--79 Woody Jones, 78 Eddie Segeara shown io aetion here last year on his way to setting seven school and become accustomed to the SE-32 Bob Blake, 83 Sbruman Seiders records. One of his passes, an 89-yard strike to Emilio Vallez, was ,,,games . and has lost the last eight in eight of the 10 games. could be the defensive line with new offense and the altered Wll---47 Aee Hendricks, 40 Bob Fowler a party a mile away, ma row. tackles Smith and co-captain Rex TB-25 Ron Romans, 44 David Bc!okert also a Western Athletic Conference 111ark. Terry Stone, right, a Seiders Sidelined defense. The key to a Lobo vic­ QB-16 Rick Beitler. 15 Terry Stone Weeks has gone to the pro~style Hennington anchoring the front transfer from Baylor University, is expeeted to alternate and Split end Sherman Seiders, who tory will be stopping Idaho quar­ FB-37 John Paut.;cb1'30 .Rick~ thanks to Sprite. I formation to give the Lobo a~ four. Letterman Mike Rucks and terback Bill Ingram. duel with Beitler for the starting job, Beitler is a 6'·7", 174-pound caught 27 passes a year ago and DEFENSIVE TWO-DEEP letterman from Durango, Colo. Stone, 6'·1", 190, is a product of tack more versatility, particularly Ken Warren will be at defensive LE--67 Hike Rucks, 69 Ron Manno!! ,, in the passing game. In the past end slots. Ingram Holds Record LT-70 Paul Smith, 72 Buzz Esmiol Albuquerque's Highland High. Both are expected to see action in Social-life majors, take a ,, New Mexico used the now out­ A pair of senior lettermen, Joe Last year Ingram gained 1188 RT-74 Re:l; Heningtou, 81 Don Silver the season opener here Saturday night, look at Charles 1Jan der RE--87 Ken W am:n. 76 Dan Silver dated wing-T. Changes have also Ca~ms and Joe Presente, have yards to set a new school record. MB-86 Paul Skubic Hoff. He can' t play the LB-36 Frank V ainisi, 88 Ed Ostrowski guitar. Never directed been made to stiffen the Wolf­ plenty of speed in the defensive His favorite target was split end R-84 Dave Harris, 17 Scott Oliver pack defense. secondary, as well as experience. Bob Odom who grabbed 21 passes, LC-26 Rick Hattb..,, 23 Tim Lewis an underground They are small, but their speed RH-45 Joe Pl-esente, 21 AI Hraeek movie. And then Optimistic But Cautious The Lobos are heavy favorites ss-u Joe Casas, .24 Frank Martinez should help them a great deal in to turn the game into a practice S-12 Randy Muerich, 28 Kevin Smith look at his ears! The coaching staff and most of tight situations. Two-deep subject to chang., _by opening A bit much? Yes! session with the Idaho State ll&llle. . the players are optimistic. about Weeks thinks that perhaps the lEVI'S. STA-PRESr But--Charles Van the opening game and the entire defensive secondary is the most ' ... ' der Hoff can hear season. But it is a very cautious Phone a bottle of tart, optimism. , improved area on the squad. 247·0836 Bengals Open Season •..-ittiu NORGE tingling Sprite Already the Lobos have lost .,._ l~~QUIPPED 8 a.m._, 8 p.m. OR being opened in the co-captain Jim Boller for the first The Saturday night game will Until you finish 1Jffi0~[lli[]JJ[Jg) girls' dormitory game and probably the season. from across the Boiler, a senior linebacker, re­ CAMPUS LAUNDRY campus! injured a nerve in his neck and What does it •..,.has been scratched from the matter, you say? roster. Sport & eLEANJNG never need ironing Hah I ~Dq you realize Voted the top defensive player led. the team in scoring with 33 2106 CENTRAL that Charles Van in '66, Boiler was to be one of the . . S,t:. der Hoff bas never mainstays of the Lobo defense points, will not be able to start missed a party at that position because of an Notes which was almost non-existent a in four years? year ago. injury. However, he will be able cor~ operated & prof'essiortaf to handle the extra point and field Lobo Coach Bill Weeks thinks When he hears Injuries Could End Hope more people wi]] be throwing servicec; available- those bottles goal kicking duties. The coaching from their own 10 or 15-yard lines or Sprite being uncapped--the roars--the Both eXperience and depth will staff hopes he will be ready for this year. "They want to get the fizzes--the bubbles--be runs! So before you be a major problem for New full action by mid-season. ball out of there one way or an­ ATTENDANT ALWAVS ON DUTV can say anti-existentialism, he's getting in Mexico and many injuries could Besides Vallez, the Lobos' other other," he said, referring to the !:ass acce.ss on that tart, tingling, slightly tickling taste of ruin all hope for a winning sea­ top prospect for pos~season bon. danger of the long punt return off stme.t. AIR. Sprite. And delicious refreshment son. On the roster are 25 letter­ ors is Paul Smith. He is a 237- under the new NCAA rule. "If --as well as a good time--is his. men and 30 players who have pound defensive tackle from Ros­ we can't get it out any other way, t:oark:.Tn,g COOL EO or course,, you don't have to never played a varsity game, in­ well. Both he and Vallez reported we might as well take a chance." have ears as big as Charles Van cluding 17 players up from last to practice in near-perfect condi­ * * .. NoR.nl der Hoff's to enjoy the swinging year's 2-2 freshman team. tion after six-month stints in the. Utah's excellent guard Norman taste of Sprite. You may .r.•r. Quarterback Rick Beitler, who National Guard. Chow: "I feel we have the poten­ just have to resign ran the Lobo attack last year, is Romans, Bookert Top Runners tial to have a great team. All we yourself to a little back, but will probably have to It looks to be junior letterman need is a little work." Utah coach 1 less social life • . share the signal-calling duties Ron Romans and juco transfer Mike Giddings: "We'll see that .- with transfer Terry Stone. David Bookert leading the Lobo you get plenty of work.'' SPRITE, SO TART MiD Both quarterbacks had a good running attack-at least in the • listen to KUNM TINGLING, WE night in the Wolfpack's first • • JUst COULDN'T KEEP early games of the season. Carl Arizona head football coach IT QUIET. full contact scrimmage Saturday Jackson and Carl Bradford, the Darrell Mudra isn't the least re­ night at University Stadium, The 1966 leading rushers, ended their luctant in assessing his Wildcats' 90.1 Mcs. starter against Idaho State is careers as Lobos last year. chances in 1967. "We're going to indefinite, but both will probably Romans is a 5'10", 172-pound be a lot better football team than see much action. tailback from Newbury Park, anybody realizes," proclaims Beitler Holds WAC Mark Calif. _Bookert, a speedy sopho­ Mudra. As a sophomore in '66, Beitler more from Hobbs who spent last set seven school records, including year at Cisco (Texas) Junior College, is 6'3", and weighed in an 89-yard touchdown strike to at 190. end Emilio Vallez for a Western Athletic Conference mark. Stone's One thing that the Lobos have Get only varsity eXperience came in lacked the past two seasons is speed. This year the squad seems WOODY~ Drive In that cool, Central at University unruffled look! ANNOUNCES THE

A Tempting Variety of Lunch and Dinner Items RE-OPENING FASHIONS SEPT. 15 6 P.M.-2 A.M. NIGHTLY 1. Beef, Chicken, Shrimp and Ham Dinners 2. Eight Varieties of Hamburgers OF THE 3. Five Kinds of Hot Dogs Hide-N-Seek Room 4. And Many Types of Snacks Fashions that match DOWNSTAIRS • LIVE We Cater for Parties, Picnics or whatever the Occasion •INTIMATE ON CAMPUS ••• IN THE CLASSROOM ENTERTAINMENT LEVI'S STA~PREST LEADS THE CLASS • DANCING COOPERS features a c:omplete selection of these famous no-iron slacks in all the new fall colors and fabrics. • PITCHERS You'll also flnd a wide variety of Mr. levi Sta-Prest slacks to size 42 waist. Stop in ... look 'em over. Open From 'from classroom to week-end dare 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1717 CENTRAL NE MUGS ALBUQUERQUE Woodrll//-flllilm Friday & Saturday SCHLITZ 2904 Central s.E. Phone 213-5389 IS OUR frHPa!Utg 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. DRAFT BEER Reclr EntraiiCII WALK IN-CALL IN WESTER~ & CASUAL WEAR - WINROCK CENTER Must Have Proper I.D. ·21 Yrs. or-Older Wednesday, September 13,.1967 Page28 NEW MEXICO LOBO listen to KUNM EW EXICO OBO 90.1 Mcs. Our Seventy-First Year of Editorial Freedom Vol. 71 Wyoming Favored in WAC Monday, September 18, 1967 No.2 Editor's note: This is a lwk at · two main problems facing offen­ who also will play both safety all-wAC first teamers) and line­ defending Western Athletic Con­ sive line coach Bill Baker: lack of and halfback. backer Tom Gernentz, an honor­ able mention choice, waaMalcen of ference football champion Wyo­ overall depth and inexperience at 21 Intercepted ff!CiC ming from Bill Young, the Sports center. · Between them Washington and The three returnees are all sea­ · lndia11 Jewel" Information Director at Wyo­ Two all-WAC first team choices, Speights foiled nearly half of the soned veterans with two letters OLDTOWN Bengals Shaken ming. The Cowboys won the 1966 tight tackle Mike LaHood (230) enemy passes that misfired: they Sun Bowl over Florida State and and split guard Dave Rupp (190), either knocked down or intercep­ ~ea~c~h~,~~======~====~~~~~======~~~~====~~-· are ranked in the top 2_. teams in led the returning lettermen who ted 46 of the 102 passes the op­ pre-season polls this year. They fill every position but the critical position missed. Vic, with :09,7 • ,, are also heavy favorites to re. center spot. Starters also back speed deflected a team high of 22 KDEF FUN~i15~ .. peat as WAC champion. are tight end Joe Cassidy (204), pass~ and intercepted three Wolfpack split tackle Glen Lybarger (235) tn others. Speights tied for the team By LARAMIE - Wyoming's run­ and tight guard George Mills . ~1~• -aUQU.Itqu•. : :aota-'~' ning attack should b:! as rough­ lead in interceptions with six and (205). Other lettermen are split shot down 15 other aerials. All • ___!>LB~QUERQU£, NEW )I~EXICC) shod as ever despite an injury to ends Gene Huey (172) and Den­ told the Pokes intercepted 21 veteran fullback Tom Williams. nis Devlin (201), both of whom passes, two shy of the school rec­ Williams, 5' 11", 200, suffered a also will alternate in the defensive ord but returned them 270 yards, severe knee twist in a short scrim­ Season Opener secondary, and tight tackle Byra a r:ew Wyoming high. age session Sept. 2 and will be out ·Kite (224), who was shifted from Washington led the nation in for an indefinite period. the defensive unit in the spring. punt returns with 443 yards in By NOOLEY REINHEARDT But Cowboy coach Lloyd Eaton Speed Is Above Average 34 trips, both new WAC records. WELCOME BACK New Mexico, showing only occasional sparks of potential, has a stable of fine running backs Wyoming's offensive line, then, Two returns went all the way, 54 scrambled past Idaho State University 24-3 here Saturday that should take up the slack until has experienced men at every yards against Wichita and 55 Williams returns to the lineup. night in the season opener for both teams. position except cente~ wher~ a aaginst UTEP. He also paced ~he· Heading the list is 1967 co-cap­ fine-looking sophomore IS working. Pokes in kickoff returns With The win for the Lobos broke an eight-game losing streak tain and All-American tailback Back-up help is inexperienced, but UNM STUDENTS seven for 234 yards, and the final ~' and was their sixth in the last 21 outings. candidate Jim Kiick, 5' 11", 211, talented. Overall speed is above return of the year was for 95 who is a two-time all-Western average. yards and a touchdown that scut­ Joe Casas, a running back turned defensive back, opened Athletic Conference choice. The "We could have a pretty salty tled Brigham Young, 47-14, in the the way for the Lobo victory with a 96-yard kickoff return other hard runners are junior bunch," Coach Baker allows, "but Dave Hampton, 6', 200 pounds, WAC title game in Provo. Room Decoration for a touchdown with 4 minutes and 13 seconds left in the believe me, those sophomores need Defensive Tries Hard I; who was playing both tailback to grow up in a hurry. This year's R first half. and fullback and will now take When you're number one in the Headquarters WAC race could be one of the nation, you have to try twice as "I' Moments before Casas's picture-book run up the middle, over fullback assignments exclu­ toughest in years. We had better A NEW LOOK in Lobo operations, namely the stressing of an nerial attack instead of the running sively· sophomore Joe Williams hard to stay on top, Hertz and e Posters 'I' Idaho State had tied the oal b ailing Sherman be ready up front.'' · Avis ads to the contrary. /; game, is displayed by quarterback Terry Stone (right) as he sails a pass over the heads of a horde of score at 3-3. The Lobos got on Sg 'd y (no ~elation to Tom) 6', 192 A near airtight defensive sec­ Idaho State defenders. Stone and Rick Beitler went to the air repeatedly as the Lobos stiOed Idaho 39 pounds, who will alternate with That's the theory anyway of e Hanging Ashtrays ' b d fi t 'th e1 ers. ondary was one of the most im­ State 24-3 in the opening game of the 1967 football season Saturday night at University Stadium. score oar rs WI a - The Lobo defense held the Kiick at tailback, and Joe De­ Wyoming assistant football. coach portant factors in the success of e Hanging Lanterns • .:.:.______Y_ar __ d_s_e_c_on_d __ q_u_a_rt __ er __ fi_e_Id Bengals to the lone three Sarro, 5' 6", 175, vest-pocket let­ Wyoming's 1966 football season. whose defensive _.:.T::h::e_v::ic:.:t::or:.:y~br:.:o:.::k::e::a:.::n~e=i~gh:.::t:..:·g~a:.:m:.:e:...:.:lo:.::s:.:in::::g:..:s:.:t:.:re:.:a:.::k~f:.:o.:.r..:t:.:he:..::L~ob::..o:.::s::.. terman fullback. unit .last year was the first in the One half of the stingy deep four country in rushing defense with PLUS points, but no one was quite sure Kiick Led Rushing that set one school record and a 38.5-yard average that also set ManyO:her how. The lightly regarded Idaho Kiick and Hampton finished came close to another returns to State bunch, playing one of the one-two in the rushing derby last a new record in the Western Ath­ Selections help defend the Cowboy's West­ letic Conference. ID lll few major college teams on their year, with Kiick leading the Pokes ern Athletic Conference title. UNM Shows Leadership With The Cowboy's "front seven" schedule, often pushed the Lobo~ aground for the second straight But more important, the re­ (the five linemen and two line By CHUCK REYNOLDS experimental course ID 111, UNM for the course, edited by Carl aside almost at will. season. Jim netted 597 yards in placements for the missing half and "The New Morality.'' At one point the visitors gained 145 carries for a fine 4.1 average, backers) allowed enemy rushers The 1967 fall semester has is showing important leadership Selinger and published by UNM, A long list of other significant are lettermen who received plenty but 385 yards in the 10 regular in the area ·of enlightened educa- over 110 yards in three plays, only while Dave pounded for 384 yards of game experience last fall. REMEMBER-We Print been marked al'Ound the country includes such authors as Robert topics follows these, and, as the season games, and threw Florida tion. · Kennedy, William Fullbright, to have two of the plays, good for in 88 trips for a 4.4 average. All-WAC first team halfbacks Sweatshirts & T-Shirts as a semester of innovation and text's cover indicates, "of course over 80 yards, called back because DeSano, a good tackler and Vie Washington (180) and Dick State's runners for a minus-21 ID (short for Interdepartmen­ Russel Baker, and James A. Pike. Henry the Horse dances the yards aground to help fashion the optimism by educators and the tal) 111 is the restult of the ef­ The anthology (271 pages) of penalties. blocker, earned his first letter last Speights (168) return tor their Your Design or Ours press, with student-selected cur­ waltz.'' (Shades of Billy Shears.) season as a member of the spe­ 28-20 victory in the Sun Bowl. forts of several individuals, pri­ could very possibly become na­ Bengal Receivers Mulrecl Throw• second and third year of competi­ riculum, pass-fail classes, and Junior and senior students in ~engal quarterback Bill Ingra~J. cialty teams. He ,has good speed tion respectively. Front line safe­ On two occasions during the reg­ marily Law Professor Carl Sel­ tionally popular for use as a text the General Honors Program will ular season, Shurmur's aggres­ many other progressive develop­ inger and Education Dean Ches­ or for general reading. also found the mark several times on his compressed frame-and ties are Jim Stankus (201) and ments. supplement' the cour1e by «ll)n­ with on-the-dot ·puses, only to he's probably the smallest full­ sive unit held the opposition to ter Travelstead. The courae is The claBB, which will be attend­ dueting diseWlllion leuion• in the Dennis Devlin (201) who are re­ Although few people may real­ subtitled "Introduction to Con­ ed by approximately 400 fre8h­ llave hi. receiver drop the ball, back in the league. placing Ed Friehlich, who grad­ minus yardage: -85 for Wichita Honors Center with smaller num­ alter having the Lobo defender and -31 for UTEP. 8 ize it, UNM is not only in the temporary American Thought.'' men for the first .semester only, bers of freshmen. Joe Williams was held out last uated, and Paul Toscano, who now '" SpOOFER SHOP mainstream of these develop­ When the course's organizers will cover a wide variety of beaten b.v tJJree or. four steps. Four Missing year, and the season of schooling is the offensive quarterback. ments but, with the organization say "contemporary" they mean topics, including "Youth in Amer­ If the course ean be character­ One of the bright spots for the paid off. He led all the rushers First replacement will be letter­ Four members of the 1966 unit and implementation of the new "contemporary.'' The major text ican Society/' "Race Relations," ized by a single word, it must be unpolished UNM attaclc is taU­ in the two spring games, netting man Gene Huey (172) who will are missing as the Pokes prepare 2404 Central Ave. "confidence.'' The all-pan course back David Bookert, a junior col­ 96 yards on 32 trips, running with swing both at safety and half­ to open defense of their WAC (no entering student ean fail) lege tranafer. Of the 84 yards good speed and authority. back. A junior, Huey also will championship-end Tom Frazier, presumes a great deal of confid­ (net) that the . Wollpack gained Offensive Is Key play offensive split end, making tackle Ron Billingsley and mid­ ence in the participants. The only on the ground the former Hobbs One of the key factors in Wyo­ him a most valuable member of dle guard Jerry Durling (all three Cost: of Five New Buildi.igs obligations assumed by the stu­ High star picked up 73 of them. the '67 squad. dents are to attend classes and The 6'-3", 190-pound junior car­ ming's bid for a second straight ..• ·-~·;~·:·:~... ·:·-~·- ~·::.: :--.:.~.. ~- -:-~·:~-,:~·-::·-·;-··'. ::~:?t Western Athletic Conference Second replacement probably ---::, ·. <-:'·' __ -.·· .} do the readings. ried the ball 19, timea and gained championship is the Cowboy's of­ will be sophomore Jim Keen No demands or pressures are 94 yards while losing only one • fensive line. (176), a converted quarterback :} annexed to the class by exams or The top ball-carrier returning Eight lettermen from last To Tota-l Over $5 Million fear of failing grades. The great­ from 1966, Ron Romans, carried year's unit that helped push Wyo­ est demand on the students will only twice for 'llix yards. ming to 12th nationally in total By GREG MACALEESE derwent construction during the struction on the building has be to digest the tremendously im­ 17,000 Fans Watch Victory offense return this fall. These Five buildings, amounting to a 1966-67 school year, only one, the been completed and it will be in­ portant and relevant readings and Over 17,000 fans tumed out cost of 5.5 million dollars, will be addition to the biology building, spected within the month, al­ veterans will partially offset the WANT ADS to become stimulated to continue to watch the duel for the quarter~,~ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES: built on the UNM campus this will be occupied this fall. The new though, it is not scheduled for 4 Une ad., 65¢-4 tilnes, $2.00. Insertions their awareness after the course back slot between junior letter- must be submitted by noon on day before year, the offiee of Van Deren addition cost $1,720,000 and will occupation until 1968. publication to Boom 11>9, Student Publiea­ Hooker, UNM school architect, give the biology department more Used For Research tions Building, or telephone 277-4002 or reported last week. classroom and laboratory space. 277·4102. The new structure will be used Lobos Foce BYU, FULL TIME-PART TIME The new construction will in­ It will also provide the faculty primarily for faculty research Girls over 18 for New Line: New Train· clude additions to the chemistry with research facilities. ing: Extra. high pay: Can be supervisor complex and the heating plant, Most expensive of the new and will also have a complete in 2 months. Minimum pay $100, per wing of teaching laboratories. month. Call: D'Amico Enterprises, 25o- modem dormitories, a car repaiJ.< buildings is the Medical Science Open League Play 4541. 9/13, 18, 20. center, and a studio building for Complex, located on Lomas Boule­ 16 Months From Completion SERVICES KUNM, the campus FM J.

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