new mexico lobo, volume 065, no 12, 10/19/1961

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1961 e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 10-19-1961 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/ 1961 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1961 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1961 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961." 65, 12 (1961). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1961/65

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1961 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

10-19-1961

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1961

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

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961." 65, 12 (1961). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1961/65

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

Pllge 8 NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday, October 17, 1961

Score: 41-7 3 I t I T fo1· the season by defeating Sigma Spouse Cards · n ramura earns Phi Epsilon 24-0. " , 11 • . The Sig Eps cot!ld never hold a A . Stude~t Sp?use Card. .":Ill

W If k R • u b t sustained drive while Phi Delta be sold for $3.~0 1'? the act!Vltles

Utags FlaJ.l.en 0 p•c • emarn n ea en Theta tJsed a consistent gNUnd cente1• to admit WIVeS and da~es -.;; 1;; U ' game on touchdown 1·uns fl'om Bob of students to campus Ctlltmal

Sigma Chi, Pi Kappa Alpl~a and Gemoets~ Stafford and Brown. events., " , , .

L b F P f I AU Sig·ma Alpha Epsilon 1'e1nam the Brown rl\n for another· touchdown Th~f new s~Otlse. card will

0 OS ace Ower u only undefeated flag football in the second half to round out the tsalt~ ,lfl tjie_, Umv~1Sitr Pro1.ram · teams in the affiliated league after Phi Del tscoring. 0enhes, t Co-.ey t eadel' P ays,

. 1·c es ·ra oncer s an Pl'Ograms . . d two rouds of play. Kappa S1gma defeated Lambda ' . . A powerful Utah State Aggie, offense as Santiago has a'.'erage S' Chi combined a balanced Ch' Al h 22_6 L' A d covered by the student act1v1ty

team rocked and socked the New seven yards per carry with 256 1~ma . 11 • 1 . P a · meman n Y card except the "Mirage" and :Mexieo Lobos to a humiliating 41- yards in 36 carries. Morgan netted runnmg a.ttack With an equa Y Smcla1r ran for a t?uchd~wn and · . 7 defeat at Lo an Satm·da after- 54 yards in g carries against the g·ood passmg game a~d. shut o~t adde.d two more pmnts with con- the athletic events. n g Y Utags and ran two punts back for Kappa Alpha 28-0. S1gma Clu s vel'Sions. Dalacon and Stocton also Another "spot!Se card" to cover o~~rly in the first quartel' the 20 and 64 yards respectively. touchdowns ~ame fro;n runs b~ ran touchdowns for Kappa Sigma. football and basketball games aJld

W:olfpac~t scored on _a .quick Jim' ~hn Cro~narti~, ~~!p:c~ ~~~~ ~~~l.~t;~~·a~:~d;~oss~d~ t~~~h~~~~ ~~~bJaa6~~~~'f;ecr~~f pe~·~~d ;~: othel' athletic events is a:ailable, ~~~~~dr~~:~o!~~~:::~:.sr£!,~~ ~~~c~~~/;::s:. i~ additio~ to run- pass to George Vergal'a, ~n? Rubi a defensive battle with neither fol' $6.00 from the athletic dept,. • the only score for the Lobos all ning his roll out and bootleg· pat- threw a s.u~cess~ul convel Slon at- team able to score. at J olmson gym, ft ' terns. He has completed 25 passes tempt to Fred C1omes.

a emoon. d s· ' th · t Three plays later the Utags for 325 yards and two touch o~ns. The 1g s o. er pom s . came scored 011 a 41 yard untouched 1.·un Saturday,_ the Lobos go agamst fr_om a convers1on run by Jm1 Ir­by Totn Larchield. With a success- a stro~g ;\r1zo~a team at Tucson. wm and a. safet:l.' due to a blocl~ed . ful conversion the score was tied Stat1stws for the Utah State punt. Davrd Dav1d was the leadmg 7-7 · game: ground gainer for Kappa Alpha

For the rest of the afternoon Utah State New 1\Iexico who now stand 1-1 inle:J,gue play. the Lobos fumbled away the ball 19 ------ First Da~ns ------ 13 Phi Sigma Kappa could not hold seven times, had two passes inter~ 310 ----- Net Rushmg ----- 75 off a potent Pi Kappa Alpha of­cepted, and gained only 75 yards in 4-9 --- Passes Attempts --- 9-17 fense and lost its second game n~t rushing. 2 --- Passes Inte1·cept7d by --- 1 26-0. Tony Shaw ran for two

. Completely Helpless 83 ---Net yards passmg --- 141 touchdowns, passed to Steve The end of the first half saw a 393 ----- Total offense ----- 216 Smucker for another and threw to

completely helpless Wolfpack be- 5-33.4 --Punts Average -- 5-33.4 Stan Hays for an extra point try. hind 28-7. Only the final gun saved 25 -------- Penalties -------- 15 Boue completed the Pike scoring the Lobos from a wo1•se than 41-7 1 ------- Fumbles Lost------- 7 on a touchdown run and a success-defeat they suffered. ful attempt. Phi Sigma Kappa

By winning the game the Utags C • R I S drove to the one yard line in the stretched their record to four wins am pa I g n U e last few plays of the game, but and one ti~ this season. They have Go Into Effect Ish Valenzuela was stopped inches yet to be defeated. The Lobos have from the goal to keep the Phi Sigs lost two and won none in confer- Campaign rules for Hokona sc01:etess. . . ence play. . Hall go into effect at 6 a.m. Tues- Sigma A:pha Epsilon won I~s

O,ver th.e seas~n the Wolfpack day morning. Those who have al- second strmg~t game ?Y a ~orfCI~ l1.a~.sccy~·ed.68 pomts to the oppo- ready put up posters that don't from Delta Sigma P~1, wlnle Ph! SltiQn's 95. , . comply with this regulation may Delta Theta made their reco1•d 1-1

Bobby ~antlago a~d Bobby Mor- leave them up for this election gan remamed the b1g guns on the only,

1. Each candidate for office is B u s i n e s 5 F r a t limited to one poster in the dorm

lobby. The maximum size has been pIed g e s Ten set at 18" by 24". Rules for posters . of special queen elections are to be

The . Gamm!l" . Iota c!1apter ~f governed by sponsoring groups. Delta S1gm!l. ~1, rn~ernatronal h~;~s1- 2. Other locations for posters ness admm1stratlon . f1•atermty, shall be only on the bulletin board pledg~~ ten men at therr preferen- at vai·ious places in the wings of tial dmner S1;Jnday, 'Oct. 15. ~he the dorms.c --LA-s-·s_I_F_IE-.D--A-D_V_E_R_T_IS_I_N_G_R_A_T_E-·S-: dinner, held m. the New Mexico 3. Handbills or calling cards may 4 line ad, GGc- 3 times $1.50. Inser­Union, was addressed by Mr. Dan be handed out personally in the tions must be ~ubn:itted by noon on "' 'th . c ·t'fi a p bl' A day before pubhcabon to Room 15~. omt . , a ~r 1 e u lC ccoun- lobby. and may be placed on or Student Publications Building. Phone tant. h. ere Itt Albuquerque a'?d a under the doors of rooms hy auth- CH 3-I42S or Cl}_ 7~391, ext. 314. P,art-ttme lecturer at the Univer- orized persons. _ P~RSONAL Sl~Y· • • 4. Posters shall not he placed on Susan, Sweetheart.-, -=rCC'·m-s-or-,.,.-.-:H;:;o-w-·-a7bo-u-:t

_ The new pledges are -y.'!lham painted surfaces and no scotch toni17ht1 l'vc got two free P'"""" to the Bryant, Gol'don Blanltenshlp, Bar- tape shall he used in putting them :::m:.:0 '..:"'.::"-'::..· ..:s::... T.:..':._;;;:~:;-;-;:-;:------ry Ham~o~d, C~arle~ Hynt,, Ste- up. l!'OR SALE !'hen SchwaU, , J ilCqb Maestas, 5 Do not place posters on glass Em;r,HHOOK, 3 port inta~e manifold for Cl • · T' t D u S 'th ' 'u7-'ll0 Plymouth complete With 3 Stromberg ar ence Ip .on, ' an .. ,.. m1 ' surfaces. 94 earbm·etors, $70. '61 Harley David•on Vincent Elmorejand. Robert Chap- 6 Posters must be initialed at Duo-glide $1200. CH 3-2579 after 4 p.m.

lin. . . the' desk before they may be dis- ~~rflJ~~. cc~~'~ai:,J~:~e Rti:.,. ~M~o~~ , The pledgmg ceremoi}.Y was played in the dorm. Call Richard at CH 7-0391, ext. 264.

given by Al Harrell, prestdent of 7. No campaign material may be PONTIAC Chieftain 4-door R & H; run• the fraternity. d!'stt•J'bute"d through the mal'! well. Needs choke and •pare tire. $275.00.

Call Richard at CH 7-0391, ext. 264.

Football Films boxes. SERVICES

. -Robe1·ta O'Neill, Hokona ~Pr~sident Films of the UNM-Utah State

footba'If 'ginne will be· slio,vn at 4:00 t~d!(y_at the Union 'theater. Waterlous

EXPERT eleetrie "haver service while you wait. Guarantee<! !aetory pnrts at factory priet'Sa For a tune-up or com­plete overhaul bring it to Southwest J<;lectric Shaver Service, 200 Third Street NW.

. Don't ,drop •litter on the side- There is to be an executive meet- AUTOS WANTED Walk Kee·p-ituntil you find aside- ing'for all Waterlous officers to- WILL Pa~· ca•h for a '52. or '55 Chevy or

• • • Ford. Room 3007 Mesa V1sta Dorm or call walk trash receptacle. mght m Johnson Gym at 7:30. ~cott, ~!: 5~~_:. ___ _

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... BE SURE-·YOUR PICTURE WILl -i E IN THE '·1·962

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I RAG~ INDIVIDUAL CLASS PICTURES NOW BEING . TAKEN IN THE HOBBY CRAFTS AREA OF THE UNION-NEXT TO BOOKSTORE. PICTURES FREE WITH ACTIVITY TICKETS. THE TIME IS LIMITED SO HURRY-HURRY.

.. GIRLS:

BOYS:

Please wear dark sweaters. Pearls or beads op· tional.

Please wear white shirts with tie and coat or sport jacket,

HOURS: 9 A.M. TO J 2 NOON- I P.M. TO 5 P.M.

(Author of "I lV as a Teen-age Dtmrf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)

THE TRUE AND HARROWING FACTS ABOUT RUSHING It iH wdl <.>nouga to ~it in one':; l\Im:riR chair and theorize about ROl'ority ru~hing, but if one really \vh;he;; to know th<.> fact,.;, one must leave one's Morris chair and g<) out into the field. (::\Iy MorriR chair, incidentally, was giwn to mP hy the Philip ::\Iol'!'is Company, maker;; of Marlboro C'igarl'tte~. ThPy nrc grPat­hem·ted folk, the makerl' of l\Iarlhoro CigarettE':<, a:-; willion~ of you know who h:we eujoyed their excellrnt cigarettes. Only from hountiful j;oulH t:ould come f-'Udl mildnl'>'~, linch fht\'or, f'nch filh~r;;;, Rnch plea;;nre, n~ you will find in ::\Iarlhoroll! For tho"<.> who pr<>fer t•ru~hproof hoxP:<, ::\Iarlhom i;; availnhlf.' in cru"hproof hoxe~. For tho"c who prl.'fer ~oft packH, Mnrlhoro i:< :n-uilahlr in Boft pack~. For those \\'ho pr<>fer to buy tlwir cignrC'ttcB in bulk, plt·a~c contact Emnwtt R. f;ignfoo~, friendly m:muger of our factory in Hiclnnond, Virginia.)

But I digrl'"~- I wa~ ~n~·ing that in ordpr to know the true factR ahout ~orority rn~hing, one um~t p;o into the fit•ld and invl'~tip:at-e. Consequently, I W<>nt lust W<'l.'k to the Indi:ma Collrp:e of Bpot Welding and Bt•llt>s LrttreR and int<>rviewE><l FeYrral million coeds, muong them a l<rn•ly lui':; nnmed nt•rml(l :::\IcKc>I.'\W. (It is, inrid<'ntally, quitr :m intc>r<'sting little ~tory about lww ~<he came to be named G<'rund. It ~eems that lH'r father, 'Hnlph T. ~IcKeever, loved gr:munar hettt>r tlum any­thing in the world, and ~o he named nil his ehildrt•n aft<>r parts of :;peccb. In addition to Gerund, thf.'l'e wl.'re three girls n:mwd Prcpo~ition, Adverb, and Pronoun, :mel one hoy named Dntive Cm;e. The girls Fceuwd not to he unduly <ll.'lU'CS~ed hy their n:une><, hut Dntivc C'a~e, alaR, grew stl.'adily more moro~e and wa~ finally found one night dangling fl'Om a participle. After this tr:lgic event, the father nbandoned hi;; practice of gram­matical nomenclnture, and whaten~r childrl'n were sub~cqucntly born to him-eight in all-were nmned Ewrett.)

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!:._ ~-~-~~-~~~-q~~-::::~-~- •.• 1fltr P!edJtt/tl!tJtt &ti~·!f;JI! t#tY 1!1/trJJ!!l/ot.h ·

But I digrc~~. I was interviewing n low•ly coed mtmNI Gerund :::\Icl\eevcr. "Gerund," I ~aid, "were J'Oll rushed by n sorority?"

"Yes, mister," Rhe said, "I wns l'lmhed hy a sorority." "Did they give you !t high-prc~snre pitch?" I aHked. "Did

they usc the hnrd.Hcll?" "Xo, miHt{~r," Hhc replied. "It was all done with quiet dignit.y.

They simply talked to me about the chapter and t!w girl~ for nbout three minuteH and then I pledged."

"My goodness!" I ~aid. "Three minutes is not very long for a sulm; talk!"

"It i~ when they nrc holding you under water, mi~ter,'! said Gerund.

"Well, Gerund," I ~aid, "IJOw do you like the houRe?" "I like the hou~e fine, tniHter," ~<he replied. "But I don't live

tltcre. lJnfortunutcly, they pledged more girls than they lutYC room for, so they arc sl!'cping ~-<omc of us in the bell tower.'~

"I~n't that rather noifw?" I ~aid. "Only 011 the quurtcr-il!mr," ~nid Oerund. "Well, Gerund," I said, "it has certainly hccn u plmtHurc talk·

inp; to you," I said. · "J,ikcwioc, mister," Rhc ~nid, nnd with many u ln11gh uml clw<'l'

we W(•llt our SCJltlrttte ways-she to the cumpanile, I to the J\:lOl'l'is clmh·. "j 1Q01lln• ~hulm•n

" " * Tlte Philip llfm'fis Compcmy malceo, in ttddition to Mm·lboi'O, the rww rmfilterecl, kinu-size Philip llfon·is Commandm·­choice tobacco, ucnllu vacuum cleauecl by a new process ~o assrtl'e you the li11est ill smoldnu pleasw·e.

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NEWMEXICOLOBO This_is Be l{ind to the Right Wingers

OUR SIXTY-F'OURTH YEAR OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM

Vol. 65 Thursday, October 19, 1961 No. 12

Four Nominees Drop From Race

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LOBO PHOTOGRAPHER AI Vigil caught this shot of the last remnants of the "afternoon smash" dazedly attempting to struggle out of 1\litchell hall. With only three entrances (one of them used by 75 per cent of the traffic) the huge classroom building has been jammed from one end to the other with a solid mass of students at peak classroom hours. Vigil finally got the picture after two weeks of fight· ing his way through the crowd, he said.

Block Unopposed For Council Seaf As Sabich Ouits

By DONALD BURGE LOBO City Edito1·

Three P1·ogressive Stu~ dent's Party candidates and one non-affiliated candidate dropped out of today's elec­tion race Wednesday.

U. D. Black, the Associated Party's candidate for the Student Council, will run l,mop­poscd 'because Mary Sabich was forced out of the race "due to 1<\cl!l of time."

Student Court Chief Justice Jim Mille1• announced that Miss Sa­bich, Liz Taylor, a PSP candidate

the vice presidency of the jtl­nior class, Carole Nogg, a PSP candidate for the position of sec­retary-treasurer of the sophomore class, and Ross Christian, an in­dependent f1·eshman, have all withdrawn because they felt they would not be able to devote enough

to their duties if elected. Cramp Uuop11osed

By their belated withdrawals,

Football Back Singer Is Engaged McComb Strife Relayed ~l~~tL~~~o~~:~~~f1~~~~:~:~~ A C'L u unopposed, and Miss Nogg has

t nicago F H . T J usl. ·rce D t t leftthesecretary-h·easurer'sposi-or Omecomlng 0 1;; epa r men tion of tJ1e SophomOl'e class t() (Ed. note: The followinp: article ~onna Clauser, also an AP can-

• · t d f th Ch' • d1date. lS .1·epr~n e I'om e Icag.o Vocalist Connie Stevens, who PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (UPS) 'the mcetmg and the press confer- Class elections are important Umversrty Mar·oon. The U of C~l- stars in the TV series "Hawaiian -Two young men who were heat- ence, they could determine eag;o,has always been noted for It~ Eye" and the movie "Parrish" and en Oct. 11 i.n McCo;nb, Mississippi Meet Assistant party would have the ma-pohtlcal ferment, but no one ever records for Warner B1·others r~Iated thmr exp~r1ence to an offi- They met with Bttrlte Marshall, jority of seats in the Student Sen­suspected that they would field a Records, will entertain at UNM's cial of the Justice Department, Assistaht Attorney General fo1· ate: Greeks or Independents. The football team.) Homecoming dance, Saturday, and to a press conference, Wash- Civil Rights to explain that Student Council election is not im··

CHICAGO, Ill. (UPS)-"Od'- Nov. 4. · ington, D.C .. Oct. 12. TheY. called believed vote1• registration was portant numerically as the Greeks in! Dval Tree! Cheth·'c! Hike! The UNM Fanfare dance band for more actron by the Justrce De- being hampered in McComb by the Independents al•

"Football is back!" Dissident ele· has been contracted to play for partment in ~ississippi to protect harrassment and intimidation of to four. :ments on campus, dissatisfied with tl1e dance. perso'?s workmg. on the voter reg- Negroes by private indivdiuals Black Takes Stands the lack of "good clean fun" among Tickets to the dance, $3 a cou- 1strat1on cam:pargn and Negroes and state officials. They also de- Aslted to declare himself on tw<J .the campus radicals, have revolt- pie, are now on sale in the Union who. try to regrster, as :v-ell as Pl'?- !lcribed the beatings they were of the important questions facing ed and organized a "left-wing" Ticket office. tect10!1 for students n~volved m given on Wednesday. UNM campus Black said that football team. Innovations Planned no~-v10!ent protests agamst segre- Potter and Hayden l1ad gone to "fraternities will become inte-

"Known provisionally as the Along with the traditional gabon m any area. McComb the day before to ob- in time." Black pointed "flying Bolsheviks," the group will Homecoming activities, Home- Paul Potter, National Affairs serve events a1·ising out of out that it is "common knowledge use thoroughly unorthodox tac- coming chairman Denny Brum- Vice President of the United protest demonstration last that some fraternities are now tics. Among other innovations, mell has promised some innova- States National Student Associa- by high school students in pledging and initiating Negroes they will call the signals in Rus- tions in this year's plans. tion, and Thomas Hayden, past 113 were arrested. They ••• in time I feel that they will sian. According to a well-known A bonfire-pep rally in the area editor of the University of Mich- Tuesday, Oct. 10, be completely integrated. If I am campus politician who asked not between the dormitories has been igan newspaper, "The Michigan whites and Negroes to try to and fraternities remain to be identified, they will also set for Friday evening, Nov. 3. Daily," were joined by Edward cover if there was danger of ; if the Negro is

Continued on page 2 Continued on page 5 Garvey, President of USN SA, for Continued on page 5 Continued on page 6

What Does The Right Wing Really Think? By MARK ACUFF and in areas of high rates of eco- right are as complex and varied in form, functioning through a munists and democratic govern~

Is it possible fo1· the nation's nomic expansion. Phoenix and as those of the left_ and the mid- government elected by the people ment, but for them, the right t() militant anti-Communists and its Southern California are the "home dle-a fact often misunderstood but free to protect its own inter- dissent stops at certain ldnds of civil-liberty libertarians to come areas" of many of the more ex- or ovedooked by civil libertarians. csts, rather than relying on mass criticism, And they have their l'ea­to a point where they may meet treme anti-Communist groups. Just what are the beliefs of the support. sons fo1• drawing this nebulous to· defend t1•aditiona! American Throughout the rest of the na- extteme right? While they back tho Bill of line. Asl{ed if picketing the House f1·eedoms? tion, anti-Com~unism is Jess ex- In a series of interviews, Fron- rights, most 1·ight wingers lmve Committee on Un-American Acti-

Or must we resign ourselves to treme, and arises from a genuine tier magazine found that a re- misgivings about the extent to vities is a legitimate dissent, one civil ideological war? fear :for the future of the cottn- quest for definition of "Ame1•ican- which it and the First and Fifth right winger said "Generally

Politically active and conce1·ncd try faced with the threat of ex- ism" brought almost "reflex" l'e- Amendments apply. Few 1·ight- speaking, the American 11eopla Americans, particulal'ly students, panding Communism and the evi- sponses, most right wingel's inter- wingers will argue that the right should have the l'ight to picl{et, have made little effort to under· dent success of the So-viet-Chinese viewed replying that "American- to dissent should be curtailed, but but no one has the right to inter­stand the other fellow's point of bloc. ism" means the Constitution and they draw a line between dissent fcre with government activities." view, American libertarians, es- "Schools" of anti-Communism the Bill of Rights." Anothel' com- and subversion, leaving a gray Some say that the people should pecinlly, assume that they are the have been set up, and lecture ser- mon answer was that American al'ea responsible for the majority he free to picket the HUAC, but defende1·s o:f the American revolu- les, featuring ex-FBI agents, ism meant the preservation of of the arguments between the most feel that the student demon­tion and that the 1•ight wing con- military men, and religious peo- "competition" and "survival of the anti-Communists and the civil lib- strations in San Francisc() sists only of lttdicro\ts fanatics pie have become popular activi- fittest." Several stressed rights of ertarians. The libertarians hold, against ti1e HUAC should not o1• hard-co1•e fascists. This, of ties of the anti-Communists. Most the individual citi~en as the main in varying degrees, that the ]'irst have been allowed, The general course, is not a balanced view of civll libertarians deplore these as point distinguishing democracy Amendment must he held invio· feeling is that the demonstration the American "militant anti-Com- another threat to democratic from totalitarianism. Some said late, that an American should be in San Francisco's cit.y hall was munist." rights and historic Amcl'ican that America should prop,er!y be free to criticize the government Communist-led and Communist-

Indigenous to Southwest idenls. called a l'epublic and not a demo- f1·om any point of view. inspired. The students involved Militant anti-Communism has CGmplex Beliefs cracy. Right to Dissent were, then, either conscious ag-

sprung up all ove1· the country, But identification as a membe:r Uepublican U.S. The right wingers acknowledge cuts of Communism, or dupes of but it has been particularly in- of nn anti-Communist group does Those on the fat· right arc gen- that individual liberty and the a clever consipracy, dige110us to the Southwestern not neeessar!lY defin~ !1- member's emlly . agreed that the Un.ited r~ght to d.iss1mt arc the most sig- The righ~ of dissent, as in tel' .. states, near military in~tallations, personal behc:fs. Otnmons olt the States 1s 1\ltd should be republican mficlmt <hffcrenccs between Com· Contmucd Oltpage 5

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Page 3: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

Page 2 NEW MEXICO LOBO 'fhursday, October 19, 1961

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Yo's Blast Mechem, LATE NEWS Algerians from staging demon- jng"a·commel'Cial ail'line1' Aug~lE:lt strations in the st1·eets of Paris. Srd by I!' Fed~ral Com•t, 'fhe jury The Algerians turned out to found h1m gtulty of three crimes­

protest against an unofficial cur- kidnaping, transp01•ting a stolen

H • J I T " b (Courtesy KNMD-UPI) few placed against them by ~uth- plan, and obstructing interstate

It r • LONDON-British p1•ime Min- orities in Paris. But police Pl7l{ed commerce, 0 u n a r I u n e ister Macmillan voiced a sharp them upas they emel·ged from -0-. " -f "" - warning tonight to the Western subway stations and.buses in an NDO.LA, No~·thern Rhodesia-. . Allies: ~'Don't let the Russians attempt to a.ssemble m the down- Rhodesum officmls say the plane

The UN.M Young D~mocrats m,. agamst all obstacles, was a drive a wedge between us," and town sector. crash that killed U-N Secretax·y ~cted unammous~y at their meet- ~ra~t .that should be striven for by let's not ''drift into panic" over The Algerians atten~pted to Genera.l Dag Hammarsl,tjold was ~ng. Wednesday nlJ!:ht to pass res~- mdrvr~uals as well as groups such the Bel·lin crisis. stage their demonstratton only an accident. One ail· expert says ll~wns cond~mmng the states as therr own. MacMillan told an extraordi- hours after the French Govern- the plane's altimeter was off by ~rrmary elect~on system, the Al- In adjourning, Phil Cullen an- nary session of Parliament that ment announced it was deporting 12-hundred feet. "

uquerq)le Trrbune and Journal, nounced that Ed.V. Mead, candi- the Allies are wor•king for peace 15-hundred Moslems to Algeda. -0-and Governor Mechem. date for· governor in the next pri- talks and musn't be "rattled into The Moslems are par·t of an esti- AL

The campus group voted to 1·e- mary election, would speak at the surre'nder." mated SO-thousand who doted R Db ~~S-Ho~Jse Speaker Sam new last Yea1·'s 1·esolution urging next meeting. Temporary publi- He said the West has sev!'lral throughout Paris last night and :~ ubn f1 do~~ol: t~ave a~wounc· the abolition of the primary sys- city chairman Bill Bonem urged proposals for Moscow on Berlin· virtually took over sections of the ~ 1~. ah.as a e~ wr h start tem and calling for the convention that all interested students attend but that he couldn't give out th~ city for six hours. real'~r;g ls can~r a~aml w en his system in New Mexico. Anabel the meetings and l!'larn more abot1t details 0-- con~.1

wn p;r~rbi f e las been Sta~ord, who was elected vice- the functions of this body on And; he added that he thought GARDEN CITY N y .1 _ ~e~ 1~¥ cdom t

01', a dy tort·ht~r1·ee da:~;s

president at the meeting argued campus t f p · l'"h h , • ew 01

' 11

IS oc ors on m t he IS th t th · t' · pal' 8 0 r·em1er " rus chev s Commerce Secretal'Y J"nther strong enough yet to l'esume tak a e pnmal'Y sys em was speech Wednesday indicated rec- H d n · h · · · d • jnitiated to remove the "big party l tt Cl b 't' f All' d fi o ges says ~"ussra .as no mg a ~ancer remission m·g and

boss" control over nominations e erman . u :~~·lOU 0 le rmness on chance of catch;ng• up wrth the to begm X-Ray treatments. but it had instead removed any: ~he Letterman's Club will meet er 111

' _ 0_ U.S. eco~om.Y m th~s centu~·y. one who knew anythin bo t tomght at 7 :Sa p.m. in the Letter- Hodges d1snussed S<met Prenuer· politics g a u. man's Lounge at Johnson Gym- U.S. Troops sta1·ted a major ex- Kht'Ushchev's statement that Rus- Help with Homecomingl

· nasium. The election of officers ercise yesterday designed to test sia would have the wol'ld's high- . • Co~demn N ewspape:rs . for the coming year will be held Weste1·n defen11es of Red-encircled est standa1·d of Jiving in 20 years. .Persons mterested in helping

They fUl'ther condemned the at this meeting. Every UNM let- Berlin. More than three-thousand -0- w1th Homecoming are asked to Albuquerque Jo:nrnal and. the terman is urged to attend this Gl's moved into field positions for SAIGON Viet Nam _ The meet in the Union Activities Cen-!lbU<r~rf~ T~~bl~ne f?l' wh~t very important meeting. t~e.three.-day test. The troops are President ~f South Viet-Nam has ter tonight ·at 7:30. Interested . ey a e e as . prol~ngmg poh- drvrded mto two forces - the declared a State of Emergency students unable to attend this

~10al apathy by .1~efficren.t :repo1't- F h C d 'd "Red" agg1•essors and the "Blue" throu ·hout the Communist- meeting should contact Donna mg of local poht1cal actlVlty and res man an I ate defenders th f d t It t' d Clauser at the Pi Beta Phi hottse failing to accept the responsibil- The LOBO was informed last Army ~pokesmen say this is a t l'ea .en~d cou~lryth wa~ 1

rne f CH 2-6409 ' ity of <t newspaper in promoting night that an additional candidate so-called "Two sided free mane"- Go comlcrMe WI 1

11 T e larrlfVI\

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lmercm an po 1 tca prog- Will be l'Uninng for the office of ve1·" whwh means the "aggres- 't f 1 R d · · ress." The pl·esident, Phil Cullen, vice-president of the freshman sors" have a chanceto win eye-~~ ness survey o t re e That annoymg litter on the also felt that the publications class. Her name is Patti Wilson _ 0_ • .guen a menace. s.treets was put there by someone were guilty being a "one party d h ·n b . . -0- h!{e you. Do your part and deposit press and not fairly representing ~n J e WI e runmng mdepen- PARIS - French police have EL pASO, Texas-Leon Beard- paper and other litter in trash all the political views." en y. prevented thousands of Moslem en has been convicted of hi-jack- receptacles.

ge~o:;r~~~:ec~:~u~:s~;:e~~~:ci THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES failed to support the amendments

~er!h~d~~~!~ f~n:~~tur~~~ntw~~~~ SALUTE: BILL PI GOT tions.

Discuss Campus Tn tu1·ning to discussions of

eampus affairs, the Young Demo­crats exp1·essed support of the recent student council resolutions concerning Civil liberties. In view of this suppo1•t, they adopted a l'esolution to "agree with the de­cision of the majority of the Stu­dent Council members in their action condemning the McComh school officials but expressing re­gret that the remainder of the council did not see fit to suppo1't this action,"

The discussion of a resolution conceming the NSA was post­poned until the next meeting.

Dedicated Memorial In the nal matter of business at

the meeting, the attending .mem­bers unanimously decided to dedi­cate a memorial to the late Pro­fessor Howard J. McMurray by naming the UNM chapter of the Young Democrats after him. ernment teacher at UNM. The or­Professor McMurray was a gov­ganization chose to honor him :for his contributions to the Univer­sity, to its students, and to the establishment of better govern­ment at all levels. It was :felt that Professor McMurray's excep­tional defense of what he beli~ved

Chicago.U •••• (Continued from page 1)

change traditional :football nomen­clature. T4e ends win be known, respectively, as left-wing .extre­mist and right-wing extremist. Center position will be held by a member of the Young Peoples' So· cialist League (YPSL), ·

"A backfield shift will be known as a "change in the party line," and huddles will be referred to as "caucuses.'' Wingbacks will be lmown as "deviationists/'

At a secret meeting to plan strategy, the team decided that Trotskyites would be allowed on the team only for the execution of sneak plays.

"The team will refrain, on prin­ciple, from using the Statue of Liberty play. This will be re­placed by the "Lenin-Stalin maus­oleum" play, involving the "with­ering away" o£ the opposing team's morale.

"Cheerleaders will not lead cheers; instead they will picket the opposite stands. Unifot•ms for the cheerleaders are black stock­ings and green Harvard bags.

"New recruits are ·being dis· eouraged," a c c o l' d i n g to the group's spokesman. "We already have 25 guys and the first big purge is in ot•der .'

Six years ago Bill Pigot graduated from college with an engineering degree. Today he is responsible for the perfonn~nc~ of 12 microwave relay stations, numerous commumcations cables, and other equipment. He also supervises the work of some sixty transmission specialists.

Bill Pigot of Pacific Northwrst Bell Trlephone Company, and the .othrr young enginrt•rs like him in Bell 1Hephone Compames throughout the country, hrlp bring the fine!:\t communications service in the worl,l to the homes and businesses of a growing Amel'iea.

® BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

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RODEY ACTRESSES Veronica 'favenerarid Raymona McAdams are pictured during rehearsals for the opening play of the season, "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen.

c Pride anrl Prejudice' Opens Theater Season at Rodey

Union P-lans F Of Phi/harmon

:we think a 1 :·

tiol1 comedy ' n l'ound a De· signer.

:Page II

Foreign Service Exam Date Set

controversy by commenting on "primitive" Nigerian conditions in a postcard to a friend. Word of her 1·emarl~s got back to the Af-

(News Co\lltesy ofKNMD) rican coun~l'Y and touched off The U.S. Department of State~ ·Soviet Premier Kh1•ushchev demonstrations by Nigel'ian Stu- will hold its next wl'itten foreign

says the world will be dominated ?ents and criticism by the Nige1·- sel·vice officer examination on

, News Roundup by Communism within 20 years. tan Government. Dec. 9.

:He says American-style Capi- Peace Cor:QS Director Sargent The service is seekmg to inter~ talism is on its way out and will Sh1·iver said the 23-year-old est young men and women who be a secondary force by 1980. teacher "has not resigned from have majored in economics, publie

That is the basis of a six-hour the Peace Corps." And he added, and business administ~·ation, lan• report Khrushchev gave to the ~'We do not want her to." guage and. area studies, history, 22nd Soviet Communist Congress In a statement issued by' the and political science. yesterday. During his second Corps, Shrivel' said that Miss ·· Closing date for filing applica­marathOn speech, .he outlined the Michelmore was going to the ti'ons is Oct. 23. Further informa• party program for establishment Corps' pe1•manent training center tion and a:Pplication blanks a1•e of a Communist Society in the in Puerto Rico, where she will obtainable at the UNM Placement next 20 years. consider assignment to another Bui·eau.

Khrushchev said Capitalism is project. already past its prime and on the -0- Af"" t d B" 1' way down. and that the United WASHINGTON- Secretary of · ~er our s. an on er In, m~Y· . is the center of Capital- State Rusk says Soviet Premier be the Russians are· wondertnlr! ism's economic troubles. He as- Kh1·ushchev's easihg of a deadline where the yellow went. serted Communism, on the other for an East German Peace Treaty Berlin yesterday including a 19• hand, is growing stronger daily. may. help :~duce tensions in the year-old policem'an who scram­He said the Soviet Unio? has Be;lm cmns. However, Ru~k bled over the wan' carrying his reached the stage where 1t c!',n pomted out that th.e Kremlm Russian-made machine pistol. Two now build a "classless Communist leader J:tas . chan%'ed hls demands other youths swam to Freedom, society." on Berlm httle, rf at all. tand a family of three broke

The Soviet Premier also repeat- -O- through a cemented-up window . ed his now-familiar l>roposal for QUITO, Ecuador-New political in a border house. total and general world disarma- rioting swept two cities in Ecua- -0-ment. He said that until Disarma- dor yeste1·day when students . . .

!"'"'"' takes place, Russia will con- clashed with police and the Army , A pnvate ~este1·~ R~d10 s~a~ tinue building and maintaining in street demonstrations. No cas- bon says Sov1et SCie_ntrsts l'll;1S• an up-to-date wa1· machine. ualties were reported but the cal~ulated weather ~nf~rmatwn

-0- Government charges that a "huge durmg a Nuclear B~mb rest four A Peace Co1·ps member lms left revolutionary plot" is underway yea1·s ago. Th~ statron says th~t,

her African post for an expected in one of the cities. as ~ result, wmds dumped. radw-new assignment. -0- actr":e fallout over the Sovie~ Re-

Margery Michelmol;e, of Fox- BERLIN - About one dozen pubhc of Kazakhstan, causmg a bo1·o, Massachusetts, kicked up a more East Germans fted to West "high death rate."

right. But what can I do for the Air Force? l!n~tUI"I! You: The Air Force needs college trained men and women 1 l as officers. This is caused by the rapidly advancing technology that goes with hypersonic air and space / flight. Your four yelll's o£ college have equipped you to handle complex jobs. You: S!J.1 I was interested ... how can I-get to be an officer? FrUure YoiJ: \ You know about Air Force ROTC and the Air Force . Academy. Then there's the navigator training pro. . i gram. You've probably heard about Officer Training . School. .• where the Air Force takes certain college graduates, both men and women, and commission~ J them after three months of training. Yom , Starting salary is important. What about tl1at? Future You: ~ J Add it up. Base pay, tax·free allowances, free medii I cal and dental care, retirement provision, perhaps flight pay. You don't have to he an eco :major to se~t it adds up to an attractive package. ' Yout I've been thinking· about getting my Master•s, 1 Future You: " As an officer you can apply for the Air Force Xnstitut~ of Technology. At no cost, and while on active duty some officers may even 1Vin their Ph.D. degrees. You: Tell me more.

'that's the job of your local Air Force Reeruiter;\ 1 Or write to Officer Career lnformatio"n, Dept. 1 SCUO, Box 7608, Washington 4, D.C., i£ you \ want further information about the navigator, trainiug or Officer T.t'aining Seltool pro;;rams. j

There's a place for professional achievement in the

U.S.Air Force

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Page 4: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

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NEW MEXI~O LOBO Editorial and Business office in Journalism Building Tel, CH 3-14~8 :l"ublish~d 'l'tle~dny, Thursday, andd Friday <>f · the regular university year by the Board of Student· Publications of the Associated Students of the University of New :Mexico, Entered as second class matter nt the Albuquel''IUe Post office August 1 1918 und~· , th; net of March 3, 1870. Printed by the University Printiug 'Plan~ S?baCl'JPt,on l'ate: $4,60 for the school yenv, P!lYnble in ndvance, All editorials and sllln~ columns ex~;>ress tbe views of the writer l\tl<l n~t necesanrily those of the Board of Student Publictt!iona or of the University.

Next Step . We wondered, as many Democrats must, why the Presi. nent is picking so many Republicans for the top jobs in his administration. It has been explained to us now by Mr. James Reston, who sees Mr. Kennedy regularly.

In a jubilant report over the President's cleverness in :naming John A. McCone to head the CIA (New Yol'k Times, Sept. 29) Mr. Reston says Mr. Kennedy is making it hard for the GOP to attack his foreign policy by putting Republicans into key positions dealing with security and iforeign affairs: McCone at the CIA, Wm. C. Foster to run the new disarmament agency, Luciul:l Clay as special emis­sary to Berlin, Douglas Dillon as Secretary of the Treasury.

"How can BarrJr Goldwater," Mr. Reston exults, find :fault with the administration's intelligence and determina­tion when two solid Republicans like Allan Dulles and John McCone are running the CIA ?

Now that Mr. Reston has opened our eyes to this stra­tegy, vr.e are overcome with admiration, too, and anxious to contl'ibute to it. Wouldn't it be even more devilishly clever if Mr. Kennedy just went ahead and made Barry Qolchvater Secretary of State?

-I. F. Stone's Weekly

YD's Hit the Press Last night the Young Democrats tore into the local

press for bad and biased reporting of political events in New Mexico. '\Ve don't know just how the LOBO escaped the "ivrath of the YD's, but we cautiously hope that it is some small reflection of our effo1·ts to cover all sides of the political spectrum at UNM.

. The Young Democrats have good reasm1 to be angry With the dailypres.s in New Mexico, as inmost of the coun­t~. The nation's daily press has become by and large all1ed with the interests of big business and has shown no particular penchant for printing dissenting views in the last decade. There is a 11eed fo1· greater puublic criticism ()f the press (college papers included), and it should be hoped that the press would profit by the cl'iticism-110t ftght it, as is too often the case.

Confidence in Black

NEW MEXICO LOBO

''Psst --Waut To See Some PoeJns ?"

. , . .., .•. --,---...... ---~·-·-·-..,.,....,_ . ._..__..,,_~-~--~ ..

Thul'sday, Octobe1· 19, 1961

FilM REVIEWS . v

By GARY BRUTON One of the finest films which has

ye-t been shown by the UNM Film Society is Pudovldn's adaptatiou of the Gorki novel The Mother. Indeed, if the management of the Film Society is consistent in bring-. ing to our campus films of the stature of "Mother," then they must be gnt.tefully acknowledged fo1• theil• PRl't in the cultural en tel'· taimnent of UNM students. · The film, produced in 1926, is

Ruasian, An introductol'Y squib claimed Pudovkin to be one of the. greatest Russian directors and a disciple of the film techniques of th!l American School, particularly D. W. Griffith, rather than the European school. Certainly the1•e can be little disagreement tlla t Pudovkin was one· of the finest Russian dh•ectors if this film is ill· dicative of his work,

Filmed in black and white and without sound, of cou1•se, "Mother" made this innovation seem unnec• essary, The blealmess and desola· tion .of Russia could nevel' have been so weU expressed in Pano· 1'a1nic Vista-Vision with Stero· phonic sound. Pudovkin is as much a mastel' in facial exp~·e!'lsions as Eisenstein was in Alexander Nev.

--------------------------lsky and Ivan the Terrible. Those of you who have ever seen a Wil· liam S. Hart movie· know how :fa· cial expressions can become hilar~ iously grotesque in those old silent

Letters to the Editor Dear Sir: Sophomore class through sales movies.

In appreciation of his many and fund-1·aising projects. But Pel'ha]>s the most effective years of .dedicated .servic~ to his :· 1 :further pledge to promote technique at Pudovkin's disposal school, h1s ~t~te, h1s nat;on, and um~y, rep1·~sentation, and partici- were the use o£ the montage, the the De;rnoctatic P.lll-ty; m com- pat10n w1thm tl1e Sopl10more class sU11erilnposing of one o1· more pic· men~at~on for , In;; unwaveri~g leading it t? . g1·eater distinction tures ove1' another. Pudovkin used conv1ct1~n to h1s 1deals, for h1s and recogmtwn on the UNM it to dramatically pol·tl·ay the evel'lastmg search for the truth; campus as well as at otlter lead- frustrating scenes of the facto· the Young Democ1•ats of UNM ing universities in this a1•ea. ries; tl1eh• geometric interminabil-declare that they shall heretofore -Lindy Blaschke ity; their well-ordeL·ed monotony, be known as the Howard J. Me- Equally as effective was tile occa· wurray Chapter of the Coll:ge R d R sional use of cat>tions satlll•ated

oung Democrats of New MexiCo. ecor ev•tews with strident irony in lean Hmer-The Young Democrats of UNM son-like }>rose.

THE PHALAN_ X By PERO In the final analysis a truly . great film must have both a gt•eat

Dear Su·, As Ornette Coleman is 1·eputed and timeless message in addition . By combinin~ talents, the sen- to ha~? s~id to Don Cherry "Like, to a masterly style. Gt•iffith's·greut ~or rep1·esentat1Vc of the Journal- · • • • Ltke I no longer have a masterpiece "The Bh·tlt of a Na­Isln J?e;partment llave ·presented a record review column. The dealer tion" poss~ssed the lnttel' but fol:m1dable force. Never has the f~om wl1om I got .records to 1·e- sorely lacked the formel' unless Wl'Jter observed sue~ orde1·, f~rm, view seems to t1nnk that sales one seriously considers the Ku flawless construction, umque hav.e dropped on all the records I Klux Klan a titneless subject p~rasing. Ren~arkable. The c.on- revie;ved.. Pudovkin's mastel'piece is sttperio; s1s~entl~ .. logJCal, constructive, 'Fh1s bemg tl1e ease, I am now to Griffith's in that it filled both v~hd CI?bc1sms of yout• brothers- !5omg to do what I wanted to do requisites to the brim. Sisters-m-arms must surely bring m the first place-write alJout . .

U. D. Black remains the only candidate for the vacancu you to the conclusion that you and what is happening at the univer- " Pudovlnn por-ed th;, q~te~tu~n th S d " your staff are hopelssly unquali- sity and in Albuquerque in the . WHERE IS T~UTH. D~d 1~ he

on e tu ent Council. So, it would seem, the LOBO has fled; that in deference to your music world. Of course this will m the. complex lll'lpel•sonahza~J?ns little choice in backing candidates. But we feel that Black ~uperiors _immediate resignation prob.ably have the same success of ~oCietyt or t~e l>l·~tnl 0 PP08!ho!l will make a good councilman, perhaps even one of the best 1s the only honorable course. . · as ~~d the recotd reviews, only fol' of Id~alog!e.s. No, s~1d P.u?ovkm. It in the last few years. He is a Greek, but in his reply to ques- The Journalism Department a different l'eason. With the l'ec- lay l athet m the :mnphcity of na·

· must be delighted. ord 1·eviews the source of supply ture a!ld t!1e lov: of a tnother f?r tions put to him by the LOBO, he has answered COUl'- -Bill Givens was cut off. With the music world het· cluld; m tl1!' mnocence of ch1l· ageously, and appears to be looking realistically at the fu- of Albuquerque there is hal·dly <lren and the v~tality of Spring. ture of the Greek s>.Tstem and campus politics. We feel that BLASCHKE'S PLATFORM any supply to draw on in the first Juxtaposed agamst one another . place. were the intensely penonallove of every on.: Oll campus can vote for Black with no misgivings. Dear SJi·: . The Albuquerque Civic Sym a mother fot· he1· son and the ideo•

11!f ·k F~ll?wmg; 1s the personal and phony has its first concert of thi~ logical, impersonal n1achinationfl --------------------__:_J.~...,a=I :::..:::A:.c::.:u:.::ff::._ a~m1mstrat1ve • platf?rm of season the 25th of this montll of society against her son. In the

Lmdy Blascbl,e, cand1date for next Wednesday F'or 'th ' end, society tl'ium1>l1ed over botlt

In dust r•eS Ch d motion or referral. The complaints Sophomore class president. you tltat have ne~et· been t ose r of mother and son. I arge ~ere fifed with John Field, ~xecu- 1. I pledge support of the move- concel't by a decent orches:r: th~: It was a powerful theme mnster-tJVe dtrcctor of the President's ment to refol'm the processes of would be a fine opp01·tunity to d fully portrayed.

W•f th o• c • • t• Committee. student gove1:nment i~t all. branch- so .. A1·ound the campus one heal·~ --------JS rlffitna (Qn Also, the NAACP filed a cotn- :s -;-: exec~t1ve! l?g1slat1':e, and 2111te f;equently l'elllatks about l • v p t plant against the North Carolina JUdiCial. I wdl aid Ill cleanmg out not bemg able to stand" or "I eWIS acates OS

WASHINGTON_ Two t·ailway Stat~ Security Commission. Ac- corrupt!on and .co~flicts of in~er- just. don't like it" about ~lassical companies, a trade union, a manu- cord~ng to a complaint a ·Negro es~ ,which so hmtt the workmg mttsJC, A SDA Ch • fnct~tre;- of electrical equipment, apphcant at the Commission's ablhty of UN~ student .govern- It would prob~bly be a good bet s airman a missile structures producer a Durham office was told by the local ment, and 1 Will help to 1m prove that whoever 1s saying these nlajor tobacco firm an aircr'a.ft manager that jobs at the Illinpis- student government services. things has never been to a live Ed Lew's St d t . manufacturer and a' state agency Owens Glass Company, :for which 2. 1 pledge to recruit students concert. Besides, if you don't like resigned TJesd:y e~, fttnell~l~n, ,...._an located in the South_ are he wished to apply, "are open to whose expe1ience, humanity, and it you can go out to the lobby m~n of Studen :£ 1g 1 as c m~· .. charged with racial discrimination white persons only.'1 dedication fit for the task of after the concert and tell one of Action· UNM's t~ib or 1D~~noct•jbe in complaints filed today with the The t•ejectecl applicant was fur- effectively representing UNM the policemen standing there that gt·oup.' et•n tscttss on President's Committee on Equal ther informed that the Commis- Sophomores. _ you want your moMy back. Lewis told SOA 1 b , th t Employment Opportunity, sion would not accept· his applica:• 3. I pledge to hold monthly class They'll throw you out on your car. he felt hls duties o:~~e e~~ud \

Named in the colwplaints filed tion for any job designated for meetings :for the purpose of in- ~utt at least you could tell them Council would })rohibit ltim :fr~~i 'by He1·bert Rill, labor secretary of white parsons. forming the Sophomore class a you wanted your money back. acting effectively as chairman ot tlH~ NAACP, are the Atlantic "The opetation of state employ- exactly what its leaders and offi- SDA this year. Coast Line Raih·o~d and St. Louis- ment agencies th1•oughout the cials are a~complishing on cam- Vera Ravel Recita ( Bill Fox, CUl'l'ent chairman of San Francisco Railroad Company; South is 'characterized by a rigid pus. Meetings for Sophomores Al h D 1 . the Progt•essive Student Pa1·ty the. Brotherhood of Raihoad pattern of racial segregation and hav'c never been held, before and . . P a e ta Pl A;lumnne will will al!sutne the chah·manshi : Trammcn; the Westcm ·E!cctl'ic discrimination," Mr. Hill told the as a. result the preYlOUs Sopho- p:csent aV benfit piano l'ccital F'ox has announced intentions f., Com1>any, Nashville, Tenn.; AV· President's Committee, "The U.S. mo1•e classes have had extremely given Y er~ Ravel on F'l'iday, t•esign his post with PSP CO Munu'l'acturing Corporation, Government," he added, '~is com· little or no spirit whatsoever. This gcifbep,20· MISS t:avcl, an Alpha Fox appointed a com~ittee to Nashville, Tenn.; Liggett & Myers 1>letcly responsible for providing I will stdve to correct, Ue, a th alum, will play in thl.l fo1•m a constitution fol' the 'or­'i'obacco C~mpany, Durham, N.C.; the fi11ancial basis o:f all state em· 4. 1 pledge to work with tl1c s'mon .11 bate$1' at 8 }l.m, Admis- ganization. The committee will Douglas An'ci·aft Company, Char- ployment se1•vices. Accordingly, LOBO staff to insure that all dass 1011

WI e ' 2·00• }ll'esent a draft to the next regu• lotte, N.C.; and the North Carolina the Fedet•al Government is dh·ectly functions will be well publicized. E • . _ lat• meeting for approval by the State Seeurity Commission, Dur· sul>sidizing discrimination against 5. I pledge to promote a Sopho- squ1re Club trtembors, ham. _ . Negro citizena. It is absolutely more Spring banquet o1• £ot•mal The Esquire Club ·n h _ SDA plans to sponsor !lome .. rn ~tl~lllol;t of the cl~a1•ges o~ job ~cnseless fo_r the Govel'U!llent to held :for_ the purpose of drawing meeting Friday Oct~~, 2~Id 11 pu~I\c depntes and discussion on fliscrimmntmn, Mr. B1ll submttted 1ssue exccuttve orders agamst em- the Sophomore class. closet• to· 7:30 p.m. in r~om 230r f 1 ~t poht!cal Issues this yea1•, a total of 80 affidavits by Negro ployment discrimination while gethe:r in unity. Union, Nomination .1 ° t e workcJ·s, NAACP memllers, who Federal agencies continue to sub- 6. I pledge to 1•aise money :for ceived :fo1• the electlonWii be l'~· Does the Bill of Rights include had been denied cm1Jloymont, pro- sidize these practices.'' all :functions and activities o:f the fice1·s. 0 new 0 • 1a~d ~nclet·atood right: :f1•Gedom to

11 e.

Tbursday, October 19, 1961 NEW MEXIco· LOBO Page 15

CIVIL DEFENSE . McComb ~ • • • . - R. • hL w· 0· • • . A. . . Dr. Jorrin Speaks . : - - - <continued~l·Qmpagel) - IQ _1;; IOQ -_.piniOnS reOn'StudenfWorld' · By JOHN MORRIS Ie,nce, and to discover what the c I A -~ • s h So many faetOl'S enter the pic- high school students planned to o·mp ex na YSIS ows . The Club de las Americas fea-

tUl'e, and ente1· so ove1·whelming- do on mo1•e demonstrations. f .. -- . tures a member of the faculty to-ly, that consideration of protec- On the day of the beating, they . _ night who will speak on ~'The· tion :f1•om fallout is apparently were observing a demonstration (Contmued from page l) that o:f a "brush fil'e in a dty Student in a Divided Wol'ld.'' pr'oceeding on an individual as- of approximately 90 high school preted by the ultra-conservatives, woods." Given that vision, it is Dr. Miguel Jon·in of the De· sumption which might be stated: students who bad walked out of does not entail the right to be not then unusual that they would pa1·tment of Foreign Affah•s Will W.hat else is there to do? the high school 1•ather than sign silent when questioned by a con- to stamp out every trace of talk to the group in l'oom 250 D

Most o:f the citizenry inte1·est- statements that they would not gressional committee as to affilia- ~he fire, feeling justified if a :few of the Union at 7:30p.m. Refresh­ed enough in fallout to be con- pal•ticipate in future demonst1·a- tions and political activities, If ati mnocent plants were up;rooted in ments will be served. ce1•ned with shelters know already tions. The students had ma1•ched individual uses the Fifth Amend- the struggle to stop the greater The club, made up of students that l'adiation is invisible, that to the Masonic Temple to discuss ment to avoid testifying, then he menace. Right wingers often :feel interested in improving relation­llOine particles which a1·e radioac· their plans, and then began to deserves the stig-ma that has come that tllose on the democratic left ships anwng all nations of the tive ilo~t, and can travel long dis- march back to the high school to to be attached to his action. should_ consider their position Western Hemispllere, invites all tances before comi!1g to rest, and enlist mo1'e students in the walk- , The general _right wing belief more cloself when they find they interested students to attend. to some degree, these persons a1•e out. IS ~hat the Communists, who have m·e supporb~g causes also backe~ aw~\l'e .that some fallout material Drove Alongside sa1d that they intend to take over by Commun~sts~ ?ecause the .ev1l (spch as Strontium 90, to name a According to Hayden he and the U.S., are busily engaged in of Commu:t;!Sln 1s more sen?us PI ay Try-outs W\!11-known one) has a very long Potter drove along b~side the WHAT DOES (GALLEY TWO) than. t~e evil they may be trymg . lmif-life. The half-life is simply marching students Behind them doing so; and, therefore, the U.S. to ehmmate. · Actors for the productiOn of the length· of time ~ r~dioactive was a police car, a~d behind that has ': right to def~nd be1·se!f Th~ ~rent .deba.te, then, bet'Yeen Franz Molnal''s 1'The Guardsman" ~>Ubstunce takes to diss1patc half was a car filled with newspaper- from mternal subvers10t1. In thts ngh~ v.:mgets and tile hbe~- will be cast at the Aquinas New-its l'adionctivity. In other words, men. Hayden said that just as contest lies the factual basis of t' tS d?- the area of defi:r;n- man Center Thut·sday Oct 26 tl1e time it takes to give up half tl!eir Cal' stopped for a red light the argument between the right JOn of the lffe!'en.ce between .diS• ' , . ' ' ' ils' en-e1•gy. While material is 1·~- "I 11 t' t'n t th 1. h d' wingers and the civil libertarians sent and subvers10n. The l'Igllt at 2 p.m. All are mv1ted to try

.. o 1ce a · e po ICe a ' · h t 11 b t 'I'h · · t t d · b • dioactive it is dangerous If it is t\trned ff" and there are more than two wmg as never ac ua y cen :re- ou ·. ose m eres e 111 emg on :floating it can be inhaled· as small H d 0 • points of view. quired to make this definition, and the stage crew or the make. up particle;, .and if it falls ~n foods, l>!'ac~fca~ry ~~~teo!o~e~:~e t~~~ Th . Shubve;rsion Cited . bot~~=~t~~i~~~ ~~;~ 1;anrt l_lever staff for the play are asked to 1t can be mgested. . 1 - 1. · e rig . t wmgers see ev1dences .. .,. or 1 m an t J 1. t C .

I the b 1 , d • th f t tiCec ~he po lee were no lonr;er of intel'llal subvel'sion everywhel'e attempt to understand each contac u Iet e umco at the n ac qp:oun lS e ac followmg them for the first ttme . . ' th ' 't' I b tw h t · tl1at radioactive tnaterials occ\U' '- and are convinced that the Am- o er s po~1 tons. n .e een t e cen er.

naturally and radioactivity is as all day, a mlladn rushedhupdto the erican people are slumbering two opposmg forces he the vast -------------' . car and pu e open t e oot· on f 11 h'l th c · t of t!1e American p'e close as a lummous watch face. It th •'gl.t h d 'd peace u Y w 1 e e ommums s o·

}1as gene1·ally not escaped atten- e 11 ·~- an Sl e. take over key positions and in- would profit by such a tion tllllt X-l'ays, in usc for many The .man pulled Po~ter. out of strument Communis~ ideas_ by de. discus.sion, years for medical treatment and the :al and began to hit lum. Ac- fault because there 1s no educated --------photographs of the living tissues co:·~mg to Potter, the rna~~ "ad- opposition. Also in this context d A . • f d of the body al'e in the catego 'Y mnnstered. several blows, and are included reforms and pro. r er pp01 n e of 1>otential'harmfulradiation.lA knocked htm down. He tllen ran grams "socialistic" in tendency, T H • p t coU"trolled amount of radiation is around. the cat·, pulled. ~ayden for most right wingers believe 0 OUSing OS not hm•mful. from hts sea~ and "~dmmtstered" that socialism inevitably leads to Charles Carder has been ap·

But knowing that doesn't do anolht~· be~tm.g 1to ~Im. Bo~~ men Communism, and that public pointed assistant to the dh·ector of any good, if uncontrolled amounts use ~ Pl'lllCip e 0 non-v>o c~ce, o~nership of the e.cononly .w?uld housing at UNM.. CLASS!FIED ADVERTislNG ;RATEs: of radioactive materials are be- the!. said, and made no attempt to stifle free enterpl'lse. Soc1ahsm, The graduate of Kentucky Wcs• 4 line ad, 65o- a times $1.60. Inser• ing inh•oduced into the atmos- stnlte back. . . then is considered only slig~tly leyan College will be in charge o:f ~~~· b~~~!. ~eubfi~~m:;tedto blJto~:'n 1~8, phere by testing of nuclear de- Pohec Arnve less dangerous than Commumsm. student personnel for the two 1·es- Student PublicatioM Building. PhonQ 'Vices. Fallout is on the increase, A few minutes later, after their On. the other hand, the civil lib- idcnce hails for men. He will work Cll 3•1428 0

" Cll 7•0891• ext. 814•

and the near-hysterical writings assailant had disapl>eat•ed, the ertal'lans, usually but not always with John W. Corker, director of FOR SALE of• some well-known physicists police arrived. Potter and Hayden members of the left who announced the ap- EDELBROO!{, 3 port inta~e manifold :for

· · · • ' ftl 1 «J h D " 1 · t th. nte d th t tl d • f • t '67-'60 Plymouth eomDlete w1th 3 Stromberg atomic sc1entlsts and hu111amta~·- e< o n oe comp am s at e co n a te anger o. m er- 94 carburetors $70. '61 Harley Davidson inn philosophe1·s on the subject police station, nnd were then es- nal s!lbversion is nil, and that A native of Rosemont, West Duo-glide $1200. Cll 3·2579 after 4 p.m. bave had their effect on Ameri- '·Corted out of town by the police Amertca must concentrate on Carder will wo1·k on his mas- PONTIAC Chieftain 4-doot R ,& H; runs can opinion. lVfovements, g 1·oups on theh· way to Jackson. ~ghting. the external !nenace of degree in guidance and coun· <:!lhft:~~:de~~~H'7~oi8f."~xtr~6J.2·7 6·00· and committees in widely separat- At the p1·ess conference held mternatiOn.al Coml?lumsm r~the1· . He and his w.ife will re- SERVICES ed pn1•ts of the world have de- Thursdny Pottel· commented on than creatmg tensiOn and b1tter- m Coronado Res1dence Hall. . - . . · • "; ' ' ' • · 'th' th t . B f . · to Alb EXPERT eleetne sbaver serv1oe whde nom1ccd nucleat testmg, prmtal'- the "1rony" of tl1e Situatton, He ~ess W~ m e co1;1n ry. e ore commg 11querque, you walt. Guaranteed factoty DaTts at ily 011 the basis of contamination said that it was honic that he hbertat·mns also believe that Carder served as a student min· factory prices. For a tune-up or com·

• • o' ht t d' t ' b · t ' t • • th M th d' Ch '!.. plete overhaul bring it to Southwest of the Earth's atmosphere, and Uayde11 should recetve such ng . 0 _ lSSe!l. lS so aSlC o lS er m e e o 1st urcu. l~lectric Shaver Serviee, 200 Third Street And so, many thinlting persons great attention for a beating "of ~me!·1can trad1t10ns tl!at t~e na- N:.:..:cW..:.. ---o-:-:=:::-:::~==-----

lmve decided to go ahead with relatively minor proportions" t~on 1s. no longe1· Amenca!l1f th:;tt Reason for wearing a beard, AUTOS WANTED their own pl'Ogl'ams for family while Negroes who risked. their l'lght IS allowed to be diluted m so A Phi O's will help you WILL pay cneh for a '52 or '55 Chevy or

Protection. The increased in tel' est lives in McComb and elsewhere any way .. Thus we are. treated .to the street Ford. Room aoo7 ll!""a Vista Dorm or Cllll ~ t f ~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~S~co~U~·;•x~t~.~69~0·~~~~~~~~ by the :federal, state and nnmi- get so little attention. He went on a. ~on .. usmg ag~rega 1011 o lll· If

cipal civil defense organizations to say, "Our wounds will heal .•. d1v1duals convmced tl1at the following the President's lead has our sclll'S al'e on the outside, but "other s!de" is Ut_t-Ant':l'ica!l and baen l'eflectcd by people 1•eading they must live" with segregation tllat ~hell' group 1s actmg m the their daily newspa"ers. all the time. best mterests of the country,

'' 'B h F' " The govemment's attempts to The two men joined Garvey in . rus. 'Ire, . . provide public shelters have either n plan :for funds to support the The r!ght wmgers Vls~on of been .non-existent, ~r limit;d, ex- campaign in the South, and asked Commumsm has been descr1bed as cep~ m New Yo!'k C1ty, winch l~as :fol' better covet•age by the p1·ess of • E dtWI~ed some kmd of shelter, m- siutilal' situations throughout the Singer ngaged • • cludmg the suln~ay ~ystem, for n South. . . vast number of 1ts c1tizens. ( Contmued from page 1)

None of the States are known B • t T Att d At 7 p.m. groups of students led t.o lmve Sl).!lllt State fun~s for pub- aphs s 0 en by the c~eerlea~ers will start he shelters on anythmg but a from specified pomts on campus

Beautiful Weddings planned for every budget

Formals and Informal party dresses Featuring-Smart date frocks

Open till 9 Tu~ay !venlna

AL 1-1121 demonstration basis. Some nat- R 11 c • • (the Kappa Kappa Gamma house, ural shelters, suc1l as cave!!, and oswe onvent1on the Pi Beta Phi house, and the 11-_,.-,h-~ evac\mtion areas have been des- · dormitories) and walk toward the ignated :for publfc use. Membet·s of the :Baptist Stu- bonfire al'ea picking up st~~~~~~~~~=~~=~=~~~=;;~====;;;=~=~:;;;;;;;;!

But as with almost anything d t U . .11 t· . t . th from the var10us campus < {? ~ 1:' ~ t) IV /11\ • ·. tlte govel'llment does, private en- en lnBJont~1t Sptatl' 1scltpad e tmC e zations and Greek houses a.·. c, · - r~

. . A nnnua ap ts a e u en · on- th "''h th h tertmse gets lts shot first. ndl ventiCJll Oct. 27-29 in Roswell. e y;aY,• ... en ey rea? 1:hP''.' ., OP , this has been true of fallout shel-j' • . . t 1 50 .... . t destmatton, the bonfire w1ll be ht GO n.pproxnna e y pat>.tc1pan s d th n· ·u b · Th """"" ters •. Sp~rred on bAyd g?v;rt·nm~nt. nrc expected to attend from the aUnt h Re dy~-· mg ~vlll b ebgm. d .. e ~ 6 ·-·-pulJhcatJOns and mm1s mbon UNM H d' th' t' t a - e s"ms w1 e urne m ~ .

· tl- , · , . ea mg IS con mgen effigy '9'1 l prot:ouncements, 1e. mc.r~asmg will be Miss Lucy Belle Stokes, · Walk Planned . . if.! ten~1on over the ~el'lm criSIS, the director of BSU. Working with _ . . Sov1et. successes m space! and 1'1!- her 011 al'mngements for the bus Pr~ ~ramp, bonfil'~ chau·nta~: sumpt10n of nuclear. testml?, peo- trip south is Gal·land Dean, presi- has md1cated that en mas~~ ple are ready to budd the1r own dent of the campus youth organi- walk should create more spn·1t shelters. About 10,000 private zation ' and participation at the bonfire· sb?ltel'S are belie~ed to exist, A~d The• bus is scheduled to leave pep rally and, will also allevi~te S % t> fr ].>l'lVate contractois llave moved m the campus in tile morning of Oct the traffic pxoblem usually m- . 11 riH.hl(<li and ~roclaimed thch· willingn~ss 27, Additional information or res~ valved in Homecoming activities on. a to butld shelters, even on tl~e 111· ervutions lllay be made with 1\iiss (because traffic must be l'erouted stallment plan, New Yor1,, Ill an Stokes and many streets blocked for the excesr:1 of generosi:y, 1u~s. even AinO~g speakets scheduled to driv~ thro~gh c~mp~s beginning c1•eated tax exemptions fot sl1el- appear at the convention are Dr. at 6:30 for the v1ewm.g of Home­ter costs up to $100 per person. Foy Valentine, executive secre- commg house de.c~r~ti~ns).

(Next: Where do we go from tary, The Christian Life Commis- Saturday'~ aetmbes tnclude the ltere?) sion, and Miss Nell Magee, an Lobo-R;edsk~n game. at l:BO p.m.

U • F •J f official in the student department at Umvers1ty atadmm and the nton I m are of the Sunday School Board, both dan~e 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the Union

Sh 'T h~- . r of Naehville, Tenn., and D1'. J. P. balltoom. , . lcclc.t!:'T,6<1l. OWS eO OUSe Allen, pnstor of the First Baptist ?-'he class of 36 Will be ~aluted

"T- h l' th. A. t Moon'' Church Alexandria va th1s years as they are reumted for . eu ouse o... e ugu~ · ' 1 • their sliver anniversary Home-

·w!ll be shown m the Umon The- , coming. e~ nter Sunday at 2, 5, and 8 p.m. Dorm 1tory Payments Othet• committee heads for • r>~\tl6

The film sta1'R Glenn Ford, Mar- . . • H · .,. , o· Bl · , • ~ 1 d d 1'd 1' Alb rt It Dol'mitory l'l.lS1dents emplo:vmg omecomm., arc mne an, .....-,J:P

011 B1•nn o, an " c te e • h · t 1 f , • Penny Naughton Pat Hamilton ~JJII;£'1 deals with the efforts of a young the t l'ee-pa;y'lllen P an °1 room U D Bl I V ' G 'lb t J ' ..v-· ..... r.t~6RW nrtllY eaptain to l'ehabilitate Old- and boal•d ar<l remmded that the M. G'il ac ~ an G ~ e: ' ~an~e ..n~~i till~~ uo.wn by inttodudng Alnet·ican st>cond payment is due dul'ing the R c 1 an, Dean ~fs y, ap e 17"'¥'~" CU!'Itoms and the UM:ie}>ected l'e- week of Octobel' 23 thru 27. Pay- cogers, p olnnDa' aBuser, St1'U

• 1 ' 1 t• hy be made ht J:toua1·11g ramp, au a 1ane eers, an aults of his action. , , me 1 ~ .m.. "' · Hultberg, Marsha Sauemlan,

Admission to Untvel'llltY stu- Collecbons Office, Mesa VIsta Missy Arthurs, and Martha Ter­dentf! and theh· :friends is fifteen :Hull, !J a.m. tht·tt 4 p.m. Mondays! , .

t thru F1·idays. Willlg<!l', cen s •

Page 5: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

Page 6 NEW MEXICO LOBO Thursday, October 19, 198·11

1 A Halloween Dance

J Chi Omega Electt!Knighten nnounces A "Fl·eddy Williams" Hallow~ 1 ·. n. ob- c -cictu. lP aa.e PI d Officers ~ s •It 0 aen Dance will be held at the

J- v ~v "'0 7 e 99 l~"'ttflmfl tl pen Aquinas Newman C~n~er nex~ L--------·----=....:;~--:=---;-- .. bdl ... ~ \til.~ ~ ~~~ f-~~ '\111'l Wednesday, Oct. 25. W1lbams and ~ G d The- faU -F'"'~· ct & ~·" """ ' St d t 1 1 b nd will play from 9 to 1~ · c • p Omt:>g~ s<:>rQdty ~!;!. ~li·N~""" ~', li.~"-~ 1\\\ll:tlit\'l\~ ~ \l en 1 9 ~ Center auditorh1m. Photos By Oplln en n . oe s ~·el'S 'to\' the ~~'Ul·~ ~~~:t~ '~\'l\1.\W~\ ~~~l\\~ ll\M\~~l~~~r:~ ~~~~91~ufh;e casual and the. coso · f/ 1 , Stanlee :uvu.~:~s ~~ "«~ 'lot~~~ ~~\ ~r~~ a~~;ot to be is 700 per person. Ticlcets Will b• anL n from ~'(~!;\ .• N~-.l.·-:-. ~~~\ , .... '\\\\\\\\( ~'$ sale at the door. . A u • r; nam~ii P~ •'11- ~- . iAAW.. on

Shown t mon w~~~;;'~~L!~';.~,::;. <;;::;,i~!~ .t \.: ~~!il~::~:::~~~.::~; ~~.";;::.~~; ~::;.t.i:'':U~ ': h •ra hs b Harvey Caplin graduates at the Univer;,lt) ,, ~ ~ ~~ ~w ~ ..t ~ ~~\'i\; (\~m.itt~, wllit'h tleeds either a juniol' or a Sem.or. "It .-<~ ~~~n ':.ow ~n tho Bolh"om P~noylvania will bod"'~'!";..,~ wiU "'~.. "" ,... "=: ';,,, .;,,~ .,,,..,.,.,.1 th•· Cultu<>l n .. d!in• '"' ••t"'~~"",.'\,-:;,

' .11, Y of th• N ~ Moxioo Union writofo• th• oampni ".' " ,..: """ ..... """" .t - ,,.,.., .. ..._ whkh .,,,, Dvo m•m· b• Thw""'y, Ooto ,. · d . ..; f~o~~11 November 1. . "T~e Daily- Pe~~~ ~;~~a~~~'«'- ~,b, "«i.1~ ~ --~!·: --- . -, . '~Y'$'. l\\ t\U \)\lt its ei~ht man list; pli~ations should be tume m ·Widely recognized for h1s col- mams .a m~?t 12°m., ~: 'N ~!:>: - ·~ _,. '-tXit ~i\'t\S\'! (\mumttee, a. spe- Kmghten.

c;l'ful pictures of the. Southwest, 1ment m prmc~p\~a~' t,t!,'!,' ~-" :sh~~.t ~ ~~ ~'ItS:~ ~ :51~1. d~1 ... ''l\nllittt'l' $et up by Pres1de~t ---------Caplin is credited with pel'llaps,and oppommh • · \!!M~ tt'S....!\\, ~ ~ ~ l\"l.n l'•'l'I'-'JtW, tweds two mote Excer ts from a new dictional'Y: the largest file available of pho~-lbe allowed .to. ,.:~ ~~t~'!'t't~· ~~ IAl:'ht~t ._,.-_\;t~ ~1\~l\h>-: and the Student Coun- 't b ~blished in 2000: precau ..

raph$ on all phases .of life ~ni Last ~rrmt:• f,1:~:_~~.,.'f*:·~;_ ~:s;.''{~ ~~ (lift. .ia~~ ~~ dl f.'imm~ C'ommit~ee needs one ? e. P . , 0

kin the con~ f.1is l'eg·ion, Aceompame~ by lus 'Cipated n: ar;-i-;t f.,.~.:mll ;··.;~n. :t.t. ~~ a J:a\'11.\lt. • • ,$t\ld~nt at lal'gu. Wtth the excep- t10na1y measme. I c g . folnily consisting of Wife, two ing for tn.l" ~~~4- va~:r ~,~~ A~rt~~ C'$A '~~. t~ ~i,.. 'r )f th~ Studt'nt Council Fi- ference door after the Red Clunes.-t ·.ld. ~ t!ll'ee horses and two to lead t.,wa!"J: '"'r.::r~~t"" ""'-~;- ~, - \>.f •·Tho!- D~tls ~n~~ltt- lim \ , . t the bomb. cd

11

1 ~1~ :frequently tak.:>s off on ca6mal 5~t~st:.'n "~ ''"!C;,?o ~;~ ~i::· .....-.}>U:\'Mod tl.ll t\})('n l~t~r b.\ :nauct.> t'l'nmuttee apphcants may- go camping and packing tnps m o Permsy~>aman. • ~, • v.:"~~ i>!l.!>!~~ !;'!!1,.~!1'~ l o:-· • i ,.. ; ·,,:· : .,: . ; :: ,

ogs, · · t , • .. rn~u it"O!n ~:~:n.~ .,_ • ·n ""'rt·. r;:;:;®ru!li!!mt!'!@:~·:::t:\0~1!1':::;:,::;:r;::i.::ti:f.'::G.':'.id':\::::':'E:i:i1:.;: t;le high country and wiiderne"s men had w.:>=k~ l.'l'< til.~ p3>.).~r: •·our intt!nti,>ns: a~ and hll.\~ al-, : · . · .,, ,,. : ·: · ~l'eas to add fresh material tv his while> w0mc-n wm:k~ 1:';:" ~w"':. ~ v.-aj:'~ 1 ... -e-n to open th[' .n~\'\'$~la];}e'l'[l . ly- pn~r, The Pt>nnsj:lvaraa ~ e\h ..... l:ll women. To acc<:>mpltsh thts '1\'e~

s 1r n~tive of Roclu~~ter, N_.Y., · The men's 'C'ndergradnate Cou~- will Cl'nsider all I!roposed. plans!~

where he studied applied art~ at cil appro>ed the proposa~ for ntak- hut we x-efuse to mdulge m fur the Roche;;ter Institute o.f Tech-'.ing the paper co-educatwnal, but ther sterile ~agg~ing. • I'.:>logy-, Caplin forsook lu~ home the Women's Student Gov:rnmentj "From th1s pomt on, there lS

s~ate :following service m tl~e I Association <'YS~A) rat~ed ob-"little n1ore w~ can. do. In al! hon-. Southwest during the war, .His ljections. The objectwns were based~ esty, in all smcerity, we t~1ed to

1 :bur years of public relatto~s primarily on fea1·s that . the~give women the opp01-tumty .t~ i photogl'aphy in the U.S. An· WSGA might have to contl'lbutelwrite for tlleir campus' only dail_~ l l•'orce contributed to his giving up to the support o:f the paper; .thatlnewspaper. We must now adm1t1 m-t work and concentrating on if the "Pennsy-lvania ~ews" fold-:failure, Although we can no_Ionge~l photography exclusively. ed, women's news might not be permit any women to w~te, for

Caplin's work a~ a freel~nce given full coverage; a?d that "The Daily ~ent;s!lvaman -photograpl1er has mcluded JObs women might not be giVIl?- f~ll since one such md1VIdua~ has a!­£6r such national magazines as opportunity to rise to ed1torial ready- been threa?med Wlth. Judi­Saturday- Evening Post, Sports positions. ciary Boa1•d actiOn-we ,;vtll al­Afield Field &Stream, Bluebook, After a series of attempts to ways hold the door open. Ainerican, .American Rifleman, have the WSGA appro~e the in~~-·western Horseman, Farm Jounal gration of the paper, The Dany Brinksmanship: trying to read and Others. He has also done ~x- Pennsylvanian" was finally forced over the Communist delegation's t~nsive worl~ for the New Mdex~~o t d •op its pilot plan and postpone shouldel· as it doodles while the State Totll'lst Bureau an I s o r . U N otes publication 'The New Mexico indefinitely hopes for integratiOn, · • v · Xrl:agazine .

. He frequently is call~~ upon to assist national advel:t!Slng :pro­gi•am mi.d to provide tllustrat.10I!s .fjr western book covers. ~a ph? IS also lmown for his contnb~tl?ns of material to such pubhshtl}g C')mpanies as Double~ay, ~acM!l­hn, Encyclopedia Brd1~anmca and Collier's Encyclopae Ia.

"The gallery is open to the pub­}ln without eha1•ge,

; Anout-of-town trip has neces­sftated changing the date ?f. Har­v::y Caplin's reception ot'lgmally­planned this Sunday afternoon. Instead it will be held :from 2:30 until· 5 o'clock next Sunday (Oct. 23) ·in conjunction with his cur­r'!nt show in the gallery of the Student Union.

ADPi's ·Entertain Sorority Visito~~.

Alpha Delta Pi honored_VIsitmg collegiate officers of the UNM sororities at a dinner held· Tues­day night at the Chapter House.

Those attending "Were Sara_h Lee Staggs, Alpha Delta P1; Caroline Kloppenberg, Delta Gnmma; and Smtdra Max\~ell, Alpha Chi Omeg~, all coll~gmte traveling secretaries of. t.hmr re­S}Jective national sororities, and Carol Lee Sykes, Kappa Kappa Gamma who is a visiting coufi­selor,

Black Alone • • .. ·(Continued from page 1)

tlot acce1lted by the fratemity system for other than his athletic va1ue then the universities should bke ~teps to raise the Negro to tile level of human dignity he de.-S-:lrves." ·

Pl~ased with Council Black also deelarcd that he

"was very pleased with the Stu­dent Council's and the I:OBO's ac­tions this past year "with regard f 0 national politics." Back fellls thnt a person's "political views" .are formed in his high school a_nd college years and therefore active participation in campus .and na­tional poli~ic~ is a requisite :for .any good citizen. .

Polling for the class electwn.s s.nd the special Student Coun~tl ~lection will take place today m the Union :from 8:00a.m. to 5:00 F m Election proceedings are gov­e~n~d by the Student Court and the Court will count tho ballots.

What every designer dreams of: a sports car that looks born, not made.

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Woodruff-fu!ian

Dresses, Coats, Suits and Accessories

2904 CENTRAL S.E.

'l'hlU'sd!l-y, Octoher 19, 1961 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 7

Printer's Nightmare U Graduate Accepted by Corps Yesterday I took part in one,-------------:--1 . . . 1' · th

the democratic processes. This u c A June 1961 gradu~te of UNM Peace Corps Volunteers wlll merly known as Sian~, 1cs m . o ~ne is called the Selective Service f . ect•cut is currently training at the Uni- wol"lr as English-lan~uflge instruc- heart of the Indo-Chmese ,penn~~ Syaten>. It ia • m•tbod of g•tting 0 onn I "'"'"' of Mioh\gan fO< • p,.., .. ,., " ......... ,,.,.,. •. aoll~oa oula. It ia b~und~~ •t ""'':.' ,;:, :pex·sonnel for the Al'llled Forces. · · ~ · Corps project in Thailand. in the provmces, a~ vocatiOnalm- the west a~ 11~1 !' • ao~ho ea~ t

The nightmare in which I was F . d 0 F Miss Luc~a Wilcox, of Albu- str·ucto1·s in techmcal and wade . am ~\ lll on the It' j. involved was the Physical Exam- eu s ver ees querque, graduated last June with schools and as teaching a:;;s.i::;_tant~ Mfl~~ 011 a~lel~ot~h~\1. th: ination. There we1·e about 150 of a degree in biology, While in col- in science, English, economws an. S.lg Y sm d h , la-us in all, most of them "pre-in- . lege she worked in the Jibra1·y and sociology at 'Chulalongkorn Um- of 2~ex~fran as a pop

1 duction.'' That means that you STORRS, Conn. (UPS) --A did ~lerical work for UNM depart- versity in Bangkok. 0\ 11 nu/~~~ . eople live in

are examined and tested before contintling battl!l has raged for ments. She entered training Oct. Other Vohmte!ll'S will answer The .u ' 0 Bangk~k about th~ being inducted so that they can nearly- four weeks at the Univer- 9 at Ann Arbor. an urgent Thai requClst :for ent~- :x~:· hington b c is tl~e save time in shoving you into the sity- of Connecticut between the About 50 Peace Corps Volun- mologists <tnd laboratory- techm-

1 f g '~ty It is' th~ ~~nter ot

Army, student gover~ment and n.ews- teers will be assigne~ to Thailand cians. W o~·king w~t? Thais al}d ~~1 ~ :~~ec fina~ce and indtlstry-... What impressed me the most paper on one side and the umver- in early 1962 to assist that coun- under '.rhm superv1s1on, they ';lll ~ nddh. \ is the national reli­

was the rigid standards which the sity administration on the othe1·. try's education and public health assist in a natiomyide .cam~aign . u d 1~h\ is considered an im-A1•my- applied. The intelligence- The dispute grew out; of admin- programs. to e~·adicate malaria, h1st0l'1C~ll.y gwn an fac~or in the outlook (>f placement exam can be passed by istration action to decide what Project Requested . Thailand's greatest cause of SicJ,. Thai people. As Buddhists, anyone able to read. And :for those was to happen to the student ac- The p1·oject was developed m ness and death. are dedicat<::d to model'ation who .cannot. write there is someone tivities :fee, The. student govern~ response to requests from the Thai D~al;l Com·~in.~tes . gentleness. , · :t;c g1ve assi~tance. . . ment had been m ch~1·ge of ad- Government. The ~rammg f!lO?ram a.t the The Thai climate IS generally

The physical exammat~on was ministering $6 of the $10 collected Candidates for the Peace c.orps University- of MIChigan Will with high temperatul'(·S a farce which obviously disgusted from every- student, but the ad- project will train at the Umver- coordinated by Harold M .. Door, humidity- but with mark!:!{l ;the l)octOl'S. Medical assistants, ministration changed the set-up sity- of Michigan in Ann Arbor Dean o:f Statewide Educatwn at seasomll variations. The l'ain:; ()r whatever they were, gave most by directing $5 of the $6 to go to from October 9 through J an·na:;:y the Unive1·sity. Pro~cssor Robe1·t season lasts :f

1·om mid-May

of the exams. This moant t?at the Publications Board. It .wa~ al- 17, 1962, accordin~ to an an- Le~stma, an educat:ona~ psyc?ol- through mid-Septembe1·; the cool these people took your med1cal so decided that all orgamzat!Ot;s nounc~Jment made Simultaneously og1st who r~cently ~etmned. from season fl·om mid-November to late Gheet and marked down the 1·e- with budgets of more than $100m in Bangkok, Washington and Ann two years. m Thailand, Will be February; and the hot season sults of exams which you neve1· expenditures a year were to be Arbor. program directo::. . , from February to late May. had. We were all amazed to find subpect to administration control. They will dep~rt for Bangkok . TI~ere wi~l be mtensive mstrt~c- The government is a const.itn· that our temperatures were s.uch Campps Demonstrations January 19! ~eceiye fom: weeks of t10n m.Thm langt~age m~d cu.lt?re, tional monarchy, with. a. cabi!ltt and such when they had never The protests including demon- further trammg m Thailand, and supel'VIsed by Piofessor W1lha:n and a unicameral, appomhve, leg­been taken; that our vision was strations on cai~pus and at a :foot- begin their assignment on Febru- J, Ge.dney, Profess?l' Gedn~y. IS islative hl·anch, The Chief of uniformly excellen~, etc. . ball game, are based on th~ee ary 2.1, ~962, , A~enca's ~mtstandmg .Thai Iu:- State, King Phumipon Adull;~<;t,

One fellow was listed as havmg rimary- objections to the admm- Thts 1s the 13th Peace Corps gu1s!, havmg. concentrated Ius and his beautiful queen, Sarmit, ~0/20 vision when it was later Istration's actions· the adminis- project to be announced. Ot~~rs studies on Thm language and cui- intemational prestige and found that he was blind in one tration violated the rights of were developed for ~anganyi~a, ture for the past 18 ye!lrs. " The 34-year old mon-eye; another's vision was list:d students by simply allotting th.eir Colombia, the P?ilippmes, Chi.le, .Th.e Volunteer~: ctu·rJculum,~lso arch was born in the Unitu! as correctible to 20/20 when m money- without any consultation Ghana, St. Lucia. (Wes~ Ind~es will mch~de ~ou~ses on A~lencan States and ascended the Thm one of his eyes it was not.~ :vith them or with their elected Federation), Indm, N l g ~rIa cult~ral mstltutwns, physiCal ed- throne in 1946.

The assembly line examination ~epresentatives in the Student (three projects), West Palnst~n ucatJon, person~! health an.d hhy- --- -------by tl1e Doctor was ve1·y thorough; Senate. by setting up a Board of and East Paldstan. giene,. the tea!!hi!lg of Enghs as it took 17 minutes to examine 28 Publicdtions not controlled by stu- Assist Education a fore~gn lang~a1? and a st~~:r 0~ Get with it man' You peo1>le. It wasn't the Doctor's dents but with the power of the Primary importance of the malana. er.adiCa 10~, spec1a Ize 1 • • • •

fault, of course, but the insistence purse over all the student publica- Thailand project is to assist that in.struct!On m. malarm . M ron b I • fh • d' bl of the Department of Defense that tions the publications were sub- nation's education progra:n. Qual- Will be provided f brh D~. h l f e ong m e In ISpensa e many men are needed to defend jected to adminish·ation control ified Thai teachers are m short!W eg:nan, dean o e c 00 0 the country in case of war. and censorship; and the Senate supply and the schools and col- Public H.eal~h. f Th .

1 d :for WE A-rH ER

The examination station was was made a powerless body by leges are badly understaffed:. The Kmg om 0 m an • • fill 1 greatly ove1·crowded, there were the actions taken by the admin- E N I KER 150 people in an examination sta- istration, becaus~ t~e Senators C H EC tion set up for 40, And, of course, would have no vmce m the allot- • the usual example of bureaucratic ment of students' money and be- -

prevailed. that the admmistrat10n will also . t confusion, inefficiency-, and waste cause the act~o~ see~ns to. imply ... ·~·, .....

1 ... - .. -~

We spent three-fourths of t~e take other actions wit1wut l'efer-nine and a half hours there .sit- ence to the students' elected l'ep­ting and waiting to do somethm!l'. resentatives. Most of this tim~ we 'Y:re. m University officials say students shorts with the air-cond1t10m~g have nothing to worry about. The on. If we don't have pneumoma administration has taken over fi­next week then we'll probably- get nancial matters, they say-, because !food poisoning :from the gox lunch "Nutmeg" the university year·­the government, ?r somebody, so book, was' in financial difficul.ty, thoughtfully provided. . and the administratio,n has '!1-o ~n-

Alth?ugh .there wc;re ~1gns post- tention of exerting any- echto:•ml ed agamst It, r~crmters cam: by control ove1• any of the publica­and made various suggestions tions about how we co~ld spend the ' Distrust Statement next several years m some. useful Students have distrusted the occupation, in the service of administration statements, and course. And everyone was vel~ have held demonstrations in p1·o­kind and told us that we wou test a ainst the new policy. One all be back in a month to get ou~ chowl estimated by the "Daily shots, if we weren't deferre Camp~s" to number 2,500 indi­:until the end of the present school viduals, marched around the catD:­:semester. , us. the Inter-Fraternity- Council

Very probably we will too, ~x- ~ot~d to boycott all Homecoming Clept for the two-ma.ybe three- Week Activities; and the Sen~te who failed the physical. If. tl~e hired a firm of lawyers. to dis­tone of this suggests t?at _It ts cover and fight for their legal the bittet·ness of an tmmment • 1 t draftee, then I must report ~hat I l'I~~!' students cite a number of was .one of the few to fail the reasons for their distrus~ of the physiCal. administration. They pomt out

Except :for '~aiting, the most that although the $10 activities eommon comp1amt I heard- es- was self-imposed by vote of the pecially :from the 15 or so UN~ student body the Trustees decided 'Students-was "What a wa.ste 0 in 1953 to ailocate $4 to the Stu­time to spend two year~ I~ the dent Union Board of Governors, :much traer. A large maJOl'lty of who are not elected by students. Army.'' I don't tl!ink it <;ou1d be In 1959 students claim a prize­the men now in the services at•e winning' story was pre-censored, just marking time. If a war does and was not allowed to appear in come there will be no use :for them the by- then Board of Governor because they will be ldl!ed along con'trolled "Fine Arts Maga~ine.'' with the civilian l!Olmlabon of the And in l960 the editor of the wotld. "Daily- Campus" was expelled

"Greetings • • ·" from school, although his aca-demic record was good, for mal-y . w··/1 Dance practice as an editor.

agUIS I Students also point to a series

I 'E • Aft• I of quotes from the university Bul-n venlng lfe letin which they feel are signi~-Residents of Yaqui House of cant. The passages were quoted 111

Mesa Vista D.orm attd their dntes "Nightsh~de," • a weekly ~~ews­will be dancing in their 11a,jamas paper, numeograp.hed on a :mgle F , d .. 1 t sheet of }Japer wh1ch began o ap-

' 1A ~~~1~1~~ dal}ee" 1 • with nmsi~ pem• dur~n~ the co~tl·oversy, The

:~~:~~~~;~~t~~~:~~~~fJJstr!~~i~~ ~~i~ei~~;~·~·. ~ 9S:si:~:~~~~~~ t~~ ff . Eld Ma . , Student Senate.' . ,

a an· ' lou In., 't~d ai'e the "AIWil 1950-'Student Actlvi-The on y ma os mv1 " ' 1 t · 1 by the

1'esidtmhl of Yacq~ti .hous!co~~~l ~~~o~~~~ecl 'st.tt~l~n~·nG~~~rnment.' their guc~t~ •. Any girl ~s we. ' ·,;AJll'il 1953-'Stttdont Activi­but the reqmrcd dress 18 ll!\Jalllas. t' .. , ' determined by tho Tl 1 nee in thongs or H'R .1.< ee · • ·

IE'Y may < a ' University Trustees after recom­aocks or hare I flle.t. at 8 ll m in men<lntim~ by the Associated Stu-

Tho dance . Jllgt~s · ' 1 ,1 t Govet·nmcttt.'" ~he Dorm c!1-fetcl'l!t, c e 1

Here's deodor~nt grotection

YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastcst, nearest way to all· day, every day protection/ It's the actit•e deodorant for active men •. , absolntely dependable. Glides Oil smoothly, s11eedily,,, dries in recol'd time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant -most cotwcnicnt, most economical deodorant money can. buy. 1.00 t>ltts tax,

STICK DEODORANT

SHULTON

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Whether the weather is balrny cr biting, you're ready with Weathc_r Checker, knockout new H·I·S style with zip-out Orion pile lining. 40" long-it has a Bal Collar, raglan shoulders, slash pockets, center vent, sleeve tabs. In washable fab. rics-at stores that are 'wii'h it'. $25.

l>oh'f ehvy H•I•J,,, wear ihl!ln

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Page 6: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 065, No 12, 10/19/1961

Page 8

Nationally Ranked

Arizona Might Confronts Wolfpack Saturday Night

U_NM's Lobos, licking their yards in 45 carries for a 7.9 yard wound$ after a disastrous 41-7 average; in pass ~·eceiving with smearing at the hands of Utah six catches for 196 yards and one Sta~e, wm run head on into the touchdown, and in scoring with 30 natwn's second-ranked offense points. Thompson has run back Saturday night in Tucson. only two punts, both for touch-

The University of Arizona downs, on runs of 75 and 74 yard&. Wildcats, this week's UNM oppo- Quarterback Wilson a 184 nent, sport one of the nation's pound senior has compl~ted 20 of fastest ,backfields and _one of the 43 passes fo; 423 yards and four country s :op P.assers m qu~rter touchdowns, He leads the team in b~ck Eddie Wlison, an Anzo~a punting with 17 kicks for a 39.2 high school product who made h1s yard average. His punting was a way up through the ranks. · decisive factor in the Oregon

Some sportswriters have placed game the Wildcats as high as seventh ,.' , . among major college football . Anzona s total offense IS run­teams. mng at a 372 yard per game av-

The Wildcats a1•e 1mbeaten this erage aft:r four ga!fieS. With 484 season and sport the longest un- ya;·ds game~ passmg ~nd 1004 beaten streak in modern day Ari• gamed rushm.g, the Wildcat of· zona football. The streak extends fense has gai,ned 1488 yards to through ten games, including a the op~onents 974, and has out~ 14-14 tie with Nebraska early this scored.!ts four o~ponents, 110-33. year. Last $aturday, the Arizona HaVIng made It past Neb~·aska team upset almost eve1·y "expert" and Oregon, the Wildcats are. ex­in the country by upsetting a pected to f~ce only two. serxous heavily favorcd Oregon team 15-6 threats durmg the remamder of :In Portland. Even more signifi- the se~son, unless the Lobos )lUll cant was the apparent ease with off .a mighty upset Saturday m~ht. which the Wildcats romped over Anzona has yet to face Wyommg Oregon. on the ;vndcat~' home ~rounds in

Bobby Lee Thompson, a senior Tucson s Varsity st~dmm, N?­halfhack weighing in at 174, leads b~mber 4th .. The W1~dcats will the "Wildcats in rushing with 342 wmd up their season m a brawl

with arch-rival Arizona State on November 25th in Tempe. The Wildcats first indicated what might be in store for this year when they upset highly favored Arizona State in Tucson last year.

Arizona State, long a South­western football power (sixth in the nation in 1958) should be add­ed to UNM's schedule in the next few years, as the University

•1moves toward affiliation with the la1·ger schools in the Southwest.

Mexico expects to join A1·i­and Arizona State (both pulled out of the Border

Conference) in the formation of a new Great Western Athletic Conference. Arizona's enrollment is about 14,000 and Arizona State's about 12,000.

JFK Implores K: Don•t Use Big Bomb

WASHINGTON - The White House to Soviet Premier

L I Kliirutsh~he;v yesterday not to ex~ OBO HALFBACK Bobby San- a 50-megaton Nuclear

tiago continues to lead the Khl'llshchev announced the Wolfpack offense. (Photo by Soviet intention to set off the AI Vigil) huge bomb Wednesday at the

opening of the 22nd Communist

UNM Photographer Pa~~ c~~:88nouse statement

F• d F s b• said that the detonation of such a In S ew U jeCfS powerful bomb could ~n~y "serve some unconfessed political pur-

. . , pose." It also said that the U.S.A. Pictures for this year s MI- has had the technical knowledge

R~GE, the UNM yearbook, are and ability to build bombs of the bemg t~ken free, but stude~ts are 50 to 100 megaton range since not takmg adva~tage of this. 1957.

The newly-hired The explosive equivalent of :P~o~ographer has be:n forced • bombs from 50 to 100 mr~atons sit Idle much of .the .time, .the edi- is 50 to 100 million tons of TNT. tors of the publication said Wed- A 50 megaton Nuclear Bomb nesday. would be 2,500 times as powerful

Less than one fourth of the ex~ as the Atomic Bombs dropped on pected 4,000 class portraits for the Nagasaki and Hiroshima during 1962 MIRAGE have been taken World War II. so far.

Co-editor Kate Corbin and Diane Beall urged that all stu- u N M Grads Made dents who have not had their pic-tures taken to malce an effort to ROTC Officers do so as soon as possible. The photographer will be in the Hobby Three recently commissioned Crafts area of the Union from 9 UNM graduates have l'eceived or­a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. ders as ensigns to report to three each weekday through October 31. ships based in California.

Class portraits are f1·ee tbis Charles Guest Bachechi, son of year to holders of activity tickets. and Mrs. Carlo Bachechi, Other students may have their Rio Grande NW, will rcport pictures in the Mirage by paying the USS Princeton in Long the photographer $1.00. for his first duty assign~

The editors plan to have a lar-1 ,· """'"· ger book tban past annuals if William Robert James Jr., of there are enough. students in the Summit, N.J., has been ordered to class sections. USS Bon Homme Richard in

Posters have been placed in all Diego, and John Robert Stiles residential houses and dorms, Sacramento, Calif., goes to letters have been written to presi- USS Merdck in Long Beach. dents of all organizations, adver-tising has been placed in the "Doin' anything Saturday LOBO and on Radio KNMD urg-•M•••"'"1" ing everyone to have their pic- "Nope."

NEW MEXICO LOBO

The Item

DRUGS

PRESCRIPTIONS

ART

SUPPLIES

DRESS

SHOP

PHOTOGRAPHER

SNACK BAR One Stop

Cosmetic Shopping·

JEWELERS

HAIR STYLING

AUTO REPAIR

FLOWERS

CORSAGES

CLEANERS

STORAGE

SCOOTERS

BICYCLES

THE MAN•s

STORE

HOTEL

COIN

LAUNDRY

T

Thursday, October 19, 1961'

The Place·

DORSEY LOBO PHARMACY 3001 Monte Vista NE Just east of the campus·

C o II e g e I N N B o o k s t o r e: Mrs. Fisher 191 0 CENTRAL E. CH 3-5346

LEE JOY SHOP Phone AL 5~9087 I 05 DARTMOUTH SE.

ELVIS GREENLEE STUDIO (ACROSS FROM HODGIN HALL)

CH 2-3563 1812 CENTRAl AVENUE SE'

CHISHOLM'S ACROSS FROM JOHNSON GYM

BUTTERFIELD CH 3-2446 2312 CENTRAL SE

DOROTHY GRAY'S 'AL 5-1167 - Open Fri. till 9

2935 Mont Vista NE

BILL KITCHEN'S

On the a

COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR Al 6-4120 127 BRYN MAWR SE

McKOWN'S Al 5-6111 3120 CENTRAL

UNIVERSITY CLEANERS EMERGENCY 2-HOUR CLEANING SERVICE

Open 7:00a.m. ·6:00p.m. CH 3-6553 1800 CENTRAL SE

HARRIS SALES COMPANY Two Two Two Two Central SE

GUS PATTERSON'S AL 5-2684 3124 CENTRAL.

PARK LANE MOTOR HOTEL COMFORTABLE ROOMS FOR FAMILY OR FRIENDS

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Phone 243~5528 1701 CENTRAL NE

. -

UNIVERSITY COIN-MAliC Self .. Serviqe

Across from campus 1806 Central tures taken. "Kin I use your soap?" ~-------------------

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lack now is. the wood,"~D'en." ny Brummel

Carries All Class Offices . AP Victory Adds One to U Greeks' Council Majority

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