new mexico lobo, volume 072, no 31, 10/29/1968 · c.o rdi\l.ado 37'6. 7'is? vn3qw v. n e...

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1968 e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 10-29-1968 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/ 1968 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1968 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 1968 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 072, No 31, 10/29/1968." 72, 31 (1968). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1968/101

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968 · C.o RDI\l.ADo 37'6. 7'iS? Vn3QW v. N E V\1 7:2~·3.( ~~~ . IVIEXICO Vol. 72 Tuesday, October 29, 1968 No. 31 _mergency 0 Faculty

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1968 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

10-29-1968

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1968

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 1968 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968." 72, 31 (1968). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1968/101

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968 · C.o RDI\l.ADo 37'6. 7'iS? Vn3QW v. N E V\1 7:2~·3.( ~~~ . IVIEXICO Vol. 72 Tuesday, October 29, 1968 No. 31 _mergency 0 Faculty

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Andean Center

Want Acls FOR SALE

35 MM SLR. Mamiya..Seeor's Tower 37 with 65 mm normal & 35 mm wide angle lens. Just cheeked by top L.A. llPecialist. $100. Stephan Part, 1612 Gold SE, Apt. 2, or message at Art Dept.

FADED BLUE '65 Chevy, "-door. V-8, Radio, Heater. Asking $250. Come by Lobo office, don't eaiL Ask for Barton.

1967 GREEN TRIUMPH Spitfire. $1346. Engine in excellent shape; 24 m.p.g. in town. Call 299·9161.

WHY. PAY RENT when for only $350. down &: low monthly payments you can have the pride of home ownership, build an equity, and have tax relief. See t.hi! charming 2 bd rm, w /formal dining room & large llving room w/fireplace. 2 :pati08, part bas:ement, Pl"'llte, central forced air, hardwood floors. Close to Nob Hill. Call Sam Cooper 265-8571; evenings 842-8280. Caird Norris Realty.

:MISCELLANEOUS WANTED: Portable tape :recorder and

tapes, for c1aas lectnres. Cheap ($) bnt stnrdy. CaD 268-2139 evenings or come by LOBO office. J. Milogl&v.

RUSH AVIATION CENTER. Instrnment-Commerclai·Private Ground · School claues. Call 256·3756 or 298-1978.

PERSONALS TWO GmLS to pose for commercial pho­

tographer for promotional advertising. You wil Jreceive free eupiea of the photo­graphs which are tJSed. Pl<!ase eall Rich­ard Sittler, 247-4.203.

"HARRY, NOON AND NIGHT is a sbock­lng play, even for me,. and I'm not easily shocked. Bnt l've felt & growing sense of .commibnmt to 'ita truth, strength, originality and craftBinamlbip and 1 look forward to understanding what its aJ laboot by opening nlgbt."­Craw!ord lll:ac:CaUum, Old Town Stndlo. Box Office 242-4.602. Performances No­vember 1·3, 7-10 at 8:00 ••

SERVICES TYPING. Are you ''bugged" by spelling

and Punctuation 1 Phone 242-0649.

J!OSTERS

25% OFF With this Ad

e Blacklight • Color e Dylan, Hendrix

Beatles, Ginsberg

2218 Central S.E.

Gifts, Pottery, . Hami-CartJed Furniture, Posters & Fun. Thi~tgs

Photo by UNlll: News Bareau The UNM Andean Study and

Research center was dedicated at ceremonies in Quito, Ecuador, Oct. 28. UNM President Ferrel Heady and UNM Regents Presi­dent, Arturo Ortega, joined the President of Ecuador for the ceremony.

NEW MEXICO LOBO Monday, October 28, 1968

Class For Handicapped

Special ~ducation Offered By SANDRA SCHAUER

Motor sensory and perceptional training are the two stressed areas in a special education class for physically handicapped chil-

. dren being conducted this semes­ter at UNM.

In addition to moto:r sensory training and perceptional train­ing, which includes audio, visual, and tactile training, the class also concentrates on language develop­ment, development of self-help skills, and the opportunity to work with other students in an aca­demic environment.

Second Year The class was started last year

by Dr. Don M. Rice, who came here on a Stimulation grant from the U.S; Office of Education in order to set up such a program for the crippled.

When Rice arrived here he found several children at Man­zanita Center whose educational needs could not be met at a reg­ular school because of physiolog­ical and neurological problems.

Currently the class, which is the only one of its kind at UNM, has three boys and three girlf!.

Out of the six pupils one is almost completely paralyzed and another bas muscular dystrophy. None of the students, are con­sidered mentally retarded al­though some could be considered "slow-learners."

Rice said that no matter bow betwefln 9 and 11:30 a.m. in the physically handcapped the chil- Manzanita Center. dren in tl1e class are, they will be given an education. Rice . added that "the ultimate goal is to get as many as possible back in the classroom."

Students in graduate level courses at UNM are able to ob­serve the class, which is taught by Judy Lassiter, a UNM graduate student.

The six children, who range between six and seven years of age, meet in class five days a week

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·Character Studies

Photography by RICHARD L. SITTLER

410 Harvard Ave. S.E. Office 247-4203 8 to 5, Residence 842-9632

Commercial Fashion Legal - SUNCARDS Welcome

SOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

is pleased to announce the establishment of

THE HATTON W. SUMNERS

SCHOLARSIDPS IN LAW

Stipend: The Sumners stipend has a value of $3,000 a year. It provides, in addition to the full tuition and fees, room and board in Lawyers Inn and an amount for books, personal expenses and travel costs.

The total value of a Sumners Scholarship for the three years of study is $g,ooo. The Scholarship is awarded initially for one year, renewable for the second and third years of study, provided that the Scholar maintains a cumulative scholas­tic average in the upper third of his class and meets the other requirements of the program. ~

Qualifications: An applicant for a Sumners Scholarship must meet the following require­ments:

(1) Hold, prior to commencement oflaw study, a baccalaureate degree from an approved college or univc::rsity.

(2) Rank academi<:ally in the upper twenty-five percent o£ his class, and exhibit qualities of leadership and character which give promise of success in the law.

(3) Be an unmarried, male citizen of the United States between 21 and 27·

( 4) Be a permanent resident of, or in attendance at, a college or univer­sity in one of the following states: Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico or TexaS;

Applications: Write to Sumners Scholarship Committee, School of Law, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas 75222, for SUMNERS SCHOLAR-

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C.o RDI\l.ADo 37'6. 7'iS? Vn3QW N E V\1 v. 7:2~·3.( ~~~ .

IVIEXICO Vol. 72 Tuesday, October 29, 1968 No. 31

_mergency 0

Faculty Meeting By ROB BURTON •

Editor-in-Chief The UNM faculty will meet in emergency session tonight at 8 p.m. in

Mitchell Hall 122 "to discuss the policy issues raised by the suspension of three UNM students in connection with a non-violent demonstration" last week, said a notice delivered yesterday to faculty members.

The meeting has been called an ad hoc committee of faculty who profess themselves concerned at the administration's failure to make use of the student standards committee, "as provided for in the Facu1ty Handbook."

Henry Weihofen, UNM: professor of law, will chair the meeting. As word of the suspensions Wednesday spread and the role of the Uni­

versity's vice-presidents became clearer, faculty members began to attempt to intercede on behalf of the suspended students.

James Thorson, an English professor and chairman of the UNM chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), Saturday polled the executive committee of the AAUP and gave a resulting resolution to Vice-President Lavender. It said in part, "we feel that due process, as required by the joint statement on student rights which the UNM chapter of the AAUP adopted last spring, may have been violated."

The AAUP letter suggested the administration rescind the suspensions "until a court of original jurisdiction ... is able to hold hearings as to fact."

For a while Saturday, for those involved in the peace negotiations, it looked as though the adminstration might take a more conciliatory stance. The vice-presidents met Sunday morning, however, and stood by their original ruling.

At issue, said a high administrative official, was the administration's right to suspend any student without having to hold a hearing.

Yesterday six professors met to consider alternative approaches to the administration. Several had been involved in the circulation of a petition signed by 62 faculty members that was critical of what they called a violation of the spirit if not the letter of university policy and procedure as set forth in the Faculty Handbook.

The petition also criticized the selectivity of the suspensions-it said that since as many as 300 might have been involved the suspensions "might be more related to their other activities (as student leaders) than to the charges against them."

Travelstead Says

• eettng e

• uspenstons·

Student Body Meeting By GRANT HARVEY

News Editor Student Senator Steve van Dresser has reserved the Union Ballroom to­

night in the name of student government for a general student meeting to discuss the suspension of Manuel Wright, Alen Cooper, and Larry Russell.

Van Dresser, who indicated that the cost of the room came from the pockets of he and other individuals, said that student government itself was not taking a position on the issue.

"We were able to get the room by using Article Two of the Constitution of the Associated Students of UNM (ASUNM) which reads under Student Rights, section two: The student government shall be bound to protect the free expression of ideas," van Dresser said.

In the scheduling book the meeting is labeled, "student government, open discussion."

A leaflet handed out by students yesterday and today publicizing the meeting states the purpose of the meeting is to "Discuss the suspension of three UNM students for their actions on campus."

The leaflet goes on to state, "These students were suspended without benefit of a hearing as an example for the rest of the student body. This action affects all of us. Come and get the facts and ask questions."

The three suspended. students are expected to attend the meeting to explain their position and reasons for appealing their suspension. Cooper, Wright, and Russell have stated that the administration has not followed due process of suspension policy.

ASVNM President, Jim Dines, said the meeting could be called a student government function because it is open to all students. "It is the duty ofw• student government to provide a situation in which dialogue between stu­dents on this campus can be exchanged," he said.

"I must stress that anyone can come and eA'"})ress any opinion ~t this meeting," Dines said. "Student government is not sponsoring any .faction in this controversy. We are merely providing the students with a chance to verbalize their opinions."

In respect to van Dresser having reserved the Ballroom in the name of student government, Dines said. "This is perfectly in order. The only people who can officially schedule things like this are van Dresser, president pro­tempore, vice president Ron Curry, and myself."

Suspension of Students Not Penal Action By STEVE LAPRADE

Staff Writer "It shall be understood that the University's function is

educational and not penal." This excerpt is taken from the ''Faculty Handbook"

which says penal decisions (such as the suspension of three UNM :students for disturbing au NROTC exercise) are the responsibility of the Student Standards Committee.

terrupti9n of the ROTC calisthenics or relay drills. Thus there wa:s not even a real offense to punish. Furthermore, there was no hostility between members of the two groups; some of those involved in the watch-in were invited by ROTC members to join relay races, and, after the suspen­sions, several ROTC members expressed sympathy with the suspended students. If nothing in fact happened, how can there be punishment?

NROTC relay race is a ''regularly scheduled academic event"; in any case, nothing happened on that field to "interfere with others in the pursuit of an education" or to "adversely affect the educational function of the Uni­versity."

5. The procedure by which the suspensions were deter­mined cast doubt on the validity of the charge. The de­cision was made too swiftly, as though there were some imminent danger to the campus." Dr. Chester Travelstead, UNM academic vice president,

when asked if the suspension decision was penal, said, "We didn't consider the ruling to be penal."

The Lobo asked other vice presidents about the suspen­Rions. Dr. Sherman Smith, administrative vice president; said, "TaUt to Dr. Lavender. He knows as much as I do and it will be better if be did all the talking".

Dr. Harold Lavender, vice president of student affairs, was not available for comment.

The suspensions were made without consulting Student Standards. As it now stands, any student appealing the suspension must prove he is innocent of the charge.

The Winter 1967 "AAUP (American Association of Uni­versity Professors) Bulletin", in its "Joint Statement on Rights and Freedoms of Students" said, "The burden of proof sl1ould rest upon the officials bringing the charge."

Dr. E. Smith, director of housing and administrative representative on the Student Standards Board, said that today's Student Standards meeting will not have the sus­pended student on the agenda. 1\lanuel Wright is the only one of tlte three suspended students who bas appealed. His case is tentatively scheduled for next Tuesday.

A "Position Paper on Student Suspensions" has been circulated for signatures of people who feel "an injustice has been committed. Those of us who have signed below urge that the suspensions be lifted."

The paper says, "The administration's action in suspend­ing the three students seems to us invalid for the follow~ ing reasons:

1. "According to several ROTC cadets, tl1ere was no in-

2. ''The punishment itself, a full year's suspension, was obviously excessive and out of all proportion to what ac­tually occurred. No one was injured, no property was de­stroyed or harmed, no one was threatened, nothing was stolen, and no one was harassed or intimidated."

3. "The singling out of three students from 200 or so participants suggests that the administration was using the event as an excuse to retaliate against certain students who have been active in University reform. If the Univer­sity really thought some serious offense bad been commit­ted, they should have proceeded with mass suspensions.

4. The charges on which the students were suspended are fiim:sy at best. First, it is questionable whether an

INDEX LBJ Doing All He Can Pg. 4 Prague Student Riots .. Pg. 5 Eugene McCarthy ...... Pg. 8 Cargo: Chavez, Maestas

Debate .............. Pg. 8

A "Complicity Statement" is also being circulated for signatures of other people who were at the NROTC dem­onstration. The administration bas said that anyone who signs the statement will be suspended.

Allen Cooper, one of the three suspended students, said that about 50 people have signed the complicity statement and the goal is 200 names. Cooper has not yet appealed his suspension to Student Standards. "As far as I know now, I will not appeal unless there is an open hearing."

Larry Russel, another suspended student, said, "I am not planning to appeal at the present time.'' ·~ <ll.

If Student Standards overrules the suspensions, Univer­sity President Dr. Ferrel Heady has the final ruling. He would be, in effect, ruling on his own original decision. Heady does not have to follow the Student Standards rul­ing, tlte Faculty Handbook states.

President Heady was in Ecuador for the dedication of the Andean Study and Research Center at Quito and could not be reached for comment.

UNM Academic Vice President Chester Travelstead was asked if he was aware of faculty and student concern about the decision to suspend the three students.

"I'm always aware of the concern. I was eoncerned about the whole matter, and I feel, as Dr. Lavender does, that our action was just and proper.''

Travelstead, asked why the cases were not referred to Student Standards, said, "We didn't want to cause any greater harm to the students involved, and we wanted to avoid any wider publicity.''

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"Now gentlemen, time is short, but how can we lose with our wonderful 'something for everyone' o:ffense."

It Could Happen Here After releasing his commission's report on the Columbia

revolt, Archibald Cox tried to measure the intensity of the crisis. "Columbia both before and after the disturbances," he said, "seems clearly to be a microcosm of the nation. And if the problems cannot be solved at a university, then where can you solve them?"

The awesome, obvious corollary to this is that Columbia's problems are the problems of Duke and of most universities in the -country, and it is here that we must fix the blame and find the solution to our distress.

While attacking the use of "violence or physical harass­ment or obstruction" as "never an acceptable tactic for in­fluencing decisions in a university," the Cox commission ac­cused the administration and the faculty of helping to cause the "combustion."

The faculty, they wrote "did not participate in institu-"...tional decisions and, therefore, could contribute little to pro­

vide the university with internal coherence." They became "more and more remote from the problems of student life and general policy not directly related to formal instruction."

They accused the administration of "evasive improvisa­tion" and declared that they "too often conveyed an attitude of authoritarianism and invited mistrust."

It is not possible to translate directly these criticisms of Columbia into a commentary on Duke. Douglas Knight is not at all like Grayson Kirk. The university administration for all its faults is not as insensitive as the administration at Columbia. Nor are the students here ready to seize campus buildings. But there are grave similarities.

Perhaps the most important thought of the Cox commis­sion lies in these two lines: -- "Any tendency to treat a university as a business enter­prise with faculty as employees and student as customers diminishes its vitality and communal cohension."

"The government of a university depends, even more than that of a political community, upon the consent of all the governed to accept decisions reached by its constitutional processes."

All of the members of this university should see them­selves as part of a reasonable and open community, but they cari.'lot possibly envision it in this way. Instead students must look at a faculty jealously guarding its hard-won prero­gatives in curriculum from student encroachment. They must look at an administration prone to secrecy and, at times, de­ception. And they must see at the top of this heap 36 men and women who make decisions, usually it seems, without hearing from the entire university community.

We must have a revolution before we can become a com-/,:•--munity. And this revolution must extend to the trustees, the

faculty, the administration, and the students. From their splendid isolation they must realize the stupidity of secrecy, of evasion, of arrogance: in decision-making. And while we refuse to listen to one another, we increase the polarization and paranoia that has been growing the past few years.

Until we can all find in ourselves a vision of the commun­ity we need we will be govetned by stereotypes and misun ... derstandings. We must have a peaceful revolution in atti­tudes, a liberation from traditional polarities. And we must have it now.

President Kennedy once said, 11Tbose who make peaceful revolutions impossible make violent revolution inevitable/' It could happen here.

THE DUKE CHRONICLE

NEW MEXICO LOBO

NEW MEXICO

ROBERT BURTON Editor-in-Chief WAYNE CIDDIO

Managing Editor

Box 20, University P.O., UNM, Albuquerque, N.M., 87106 Phone (505) 277-4002,277-4102, 277-4204

I To The Editor: CIVIL OFFENSE SYSTEM

To The Editor: Friday morning, Oct. 25, at

about 11 a.m., six friends and I were given the opportunity to see the Albuquerque Police Depart­ment's "civil offense system" in operation.

We were driving west on Cen­tral, on our way to meet some friends for a trip to Santa Fe. The car wal;l crowded, but legally so--with three people in front, and four in back. It was an old Ford with Colorado plates, a Mc­Carthy flower on one window, and a "Boycott Grapes" sticker on the rear bumper-obviously a car be­longing to a suspicious and/or dangerous individual.

Or thus seemed to be the logic of the Albuquerque policeman who pulled us over and detained us for some 25 minutes in front of the Yale entrance to the uni­versity.

He asked for the car's registra­tion and an explanation of the out-of-state plates; both the reg­istration and explanation were in order. Then without giving any reason for his request, he asked for identification from the seven occupants.

One of the people in the car was 1 '7; he was asked if he was running away from home. (Im­pressed by the policeman's con­cern we all turned to our friend and heartily urged him to remain in the car, to continue to Santa Fe, and to abandon any foolish thoughts about running away that might have been placed in his in­nocent head.)

Another person said she was 25, she was told she didn't "look it." Happily she beamed at him and murmured girlishly, "Thank yew," graciously ignoring any insinua­tion of her having lied about her age.

Noticing our impatience, (in­deed we had by this time asked the policeman for his reason in pulling us out of a heavy stream of traffic for such intensive inter­rogation), the Officer of the Law assured us that the procedure was one designed to protect us from ourselves, as it were.

He explained that many times young run-aways can be persuad­ed to return horne by their friend­ly neighborhood policeman who happens to discover them in the act; we repeated that none of us, not even the 1'7-year-old, planned to run away that day.

He explained that often sketchy reports were radioed to patrol cars, reports of thefts or mur­ders or oi.'!1er crimes committed by "hippie-types" and a general

search would begin on the basis of the information no matter how sketchy.

For example, the harrassrnent here of men and women with long hair several weeks ago was "justi­fied" by a radio call for a Cali­fornia murderer with long hair and an earring in his ear-all men with long hair in the vicinity of the Dairy Queen were natural­ly suspect.

We replied that since we felt at one with the hippies of the area, we would write them all an open letter; "Attention Hippies: There is a California murderer among you," and that method we empha­sized, was as likely to uncover the murderer as was the police department's.

Finally he reported that cars with out-of-state license plates were more likely to be stopped, and at that moment--as if by the will of the Great Pumpkin-a big, shiny Chevy rolled by with Ar­izona plates.

"Hark," we cried, "Arizona plates, and the driver •.. why he looks like a pusher to us!" "After him!" we cried, "and check the hubcaps." But the policeman re­mained by our side and calmed us with the words that some peo­ple looked more suspicious than others.

You know the rest, I'm sure­he threatened us with traffic tick­ets which legaily he could not give. He urged us to cooperate in the future, to understand the work of the police and to assist them.

Finally we were free to go. We laughed, we yelled, "We love you. But listen, Albuquerque Police, you make it reaily hard to even like you. It's nothing personal. No more personal than was the policeman's decision to choose us as the audience for his demonstra­tion of the civil offense system de­signed to humiliate and harrass any young person, anywhere and at any time.

Mary Dorothy Neary

AUTONOMY To The Editor:

I have read with great interest your editorials about the need for university autonomy. As a professor (English), a lawyer, and an administrator, this subject rightfully demands much of my interest. I am in complete agree­ment with your position, and I believe that in championing the integrity of the university you have placed your paper in the best tradition of student journalism.

Fred B. Warner, Jr. Assistant Dean, College of Arts and Sciences

~~~----- ~~----~-----

'.i'uesday, October 29, 1968

Tho New Mexico Lobo is published daily every regular week of the Univer­sity year by the Board of Student Pub­lications of the Associated Students of the University of New Mexico, and is not financially associated with UNM. Printed by the UNM Printing Plant with second class postage paid at Albuquerque, New Mexico, 87106. Subscription rate is $5 for the academic year.

The opinions expressed on the editorial pages of The Lobo are those of. the author solely. Unsigned opinion is that of the editorial board of The Loba. Nothing necessarily represents the views of the Associated Students or of tho Uni­versity of New Mexico.

Letters arc welcome, and should be no longer than 260 words type­written. double spaceda Name, tele-. phone number and address must be included, although name will be withheld upon request.

ROTC RELAYS To The Editor:

We ran up-and-down the fields, played chase, and cheered ROTC calisthenics. The administration and the police felt they had to "protect" two groups from each other-in reality there was little personal hostility. I want to thank my friends in ROTC for their good humor and publically apo­logize for any insults they may have received. In fact, some of the drillers jokingly invited us to run relays with them. They are all my classmates whom I respect as individuals.

I oppose the military on cam­pus.

Manuel Savage

REASONABLE ALTERNATIVES

To The Editor: I believe that the letter by

James R. Piatt in The Lobo of Oct. 28 deserves reply since it reflects the muddled thinking of many who support the war. As one who has seen and supported several "reasonable alternatives that won't lead us to anarchy," I consider myself a proper self-ap­pointed spokesman.

First I belive that those Ameri­cans who have spilled their blood in Viet Nam have done so in vain. Even Curtis LeMay would probably agree with me on that point.

Mr. Piatt's argument that the anti-war protesters are respon­sible for the deaths of American servicemen reminds me of the Mobius strip. No matter where one begins one is led along an essentially one-dimensional path to the same spot.

As far as I can determine any­how, it was Johnson, Rusk, and a few generals who sent the bulk of the forces "over there" while most of the anti-war types pre­ferred that the soldiers stay home as civilians. Mr. Piatt might more appropriately mourn the loss of blood of those Vietnamese who neither volunteeered nor allowed themselves to be drafted hut hap­pened to live where the United States Government chose to im­pose its ethnocentric style on the natives:

My advice (free, of course) to Mr. Piatt is that if he is as op­posed to the war as he claims he is, he should urge his draft-liable friends to use whatever legitimate means necessary to stay out of milital'y service.

Ray Crain

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T\lesday, October 29, 1968

Engineering and Science at IBM

"You're treated like a professional right from the start~'

"The attitude here is, if you're good enough to be hired, you're good enough to be turned loose on a project," says Don Feistamel.

Don earned a B.S.E.E. in 1965. Today, he's an Associate Engineer in systems design and evalua­tion at IBM. Most of his work consists of determin­ing modifications needed to make complex data processing systems fit the specialized requirements of IBM customers.

Depending on the size of the project, Don works individually or in a small team. He's now working with three other engineers on part of an air traffic control system that will process radar information by computer. Says Don: "There are only general guide­lines. The assignment is simply to come up with the optimum system."

Set your own pace Recently he wrote a simulation program that enables an IBM computer to predict the per­formance of a data processing system that will track satellites. He handled that project him­self. "Nobody stands over my shoulder," Don says. "I pretty much set my own pace."

Dan's informal working environment is typi­cal of Engineering and Science at IBM. No matter how large the project, we break it down into units small enough to be handled by one person or a few people.

Don sees a lot of possibilities for the future. He says, "My job requires that I keep up to date with all the latest IBM equipment and systems programs. With that broad an outlook, I can move into almost any technical area at IBM-development, manufacturing, product test, space and defense projects, programming or marketing." Visit your placement office Sign up at your place- ,--------. ment office for an inter- ON view with IBM. Or send CAMPUS a letter or resume to HarleyThronson,IBM, NOV. Dept. C, 3424 Wilshire 21 Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90005.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 3

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The Concentus Musicus of Vi· enna will play in the ""Fine Arts Recital Hall Monday, Nov. 4. They will play Austrian Baroque on the original instruments, and follow the performing customs of the period.

Concentus Musicus

Columbian Educators Aided by U NM Group

A group of UNM advisors is helping educators in Columbia in the first phase of a program which will modernize the second­ary education system there.

The first phase of the project consists of technical advice to the Colombian Ministry of Education by the specialists sent by UNM to South America, and training of Colombian educators on the Albu­querque campus.

Additional educators will be sent to the UNM college of edu­cation for training. During the past. academic year 15 Colombian school administrators were here training as high school principals, and another nine were trained as guidance counselors.

_..- At the same time, UNM has submitted project proposals for the second phase of the project. The entire project possibly may take 15 to 20 years to complete.

"I feel pretty certain that some aspect of the second phase pro­gram will be contracted with UNM," Dr. Frank Angel, the project director at UNM, says.

Colombian secondary schools have generally followed European patterns, with separate institu­tions for commercial, academic, technical and vocational, or agri­cultural students. Other high

Society's Flaws Topic of Films

schools train students as elemen­tary teachers. When the long­range project is completed, the school system will be closer to the U.S. pattern, with diverse educa­tional programs under one roof and administration.

UNM's immediate role is that of assisting in the planning and construction of 20 comprehensive­type high schools, helping in the development and revision of a curriculum f o r comprehensive high schools, training high school principals and other administrn­tors, and working in colleges and universities helping reorganize the programs for preparing sec­ondary school personnel.

legal Students Supply Speakers

A Speaker's Group, sponsored by the UNM School of Law and composed of advanced law stu­dents, is willing to :furnish speak­ers for clubs, colleges, public schools, and other groups who will speak on a variety of topics.

Among the topics which are available are "The Legal Profes­sion," "Bill o:f Rights," and "Se­lective Service Laws."

Anyone interested in this serv­ice should question Raymond SawYer, Institute of Public Law and Services at 277-3120.

I" .• • •a.•

The :faults of contemporary so­ciety will be the subject of a 90-minute p r o g r am of "under- ' ground" films titled ~<protest and i Politics" to be shown Oct. 31 at

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T h e program includes the works of several experimental filmmakers such as Tom Palazzol­la, Jeff Dell, and Robert Feldman.

''Hey Stop That," by Robert Feldman is a satire on bomb shelters, the police, and the arm-ed forces. ·

"Not As Yet Decided,u uses two small children to make a com­mertt on race hatted. It was pro• duced by Jeff Dell.

Tom Palazzolla's 1' America ln , :.,.)leal Trouble," shows a parade to ' ' make Jt. comment on "the regimen·

tation and the of war.''

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NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday, October 29, 1968

'LBJ Doing All He Can'

War Policy Gains Backing PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-The

percentage of Americans who be­lieve Pl·esident Johnson is doing everything he can to end the Viet N am war has risen in the past six weeks although more people now disagree with the U.S. conditions for a bombing halt, a nationwide survey indicated Monday.

The :findings were reported bY the Sindlinger survey following a telephone poll of 1,197 adults con­ducted I as t Wednesday and Thursday. Sindlinger, a market analysis firm in suburban Nor­wood, taok a similar poll Sept. 9 through 11.

Sindlinger also reported that · despite the climb in approval for Johnson's efforts on Viet Nam, the percentage of persons believ­ing he was doing an "overall good job" as president dropped.

Asked whether they agreed or disagl"eed "PresideJJ.t J ohnl!on is doing all he can to settle the war in VietNam," the replies by per­centage in the two samplings were:

Oct. 24 Sept. 11 Agree {9.6 ~7.1 Disagree 32.1 39.1 Conditional 9.3 5.6 No Opinion 9.0 8.2 This left a balance of 21.7 per

cent currently approving of John­son's efforts, compared to 7.9 per cent last month.

Asked, however, whether they agreed or disagreed with the U.S. position "that we would halt all bombing in North VietNam only when there is a compensating and similar reduction of military ac~ tion by North Viet Nam," the re­sults of the two polls were:

Oct. 24 SePt. 11 Agree Gl.G G3.2 Disrurree 18.6 22.4 No Ootnton 19.9 14.4 Sindlinger said 77.5 o:f those

questioned said they had been fol-

lowing the Paris peace talks on Viet Nam, compared to 75.9 per cent in the earlier sampling.

The percentage of those who said the progress of the peace talks in VietNam was going as well or better than expected rose while the percentage finding the progress "not as good as expec­ted" dropped sharply. The per­centages were:

Oct. M SePt. 11 Same 49.9 44.~ Better 6.(1 1.~ Not As Goo4 38.7 47,0 No Opinion 6.4 7.o When asked to rate Johnson's

overall performance of his job as president, the replies by percent-age were:

Oct. 24 Sept. 11 Good 44.0 46.7 B~d 22.2 20.9 C<>nditional 23.7 24.0 No Oomion 10.1 8.4 This left a balance of 21.7 per

cent currently finding Johnson was doing a "good job," compared to 25.8 per cent last month.

As for Johnson's future private life, he will teach a series of sem­inars at Rice University next spring on topics to be announced later, Dr. Joseph Cooper, chair­man of the university's political science department, said Monday.

· Cooper said Johnson, in accept-ing the invitation, said, ''At this time it is difficult to arrange a schedule and to decide on the for­mat of my visits with you. Rest assured, however, that I gladly accept your invitation."

Johnson has indicated he will return to the teaching career he pursued before he entered politics after he leaves office next year,

He taught in Houston :for two years, in 1930-31, at Sam Houston High School. He left teaching to become secretary to Texas Con­gressman Richard M. Kleberg, beginning his political career.

and The Cultural Program Committee

EXPERIMENTAL FILM SERIES

PROGRAM I

CHAFED ELBOWS -7:30 P.M.

PROTEST & PoLITics- 8:45 P.M.

WARHOL SAMPLER-10:15 P.M.

Thursday Evening- October 31

Adm. Adults 1.50, Fac.JStaff 1.25 Students - 1.00

Tel.- 277-3121

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Tuesday, October 29,1968 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 5

Students Storm Embassy

Czech's Hold Anti-Soviet Demonstrations PRAGUE (UPI) - Thousands

of rebellious students Monday stormed the Soviet Embassy howl­ling "Russians go Home," parad­ed through the streets under "David and Goliath" banners and mobbed Alexander Dubcek with 11ffection in the wildest anti-Soviet demonstration since the early days of the resistance.

Prague rang with shouts o:f "Occupation army get off our backs-Long live freedom!"

Late 11t night, the demonstra­tors melted away but left candles burning at the foot of King Wen­ceslas Monument to symbolize what their date in the streets meant. Three shivering youths held national flags at attention and pledged to stay there the whole night.

While an estimated 2,000 stu­dents jeered and cursed the So­viets outside their heavily guard­ed embassy, thousands more

Open Dorm. Bill Rejected By Willamette's Faculty

Other campuses besides UNM are having questions raised with regards to dormitory policies.

The Willamette University stu­dent newspaper, the Willamette. Collegian, reported this month that the student senate there had passed a proposal that would al­low open rooms in the campus dormitories, but the Faculty Com­mittee rejected it.

Dean Richard Yocum, said there were many reasons the committee rejected the planned open rooms. He cited the belief that open rooms would infringe on the rights of others, that other schools have tried the policy and found it unsatisfactory, and that such an attitude by the administration is equal to consenting to premartial sex.

Yocum quoted the April 2 issue o:f Time magazine to emphasize this last point: ''A Harvard pro­fessor expressed concern last week about another form of stu­dent behavior. Speaking to the Maternity Center Association in Manhattan, Dr. Graham B. Blaine Jr., said that illegitimate births in

Religious Center Asks Donations To Aid Children

The Canterbury Episcopal Cen­ter is sponsoring a drive to get toys, books, educational materials, and clothes :for a South Vietnam· esc school for deaf children.

The Lai Thien Deaf School is in Phu Loc, north of Saigon. The children in the school range from 6 to 17 years old.

Two army aviation companies in the area, the 74th Rccon. Air­plane Company and the 11th Com­bat Aviation Company, have been giving support to the school. A letter from Lt. John Olson, re­questing aid, generated the en­thusiasm for the drive.

All donations are needed by Nov. 2, so they can be mailed in time for Christmas. For more in­formation call Mrs. Kathryn Ol­son at 268-3280, or Marilyn Mul­doon at 243-6011.

1 ? •

the U.S. have tripled in the past 25 years.

He placed part of the blame on college officials who, by allowing men and women to visit each other in dorms, have encouraged intimacy both on and off campus and "are actually giving tacit con­sent to premarital se:x." "This puts an unhealthy degree of pressure on those who wish to curb their natural impulses," he said.

A member of the Student Af­fairs Committee at Willamette, Dr. Frances Chapple, supported the open room proposal. She cited the opportunity :for an academic "get-together" and for small group inter-relations.

A.S.W.U. President Terry Hall said the proposal will again be discussed in the Student Senate.

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Dr. Benjamin M. Spock, one of four men convicted this year of conspiring to counsel young men to avoid the draft, will speak Thursday, Oct. 31 in Johnson Gym at 8 p.m.

In January, Spock was indicted on a conspiracy charge. His con­vitcion in a Federal court trial is now being appealed.

Ife is currently speaking for ihe Civil Liberties Defense Fund, Inc., an organization which raises :funds :for the legal defense of draft resisters.

Spock received his B.A. from Yale, attended Yale Medical School, and then transfered to the College of Physicians ·and Sur­geons at Columbia University where he received his medical de­gree.

Tickets for the talk, one in a series sponsored by the Associated Students at the university, are being sold at the Popejoy Hall box office. They will also be sold at Johnson Gym the night of his appearance.

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marched to Hradcany castle, the seat of the government, under fluttering national flags.

They hooted the :few visible Soviet troops off the streets and burned "friendship" literature the Soviets offered.

No arrests or injuries were re­ported.

Inside Hradcany, Soviet and Czechoslovak leaders spoke of co­operation and "normalization" at ceremonies marking the 50th an­niversary of Czechoslovak inde­pendence. Outside, the youngsters clamored for their leaders.

The young people of PragUe took matters into their own hands in total defiance of a ban against anti-Soviet demonstrations im­posed by their elder government leaders.

They filled the cobbled streets of this old city with sights and sounds since the days immediately following the Aug. 20-21 invasion of Czechoslovakia by Soviet and other Warsaw Pact troops.

"Go Home" Russians Outside the Soviet embassy, an

estimated 2,000 of them yelled their "Go home" message above the heads of 500 Prague police.

Police restrained the cursing, jeering mob firmly and without using billy clubs. A fire truck was called in to nudge them gently down the street.

Authorities pleaded for "norm­alization" through loudspeakers:

"Please, we beg of you, go back to your homes. Otherwise we will be forced to act accordingly to the laws o:f the land,"

"That's trash, that's trash!" the students chanted back.

They retreated from the em­bassy only to mass outside the Prague national theater and to cheer national leaders. arriving for an opera.

Student Cheer Dubcek Dubcek, the Communist party

chief who engineered the reform movement curtailed by the So­viets, had to stop his car 100 yards from the theater and strug­gle through the throng on foot. The students roared their admira­tion for him.

While the embassy df'"lonstra­tion was in progress, oth ... z young people massed in old town square.

They foiled the only attempt the .Soviets made all day to meet the demonstrators, hooting and whistling at soldiers who tried to pass out literature and burn­ing the offered papers.

Soviet occupation patrols kept well to the side streets and made no move to launch the "retalia .. tion" predicted by government leaders. Prague police protected the embassy but did not other-

wise interfere with passing throngs.

From Old Town Square, the students marched miles across Prague to Hradcany - here and there picking up adult support until their ranks were 4,000 strong under red-white-and-blue national flags.

1\fini-skirtea girls, curly haired youths sporting Mao Tse-Tung buttons, students in bulky sweat­ers, women pushing baby car­riages, all joined the parade,

Their vanguard banner read "When a giant spits in your eye . . . " and pictured the slingshot of Biblical David.

They chanted "occupation army get off our backs" and "long live freedom."

NSA & Student Gov't. have available THEATRE DIS­COUNT CARDS good at Hi­land, Cinema East, Kimo, State, Sunshine & lobo. Cards entitle holder to 25¢ - 50¢ discount when pre­sented at the(ltre. Cards can be found at NSA office or ticket booth in SUB through

Wed. Oct. 30

And you had better believe it. Because throughout your collega career, you'll spend over 5,000 hours with your nose in a book doing just your required reading. That's if you are a "normal" student with a reading rate of 250 to 400 words per minute. And you know, that's a shame, because if you had enrolled in the revolutionary Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course you could save at least 3,700 of those hours.

tail perfectly with all scholastic classes. And you will find that the time you put into Reading Dynamics comes back many-fold before the basic course is finished.

For ten years now Reading Dynamics has guaranteed to at least triple your reading speed or refund your entire tuition. Over 400,000 students have taken up our offer and are now reading 3 to 10 times faster. Results? ·Hundreds, even thousands, of hours of irreplaceable free time for you to invest as you choose: campus social activities, "want to" courses, making love not war, raising your grade point average, or a part-time job. Just think, if you could cut 3,700 hours off your required reading time and invested only 2,500 of those hours in a job that paid $1.75 an hour, you could earn $4,375.

So wise up. Put the remarkable Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course at the top of your schedule for the new tenn. The course takes just a few weeks and is designed to dove-

Reading Dynamics is an incredible edu­cational breakthrough. It's the definitive rapid reading method in the world today. Our grad· uates consistently surpass the 450 to 600 word per minute rates aspired to by conventional reading courses. Most Reading Dynamics grad­uates read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute. Many go higher, and all under· stand and appreciate what they read at these staggering speeds.

Free Reading Dynamics Mini-Lesson How does Reading Dynamics do what we

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Page 5: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968 · C.o RDI\l.ADo 37'6. 7'iS? Vn3QW v. N E V\1 7:2~·3.( ~~~ . IVIEXICO Vol. 72 Tuesday, October 29, 1968 No. 31 _mergency 0 Faculty

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NEW MEXICO LOBO Tuesday, October 29, 1968

Sigma Chi, Law School Forge Unbeaten Into Playoff Game

By JOHN MOSER Sports Writer

Sigma Chi and the Law school emerge as the teams to beat as Intramural football playoffs be­gin this week.

The Sigs finished their regular season with a perfect 11-0 record capped by a 35-0 thrashing of Lambda Chi Alpha last Tuesday. The Pikes finished a strong second at 10-1 and will meet Sigma Chi this Wednesday at 4:00 P.M. for the league championship. ·

Law School sailed through its Independent League I schedule without a defeat to a 6-0 record, which included a neat 7-0 win over second place Mother Carey's Chickens. The barristers and Chicks will represent their league in the playoffs.

In Dorm League I, Mossman emerged on top by winning a three way playoff with Mendoza and Pueblo, which were tied at 6-1 after the regular season. Men-· doza claimed second spot and will accompany Mossman to the Championships.

Yaqui captured the title in Dorm League II, with Mescalero claiming second. Both had 5-l season records.

The situation in Independent League II is still up in the air as three teams - Columbus AC,

Fourth Street Winos, and Pharm­acy al'e tied with 5-1 season rec­ords. A coin toss was held late Monday night to determine the two teams that will meet first in the league semifinal. The squad that draws the bye will meet the winner of the semifinal to determ­ine the league champ.

Here are the final regular sea­son standings:

FRATERNITY LEAGUE Sigma Chi 11-0 Pi Kappa Alpha 10-1 Phi Delta Theta 9-2 Alpha Tau Omega 8-3 Lambda Chi Alpha 6-5 Kappa Alpha 6-5 Phi Gamma Delta 6-5 Sigma Phi Epsilon 3-8 Alpha Kappa Lambda 2-9 Alpha Epsilon Pi 0-10 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 0-10

INDEPENDENT LEAGUE I Law School 6-0 Mother Carey's Chicks 5-1 NESEP 4-2 NROTC 3-3 Alpha Phi Omega 2-4 Baptist Students 0-6 Bailers 0-6

INDEPENDENT LEAGUE TI Columbus AC 5-1 4th Street Winos 5-1 Pharmacy 5-1 Students for Democratic

Football 3-3

Engineers 0-6 SDS Institute 0-6 Woodchucks 0-6

DORMITORY LEAGUE I Mossman 6-1 Mendoza 6-1 Pueblo 6-1 Comanchero 4-3 Toltec 3-4 Kearney 2-5 Kiowa 1-6 1\ztec 0-7

DORMITORY LEAGUE II Yaqui 5-1 Mescalero 5-1 Escalante 4-2 Tewa 4-2 Navajo 1-5 Chimayo 0-6

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Lobo Lovely Sun Devils Recuperating After Loss to Beavers

COAT and TROUSERS $6.50

By MIKE PERRY Sports Editor

The Lobo sports staff wants people to know it has other inter­ests in life besides sports. And to show readers what we mean, the staff has inaugurated a feature entitled Lobo Lovely.

This will be a weekly feature­running every Tuesday-and will feature a campus co-ed, who we feel typifies the ideal university co-ed.

This week's Lobo Lovely is blonde Lorelei Crompton, a junior English major from Chicago, TIL

Lorelei moved to Albuquerque ftom Chicago when she was four. She attended Albuquerque schools

and is currently enrolled in the Honors Program. She's also work­ing on a minor in psychology.

Her eventual goal is to be a counselor in the public schools' system.

Her activities include - presi­dent of the UNM · international Folk Dancers, and participating in the Dcseret Club and LDS In­stitute.

In her spare time she continues her studies on the piano and is also organist for her church.

Her summer was exciting also. She spent it touring South Ameri­ca. We think Lorelei is pretty excit­ing too.

ASU Sports Information - A week off provides Arizona State University with a chance to dry out after an unsuccessful road swing into Oregon and time to ponder the remainder of the 1968 football schedule.

The Sun Devils saw little sun on game day and fell to Oregon State, 28-9, in the Portland Rain and Mud Bath to the bigger and stronger Beavers who worked out in the inclement weather all week.

There is no varsity action until Nov. 2 when 1\SU entertains New Mexico at Sun Devil Stadium.

Date Set For Gridiron Dinner

About the only sunshine cast on the field Saturday was by full­back Art Malone who out-gained Oregon State's Bill "Earthquake" Enyart, a 1967 second team All­America and the nation's fifth The Albuquerque Press Club re­

cently announced it is making 100 tickets to its Gridiron Show available to the general public.

The :~how, which traditionally draws the top figures in New Mexico public affairs, consists of a steak dinner and a two hour program of musical skits, satire, and film clips lampooning both the political fraternity _and the news media.

"We limited ticket sales this year because we oversold the past two years.

"The Board of Directors felt we should make some seats available to persons deeply interested in public affairs who aren't on our list of regUlar clients," said Tony Hillerman, club president.

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The show will be held at the UNM Union Ballroom at 7:30p.m. November 2. Tickets are $10 with profits going to the club's journal­ism :;cholarship program.

The 100 tickets are available at Riedling Music Co., 610 Central SW; and American Savings, ac­ross from the Coronado Center on Louisiana, NE.

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best rusher going into the ASU game.

Malone, at 5-11 and 19'7, oozed his way through the mud 27 times for 101 yards against the

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Tuesday, October 29, 1968 NEW MEXICO LOBO Page 7

U NM Girl's Volleyball Squad Defends Title By SUSAN CJlAIG

Staff Writer "Height and experience should

help the Women's Volleyball team defend their state and regional in­termountain championship title,'' said Jan ice Olson, coach of the womens' team.

Last year with a relatively short team the women remained unde­feated through both the state and regional Intermountain tourna­ments held at UNM. Five of the eight first team starters are re­turning this year, ·

More height for the team should come from two Samlia g·raduate, Kathi Raver (5'10") and Carol Kress (5'7") ," said Miss Olson.

"If these two girls work o•1t and make the first team, we should be in good shape," she said. Miss Olson explained the empha-

X-Country Team Takes Triangular

Chuck Schuch, Web Loudat, and Adrian De Windt finished 1-2-3 ns the UNM cross country team swept a triangular meet from Adams State and Northern Ariz­ona Saturday at Roosevelt Park.

Schuch finished the three mile course in a time of 15 :35.4-al­most a full 12 seconds ahead of teammate Web Loudat. Loudat's time was 15:47.

UNM's Adrian DeWindt was third in 15 :52.

Other Lobo finishers were Tom Toft, seventh; Ray Jordan, eighth; and Bill Utrup, ninth.

Sun Devils Heal After Big loss

(Continued from page 6) huge Beaver defensive line for his fourth 100-yard-plus perform­ance this season. He had runs of 18, 13, 12 and 10 yards.

Enyart managed 69 yards in 23 carries with his long run of the night being an eight yarder.

Malone, a junior, bas a shot at his predecessor's Western Athlet­ic Conference rushing record. Last season Max Anderson, now with Buffalo, set a league mark of 1,188 which was third nationally.

If Art can keep at his current pace of 121 yards per game he'll finish with over 1,200 yards in his first year ever at fullback.

Lake Blue After Fish Eradication

GRANTS - The waters of Bluewater Lake are blue again.

For several years pl'ior to the treatment of the lake with roten­one by New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, the water had been a murky tan in color. Now, weeks after the eradication of all fish life, the lake is crystal clear and its waters have returned to the blue color from which the name was derived.

This would seem to prove that the large number of suckers, ap­proximately 85 per cent of the fish population, was stirring up the silt on the bottom of the lake and causing the murky water.

It appears that the Depart­ment's eradication program was 100 per cent effective as Game and Fish personnel have been un­able to find a single fish of any species by electro-fishing m1d gill netting.

The lake will be restocked with rainbow trout in late October or early November.

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sis on height. The concern for height comes

from the need for more spiking and blocking power for the team. All the players are required to be in command of both spiking and setting skills, but the taller play­er has a natural height advantage. She can spike harder in a more line-drive fashion and can block better by stopping the ball as it crosses the net.

After the first week of practice Miss Olson said the players show­ed a great deal of potential. Play­ers expressed their satisfaction with the skills they displayed so early in the season.

"The girls are learning to move much more and think faster," Miss ·Olson said.

In the first few practices Miss

Olson said she was very impressed with the playing of Sandy Deuell, a senior, and Linda McDowell, a junior, both from last year's squad.

"Sandy's serves were great and she has always been our best player at the net," she said, and Linda has also been playing tl1e nets well.''

On another outstanding player she added, "For teamwork I think Diana Elmore is our outstanding setter and play maker."

The women's volleyball teams have won several titles in the past.

During the 1965-66 season a somewhat taller team finished the year undefeated. This team, perhaps the strongest of the UNM teams, has never lost a match and

during its entire season, lost only one game.

The 1966-67 team seemed to lose momentum, spending most of the season alternating between good playing and costly mistakes.

In the year 1967-68 the team lost a lot of its height but regain­ed some of its titles. It was unde­feated at state and intermoun­tain regionals, but was shut-out of the Arizona Invitational at Flags­staff.

For the coming season Miss Olson sees several rival schools that could give the UNM team lots of trouble.

She named New Mexico State and Western New :Mexico State as the best competition in the state.

"Because they have tall, strong

teams and are highly competitive, the Arizona State and Northern Arizona Universities are always a threat in the :regionals," she said.

Other inteJ:mountain schools that can mean trouble are Colo­rado State University, Southern Colorado State College, and Brig­ham Young University.

The upcoming toul·naments the team plans to attend are the Ar­izona Invitational at the Univer­sity of Arizona in NoYember; an invitational at Northern Arizo­na in December; and the Inter­mountain tournament at Colorado State University, where some twenty schools are expected to compete later this year.

The date of the state tourna­ment has 110t been announced.

,

• •

If you want a career with all the growing room in the world, we have a suggestion.

Start with Humble and you start with the company that supplies more petroleum energy than any other U.S. oil company. We're literally No. l-America's Leading Energy Company.

Start with Humble and you start with the principal U.S. affiliate of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey) with its 300 worldwide affiliates. So your advancement can be intercompany o:s well as intra­company, worldwide as well as domestic!

Look into Humble's wide-scope careers in exploration, production, transportation, manufacturing, marketing and research- and the management of all these. We have immediate openings for people in practically all disciplines and at all degree levels.

We'll stretch your capabilities. Put you on your own a little too soon. Get the best you can give. But you'll always be glad you didn't settle for anything less than No. 1. See us on campus soon.

Bumble on & Refining Company America's Leading Energy Company A Plans for Progress Company and an Equal Opportunity Employer

Page 6: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 072, No 31, 10/29/1968 · C.o RDI\l.ADo 37'6. 7'iS? Vn3QW v. N E V\1 7:2~·3.( ~~~ . IVIEXICO Vol. 72 Tuesday, October 29, 1968 No. 31 _mergency 0 Faculty