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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1954 e Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 2-5-1954 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1954 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1954 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 056, No 45, 2/5/1954." 56, 45 (1954). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1954/7

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1954 The Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960

2-5-1954

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1954

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1954 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954." 56, 45 (1954). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1954/7

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

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Reel' Reviews ,

by Dav.s Sanchez The latest shootem-up is now at

the State and it's another "searing, violent saga of the West," starring John Wayne as the "fearless, em­bittered man who fought .and loved as violently as the country he. lived in." This Violently violent bit of cinema fare is titled "Eondo" and introduces Geraldine Page as the . "wal'in, outSlloken creature who could tame this half-wolf, half-In­dian creature whose violence made his .name feared in the unsettled West." Co-stat'red is a rather dirty looking mongrel named Sam, whose bid for the Academy Award con­sists of cm;Jing his Ullper lill and frightening little boys with gut­teral noises.

Mter the movie I managed to sneak backstage and overheard the following' comments' from the staJ;s concerning this epic: .

Hondo-"When I was livin' with the Mescaleros, I lurned one thing • -with Westinghouse you can be sure."

Vittorio, the Apache Chieftain­"Allache braves add new touch on war paint, add 3D goggles and scare-um buckskin unmentionables off settlers."

Sam, the dog-"I'm sick, sick, sick and tired of eating these mus­cular, indigestive jackrabbits!! Two lumps and no lemon in my Gaines, Jeffrey." .

In case you're interested, it's all at the State, and though it smacks of "Shane," as far as 3cD Westerns go it's the best out of HollyWood so far.

"Sins of J ezebel." "The Robe" has nothing to fear

from this one, and the only decent actor in the whole movie is the narrator. As far as the Kimo is concerned, it was a sin to put this trashily interpreted 'bit of Biblical lore on the screen.

But if you have sixty cents you can't even give away, and you're sadly in need of sleep durin~ the finals melee (though laughing gas would be more satisfying), run downtown and see this one. The short feature is about German canal barges, and most educational.

K Sigs Name Officers Bill Coates is the newly elected

president 6f Kappa Sigma. Other officers elected at Monday night's

'meeting are: Carter Mathies, vice president; Pat Heard, master of ceremonies; Hank Kerr, pledge master; Jim Weber, scribe; Manny Sousa, treasurer; guards, Bob Aber, Tip Pinkerton and Bob Bogen.

NOW THRU MONDAY

FEATURE ... 12-2 i 6-8--10

CARTOON - NEWS

---- - I (11-

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS.

ONe COI"i IN LI"II~~)'

PITHECt\NTHKOPL!$CiV/LIZATIOtJ by MER.'fHIO~AT~ E. CI:,A~If5

(2084 PMI1S) ~OT£: TIS~TS IAJILL

t:.O~t-/Z. UAPIN6 "'1>~16">1f" r~ fiU>M T~I~ 6000:.

,

, ' 1

Bibleu

. ,

"I don't see how any of you can expect good marks in this course-the very fact you enrolled for .it shows you don't have a very high 'IQ'."

meets U.J:IKIL1..1Jll'l,C

scene from Warner Bros,' "HONOO," filmed in WarncrColor.

NOW THRU MONDAY

FEATURE 12:20-2:16-4:12-6:08-8:0i-10:00

.... •.• They called him

"IIondO' SILENT AS GUNSMOKE

and as Savage as the Surly Dog at His Side!

wllh GERAlDINE PAGE

WARIIERColOR

IN3 DIMENSION CARTOON -NEWS

NOW THRU THURSDAY

FEATURE 12 :10-3 :18-6 :26-9 :3'4 ,

3 YEARS IN THE MAKING! LIFE .nd LOOK MAGAZINES d.,ulh II ... "The most (olossol mavle ever model"

~IS TECHl\TICOLOR

,Ia;"iitg

Robert TAYLOR

CARTOON - NEWS

"

LOBO ARTS THEATRE NOW SHOWING THRU JAN. 21st THE STORY'S ABOUT A PLUMBER THEY THOUGHT WAS A SPY. T~EY PAID FOR HIS BRAINS BUT HIS DREAMS 'WERE OF HIS SUPER DUPER ~ATHROOM FLUSH UNIT ••. DON'T MISS IT.

MR •. POTTS -1 'GOES} TO MOSCOW

CHARLES GOLDNER • ELEANOR SUMMERFIELD • FREDERlCI( VAI.K THE STOn o~. WATCH FOR THE THE DIPLD... (

"TITFIELD THE 'LU •• E _. j THUNDERBOLT" 'EA~~~F1~E."' ,(~~

NOW THRU SAT.

Feature -1 :27 - 3 :33 - 5 :39 - 7 :45 - 9 :51

------- Coming Sunday ~--------

COLOR CARTOON

BACK TO GOD'S COUNTRY

Color by Technicolor Rock Hudson'

Marcia Henderson

NOVELTY NEWS

____________________ .... ______________ .... _ .... __ .......... _-·-... _-_· .. " ...... · .. _-·_ ..... 'T .. ··· .. ·'~ .... · ........ -w .. · ............ "_ ... _ ............. "''' ........................... ~ .......... ~.~.---,--~,------

'I' ",'."" ••. "

EW ~'The V.oice of a Great Southwestern Uniyersity"

Vol. LVI ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1954 No. 45

o . !

3900 xpect:e o (fro Normal Semester 2 I;)rop Se~n by Admissions Office

The normal second semester drop in enrc;lllments has been predicted by the office of admissiop.s and records as registration' gets under way today.

An expected 3900 students will be enrolled after late reg­istrations close in two weeks. This would be a drop of 163 from last semester's 4163 enrollment.

Today and Saturday 3500 sudents are expected to register; according to J. C. McGregor, director of admissions.

Lines close . today at 2 :30 p.m. Registration tomorrow will be from 8 :30 until 10 :30. Evening College students will register tomorrow afternoon in Mitchell hall from 2 until 5 :30.

Classes will begin Monday, Feb. 8. More FreshmEln have enrolled this

semester than for Semester II last year, McGregor said. Enrollments will increa~e slightly for the next few years, he predicts, to be swelled in the '60s by the. influx of World War II babies.

According to University Presi­dent Thomas Popejoy, UNM is pre­pared for an increased e,nrollment. • Within the last 10 years the Uni­

versity has acquired a faculty which he rates as highly competent. Pope­joy attributes this to high salaries paid by UNM and to the intellectual climate of freedom encouraged 'by the University. •

20 U Students Commissioned InAF, Navy

Twenty University students reo ceived commissions in the Air Force, Navy and Marines in cere-monies between semesters.

Col. Henry Hamby Jr., Kirtland AFB . commanding officer, spoke to the 16 graduates who receivedre­serve commissions 'as second lieu. tenants in the Air Force. Approxi­mately 100 people attended the ceremony in the ROTC building on

An extensive building program begun in 1948 is another evidence campus.

CLASS CARD, Class card, Who's got my census card? This picture was taken last year during fall regis­tration, but except for different faces, the scene will be repeated with all of its frustration for years yet to come. Happy scribbling I .

of UNM's foresight. A total of $5,- Colonel Hamby warned his audi-950,000 has been spent on buildings ence against complacency that for physics, biology, 'chemistry, could cause the United States to go geology, pharmacy, journalism, and "the way of previous powers that

Members Sought For UNM Chorus

A membership drive is under way to increase the enrollment of the University chorus to 200. This would be an increase of 70 members over last semester.

Prof. Kurt Frederick, director, hopes this number will be attained so that he can carry out his plans for the chorus during semester II in "grand style."

Previous musical or vocal train­ing is. not necessary for member­ship in the University chorus, Frederick said. Many students en­joy their first musical experience with this organization. Rehearsals take place on Monday, Wednesday and Friday for the men, and on Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from four to five p,m. for the WQmen. One hour credit is given for the course. ROTC students get merits also for their attendance at chorus rehearsals.

Prof. Frederick said, "The Uni­Versity chorus stands in the unique position to offer the most immediate and accessible avenue of active par­ticipation in music to the entire student body. It is our hope that students in every department of the U'niversity will take advantage of this opportunity."

Prof. KUrt Frederick is recog­nized as the most outstanding mu­sician in the Soutllwest. He is a graduate with highest honors in conducting of the State Academy of Music. and the State College of Music in Vienna. He has been opera coach and conductor at the State Theater in Danzig. He Was first violinist of the New Friends of Music in New York City and a mem­ber of the Koliseh string Quartet. before coming to Albuquerque in 1942.

The major choral work to be pel'­formed during the next few months by the Univel'sit,Ychorus is the well-known ReqUiem by Johannes Brahms. In addition to this work, the chorus wlUpresent a number of concerts of short, lighter music. Plans are in procesS,for somo leind of concert toUi'.

The University chorus has an en­viable l.'ecord of performances of many great works of music. Be­

(Cont. on page 8)

UNM Grads Leave Campus For Australia .

A couple of University graduates are driving this weekend to Los An­geles where they will take a boat to Australia for the biggest adven­ture of their young lives.

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn L. Houston wiII sail from Los Angeles next Wednesday for Sidney, Australia, where Houston will spend a year on a Rotary International FelIowship at the University of Melbourne.

Houston is no\v in his senior year . in law at UNM and plans to study

jurisprudence, industrial relations, criminology, and international law while in Melbourne.

Mrs. Houston, who was graduated from the University in 1951, fin­ished Gallup high school as Rose­mary Jones in 1947 and has been teaching for the past two and a half years at the Zia elementary school in Albuquerque.

While her husband. is studying law in the "down under" country, Mrs. Houston plans to teach in the Melbourne schools.

The couple, married in 1952, is now taking a sort of belated honey­moon visiting the Grand Canyon, Boulder Dam and other scenic spots on the Way to the wast coast. Mrs. Houston's brothel' from Thoreau, William B. Jones, is dl'iving them to Los Angeles.

Next Wednesday they will board the M.S. Nan'andera, a Swedish freighter, which carries only eight passengers for an 1S·day crossing of the Pacific.

Houston was one of 96 winners of Rotary Fellowships last year including residents of the United States with grants to study in for_ eign . nations and foreign stUdents who will study in this country. The Fellowships are recognized in all countries where Rota.ry operates.

Houston was sponsored by the Hobbs Rotary Club and was elected finally by Rotary District 170, which takes in all New Mexico and part of WeatTex8S. There are 40 clubs within the distl;ct.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Houston made top records at the University. Hous­

Continued on Page 8

Cline Candidate For City Office

Miss Dorothy Cline, professor of government at the University, has announced her candidacy for one of the three vacancies on the Albu­querque City Commission to be filled at the April 6 election.

Miss Cline has been with the de­partment of government since 1946. She made a study of Albuquerque's city manager plan in 1948.

In declaring herself a candidate for the Commission,. Miss. Cline said: "We've had a do-little govern­ment While the city has been burst.. ing at the seams. A woman with courage and practical knowledge of city affairs can be effective in mod­ernizing city services. I am con­vinced I can be elected because we have enough voters in our city who want action instead of talk."

Miss Cline has been interested in Continued on Page 8

law. Mitchell hall, the civil engi- b . 1 d f 11 b f neering building Mesa Vista dor- ecame comp acent an e.. e ore mitoi'Y and the' golf course have ,> the onslaught of the barbarians." also been completed during this He said the U. S. could not hope peTri hod. xt' th b 'ldi to match manpower in any future.

ene proJecton e U1 ng t 1· 'thR ' dth t''w program is a new dormitory for s rugg e.wI ,usSla an. a. e women to be erected on the golf must w~n With. superIor bral,nB, course land north of Mesa Vista. leadership, p}an~,Ing and execution 'Popejoy also expressed the hope of 0UF plallmng. • that construction of a new gymna- Un~verslty presld~nt Tom L. sium will be possible in the near P,?pe,Joy. presented AI~ Force c~m­future. • miSSions to the followmg: Wychffe

With its bolstered faculty and its V. Butlerl Robert Vf· ,Elder. Thomas extensive building program, the L. Gambill Jr., Wilham J. Gentry. University is preparing itself for James M. Ortega, Charles E. Seth, an increased student body 91arke G. Stroud, Robert P. Wad-

• mgton, Robert Wooton. Oran D. r----.:;...-------~ Brown, Robert B. Czirr. Dan B.

Lobo Will

Staff Meet.

·An organization meeting of the Lobo staff will be held Tues­day at 4 p.m. in the Lobo offic.e. Night editors, reporters, and re­write men are needed on the stafi'. All those interesting in working for the neWspaper are invited to the meeting in the Journalism building on the cor­ner of Yale,and Central.

Kloss, Donald G. Papini, John H. Wood, Vernon E. Wolcott and Edsel E. Overall. ,

Col. Nelson K. Brown. NROTC commander, presided over the cere­monies for the four cadets commis­sioned into the Navy and Marine Corps.

AleX'ander Quartly and David Segal were given commissions as ensigns in the regular Navy and Naval reserve, respectively.

Clarence Dilworth and William Kaiser were commissioned second lieutenants in the Marine Corps and Marine Corps reserve, respec­tively.

Car Traffic on Yale May Be Prohibited

The block in front of the Univer­sity library may be closed to through traffic following a recent meeting of the University board of regents. The matter came undel' consideration following a survey of traffic along Yale Ave. The SUrvey was conducted by Prof. Marvin May !lnd his students in civil engineer­mg.

May reported to the regents that on a typical week day, his ~roup counted 3523 cars passing the hbrary I.between 7 a.m. and 6 p,m. Of this number, only 43' per cent were campus cars.

HU'RRY, HURRY, HURRY, Step right up. After registering for cIasses, you can sign up for all kinds of campus activities outside the gym. Almost every organization will be represented.

May stated that campus traffic may get so heavy on Yale that it may become dangerous to walk across the street between the library and Ylitolta hall. May said that pedestrian traffic is extremely heavy in that one bloekarea. He aMed t.hat the campus streets are UnIVerSIty owned.

(See Editorial on Page 2)

.11 ,I : '

Page 3: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

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UNM Professors Get $89CO Gra;nt

'l7W6l linmIlJf p':!c.~ ~ l!a­ee:r~ = $a;a; 11;?a:n:L:tfu= & Nz.. t"~ ~ F=.'!~~fi:tr~ l!~~e!l)~~

'Jf'aa; f'!i t'lie ~ ~ ;£~0S!!&d W Dr. li1'cl= Eege= =dl.1~ E.. Gmm;. ~ lt~~ $'~ :ft= ue ~....&l!i'c~ m :l!.Ga'1'..

:l.ib". ~. ebL~ at: 1E:e ~f;:.i';r><$~!l;. b; wOlf.&-...g;ui-j~ ~~",:!enOl'!ltPre ~~*l1IIl ~ =d!~:mrl'e ~

Dr. ~~ Ul. 2ltite-':"f:lji""'~ • t';o ~ W'Tef: tr:e idl:uetti",e d ~ c.:! .. :U..xyre ri'~ r:u:tel'.!\. W'frem !.'it%!1J-~ ~ ~~.e ~ll'$. r:

B'er;.f<m;i'n ~.i6l1 'irQ ~ c.Jl\ ~2tP,~~.. .-

~_.....:._ I

HOlme Made Clofhes Mcdeledby U. Coeds ~ a:nrl! ~ ~$ f:n iifre M;i]..

c:~, g <%1ll!lre ~ l!l:w til:e ~ ~ i!'e;;:auttimem-,. were ~ .:red k11!$ ~ ~ l!l. m;n....ee;er-e::d Ilfr,\r:e .");1' ru: ~llt.

'lree WOlt:l ~ wa:.!l ~ m ii'elrl!l. ~J& bir1! ~~ = =c­er:::tlIS c.:! ~ a;ml f'=':t;r 1:lEl!aCi'S. 1te!l. -

lI'L"w Jm~ llilfi=F. m­:>fu!1:i~~:sc;:~ ecufu!-~u 0;,[ ~ ~:n:;z& d p:cc:'e crc.~ &=U =d d..i'ter wi':n::ia ~

:Mi'.u ¥~ ~ ~ tEe ~~:fG?'b~ .. S'~..$ m:o :t:::x..M f~ g,ar-

".r1'i'=r4.s< W'~ i£:z$ K".2.sv E~~.e:rG C<=ll7m De S'~ Je=eu'"te V2S­I',.-=" Si:..-w W~art&. LEy Ik.~ .mn c...,.~ :a.~ .:l.Jice 03l:ic.=-. ~ W...:!e,. ~ :&=Ten,. 11~ G:Z'£7. p..nitz ~hnil;. :&t& Ber~ S"oe?r;F &1-=ge. Vugfr.::z ~. N2dyne Hand, NCileDe ~mi'e'. l!ttr.e! H:trcl: zoo. S=t Sp7AL

PASSEO BLOC. 71 GO AHEAD MEET NEINl LOST """~.J

I---'-:"~!r:r:-::rt SPACES L-t?:+t&~-J

GIRL 1---1 CAR05 GO START

6 OVER •. ~:!-....-:'~--r-~ ,.. .. .: .. :9 ~ ......... "

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..... :::. FORGOT TO • '. ~ FILLOfJT A

~~~~ CARD LOSE A TURN

IF YOU THlft'KI YOU'RE

FINISHED GO SACI(

'9 PACES

THE REGIST,RATION GAME jsn't new; but-it was diagrammed for the :first time last year. It's rather expensive, too, since it. cos~ eitheL".()neor two hundred dollars Just to start. 3900 arc expecwd to.play the game thIS spnng for a chance to win, place or show.

,

~F.~~~me~~ ______________ . ____________ , ____ ~--LE~~~ ~ ~ __ Nh>m;gi1):g §ror ~ 1tfiE\'e • ..,:7e>_ Bm~ Nf~g~ ~~ ~ad. Bt:I~ N~ K= It.iIr .... ll!. ~(il'Zl!1'11ati&n. ]i.&m!p:r

--

DAILY CRO'SSWORD :LAmTG?F's

:fv.lt: LVar.q

o€teet 9. RzHm?f lO.QT;£~ lZcare:r 13. Salt

(chem.) :14. Sash (jap.) 15.Atbome 16.TDtEd

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19.1!C!dd1e 21. Ifafian

pr:iDoe1y family

23.P.aman ~

24. City fnlaw&

25. Audimce 26. For ZT. FZ'OIlUe:ls­

man'sshoes 29. Having

implements 32.Fenclng

SWO'ld 33. Soundmade

bylliIk 34. ltrusic note 35. Frighten 37. Indefinite

article as. Shield .to. Public

notlcea 41.Ukely 42 •. Placeo!

worship 44.Soundo!

contempt 45. Concluded

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for cotree 41. Help 43, Fish '4. Exclama.­

tion

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DAILYCRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how W work it: AXYDLBAAXB

f:5.LONGFELLOW One letter slmply stands for another. In this IlXlUllple A Is used

fot' the three Ils,. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apOllo troph1es, the length and formation of Ute Wor!l3 are. all hints, Each day the code letters are dlfrerent.

A Cryptorram (laofaUO.D

JDTJ'BOQJEJDWHR EWl34JPL XI YP QJLAH WDT GQYDL Jl)HY W lWItRDH

HQRWOCR-OWQCVOR,

YesterdaY's Cryptoquote: DANTE. WHO LOVED WELL BE. CAUSE HE HATED. HATED WICKEDNESS 'l'HI.T HlNDtilRS LOVING-BROWNING. ~

lllaU1-=" *,,, XI::I, "talllN "dIYl.

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New Members Initiated Into ~iplogy Honorary

Phi Sigma, honorary biological research ~ociety".atU~M; initiated new members at a ceremony. preced •. ing tWe Phi Sigma banquet on Thursqay, F.eb. 4 •.

:New members, chosen for schoo lastic excellence and 'productive scholarship, are: Donald Anderson,

Swimming became a national . sport .in St;otland when toll bridges were erected. .

On Nov. 13, 1851, England anq France Were copnected by ate1e· graph line. - ..

Standard time went into effect in the U. S. on Nov. 18, 1-883.

Roger ·Boe, Edith Brattan, Ruth Cuthbel;tson, Ri!:hard Davidson, ARCH I E'.S· Josephine Ehret, Valerie Ernst, Frank Gruver, Winifred Matthews, Chester Richmond, William Seese, UNIVERSITY

William Howard Taft was porn Moha\ldas Gandhi, born Oct. 2, on Sept. :15, 1857. ). :1.869; 'Wal> kUled, in 1948.. .. .

.. Washington'liI farewell address; was d.elivered Qn Sept, 1~,.179V.

, . ' . . The u;st p.llblic demonstration of

ether tOOk place on Oct. 15, lBM;. . ""', ..-. ..

John Adams was bprn on Oct. 30,1735. "

'l'eddy Roosevelt WliII>: born on Oct. 27, 1858. . ,.

" "

. i

"

David Torgerson,. Do?r""ot;::e",;o:-,V~i~i~l.--;;--H"c-:=--=-=----~-- Alpha Nu, the UNM chapter of BOO'K STORE

Phi Sigma, was founded in 1935. . .

"

, i Ii

I , i ,

Dean'Edward F. Castetter is coun­cil representative and Donald R. Richmond is chapter president.

RENTS TUXEDOS

has ALL your· classroom needs

Including-• Sheaffer and Estetbrook

Pen - Pencil - Desk Sets • Engineering and Drafting

Supplies - K&1') . .

• UNM Stati<!Qery _ Fraternity ,and Sorority

Pledge Stationery·

Just Off the Comer of Yale .and Central

.. . ,

WHE.N YOU KNOW YOUR B·EER If you are under 34 years of age you can have

. . an estate of $10,000 At a Cost to You of About $1,00 Per Week

'Thru Farmers Union Life Insurance

Protect your family, your home, your investment

FARMERS UNION INSURANCE Fred M. Calkins, Sr., Agt.

7008 4th St. Phone 4-1817

New SPRING Clothes • • • Arriving Daily--

Dresses - Coats - Suits and All Accessories­

LOOK RIGHT FOR SPRING!! WE'RE CONTINUING OUR SALE

At Greatly Reduced Prices (One Group Dresses-~ Price)

HARPER'S DRESS SHOPPE 1806 Central E. (at University) Ph. 7-9327

LISTEN TO "SPORTS TODAY" WITH BILL STERN AIC IIADIO NITWOIIIC MOHDA' JHRU fRIDAT

35401

How the stars got started ...

••• it's bound to be Bud You see it so often _ •• a warm welcome

. for a cold bottle of Budweisel." • .And it's no wonder that the distinctive taste of Budweiser pleases people as no other beer can do _ • _ for onl:v Budweiser is brewed by the costliest process on'Earth.

Enjoy

BudweiseJ! Le"tls All Beers In Sales Today

••• anll Through The Years'

A' N H :I!.U 5 E R • BUS C H, INC". ST. -LOUIS, MO. NIWARK, N. ,.

~rwua.OAlOrm~ Eddie Sauter and Bill Finegan,

leaders of America's most excitingly­

different dance band, met in 1939 as struggling young arrangers. _---'II Ed had studied trumpet and drum at college, worked

up to arranging for "name" bands; Bill had studied in Paris, won a spot with Tommy

Dorsey. After 13 years of pooling new ideas,

they fonned their own band. It clicke,d!

AMERICA'S NEWEST, MOST COLORFUL DANCE BAND

BV1. Ft#!B()L ~~:

'WITH ME,CAMELS Cl.ICK£D INm'ANTLY. TUE RAIIORS HOW

I UKE rr, THE MILDNess JUsrr RlGHr.'

mets agree with mote

\

START SMOKING CAMELS . YOURSELF! Smoke only Camels

£or30 days and find out why Camels are first in mildness, flavor Ii and popularity! See how much pure pleasure a cigarette can give you!

people. THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE.

" .~

..

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Page 4: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

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t --... .. .,.' .. " .IJ'

Prof. Raymond Jonson To Retire July First PATSY QUINN DANCE STUDIO

• Raymond Jonson, one of the na- 3600 C

tion's leadinS' abstract andnon-ob- . opper Ave •. NE jective artists and professor at the Announces University art department, has an-nounced that he will retire from BALLROOM DANCING CLASSES teaching July 1. Under the DirectIon of

"JI,ut A Little Loving Will Go A Long Way"

IN A .NEW CAR.

fro:m

He plans to continue his work as . · director of the Jonson Art Gallery, MR, CHARLES BALISTRERE

Since he began his career in 1912, JI.Class Lessons for· $10.00 • Special Latin American Classes

ACME U DRIVE IT 1524 Central SE Ph.one 3.1156

Jonson has completed more than 1100 works. He progressed through . Phone 6-3816 Just 3 Blocks We"st of Hodgin lUIll

"25 different approaches to art'" ~=======================~J~==============:o~n:c:e:nt~r:al=====::! from naturalistic to abstract to non-objective.. .

(,,(GO~, ·WITH LSJpp&:' AND MEET THE PEOPLE ~;'

MEXICO 6waaka Summar 5a .. lon at U. af

axleo ••• waak anel axcur.lon •• 545 ••• 5aa your traval agant. STOP TOURS, Berkeloy,' Calif.

••• + ••••••••••••••••••

Get Your

New and Us'ed

Text Books

at

Louie· The Lobo Says:

· . ALL THE WOLF PACK .IS ON ITS WAY FOR-

Archie" Westfall's

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

Just Off the Comer of Central and Yale

NEWS

TIP!

PAGE

UNIVERSITY" . CLEANERS

EMERGENCY!! 2-HRS. SERVICE CLEANING and

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Press while U wait·

1800 Central SE ~'Just across from the

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FREE BOOK COVERS and BLOTTERS!!

ylO U·R student Ownell

ASSOCIATED STUDENTS BOOK'STORE ,

STUDENT UNION BASEMENT PHONE EXTENSION 219 ~ .

Lobo Cagers Bid For First Division

The Upiversity o;f New Mexico Lobos, primed tQ make their expect­ed first-division bid, host Utah State's gi,!nt-killing A-ggies and the hard-runmngMontana Grizzlies in a pair of important Skyline Con_ ference basketball games over the coming weekend. .

The vaunted Aggies, conquerors of both Colorado A&M and Wyo­ming, cozpe into New Mexico's Car­lisle gym S9,turday night, and the Montana quintet is scheduled there the following Monday.

Coach Woody Clements' Wolfpack annexed its second. league victory of the Season last week at Denver when it walloped the Denver Pio­neers, 75-61. It marked only the second road win scored by aNew Mexico entry against Skyline foes in thr!le years.

The win over Denver gave the Lobos a 2-5 record against Skyline teams thus far and left them in pretty good shape as far as the rest of the season is concerned.

New Mexico still has seven Sky­line games to play, but five of them are on the UNM court. The Wolf­pack hosts, in addition to the two on this weekend's ticket, Denver, Brigham Young and Utah. They are on the road to meet Utah State and Montana late in February.

The Lobos currently rest in sixth place in Skyline standings, but Coach Clements figures his boys should be able to finish the year up among the first four.

"The boys are playing much bet­ter ball right now than they were at the same time last year," he points out. "They are in good shape and I don't think we'll run out of steam again this season."

Clements thinks a great deal de­pends upon how seniors Ross Black and Marv Spallina perform from here on out.

He says All-Conference nominees Russ Nystedt and TobY Roybal show no signs of weakening and believes the recent show of scoring prowess exhibited by both Black and SpalIina may be enough to carry the squad into first-division contention.

Black contributed 16 points to the Denver victory and played an all­around good floor game. Spallina tallied 21 points against the Pio­neers for his high mark of the season.

Nystedt and Roybal continue to pace Lobo scoring, however. Ny­stedt, 6-4 pivot, leads with 174 points tallied in 12 intercollegiate games. Roybal, Santa Fe junior, is second with 167 in the dozen games. He missed most of the action against Denver due to a severe cold.

The Wolfpack will definitely be "pointing" for Utah State-in self defense. Last year, the two teams split a pair of games, but Ne\v Mexico. spoiled an Aggie bid for a better than .500 season with a thrill­ing, 99-91, double-overtime triumph in Carlisle gym, after the Aggies had won the Holiday Festival tour­nament in New York's Madison

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ASHAWA'( BRAIDED R ACKEr STRING " Choice '0'( Ti,e Cha~p;6ns

Square Garden alld had been one of the powers in the league through the season.

This year, SO far, Coach Cecil Baker's tall Utags have l;Iuddenly w.axed ~'~ot" and accomplished the glant-klllmg tasks of defeating Wyoming and Colorado A&M, in order. The Cowboys and C-Age were each undefeated in league play until meeting Utah Stl).te. .

Aggie center Bill Hull, 6_7 point­maker, will. be the Lobos' chief tar-1963.game at Albuquerque, the su­get III the Saturday game. In the perbly coordinated Hull dumped in 33 points and virtually controlled both backboards all night.

A win Saturday could vault the Lobos ahead of Utah State, now in fifth place with a 3-5 record in the Skyline.

Clements plans to start Spallina • and Bruce Wilson at forwards. Ny­stedt will get the nod at center, and Black and Roybal will operate at guards.

For Monday night's game against Montana, the starting lineup .will rem~in the same, b!1rring injury. Jumor Gene Golden IS expected to furnish most of the relief action as New Mexico continues its "iron-man" style of ball. .

Clements was able to use his re­serves freely against Denver, but that was the first Skyline foe against whom he has been able to use more than seven men.

The first battle the Moslems fought against the infidels was the battle of Badr,fought in January, AD 624.

I

Beneath this stone lies Kelly, They buried him today. He lived the life of Riley While Riley was away.

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HOT NEWS

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Di~k Powers Named New Representative

There are 37 Smiths in the bio­graphical section of Webster'S un· abridged dictionary. Four pf them are Georges, and another :i'our are William~.

The District of Columbia was· es~ tabli~hed on July 16, 1'790. '

. ,

Dicll: Powers was appointed cam­pus tepresentativefor Chesterfield cigarettes recently by the Campus Merchandising Bureau. He replaced Bill Gentry whp WIlS graduated this February and commis$ioned in the· Ail' Force.

John Quincy Adams was born on July 11,1767. .

powers is a member of. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Pi Sigma Alpha, t~ IFC and the Student senate.

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Welcome both Old and New Students

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE . 1

(Just,off the Corner of Central and Yale) 212.8 E. CENTRAL /"

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Page 5: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

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, "' .... ~.",''''', i -' •• '.7", .11, .If""'-' ) ~',;- "

...

• • ."' " , ),,!',: iJ' d ,,- t' 'Att" d' 'Exchange' Student i : U ge 0 en 'To .r 0, , ac,h, "', G'e, rman'

. ~\~~- '.~' , ,

ACAM'PUS .. TO~CAREER CASE ,,; . '" i .

HISTORY' .. ,: " , ..

II"UNM' Co' n' 'f' ',er' en',' ce A ~ou:e' in" conversational Ger-, man, to be offered for the :first time next semester by the Community

I i' Evening college, will be taught by i Judge Joe M. HillQ-f Dallas, Tex., an exchan, ge studen, t from M,unich, assistant director of the Traffic iCourts program for the American Germany. ' , ., ;Bar Assoeiation, is in Alliuqulilrque Wolf-J)ieter Euba, a 20-year-old ~to attend the three-day conference journalil!mmajor, was one of two :on traffic courts at the University . Munich candidates selected last fal,L of New Mexico College' of Law.

, Judge Hill, traffic courts judge in ' for study outside Germany. He sug_ 'D J f gested the "SPfilaking" course to eve­, al as for 14 yeara, is on leavl:o , ning college officials after receiving , absence from the traffic courts pro- requests to tut, or others in German. igram as one of the sponsors of the lconferllnce which will be held 'on The non. credit course is tailored ,campus Feb. 11-13. for Albuquerqueans who expect to . The second annual traffic courts visit Germany in the next few ,conference at UNM is expected to years. iattract some 200 judges, prosecu- The young teacher, as a result ; tors, police magistrates, justices of of. his experiences with English, 'the peace and state traffic officials does not expect to do the impos. ifrom throughout New Mexico, sible. He studied English for nine

" A team of representatives from years in Germany but found ita

-the Traffic Institute at Northwest- strange language when he arrived ern University will help direct the in this country. conference on ways and methods of ------~----­traffic safety to decrease the num-ber of automobile accidents in the state. .

The c.onference next week is lie­lng presented by the College of Law at the University of New Mexico in cooperation with the American Bar Association, the Traffic Insti­tute of Northwestern University, the State Bar of New Mexico, the New Mexico Motor Club and the Governor's Traffic Safety Coordi­:nating Committee.

Opell Tuesday. till 9 p.m.

t815 Central Ea.t

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Jeanette's ORIGINALS

AerOllll from Hiland Theatre

, ". ' . . \ "

The class reunion at his' alma mater, Swarthmore College, was an eye-opener for Ed Mahler. The talk among the Class of '50 switched to jobs. Ed had taken it for granted that everybody was happy with bis work.

Then he found that some of his class· mates had had two -or three jobs since leaviJIg school. Others had kept the same one but weren't satisfied. By stick. ing with his first job and intending to make it a lifetime career, Ed suddenly discovered he had a head start.

After being graduated with a B.A. in Economics, he went to work for Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania in 1950. He reports he chose the Telephone Company because it seemed to offer the hest chance for a career.

After a year of training in which he worked in each of the departments­mstalling telephones, handling business contacts with customers - Ed felt he had a good look at the entire company.

·h, 'fIV ~ .' .

It took a class reunion to show Ed Mahler, '50; tbat all fir8t jobs are not alike. He tells us wh,: (Reading time: 33 seconds)

He was assigned to. the Traffic Depart. ment, which has the responsibility for seeing that customers' calls are handled efficiently. The job included,personnel work in addition to developing better operating methods and practices. He was quickly put on his own. .

Now Ed has been transferred to the job of estimating the amount and type of new equipment which will be needed in central qffices as their customers increase.

Ed points out that projecting himself into th\' future isn't anything new. That's precisely what he attempted to do when he chose his first-and only-job.

• • • Ed. Mahler's job is with an operating com­pany of the Bell System. But there are also jobs for engineers, arts and. science· and. business administration graduates with WeStern Electric, Sandia Corporation, and Bell Telephone Laboratories.

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235,500 i Ex~Gls In Universities

Nearly 60Q,000 veterans are en­rolled, in America's schools and training el'tablishments under Vet­erans Administration training pro" grams. . •.

The total, VA said, 'includes a a record-breaking 217,000 veterans tal<ing training under the 1~­month-old Korean GI Bill. Another 346,000 are World War Two' Vilt­erans still enrolled under the orig­inal Gl Bill. . Of the rest, 18,500 are disabled veterans of World War Two, study­ing under Public Law 16, and 75()() are' veteran-trainees disabled in service since :fighting started in Korea.

The current number of Korean GI trainees has almost doubled the previous peak of the new GI train­ing program, which was reached this past April, 11)53, with 131,000 veterans. • College training ,has been the most popular choice among Korean veterans, VA said. Fifty-four per cent of the total, or. 117,000 vet­erans, are enrolled in institutions of higher learning.' ' ,

Another 57,(100 are in schools be­low the college. level; 34,000 are training on-the-job, and 8300 are taking institutional on-farm train­ing, a combination of classroom work and actual- farming experi­ence.,

The increase in the number of Korean veterans in training has been more tlian off!;et by a decline in enrollments under the original World War. Two GI Bill, VA said,

The 346,000 World War Two trn,inees represent the lowes~ G1 Bill fall enrollment figure since 1945, when the World War Two program was just getting under way. In fact, it is less than half of what it was, ,a year ago.

A 1951 cut-off date, under the law, has virtually put a stop to new enrollments· under the World War Two GI training program. Veterans still in training, for the most part, are those who started before the deadline and who have remained in training since. The World War Two program ends, for nearly all vet­erans, in July, 1956.

Among the World War Two vet­erans in training this fall, below­college schooling continues as the number one choice. This type of training accounts for 43 per cent of the veterans, or more than 150,-000. College students number 118,-500; on-the-job trainees, 16,000, and on-fann enrollees, 61,000.

All thef;le enrollment figures, VA sai d, are as of Nov. 1. It is expected that classroom enrollments will continue to rise dUril1g the month, as schools report additional enroll­ml!nts to the VA.

The increase is expected to be particularly sharp under the Ko­rean GI Bill, V' A added.

Kittell Will Head TKE Ted Kittell was elected "resident

of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity at the last chapter meeting. Kittell will serve for the entire spring semester.

Other officers elected for the same period are: Joe Romo, vice president and social chairman; Fred S. Minshall Jr., treasurer: Ken Hy­barger, secretary; Chuck Hansen, chaplam; E. B. Dawson, historian, and Ted Tristram, pledge trainer.

Get Your

New and Used

Text Books

at

Archie Westfall's

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE

Just Olf the Corner of Yale and Centrn1

•••• ? ••••• « « .•• -jl e' • t « •• t i'

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'~_ t-, • ... ,' ...... ' T4e :first American Legion con.

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To , a "L<?vely Girl ," I

. Paul ,,;Rlilvere ma.de his':fam~us l'lde, April 18, 17'15. '. ,",

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The:fi:rstTrans-U. S. flight took place on MaY' 2, 1925. '

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Continuously we' and our consultants have analyzed, experimented with and smoked all kinds of tobaccos .. ,especially Southern Bright, Burley, Maryland and Turkish cigarette to­baccos.

Our own cigarettes and competitive brands have been submitted to the most exacting scientific scrutiny including thousands of anal­yses of millions of pounds of tobaccos.

From all these thousands of analyses, and other findings reported in the leading technical .Journals, our Research Department has found no reason to believe that the isolation and elimination of any element native to cigarette tobaccos today would improve smoking.

For four years we have maintained in the smoker's interest an intensified large~ scale diversified 'research program. A half-million dollar 30-ton machine, the world;s most powerful source of high voltage electrons, designed solely for' our use has tested tens of thousands of cigarettes. This program has already given to us dir~ct and significant in­formation of b~nefit to the smoking public.

Our consultants include Arthur D. Little, Inc. of Cambridge, Massachusetts, ~'OIie of the largest and most reputable industrial research organizations in the country" (From Business Week Magazine) and eminent scientists from leading universities .

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Page 6: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 056, No 45, 2/5/1954

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scene from MGM's musical, "EASY TO LOVE;' in color by Technicolor. '

Albuquerque Theater Reviews A school for which students trav·

eled more than 100,000 miles during a course of study lasting 25 days; was recently established in Florida for the benefit of a group originat­ing from tne state's major rival in tourist, orange and climate claims­California.

Its student body, which met in two classroouls, one on land the size of a football gridiron and the other covering a wo.and.one.half mile span of water, consisted of 100 athletes from all over the United States-and Esther Williams from HolIywood. And the only instru­ments used in furthering their edu. cation were water skis, 50 pair for the men, 51 for the women. .

Graduation took place the last day the Technicolor cameras turned on a water-ski spectacle for MGM's new musical, "Easy to Love," filmed on location at Cypress Gardens in Winterhaven, and co.starring Miss WilJiams with Van Johnson and Tony Martin. The picture is now at the Hiland Theatre.

Roll call for the students began daily at 8:80 a.m., and tQok fifteen minutes to complete. Once finished, the 101 water skiers lined up in po· sition along one of the six loo.foot long ramps that were constructed along the shores of Lake Eloise :for the purpose of departure. At a given signal, the skiers grabbed onto long linen ropes and were towed in groups of 10 by 10 160-horsepower speedboats across the two·mile lake to the scene of their film assignment.

The boats started out with a run around the lake in concentric circles.

wJ:u:mn NOW SHOWING

FEATURE 12-2:05 - 4:10 - 6:15-8:20

10:10

He Carved a Legend of Valor and Lovel

PLUS CARTOON-NEWS

Six oversize ski jumps, 12 feet high, became the scene of 20 skiers flying over them at ane time through faun· tains installed on either end of the jumps. Next, several columns of 10 skiers, each weaving through the cypress trees that grow out of the lake, executed several turns through six 85-foot high geysers that were constructed in the lake. The chorus of skiers then formed behind Miss Williams as she pre. pared for the routine's finale.

The swimming star was towed over one of the 12-foot jumps by a helicopter to an altitude of 75 feet, from which she dived into the mid. dIe of a horseshoe formed by the 100 skiers!

Tennis, anyone?

Post-Registration Hop Slated for SUB Tonight

Students will be offered a chance to relax from the registration hassle at a Student Body dance Friday night in the SUB baJlroom.

Phil Graham and his orchestra will furnish music from 9-12. No admission will be charged, and all students are. invited.

.Dick: This flash bulb won't work. Jim: What's the matter with it? Dick: Darned if I know. It lit OK

a minute ago.

The government's price support on potatoes cost the government 500 million dollars up to 1950.

The armed forces radio station in Trinidad, BWI, during World War II was WVDI.

NOW THRU . MONDAY

• :FEATURE 12 - 2:00-4:00 - 6:00 - 8:00 -10

WllD' ADVENTUR.E ... RECKLESS LOVE~

Jeff CHANDLER' , Maureen O'HARA

i.lJNlVt~~~,:NA1fO~L

PLUS COMEDY-LATE NEWS

. '

UNMGrads •• .. Cant. from ')'age ,1

ton was winner, with. :garold Brock, of the. 1951 Nationa.! Tau l\:appa

,Alpha debate championships. The Ilame del>ate team ranked high in the' WeISt l"oint contests. Houston was active in 'campus politics the four yea),'!! he was, a UNM under· graduate. . ' , .

·Mrs. Houston was aUNM cheer leader, Popularity. Queen, Paper Doll Queen, president of Alp\la Delt::> Pi and of the Woman's/Rec· reational Council. She was a mem­ber of the Athletic Oomicil and of AWS.

Mrs. Houston's father is Homer C. Jones, for a long time an Indian trader at Thoreau. Glenn's parents are Mr. and Mrs. John S. HouGton, Hobbs.

Houston plans to return to the University of New Mexico to take his. 'law degree and then take the state bar examination.

Members Soughf ••• Cont. from l"age 1

sides Honegger's King David which was given before a sell.out audience last semester, the chorus has pre­sented in recent years such master­pieces as the Bach St. John Passion and the St. Matthew l"assion, Han. tiel's Messiah, Haydn's The Seasons and The Creation, Mozart's Requi· em, F'aure's Requiem, and the Bach B·Minor Mass.

Cline Candidafe ••• Continued from Page 1

city government since 1927 when she was active in city manager campaigns in the middle west.

She is serving at present as presi. dent of the New Mexico Recreation

• association and is the only women member of the Land Commission. er's advisory board.

Spring Rush Schedule Announc·ed by Phrateres

Phrateres, national organization for independent women, has an· nounced its rush schedule for se· mester II.

The social and service organiza. tion is also open to stray Greeks, 'women affiliated with sororities not represented at the University.

A Valentine coffee is scheduled for the SUB Sunday morning, a Date with Lincoln party will be held in T.20 Monday evening, and a How Not to Study party is slated for the SUB Tuesday.

Norene Miller, Phrateres presi­dent, and Barbara Anthes are in charge of rush plans.

NOW THRU WEDNESDAY

DOWN! DOWN!

••• Inlo BoHlet

PLUS CARTOON--NOVELTY

NEWS'

Hete lies the father ot 29. He would've had more

The old Irani.an name for camel was "ustra!' ,

But he didn't have time.

Ami' ibI\ al As originated the idea of digging the Suez Canal in AD 639.

Camel's hair brushes come from the tails of Siberian rabbits. "

Roses are red, Violets are blue. Orchids are $10.95; Will dandelions do?

.The YMCA was organized in London In 1844.

NOW THRU SAT.

FREE PARKING . LOTS FOR HILAND

PATRONS

FEATURE: 1:33 - 3:37 - 5:41 - 7:45 - 9:49

THE YEAR'S BIG EASYmlOOKIN', EASY-lISTENIN t

, TECHNICOlOR

... rrlng

MUSICAl! Filmed in Florida's Cypress Gardensl

£STHER VAN TONY WILLIAMS · JOHNSON · MARTIN

COMING SUNDAY "ESCAPE FROM FORT BRAVO"

JOIN THE , CRITICS' PARADE! FUN FOR ,YOUNG

AND OLDt

**** "A HIT!"

-Clle

"A GEM ! ... -Mlrro"

"HURRAH !'" - No\!, Yorker

"EXCELLENn" -Post

"FASCINATING !" -Her.

• Coming Tuesday to Your Lobo Arts Theatre

•--~-------------. J. ARTHUR 'RANK PRESENTS . JAMES MASON '.

IN CAROL REED'S PRODUCTION

, ,. " "ODD MAN' .our' , , 'AN :ADVENTURE IN UNBEARA'SLE SUSPENSE I

, .

STt~~YNG ROBERT NE'i/TON . :;~ .. ,,,.,, , • . ~ " ~,~

One Star EW ~ ~~ NEW ~

EXI CO Lo 'e) .~' r--------..-o:

"The Voice of a Great Southwestern University" .. ,

'Vol. LVI ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICp, TUESDAY; FEBRUARY 9, 1954 NO. 46

• _0 os 4 n ....on erence

Reactions Follow Parish' sC~arges Against tenders

Between semesters this past week, while the Lobo was on the

. inoperative list, Dr. William J. Parish, UNM professor: shook; the small loans industry in New Mexico to the bottom of its grass roots.

In a speech before the Albuquer. que Kiwanis club, Dr. Parish charged that state smaUloans lend. ers were as "unethical as they were illegal in their practices!'

The state small loans law of 1947 states clearly that above the regu. lar interest rates "no further amount. of any kind can be charged!'

Parish said that many small loans lenders of the state are operating in direct defiance of the law by forcing credit life, health and acCi. dent policies on borrowers to cover the period of the loan.

The "coercive tie·in sale of credit insurance" is wholly out of line with the spirit and letter of the 1947 small loans law, Parish stated.

A large number of small loans people are creating further abuses by splitting a larger loan into smaller notes in order to up the

(Continued on page 8)

Five Scholarships Awarded by UNM

Five scholarships for the spI'ing semester have been awarded to Uni. versity students, C. V. Wic1ter, chairman of the awards committee, announced Saturday.

Four Burkhart-Parsons awards of $125 each went to freshmen stu­dents James Arlin Cooper. a gradu. ate of Highland, and Donald James Davis, Shirley Dolores Freeman and Cynthia Ellen Pacey. all Albuquer­que High graduates.

The $50 Daughters of Penelope scholarship was awarded to Vivian June Stratton, a senior in. the Col. lege of Education.

The Burkhart-Parsons awards are made specifically to students who are gradUates of local high schools. They are from a trust fund established by the late Mrs. Miriam P. Burkhart.

The Daughters of Penelope Me. morial Scholarship is made in mem­ory of Mrs. Alexandria Carrigan and Mrs. Anastacia Ipiotes to a Col. lege of Education major who is a resident of New Mexico and who plans to teach in elementary or sec­ondary schools in the state.

Chemical Company To Visit Campus

The Univel'sity of New Mexico will be visited Feb. 23 by repre. sentatives of American Potash & Chemical Corp., who will interview chemistry and chemiclil engineer. ing stUdents for positions with the company after graduation.

New personnel will participate in the company's expansion program. particularly in the research and de­velopment of new chemicals for ill. dustl·ial and agricultural use, ac­cording to a spolcesman of the cor-poration. .

Positions are available lit the company's plants at Los Angeles nnd Trona, Calif., and research lab. oratories at Trona and Whittier, Calif., for research and development pl'ojects involving new chemical compounds de1'ived froln lithium, boron and bromine. The company lilso produces basic. ehemicals such as potlish, borax, soda ash, salt cake and others.

Students interested should ask their department head or the school ,employntent office to arrange an in. terview.

• \

Seed Named Acting Dean OF Law School

Professor Verle Rue Seed has been appointed acting dean of the University of New Mexico College of Law for the spring semester.

Acting Dean' Seed is replacing Dean A. L. Gausewitz who is on sabbatical during the spring and summer and will return to the cam· pus in the fall.

Dean Seed has been a member of the UNM law faculty since tlie school was opened in 1947, teaching specialized property ,courses: real property law, security, water law, and law of oil and gas.

Acting Dean Seed took his law degree at the University of Illinois in 1926 and practiced law for sev· eral years in Phoenix, Ariz.

In 1936 he accepted an associate professorship at the University of South Dakota.

He holds a master's degree from Columbia University and in 1943 became a "Price Attorney" for the Office of Price Administl'8tion for the regional office supervising the legal activities of eight district offices.

In 1946, he became a professor of law at the University of Kansas and in 1947 joined the law faculty at the new University of New Mexico Law College. He became a full professor in 1950. .

During the summer, Acting Dean Seed will teach a course in natural resources at the University of Colo­rado Law School in Boulder. ,

lobo Staff Meet Scheduled Today An organization meeting of

the Lobo staff will be Ileld today at '" p.m. in the Lobo office.

The following positions are open to interested students: Night editor, Art editor, Sports editor, Political editor, Drama editor, Activities editor, Ex. change editor, reporters, rewrite men and proofreaders.

All interested students are in. vited to attend. Freshmen wllo are interested in working their way up in the newspaper will be given training.

Upgrade Is Seen In U. Enrollment For Semester 2

Second semester registration was continuing at 'a brisk pace Monday with a total of 3400 already enrolled for credit work. J. C. Mac­Gregor, University registrar, re­ported.

Of the 8400, some 600 are enrolled for night credit work, leaving about 2800 in the daytime classes.

Late registratic.n will continue through noon Feb. 20, the last date for change of classes or enrollment for new classes, MacGregor said.

By the end of the late registra. tion period, MacGregor said he ex­pected slightly more than were en. rolled for the second semester last year. The figure for last spring semester was 3846.

It all means, MacGregor stated, that enrollments at the University are on the upgrade. The number

(Cont. on page 8)

Football Practice To Begin Mondoy

Spring practice for Lbbo football players wiIl begin Monday, Feb. 15. Coach Bob Titchenal announced today.

Spring drills had originally been announced for March 1. but Titch. enal said the earlier date had been decided upon to allow boys who want to go out for spring sports to do so.

He said everyone who expects to be out for :football next fall is urged to talte part in the warm weather workouts. Equipment will be issued all this week, afternoons only, from the stadium equipment room.

A meeting of the squad is sched. uled for this Friday in the regular team meeting room on the second floor of the stadium building. Titchenal said all who plan to go out for spring balI should be there.

The meeting will begin at 12:30 p.m. and last for about a half hour, Titchenal said.

Skyline Conference rules aJlow 20 spring practice sessions to be carried out over a 30.day period. Titchenal said the Lobos will work until March 12, when the team will be divided into two squads for the annual Cherry and Silver game.

Baker at Dorm Dining I-Iall To Retire After 17 Years

When Mary Page malces her fa. vorite "1, 2, 8 Cake," she puts in 80 eggs. When she bakes a batch of biscuits or hot r01ls for dinner, she makes more than 1000 at a time. And she makes 75 lemon pies with 153 eggs fOl' dessert at a sin. gle meal.

Mary's "sons" compliment he1' culinal'Y efforts by fillinl:l' their plates with second and third help­ings of six tc. eight biscuits or hot rolls when she serves them twiee a day.

Mary Page is the chief baker of rolls, hot breads, cakes and pies and her "sons" are the 450 men students at the Mesa Vista dormitory on the Univel'sity of New Mexico campus. .. :Mal'y is retiring March 1 after 171h years as one of the top cooks in the dining balls on the University campus.

She began working in 1936 in wllat is now the Women's dining hall at UNM under Mrs. Elizabeth Simpson who retired last year as head of the home economics depart. ment.

Then, Mary says, there were only . five people in the kitchen and they served from 250 to 300 stUdents in the University dining hall. NoW, she works in the spacious chrome kitch­en at the Mesa Vista dining hall with 18 other cooks Where she pre­sides over all the baking for the 450 men students.

She was transferred to her pres_ . ent job when Mesa Vista dorm was opened in July, 1951.

She has worked under eight suo pervisors and dietitians in her years on campUs and said, "I take quite a bit of pride in being patt of the University's growth." , Mary, who will be 60 years old Feb. 28 but looks much younger, will go to California to !iva with her son and daughter after her re· tirement from the Mesa Vista kitchen.

it won't be a busman's holiday, though, says Mary. "I never cook anything but bl'ealefas!; lit home." She is on the afternoon shift at the dorm, working from 10 a.m. tiIJ 7:80 p.m.

(Cont. on page 8)

.Nervousness Can InFluence Unborn Child

Ed. Note - The following press release is a synopsis of an article appeal'ing in the Feb. issue of the Ladies' Home Journal; We feel that people should be more tolel'ant of the neurotics on the campus. Aftel' all, their mothers might have been scared by a college boy. '

Mothers can control the develop. men of their unborn children. That's the news, formerly considered an "old wives' tale," that Dr. Ashley Montagugives in an article.

In asserting that "There Is Pre. natal Influence," Dr. Montagu gives, case histories of mothers whose emotional disturbllnces during preg. ' nancy caused their children to be born neurotic. Mrs. Andrews' hus· band was killed during the eighth month of his wife's pregnancy. AI. though there was no record of psy. chosis or neurosis in either family, the child was nervous and irritable from the moment he was born. Mrs. Andrews' severe emotiona,l shock had produced a neurotic state in her unborn child.

The cause of such transferral of emotional disturbances lies in the neuro humoral system of the body, Dr. Montagu says. The nervous and endocrine systems interact with each other through the blood stream. Although there is no real interchange between the maternal and fetal blood streams, some of thaendocrine substances are sman enough to pass through the pla­centa. Thus, the fetus receives the changed chemical and reacts to it.

Thus, while a mother cannot "mark" her baby by seeing an un. pleasant sight during pregnancy, nor improve his mind by going to the opera, she can do much toward making him a healthy, happy child, says Dr. Montagu. Serenity and adequate affection are most impor. tant to a pregnant woman, he be. lieves.

Sfudenfs Jam SUB As Classes Sfarf For New Semesfer

The SUB bore witness yesterday that semester II classes had begun. It was jammed. Chairs were at a premium and many students were forced to take their coffee standing up. The crowd overflowed into the ballroom as UNM's scholars cussed and discussed professors. schedules and the price of books.

Most professors, true' to tradi. tion, held classes fOr only a few minutes the first day, then joined their students for coffee. In fact, there were more professors than students evident in the SUB at times.

In spite of the normal gripes about 8 a.m. classes, the lack of good-looking girls and/or boys, and the price of coffee, the concensus seemed to be that a good semester was ahead. Coming events include the King of Hearts dance, the Newsprint ball, spring formals, a week-long Easter vacation, and of course Fiesta, with Les Brown.

Although new freshmen seemed slightly bewildered by it all, the old guard felt that anything was worth going to Fiesta, even another five months of classes.

Then there were the leilJjoys who circled June 2 on their Marilyn Monroe. calendars, the day that marks the beginning of final exams •

Lettermen Will Meet Th'e Lettel'men's club will meet

Wednesday, Feb. 10, in T-21 at 8 p.m. Preparations for the dance will be discussed, Fred McCracken, sec­l'etary, announced.

Team Beats Utah And Montano U. ,

By ,Wide Margins A blistering 59.point come·back

in the second half against Utah State gave the New Mexico Lobos their first ·home court win of the season over Skyline opposition.

Led by the brilliant shooting of guard Toby Roybal, the Lobos notched a 97-74 victory over the Utags. .

Roybal cemented his all.league guard bid with a. record 8S.point total-26 of which came in the third and fourth stanzas-to erase the previous high at Carlisle for a Lobo eager. Larry Tuttle netted 29 in 1952.

Coach Woody Clements' quintet, moving into fifth place ahead of the Utags, rattled the gym for 25 points after the half time then

Led by Russ Nystedt, the Lobos won their fourth con. ference victory last night by the margin of 76 to 67. Employing a tight zone defense the Lobos kept the Grizzlies at long dis· tance shooting all night. The Montana, team was behind al. most all the way and never threatened until the closing min· utes. The Lobo reserves spelled the difference and wore down the opposition, going aWay at the gun.

ripped the contest apart with 34 in the finale.

Records went flying in Saturday'S fray.

New marks were: New 1953-04 total offense of 97

over a previous 75 against Denver. Highest New Mexico scorein reg.

ulation time. Greatest scoring offense for one

half-59 markers. Cecil Baker's Viags sparred with

the Lobos for the first five minutes in a tight 6-6 duel, then gradually waxed hot to forze ahead, 21-18, at the end of the first quarter. Center Bill Hull's rebounding blended with a versatile Aggie punch from all corners to give Utah a 49·38 half­time advantage.

Then Roybal unleashed an amaz­ing one.handed shooting exhibition for 14 points in the third. His mates picked up the hint and UNM roared to a 25'point flurry and a 63-60 lead.

Completely overlooked in the fire. brand finish was the fact that the leaping Lobos averaged an awe· some 65 per cent from the field in the second half and wound up with a very respectable 40.

Special Election Slated By Student Council

Friday, Feb. 19 is the date chosen by the Student council at their reg. ular Monday meeting for a special student body election.

StUdents wiJI vote on the resolu. tions passed by the Student senate concerning the revisions to the UNM constitution. The senate will meet Friday at 4 p.m. to consider the remaining constitutional reo vision proposals.

Student Body President Jerry Matkins suggested that a represen. tative of Panhellenic council be asked to appear before the council to explain Panhellanic's Betty Hall Memorial Fund.

Publication Board Meets To Discuss Lobo Future

Methods of creating interest in the LOBO will be the subject of a Publications Board meeting Friday afternoon at 3.

Campus leaders have been invited to attend the meeting In room 212 of the Journalism building on the corner of Yale and Central.

All those who have suggestions for improving the LOBO are invited to attend.