new mexico lobo, volume 071, no 96, 4/19/1968

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1968 e Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970 4-19-1968 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/ 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 071, No 96, 4/19/1968." 71, 96 (1968). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1968/44

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1968 The Daily Lobo 1961 - 1970

4-19-1968

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968University 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 071, No 96, 4/19/1968." 71, 96 (1968). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1968/44

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968

~···.

Thursday, April18, 1968 NEW MEXICO lOBO Page 8

Lobo Tracksters Try for Fourth Win jump-Baxter, George Lough­ridge, and Joe Powdrell; pole vault-Caffey and PowdRll; shot put-Jarros, Keppers, and Jeff­rey· javelin-Nilsson, Powdrell, anl Tom Solenberger; triple jump-Baxter, Powdrell, and Roosevelt Williams; high jump­Phil Kastens, Loughridge; dis­cus-J"arros, Kcppers, and Jeff­rey; 440 relay-Ivory Moore, Jif!!

Listen to KUNM

~~ Coach Hugh Hackett's Lobo _track squad will be shooting for

its fourth straig·ht dual win Sat­urday when New Mexico meets Abilene Christian College on the Wildcat campus.

this season with a 4:04.3 while Eller I'an a 4:06.0 in the opener in Arizona. Van Troha mn 4:16 in the relays.

A pair of new faces on the Lobo roster have set or tied school records this year and should have little trouble win­ning Saturday. Swedish imp01·t

place in the steeple-chase with a 9:18,6. He trailed post gradu­ates C h r is McCubbins of Okla­homa State and Conrad Nighten­gale of Kansas State.

New Mexico competed against Abilene Christian, Oklahoma State, Drake, Wichita, Kansas, Southern Illinois, and host Okla-

~ ~

0 X)

0 I

The Lobos won their third dual of the season last week by de­feating Oklahoma State Univer­sity !!7-48 in Stillwater and then entered a team in the Oklahoma Relays. During the Oklahoma swing, Lobo Jon Caffey establish­ed a New Mexico school record in the pole vault with a vault of lG-%,. Caffey set the old mark of 15-10 last season.

-.-----·------------------•""=•m•m·,. S1"nger, Don Walton, and Mati-p••alllllll•••ll••~~~-.-n FE - - - ~ I L s p 0 R T s ;~~dt!~:':a-y ~!~k!d~~ h~gt 1 hurdles-Williams, Herold Bai-

0 ley, Loughridge; 440-yard dash-~ Singer, Ed Moseley, and John

~ ~ FIRST QUALITY CAFFEY WILL be facing

ACC's Gt>ne Riley in the pole vault. Riley has gone 16-0 in­doors this season and 15-6 out­doors. Riley holds his school's f1·cshman mark at 16-0.

Rogan; 100 yard dash-Matison,

B ED IT 0 R Walton, and Moore; 880-yard run ' -DeWindt, Bill Utrup, and Ro-

~ All-WAYS· WHY PAY MORE

GO FORMAL!

o W A YN E Cl D D 1 0 gan; 44o intermediate hurdles-Baxter, Mike Jones, and Wil-

~ SPRING DANCES 0 FRATERNITY

The top battle in the field events should shape up between New Mexico discus throwers Er­vin Jarros and Mike Jeffrey against the Wildcats' Dave Par­sons. Parsons has the best mark in Texas this season with 175-2 ~:, and is within reach of the· ACC record of 177-10.

Jarros and Jeffrey had their best performances of the season Saturday in the Oklahoma Relays when Jan·os won the event with a 177-~4 and Jeffrey was second at 176-7.

NEW MEXICO distance run­ner Ron Eller ran third to Abi­lene's AI Van Troha in the Ok­lahoma Relays and will meet him again Saturday. Van Troha has the second-best mile in the state

Ake Nilsson set a UNM javelin record two weeks ago with a toss of 237-4 ~'2 while junior college 'transfer Phil Kastens equaled the UNM high jump record Sat­urday with a leap of 6-10.

OTHER OUTSTANDING Lo­bo performances last weekend were turned in by Rene Matison and Adrian DeWindt_ Matison tied a stadium record at Still­water with a 9.4 spring in the 100-yard dash. Matison also won the 22-yard dash and anchored UNM's winning 440-yard relay team to score 11 points.

In the Oklahoma Relays, De­Windt was the first collegiate to

homa in the weekend relays. HACKETT ALSO expects to

gather points in the triple jump, shot put, and the springs. NCAA triple-jump champion Art Baxter is returning to form in his spec­iality after a poor start.

Baxter did not make the trip to Oklahoma but has a season best of 49-2%. with a wind-aiaed 52-2%. Jarros and Steve Kep­pers are the top Lobo entries in the shot. Rene Matison will lead New Mexico in the sprints. Mati­son has a 9.4 in the 100-yard dash this season.

Coach Hackett's entry list for Saturday's meet includes: long

SENIOR JON CAFFEY set a UNl\l school rec­ord in the pole vault last week at the University of Oklahoma Relays in Norman. Caffey vaulted 16-0 to erase the mark of 15-10 he set last year at University Stadium. Caffey, a senior from Highland High School, became the first Lobo to ever vault 16 feet in competition. Caffey has fig­ured heavily in New Mexico track successes this

~cason placing in the top three in the pole vanlt m all of th~ Lobos' meets this season. Caffey will be up agamst some stiff competition Saturday when the Lobos take on Abilene Christian College in New Mexico's fourth dual meet. ACC's Gene Riley has vaulted 16-0 indoors this season and 15-6 outdoors and should fight it out with Caffey for meet honors.

Patronize lobo Advertizers

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The Guodalajora Summer School. a fully occredited Universiry of Arizona· program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford Uni• versify, Universlry of California, and Guadalajara, will offer July 1 to Au­gust 10, art, folklore, geography, his­tory' language and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $290. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, California 94305.

Newman Students Set Date for Ball

The Newman Student Organi­zation will sponsor the Cardinal Newman Ball on April 19, from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. The dinner-dance will be held at the Summit House atop Sandia Peak.

The cost of the tickets, $12 a couple, will include the ride on the tramway, dinner, and danc­ing. Tickets are available at the Student Union ticket office or at the Newman Center.

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3l8".1'?5CJ UnoQ.W v, 71 no, 9G: Q.Of l-j 3

Vol. 71

EXICO Our Seventy-First Year of Editorial freedom

Friday, April19, 1968 .:.:, !.>., . 'd,:- cl--.-,") !

Choice 68 Election Vote Slated Fof"';tfP~I Possoge Unlikely Of 1 8 Voting Age, Says Sen. Easley

No.96

24

By ALLEN BUCHANAN Fol'!ller Lt. Gov. Mack Easley,

speaking as a Democratic guber­natorial candidate last night in the Union Theater, said he fav­ors the idea of allowing 18-year­olds to vote in New Mexico.

But Easley indicated it would be impossible to have such an amendment passed any time in the :r;ear future. He said passage :requires three-fourths of the vote in two-thirds of the New Mexico counties, and ·from that ·~practical standpoint" it would seem unlikely that he, as gover­nor, would be able to immediate­ly influence any decision on the matter.

The present state government was described by Easley as ex­tremely unstable. "This is due in ~a.rt to the. instability of the po­htJcal parties," he said, ". • • leading to inefficiency .and waste in the spending of tax dollars.''

HE SUGGESTED that both parties broaden the base of their politics and concern themselves with the businessmen, house­wives, and young people of the state. "A restlessness among the young cannot be ignored," he said. "'We should enlist the young people in a drive for better gov­ernment."

Easley was asked to explain his stand on the current educa­tion crisis in New Mexico. He said that at one time the state's rate of teacher salary increase was fourth in the nation, but has .since slipped to 26th.

"WE CAN'T have good teach­ers and university professors without meeting the demands of salary increases," he said. "W c are challenged to provide a stable and equitable tax structure to provide revenue for such func­tions" E~ley said New Mexic~ has

the highest number of Ph.D.s of any state in the nation, but that it also :ranks with the highest high school drop-out rates. He believes the resultant job crisis will be one of the basic issues in the upcoming campaign.

"We must have jobs for those drop-outs," he said, "and for the men returning from Viet Nam, and the people that find them­selves replaced by machines."

DURING A question-and-ans­wer session, Easley was asked what he thought about the Viet Nam war. "I don't want to get into Viet Nam," he answered. "At present I am more concern­ed with the problems of this state."

When asked about the Stokley Carmichael speaking incident, Easley said that such decisions should be left with the Regents and Speakers Committee.

Lobo Staff Member Wins Writing Award

Lobo Managing Editor Nooley Reinheardt has won a $100 scholarship from the William Randolph Hearst Foundation for a story which appeared in the

"Wednesday, March 27 Lobo. The story, which won ninth

place in national ncwswriting competition, was the culmination of a five-month Lobo survey into drug usage by UNM students and law-enforcement and admin­istrative approaches to drug usage by students.

FORMER LT. GOV. Mark Esaley, spoke last night in the Union !heater. He ~aid he favored the idea of allowing 18 year olds to vote m New Mexico. In regard to the education crisis in New Mexico Easley said "We are challenged to provide a stable and equitable ~ structure to provide revenue for such functions.'' He said he didn't know enough about the legal aspects of the Alianza to voice an opinion. (Photo by Pawley)

1,000 Responses

Dorm l-lo_urs. Regulations Studied in Poll by Women

By GRANT HARVEY Results of a dorm poll asking

women students in campus dor­mitories their ideas on current hour regulations will not be tab­ulated for at least another week, says Mary McDonald, member of the Zia Wing Council in Hokona Hall.

Miss McDonald says the three­page questionnaire that asked women students questions such as, "If you had unlimited hours would this help or hinder your studying and how?" was answer­ed by about 1000 women.

"BECAUSE the questions were objective and could be answered at length, the forms have taken a long time to study and interpret," Miss McDonald says.

Miss McDonald said the pur­pose of the poll is to tabulate the changes, if any, that the dorm women would like to see made in the existing regulations concern­ing hours.

"A previous poll concerning

Dr. R. Dove Selected As Engineering Dean

Dr. Richard C. Dove has been named dean of the UNM College of Engineering by President Tom Popejoy and President-elect Fer­rel Heady.

On July 1 he will assume the position held for the past eight years by Dr. Richard H. Clough. Dr. Clough has announced he will return full-time to teaching and research.

Dr. Dove currently is chair· man of the mechanical engineer­ing department. He joined the UNM faculty in 1947 and is co­author of a widely adopted text­book at the graduate level, "Ex­perimental Stress Analysis and Motion Measurement.''

In 1966, Dr. Dove was honored as outstanding engineering teach· er in the New Mexico-Texas­Louisiana section by the Ameri­can Society for Engineering Edu­cation.

dress habits of women students at UNM resulted eventually in the approval by the Board of Regents for women being allowed to wear slacks anywhere on cam­pus," Mary McDonald says. "We are hoping for such good results from this poll."

"WE HOPE to make any nec­essary 'change proposals' soon to the Women's Residence Halls, who, we hope, will approve them and pass them on to the Associ­ated Women Students where they must be approved before being considered by Dean Helen White­side and the Board of Regents," she said.

"If we don't get any proposed changes approved before the end of this school term, the girls in office next year will have to go through this whole mess again," Miss McDonald says.

"As it Is now, we may have to send out a revised qusetionnaire as soon as we tabulate this one because indications from some of those forms already read arc that the first questionnaire was incomplete."

Miss McDonald said that a new questionnaire would have to be completed quickly because the current dorm-hours poll was started at the first of this se­mester.

Reception Opens Exhibit by Adams

A reception from 3 to 6 p.m. Sunday will open a new show at the Jonson Gallery, "Recent Paintings by Clinton Adams.'' The public is invited to the recep­tion in the lower gallery at 1909 Las Lomas NE.

Adams is dean of the UNM College of Fine Arts.

The show is composed of paint­ings done by Adams during the past two years. It is the 20lst show to be hung at the Jonson Gallery, and will remain on exhib­it through May 10. The gallery is open from noon to 6 p.m. daily, without charge.

Choice '68, the national collegi. ate presidential primary, will be conducted next Wednesday, April 24, but recent events "have come too late for any modification of the ballot to be effected," officials have announced.

Martin Luther King, slain in Memphis April 4, and Lyndon Johnson, who has declined to run for the presidency agaro, are still listed on the Choice '68 ballot.

Two referendum questions on the Viet Nam war will not be changed, in spite of recent indi­cations of coming negotiations.

"THE EXECUTIVE offices of Choice '68, however, are prepar­ing a statement that will cover the more glaring inconsistencies" in the ballot, it was announced last week.

Students at UNM will also vote April 24 in a New Mexico gubernatorial primary. Tod De­laney, campus coordinator for Choice '68, who arranged the state balloting, said yesterday that the College of Santa Fe may be included in the list of schools -UNM, New Mexico State, and Eastern New Mexico - already participating.

The New Mexico student ballot will include a referendum ques­tion on lowering the voting age to 18.

FIVE MEN listed on the presi­dential ballot - Mark Hatfield, Richard Nixon, Charles Percy, Nelson Rockefeller, and Harold Stassen-have issued statements praising the :purposes and organi­zation of Choice '68.

Said Nixon, "Choice '68 is a thoroughly worthwhile exercise. It enables the Iargc1y dishan­chised student to make a political impact with his views on the great issues and his preference among the candidates."

New York's Democratic Sen­ator Robert Kennedy has re­sponded to all three referendum questions on the Choice '68 bal­lot. The first two questions deal with the course of action to be pursued by the United States in Viet Nam and the policy on bombing North Viet Nam.

"IF NEGOTIATIONS can be started, we should be prepared to offer 2 realistic program towards peace in VietNam. In the mean­time, we should de-escalate our military efforts in South Viet Nam and concentrate on protect­ing populated areas so as to re­duce immediately the devastation and killing. We should also in­sist that the South Vietnamese eliminate corruption, institute major social reform, and assume a greater responsibility in the

Last Official Issue

Sale of U. Juggler To Begin Monday

The third issue of The Juggler in its last official series will be released Monday. The magazine will seU around Albuquerque for 35 cents, but will be available to students for a quarter.

Included in this issue, (the "LBJ retirement issue"), will be a wall-size personality poster of General Lewis B. Hershey, head of the Selective Service Sys­tem.

Rob Burton, Juggler editor, said he thinks the latest maga­zine copy is "consistently good" and is "the best one produced so far."

The Juggler was denied an al­location in the 1968-69 Associated Students budget last March, re­moving it from the Jist of official UNM student publications. The Student Publications Board de­cided the magazine no longer de­served subsidy by student activity fees since it was not selling.

military effort in the South," said Kennedy.

The presidentail candidate also said that "our p:rograms should include an offer to insure the--Na­tional Liberation front a genu­ine place in the political life of South Viet Nam. Without this, the success of the negotiations is doubtful."

Students voting in the Choice '68 primary will also be asked "In confronting the 'urban crisis,' which of the following should re­ceive highest priority in govern­mental spending: education, job training and employment oppor­tunities, housing, income sub­sidy, or riot control and stricter law enforcement?"

KENNEDY HAS indicated that he feels jobs and job training are "the key to solving the urban crisis." Said Kennedy, "In Amer­ica you are what you do, and every man deserves a chanc:Q•W. hold down a job and support his family with dignity and satisfac­tion. I have proposed several measures to help do this, and I would give them number-one do­mestic priority."

Choice '68 headquarters in New York announced last week that Richard Nixon had deliver­ed "an exclusive statement of :policy" on Viet Nam that "pre­sented a strategic blueprint that differed little from the adminis­tration's policy prior to President Johnson's withdrawal from the 1968 campaign."

NIXON TOLD Choice '68 that North Viet Nam is the "aggres­sor" and that the South is "in­v ad c d territor.v," discoUDting claims that the war is a civil, i~- . ternal struggle.

The U.S. is obligated to "main­tain a sufficient level of military activity to convince the enemy first, that he cannot win the war,· and second, that for him to con­tinu epursuing a military victory is not worth the cost," Nixon said.

Nixon disagreed with Presi­dent Johnson's bombing halt cur­rently in effect while plans are made for negotiations. "If sup. port for the aggression in the South diminishes, then the bomb­ing can diminish. If the North ceases to fuel the war in the South, then the bombing can cease," he said.

CHOICE '68 reported that "Nixon refused to accept any­thing short of a conventiou~ military victory in Viet Nam, as a negotiated settlement involving concessions to the North appears to be unacceptable to him.''

Nixon also said that improve­ments in job training and em­ployment opportunities were es­sential for eliminating poverty in the U.S.

"Earnings from a job would :provide the urban poor with the dignity that no income subsidy will ever provide. It would also provide both social mobility and the opportunity for the poor to either improve their own hous­ing, or move to new housing. The strongest chains holding the ur­ban poor to the ghetto today are neither legal nor racial but econ­omic," he said.

. , SUPPORT FOR Democrat Eu~

gene McCarthy's campaign for President was voiced last week by Norman Thomas, former lead­er of the American Socialist :par­ty and a six-time candidate for President.

In a statement released to Choice '68, Thotnas said, "I am for Eugene McCarthy, who took the bold step of agreeing to cam­paign for peace at a time when it was considered fatal politically, and other, more oppo;rtunistic op­ponents of the war shied away. In my judgement, fnrthermoi'C, Senator McCarthy has been run­ning an increasingly good cam­paign."

Page 3: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968

... •

Page 2 NEW MEXICO LOBO '

Socialist Slams Imperialism By PHIL SEMAS and Boutelle have been speaking for anti-war vot~s for the Social-

c 11 p S · on campuses and in local halls to ist workers as mdependent pro-0 ege ress ervJce crowds ranging from 25 to 1,000. tests.

WASHINGTON - "First we Halstead says the crowds are He adds that "we don't know ~ught to knock off the imperial- often larger in smaller towns, that Kennedy and McCarthy ~re ism" is the way one Presidential partly because the press in major going to end the war. They ~e candidate views needed changes cities tends to ignore the Socialist criticizing J~hnson bu~ they_ don t in foreign policy. Workers campaign. The Wash- say what thmfs they re gom.g. to

Fred Halstead, the candidate ington papers ignored three days do. McCarthy s present, POSlti~n of the Socialist Workers party, of press conferences and speeches is exactly what Johnson s was m is a great c?ntrast to t~e ~en by Halstead here in late Marc~. 1964." . . . _ who are seekmg the nollllnatwns Halsetad is somewhat surpns- AS FOR negotmtmns m V1et of the major parties, both in the ed at the wide anti-war senti- Nam, which are advocated by positions he takes and the way he ment he has found. He says he both Kennedy and McCarthy, campaigns. has had no "bad experiences," Halstead says, "There's nothing

Robert F. Kennedy hired a such as disruptions of his to negotiate but the traffic pro b­. ;plane to take the body of Martin speeches although there were ef- ]ems for our troops leaving. I'm

-• forts to' ban Boutelle in Okla- sure the NLF and the North lllllllllllllliiiiiiiiUIIUIIIIIIHIIIIIIIRIIIIIIIIIIIIffillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll homa and Louisiana. More peo- Vietnamese will be willing to co-

N A f • ·ple, says Halstead, are spea~ing operate on that." ews na ysts out against the war all the t1rne. Besides advocating immediate

WlliiiRIIIIIIIIHIIIUIII!IIijllftiiiiiiiiiiiiHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIII "I run into many people who withdrawal from Viet N am as say 'I have a relative who's go- opposed to negotiations, Halstead ing and I don't like this war," he also disagrees with most other says. "I sometimes shock some of candidates on the bases of Amer­my younger radical friends ~y ican foreign policy. "We can't telling them that this country ~s stop these revolutions such as is freer than. it's ever been. Bu~ 1t happening in Viet Nam. Wo:ld is, even With all. the oppressw~. peace doesn't depend on .th~ ~n­People are startmg to use the1r ternal social systems of 1nd1V1d­civil liberties now." ual countries. It depends on the

Luther King to Atlanta and even less well-heeled candidates like Eugene Mcarthy and Harold Stassen travel by plane. Halstead and his running mate, black power leader Paul Boutelle, trav­el by bus and often allot whole days of their schedule for travel.

NEITHER are rich men by any means. Halstead is a cloth cutter who lives in a housing develop­ment in New York. Boutelle is a New York cab driver.

Both have campaigned exten­!lively on campuses, where anti­War and pro-black sentiment is heavy. They received a major windfall when Halstead was placed on the ballot of Choice '68, a national presidential primary being held on 1,400 campuses, along with Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Eugene McCar­thy, Robert Kennedy, and eight others. The Socialist Workers campaign has pushed hard to get even more campuses involved in the election.

HALSTEAD is also urging sol- big powers not getting at logger­diers to vote and often campaigns heads . with . one m·~other. The in towns close to military bases ;present fore1gn pohcy of the where a good number of GI's of- l!nited S~tes means tha.t every ten attend his speeches. He says t1rne th_ere s o~e of ~hese mtern~l he finds no "bitterly hostile reac- revolutions were gomg to turn 1t tion" from soldiers although into a threat to world peace by "they often want to' argue the intervening. We should stop such facts.'' interventions.''

He is planning a trip to Viet Besides the war, the major Nam this summer, in conjunc- plank in the Socialist Workers tion with a trip to Japan for Hi- platform is an end to American roshima Day. He has asked the racism. It calls for "black control state department for all . the of the black community". which courtesies given such Pres1den- means control of local pollee, lo­tial candidates as Michigan Gov. cal stores, local schools, and pas­George Romney, but doesn't sibly an independent black politi­know what ld:ud of respom:e he'll cal ;party. If the police were local get. people and controlled by the local

I interviewed Halstead on a community, Halstead says "you'd Saturday morning in the kitchen have more law and orqer because of his Washington campaign it would be their law and order."

Friduy, April19, 1968 1 '

important. These colleges ought to logically be engines for black

right to vote at 18, free. pub_lic education through the umvers1ty level with adequate ;pay for all students who need it, and student participation in all university de~ ·

power.'' . The platform also 1ncludes

support for "the demands of American youth," including the cisions. ·

1 1 famous international dishes

(Hungarian, Dutch, Indonesian, French, German, and others ... )

lunch l"l :30·2:30 dinner s:3o-g:30

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There is also a two-part refer­endum on the war, one on level of troops, the other on bombing. Halstead has been urging stu­dents to vote for immediate withdrawal of troops and an end to the bombing, no matter who they vote for for ·president. He :and Boutelle are also urging stu­dill! ts to write in "black control of the black community" under the referendum question on the urban crisis, which deals only with alternatives for government spending.

manager's small apartment, "BLACK control of the black Central NE where he had slept on the couch community" includes black con- Phone 265-8437 the night before. He is a big man trol of black universities. Hal- 1 1 00 1 00 with thinning hair. He doesn't s~~e~a~d~s~a~id~t~h~e~at~u~d~e~n;t~ta~k;e-~o~v~e~r::~~~~~:::~~!~~a~.m~-~-~~·-::;:~~~~~~=::::::;

ALL THIS is being done in a four-month campaign tour that will end in early May. Halstead

look at all like a Presidential of Howard University was "very candidate, but when he talks he reveals a deep understanding of the issues, expressed in a common sense, working man's tone of voice.

HOW DOES he answer those who are against the war, but be­lieve they should vote for candi­dates like Kennedy or McCarthy who have a chance at winnnig when he doesn't?

"There is a tendency to draw people out of the protest mov~­ment and into the Democratic Party. I take a dim view of that. I encourage people to stay in the streets. What will cause the end of the war is not how many peo­ple ring doorbells for Kenne.dy and McCarthy bu thow much m­dependent protest there is. That's what brought Kennedy and Mc­Carthy into the race in the first place." Thus, Halstead argues

And The Cultural Program Committee Present

LAURENCE OLIVIER . zn

Shakespeare's Great Tmgedy

OTHEI.~LO Full Color Film Panavision

Two Showings Only Friday, April 19 3:30 and 7:00 P.M.

The Association

Presented by

ADMISSION-Subscription or Adults $2 Faculty $1.50-Students and Children $1.00

Telephone 277~3121

Popular Entertainment Committee and KDEF

May 18, 8:15 PM at University Arena Tickets On Sale At Fine Arts Ticket Office- 277-3411 & 3412

6.00 - 5.00 - 4.00 - 3.00 (1.00 Student Discount)

.loj

' I!

Friday, April19, 1968 NEW MEXICO LOBO

NY c · R •d d• Open to Public am pus al e. ,. UNM Orchestra

Students Arrested To Give Concert ANN AND A LE-ON-HUD­

SON (CPS)-Sheriffs deputies arrested 32 Bard College stu­dents, 14 of them on narcotics charges, in the third pre-dawn police raid on a college campus this year.

The deputies arrived in the Bard campus at 1 a,m. April 6, setting up roadblocks at the three entrances to the campus. Meanwhile other deputies search­ed dorms, arresting 14 on drug charges and confiscating quanti­ties of marijuana, pep pills, and heroin.

Some of the 18 arrested on non­drug chargesi were charged with interfering with the police and harrassrnent of police officers. Some caught in the roadblocks were charged with drunk driving and other traffic violations. The students harrassed the officers ex­tensively, spitting on them and yelling at them. However, some students said they were arrested for simply going up to the deput­ies and asking for their badge numbers.

Bard President Reamer Kline posted $28,000 worth of bail per­sonally for the students. Bails ranged from $100 to $6,250, but averaged $1-2,000. Kline said any action against the students would be determined according to the individual cases.

Duchess County Sheriff Law­rence Quinlin said the arrests were made following a two­month investigation and that more arrests were coming. Quin­lin admitted he had information from innside the campus about drug use.

President Kline called rumors that the informant posed as a college employee "unfounded," but most students believe him to be Torn Roberts, a Negro security guard who disappeared during the raid and who told one student he was the informant. It is also sus­pected that some students might have been informants. ·

UNM Debate T earn In Nation's Top Ten

The UNM debating team :has been ranked one of the nation's top ten teams after winning awards at the Delta Sigma Rho­Tau Kappa Alpha speech tourn­ament April 7-10 in Washington, D.C.

The students go to trial April 20. Some students believe Quin­lin will be unable to win the cases against most of them. Quin­lin has arrested LSD advocate Timothy Leary, whose Millbrook farm is also in Duchess County, six times but has been unable to make the charges stick.

This is the third such pre-dawn raid during this academic year.

Rodey Theatre

Musical Comedy To Be Given Here

A rollicking musical, "The Amorous Flea," has been cast as the next production at Rodey Theatre.

Already in rehearsal, the play will be presented May 10, 11, and 12, and again on May 17, 18, and 19. Based on Moliere's "School for Wives," the play is by Jerry Devine, with music and lyrics by Bruce Montgomery.

Cast in the play are Milburn Mehlhop, Willard Anderson, Ja­kob Matteson, Tuck Copp, Susan Stoner, Jan Thompson, Philip Nicholson and Arnold Brown.

The play was a long run off­Broadway hit starring Lou Park­er. It blends bright classic com­edy with a fresh, tuneful score and engagingly up-to-date lyrics such as "It's a Stretchy Day" and "Man is a Man's B e s t Friend."

The theme is youth versus age, in competition for a young maiden's favors-and resulting in a good time for all, with a sur­prise ending which straightens everything out for everyone.

Miss Larsen to Quit UNM Personnel Job

Mariann Larsen has resigned as personnel coordinator for the UNM women's dorms.

Miss Larsen will leave this summer for Logan, Utah, where she will be director of women's housing.' at Utah State University.

She received her bachelor's de­gree from Utah State and her master's degree f r o m Indiana University, in student personnel services.

The UNM team of John Pound and Wally Melendres defeated u. Assistant Dean teams from the University of Vermont, Louisiana State Univer- Resigns Position sity, John Carroll University, and Wittenberg College. Mrs. Georgine Clarke has re-

Pound took second place in ex- signed as assistant dean of wo­'temporaneous speaking at the men at UNM, it has been an­tournament and Melendres was nounced by Dean of Women Rei­initiated into Delta Sigma Rho- en Whiteside. Tau Kappa Alpha, national Mrs. Clarke will return to clas-spcech honorary. ses at UNM, working towards a

The UNM debate team is coach- doctorate degree in guidance. ed by Prof. Robert Dick and Dr. She received her bachelor's de­Wayne Eubank, chairman of the gree from UNM and her master's department of speech, who repre- degree in counseling psychology

sented the faculty in Washingtonilm.iiiliiiifrWJioiiiimiiiiOUiihiiiiioiifrSWJitaiiiitmieiiii. urnmrniiJiiiiiaifiij

McDonald'S "YOUR KIND OF PLACE! ..

The first Albuquerque concert by the UNM Chamber Orchestra will be presented at 8:15 p.m. April 26 in the UNM Fine Arts Center Recital · Hall.

The group was organized at the first of the year in order to perform music written for such a small ensemble. The 11 mem­bers of the orchestra are Gilberta Orellana, Robert Riggs, Mario Brasher, Paul Ratliff, Susan Curry and Debby McVeety, vio­lins. Others are Bob Nossett and Carolyn Cooper, horns; Greg Mathews and Marilyn Hof, cellos; Linda Rowe and Nina Vigil, vio­las, and Charles Ramsey, double bass.

Works by Bach, Arensky and Tartini will be featured includ­ing "Concerto for Harpsichord in D minor" by Bach; "Variations on a theme by Tchaikovsky" by Arensky; and "Cello Concerto in D Major" by Tartini.

Walter Keller, harpsichord, and Joanna de Keyser, cello, will be the featured soloists.

Conducted by Kurt Frederick, the concert is free 1\nd is open to the public.

2 Poets to Read At Grasshopper

Anselm Hollo and Michael Browne, both connected with the Iowa State Writer's Workshop, will read their poetry at the Yale Street Grasshopper tonight at 8.

Mr. Hollo has published sever­al volumes of translations for City Light Press and has appear­ed in numerous poetry journals. Admission is 50 cents.

Page 3

PATRONIZE LOBO ADVERTISERS,~ ..

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The UNM Stage Band is conducted by Ernest Kazmier and is sponsored by the Music department so that members can learn the playing and arranging style of the stage band idiom. All members of the band ore from the UNM Bond or Orchestra. They are selected by voluntary audition.

Bob Brown, born in flrn~, Michigan, has played with the Kirby Stone four, Dick Contino, Eddie Peabody and has appeared ot the Red Onion with Bob Ransom. He is currently teaching applied guifar at the Uni· '.'­versify of Albuquerque.

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Page 4: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968
Page 5: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968

Page·& NEW MEXICO LOBO

Lobo 9 WAC Contenders By WAYNE CIDDIO

A three-game sweep this week­end could make Coach Bob Leigh's Lobo baseball team a strong con­tender for the Western Athletic Conference title. New Mexico· meets the University of Arizona Wildcats in a single game today at 3 p,m. and a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m. Saturday at the UNM diamond.

New Mexico took the first four games of a five-game series from Hiram Scott last week and broke a school record for the most games ever won by a UNM base­ball team. The Lobos knocked off defending NAIA champion High­lands University Tuesday and now stand 26-6 on the season.

THE ARIZONA series will be the second conference encounter for the Lobos this season. New Mexico played Arizona State in Tempe two weeks ago and al­most came away with two victor­ies. The defending NCAA cham­pion Sun Devils edged . the Lo­bos 3-2 on two consecutive days before winning the final g a m e 4-1 behind tremendous pitching and stingy defensive play.

New Mexico played well enough to win all three games but was not able to come up with runs in the clutch. The Lobos had the bases loaded in the first inning with one man out when the Sun Devil second baseman turned a potential base hit into a double play and snuffed out the Lobo rally.

FOR A defending national champion, Arizona State has been almost disastrously erratic this year. Ace pitcher Ken Han­sen was bombed for eight first­inning runs this week by the University of Albuquerque. The Sun Devils came back in the fourth inning and started to peck away at the Dons' pitching and barely got in under the wire with a 9-8 win.

On the other hand, the Lobos have been devastatingly consis­tent this season. New Mexico has come from behind in more than a dozen ballgames and most of its six losses have been by one run.

THE LOBOS were well re­warded for their efforts this sea­son when they were ranked 11th in the nation among major col­lege baseball powers by a na­tional collegiate baseball news­paper. New Mexico has placed among such formidable baseball names as Stanford, Florida State, and the Sun Devils, a feat never before accomplished by a UNM baseball team.

New Mexico's offensive attack was blunted somewhat last week when outfielder Steve Barnhill incurred a broken wrist that will put him out of action for the rest of the season. Coach Leigh boasts a host of ready reserves and one of the reserves, speedster Glen Schawel, should pick up the slack.

SCHA WEL IS batting .258 and is leading the Lobos in stolen bases with 14. Schawel uses the basepaths as his personal play­ground and has mystified more than one battery with his daring running this season.

First baseman Mike McLaugh-

Gymnastics Championships

Gymnastics coach Rusty Mitch­ell said earlier in the year that he thought some of the boys on his team could beat him in gymnas· tics competition. Mitchell is a former NCAA champ in floor exercise. His team will get a chance to prove how good they are two weeks hence in the NCAA championships at Tucson.

lin is atop the list of Lobo hit­ters with a blistering .402 aver­age. McLaughlin has picked up 47 basehits, six doubles, four triples, and a home run, and has scored 30 runs and has 17 RBis.

pitching chores· in Saturday's doubleheader. S~ms missed sever­al games early in the season due to an injury, but has gotten back into good form. McAulay has a 1.48 earned run average and leads

L 0 B 0

SPORTS EDITOR

WAYNE CIDDIO

Jim Palmer has connected for 32 hits, eight doubles and two triples, has scored 18 runs and is leading the team in RBrs' with 24. Palmer is batting .356 and is currently second on the Lobo hitting list. •

RIGHTHANDER Ralph Sallee will take tl)e mound tomorrow for the Lobos' first game with the dangerous Wildcats. Sallee has won six games and lost one. The lone loss came in the Lobos' first ' game with the Sun Devils. Sallee is sporting a 2.58 earned run average and has struck out 80 men this season.

Ron Sims (3-1) and Bob Mc­Aulay (5-1) will handle the

Lobo pitchers in strikeouts with 83.

Leigh's starting lineup for the crucial Arizona series is Rick I;aub behind the plate, McLaugh­lm at first, Palmer at second, Jim Johnson at shortstop, Greg With at third, Jim Hames in left field Schawel in center, and Dicki~ Baldizan in right.

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Friday, Apri119, 1968

Lobo T rocksters Seek "'Fourth-Win In Saturday Meet

The New Mexico Lobo track team will go after its fourth straight dual-meet victory of the season when it takes on Abilene Christian College on the Wild­cat campus.

New Mexico won its third dual of the season last week by de­feating Oklahoma State Univer­sity 97-48 at Stillwater. The Lo­bos entered a team in the Okla­homa Relays at Norman Satur­day. During the Oklahoma swing, Lobo Jon Caffey established a New Mexico school record in the pole vault with a vault of 161,4.

CAFFEY SET the old record last season with a vault of 15-10 at University Stadium. Swedish Olympian Ake Nilsson was the first Lobo to erase a school rec­ord this season when he heaved the javelin 256-4% against Colo­rado. Nilsson was four inches shy of a University Stadium record set by an Arizona athlete in 1963.

Th~ top battle in the field events against Abilene Christian should develop between New Mexico discus throwers Ervin Jarros and Mike Jeffrey and the Wildcats' Dave Parsons. Jarros has picked up th1·ee first places in the last two Lobo meets. Jar­ros won the discuss event at the Oklahoma Relay with a throw of 177%, a season best for the UNM sophomore.

New 1\!exico distance runner Ron Eller ran third to Abilene's AI Van Troha in the relays and will meet him against Saturday. Van Troha has the second-best mile in the state of Texas this season. Eller had his season best in the Lobos' first meet at Ari­zona when he ran a •1:06.0 mile.

HUGH HACKETT expects to gntbor point"s in the triple jump, "h.ot P!'t, nnd the sprints. NCAA tr1ple-JUmp champion Art Baxter is returning to top form after a poor start. Baxter has a season best of 49-2% with a wind-aided 52-2%.

J arros and Steve Keppers are the top Lobo entries in the shot. Rene Matison, who ran a 9.4 100-yard dash against Oklahoma State, will lead the Lobos in the sprints.

Hackett's entry list for Satur­day's meet is: long jump-Bax­ter, George Loughridge, and Joe Powdrell; pole vault-Caffey and Powdrell; shot put-Jarros, Kep­pers, and Jeffrey; javelin-Nils­son, Powdrell, and Tom Solen­berger; triple jump-Baxter, Powdrell, and Hoosevelt Wil­liams; high jump-Phil Kastens, Loughridge; discus-Jarros, Kep­pers, and Jeffrey; 440 relay­Ivory Moore, Jim Singer, Don Walton, and Matison; mile run­Eller, Adrian DeWindt, and Ray Jordan; 120 high hurdles-Wil­liams, Harold Bailey, Lough­ridge; three mile run-Eller, Bob Nanninga and Bill Schrandt; mile relay-Singer, Matison, Baxter, and Williams.

Lobo All-Americans

Lobo track All-Americans since 1958 include Buster Quist in the javelin, Dick Howard in the 400-meter hurdles, Adolph Plummer in the 440-yard dash, Larry Ken­nedy in discus, Clarence Robin­son in the long and triple jump, Rene Matison in the 100-y a r d dash, Ira Robinson in long jump, Art Baxter in triple jump, George Scott in the three-mile run, Web Loudat in the mile, and Clark Mitchell in the 660-yard run.

Lobos Ranked 11th

The UNM baseball team is cur­rently ranked 11th in the nation, the highest rating ever achieved by a Lobo baseball team. The poll is conducted by the newspaper Collegiate B a s e b a 11. Arizona State, the defending NCAA champion, and Stanford Univer­sity continued their 1-2 ranldng with Florida State third.

TONY BULL has been one of the most consistent performers fDr Coach Joe Ferguson's UNM tennis team this spring. Bull has posted the second-best singles record for the Lobos and he and his doubles partner Van Hill have only lost once in eight matches. New Mexico is 7-1 on the season, suffering its only loss to BYU.

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Page 7

with M~9hulman

(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," etc.)

WAS KEATS THE BOB DYLAN OF HIS DAY?

Who was the greatest of the English Romantic Poets­Byron, Shelley or Keats? This question has given rise to many lively campus discussions and not a few stabbings. Let us today try to find an answer.

First, Keats (or The Louisville Slugger, as he is com­monly called.) Keats' talent bloomed early. While still a schoolboy at St. Swithin's he wrote his epic lines:

If I am good! get an apple, So I don't whistle in the chapd. From this distinguished beginning he went on to write

another 40 million poems, an achievement all the more re­markable when you consider that he was only five feet tall! I mention this fact only to show that physical prob­lems never keep the true artist ft·om creating. Byron, for example, was lame. Shelley suffered from prickly heat all winter long. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature never stopped writing poetry for one day.

Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping Nell Gwynne's pigtails in an inkwell. (This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day.) He left England to fight in the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and well, but women were never far from his mind, as evi­denced by these immortal lines:

How splendid it is to fight for the Greek, But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to

cl! eelc. While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley stayed in Eng­

land, where he became rnror sharpener to the Duke of Gloucester. Shelley waR happy in his work, as we know from his classic poem, HaiL to thee, blithe strop, but no matter how he tried he was never able to get a proper edge

·on the Duke's razor, and he was soon banished to Coventry. (This later became Jmown as The Industrial Revolution.)

One wonders how Shelley's life-and the course of Eng­lish poetry-would have differed if Personna Super Stain­less Steel Blades had been invented 200 years earlier. For Personna is a blade that needs no stropping, honing or whetting. It's sharp when you get it, and sharp it stays through shave after luxury shave. Here truly is a blade fit for a Duke or a freshman. Moreover, this Personna this jewel of the blade-maker's art, this boon to the cheek and bounty to the dewlap, comes to you both in double­edge style and Injector style. Get some now during "Be Kind to Your Kisser Week."

But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Greece and Shelley in England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric:

Although I am only five feet high, Some day I 1villlook in an elephant's eye. But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,

touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This too fai~ed. The!l Byron, ~ver the ladies man, took up with Lucrez1a Borgia, Catherme of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wife Mary and wrote his famous poem:

I love to stay home with the miss us and write, And hug he1· and kiss her and give her a bite.

Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went into another room and wrote F1·ankenstein. Upon reading the manuscript, Shelley and Byron got so scared they immediately booked passage home to Eng­land. Keats tried to go too, but he was so small that the clerk at the steamship office couldn't see him over the top of the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died of shortness.

Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together com­posed this immortal epitaph:

Good old Keats, he might have been short, But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport.

* * * @1968, Mu Shulman

Truth, not poetry, u the concern of Per.,onna, and we fell you truly that you'll not find a better shaving com­bination than Personna and Burma-Shave, regular or menthol.

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Page 6: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 071, No 96, 4/19/1968

Page 8 NEW MEXICO LOBO

Lobos Still 1n l-louston Tourney •

New Mexico collegiate golfers made a good showing in the first round of the All-America Inter­collegiate golf tournament Wed­nesday at Houstozt. UNM and New Mexico State advanced into the second round of the tourna­ment yesterday.

UNM beat Texas A&M 4-2 and was scheduled to meet Louisiana State. The Aggies defe&ted Tex­as Tech 4%-1'h and were paired against defending champion Houston in y;esterday's quarter­finals.

UNM AND New Mexico State were both well off the pace in team and individual medal play.

The Lobos had a 311 score after the first round, 26 strokes off of the pace set by Houston. New Mexico State compiled a 301 in team and individual medal com­petition.

Dick Placek led the Lobos in individual play with a 75, Mike Gooda1·t had a 7u, Terry Dear a '18, and Dwaine Knight an 82. New Mexico took only four golf­ers to the tournament after a disappointing performance at the New Mexico State Intercollegiate last week at :r.as Cruces.

BEN J{ERN was the top play­er for New Mexico State with a one-over-par 73. Teammate Bill

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Hutchison had a 74. Mike PiCello of Oklahoma State set the first­round pace with a three-under­par 69.

In team 4-ball, Houston led at 62 with New Mexico in a four~ way tie for second at 63 and New Mexico State in sixth place with 64.

WANT ADS PERSONALS

POETRY WANTED for Poetry Anthology. Include stamped envelope. Idlewild Pub­lishers, 543 Frederick, San Franeiseo-, California. 94117.

DO YOU BlTE your n~ih t Would you like to stop? A limited number of people are being accepted in an experiment to stop nail biting_ Under the auspices of UNM Psychology Dept. Call Mr. Stephen, 217-4235 fo~ appctotment.

HELP WANT!ID

TEACHERS WANTED Entire West and Alaska.. Salaries $6,000 up. Southwest Teacher's Agency, 1303 Central N.E., Al­buquerque, N.M.

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C.orDMd..o 3 7 '6:7 '3'9 u'(\ 3Q.w v.'l I Y\o,97 C.o ~'--\ 3

EW EXICO Our Seventy-First Year ol Editorial Freedom

No.97 Vol. 71

Monday, April22, 1968

Jim Dines Enters ASUNM Presidenc ntest Describes Plans, Pledges Progress Polling Areas Planned

For Choice '68 Vote Polling places will be open in

the Union area from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Wednesday for the Choice '68 primary. Students at about 1000 college campuses across the country will be voting for president and 'On three refer­endum questions.

Students at three New Mexico schools will also vote in a state gubernatorial primary and will answer a referendum question on lowering the voting age to 18.

RESULTS OF the national pri­mary will be tabulated at the Choice '68 headquarters in New York. The primary is being spon­sored by Time magazine. UNM campus coordinator is Tod De­laney, who is also handling the state primary.

Choice 168 officials announced recently that the ballot was not changed after the death of Mar­tin Luther King or after Presi­dent Johnson's decision not to run for re-election.

Delaney said yesterday that Gary Cone, chairman of the Asso­ciated Students Election Commit­tee, was to have made arrange­ments to set up voting machines. Cone is :resigning his position today, Delaney said, and plans have not yet been completed.

The polls will probably be in the Union lobby, on the Mall or Zimmerman field, Delaney said.

EACH STUDENT can vote for his first three choices for presi­dent. Delansy stresses that it is permittable for anyone to write in a name as their first ch.oice.

The ballots used will be a perforated computer card. Stu­dents will have to punch the :right square out of the card with a pointed object such as a pen or pencil. Delaney warns that stu­dents must be certain to see that the perforation does not stick on the back of the card.

'Concert Capers' Opens RHC Week

Residence Halls Council Week will open Wednesday with ''Con­cert Capers," a short variety show scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Concert Hall.

The theme of the Capers is "fresh," and "the show can hard­ly be described-it's an innova­tion," RIIC President Larry Schuster said yesterday.

(Continued on page 4)

•••••a "'' Indicate your age u of Nov. 5, 1111: 18orunder0

Q-OICE68~ 19D20:::J 210 22orover0

htdicilte your party preference:

Democrat 0 Other Party 0 RepublicanD lndependentO

I am a Foreign Student: 0 Indicate 3 choices for President (1st chorce tabulated tor election; 2nd & 3rd choices tabulated for statistical analysis,)

Fred Halstead (Soc. Worker)

Mark 0. Ha!Oeld (Rep)

Lyndon B. Johnson (Dem)

Robert F. Kennedy (Dem)

Marlon L. KinQ (lnol

John V. Lindsay (Rep)

Eugene J. McCarthy (Dern)

Richard M. Nixon (Rep)

Charles H. Percy (Rep)

tst 2nd 3rd

DOD u.s 0 LJCD 0 CJ O::J O:JD D:J 0 D DO

DOD Ronald w. Reagan (Rep)

Nelson A. Rockeleller (Rep) D ::::J C Harold E. Stassen (Rep) D ::J " George C. Wallace (Amer. Ind.) D 0 0 (Other) ~ _ D What c;.;;;;;;f military action should the u.s. pur5ue in Vietnam: (Choose one only,) 1mmed1a\o Withdrawal ol U.S. force~

Phased reduction ol u.S, military actiVIty

Maintain current lwei of U.S. m1l1tary act1v1ty

Increase the lnvel at U.S. military ac!lvity

0 D D 0 0 "'All out" U.S. mllllary etlcr\

What course of aetlon should the u.s. pursue in regards to the bombing of North Vietnam: (Choose one only.) Permanent cessation of bombing D Temporary su5pen~1ort olllomtJtng

Main lam current level ol bomu•no

Intensify bornb1nu

0 0 0 0 Use of nuclear weapons

1 confronting the "urbiln crisis" which should receive J!:ghest prioritY in government spending: (Ch

0oose one only.)

Educat1on

Income subSidY

Job tralnino and employment opportunities Riot control and stncter law entorccrnent

0 0 0 0

By MELISSA HOWARD

Promising "progress through work" and "the highest possible degree of improvement in stu­dent government," former sena­tor Jim Dines yesterday an­nounced his candidacy for presi­dent of the Associated Students of UNM.

"The joy of student govern­ment is to assist student organi­zations and, most important, to assist all students," Dines said, and as!Qed for immediate im-'

.provement in ASUNM pro­grams.' "If not here, where, and if not now, when." he asked

FORMER SENATOR Jim Dines yesterday announced his candidacy for the ASUNM presidency. He is shown speaking til his campaign manager, Danny Romero, right. Dines outlined a six point plan for the betterment of UNM. He advised the creation of several new com­mittees to better communications.

"TEN THOUSAND individual voices don't equal the power of one voice representing 10,000," the candidate said •

Pines presented a six-point platform in a speech to about 60 students at the Kiva yesterday afternoon. He :promised to "strive to contact the highest possible number of students" and to in­form them of ASUNM activities, as well as to explain the nature and significance of these pro• grams.

UNM Political Clubs Ask Choice '68 Votes

Members of the Resistance and SDS will support Dick Gregory as a write-in candidate for the Choice '68 election Wednesday, April 24, says Jeffrey Smedberg of the UNM Resistance.

their candidates in the W ednes­day choice '68 mock election.

He called for publication of a "Senate Digest" like the Con­gressional Record to inform stu­dents of the actions of Student Senate. He Jlledged to work closely witl1. the editor of The lLobo ,and suggested changing KUNM's programming to con­form with student interests. Stu-

Smedberg says members of the above groups will support Greg~ ory because they feel he is "the only real peace candidate".

SMEDBERG said that mem­bers of SDS and the Resistance felt that none of the major party candidates offered any real or lasting program of change to bring peace in Viet Nam.

Gregory, who recently spoke on the UNM campus, says he is a non-violent, vegetarian pacifist. He became known as a comedian but is now very active working for civil rights.

The UNM Students for Ken­nedy plan a heavy day's activity tomorrow to encourage support of presidential candidate Robert Kennedy in Wednesday's nation­wide Choice '68 mock election.

STUDENTS for Kennedy pres­ident Roger Dodd said Sunday that his organization will hold two open meetings Tuesday. The first will be from 1 to 4 p.m. at the International Center. It will be a discussion and question and answer session and "everyone, not just those supporting RFK, are invited."

The second meeting will be at 8 p.m. in Room 231 AOB in the Union. There will either be a speaker at the meeting to "more clearly define the policies of Ro­bert Kennedy" or a debate with some other campus political group.

Dodd said the visit of Senator Ted Kennedy to Albuquerque last Saturday sparlted the efforts in the state on behalf of RFK. Dodd also said that he spent sometime with Ted Kennedy discussing the upcoming campaign.

The student spokesman sup­porting . the candidancy of Min­nesota Senator Eugene Mc­Carthy said the UNl\f organiza­tion will step up its activities to~ day through Wednesday.

There will be a table in the Union those three days where buttons and literature will be passed out and questions about McCarthy will be answered. The group will also have a table Wednesday to register students 21 or over to vote. This has no connection with Choice '68.

The McCarthy group was the first organized on campus for a major presidential candidate.

A spokesman for the UNM stu~ dents for Richard Nixon was not available Sunday.

April 23-25

VISTA to Begin UNM Recruiting

VISTA representatives will be recruiting on the UNM campus April 23-25. An information booth will be located in the mall outside the Student Union, or, if the weather is bad, in the Placement Office Trailer. There will also be a movie and discussion W edncs­day, April 24, at 7:30 p.m. in the Newman Hall Auditorium.

VISTA, Volunteers In Service To America, is a volunteer corps living and working with the un­derprivileged in the War on Poverty. Members work with the people of crowded tenements, slums, mill and mine towns, mi­grant labor camps, Indian Res­ervations, and with the mentally handicapped.

A SPOKESMAN for the Stu­dents for McCarthy Sunday joined other campus political leaders in predicting victorl" for

There are presently 4,300 VISTA volunteers working in the United States and in U.S. Ter· ritories. The youngest is 18, the oldest is 85 years old. Their edu· cation ranges from high school drop outs to Ph.D.'s.

dents should be allowed. to give editorial comments over the air, he said.

"Student Court right now is stagnant," he charged, and pro­posed establishment of a commit­tee of two law students to work with the ASUNM attorney gen· eral to advise students involved in legal .problems off-campus.

"We cannot isolate ourselves from national and international problems,'' he said, and promised to make more information avail~ able through the Alert Center and to encourage exchange pro-­grams with foreign students.

DINES ALSO suggested the formation of a Student Rights Committee to make information available and to promote discus­sion of current affairs. This job could also be handled by an ex­panded Student Affairs Commit-tee, he said.

The student lobby needs to be improved, Dines said. The head lobbyist should issue progress re• ports and schedule she~ts and ?o extensive research on Jssues diS· cussed in Santa Fe, he said.

Pines called for referendum on state issues to be submitted to students at the fall elections.

THE CANDIDATE proposed establishment of a College Coun­cil, to include one student and one faculty member from each of UNM's colleges, to im·prove com­-munications.

The number of students speak­ing to local organizations should be expanded, in order to pro­mote better understanding be­tween the University and the community, Dines said.

The candidate called the pro­posals for an ASUNM~sponsored job-counseling service "very val­uable," and added that a similar service should be instituted to aid students seeking scholarships.

UNM STUDENTS will vote Wednesday in !he national ~hoice '68 collegiate presidential primary. The ballot hsts 13 cand1dates for president and includes a stmce for write-in ;votes. Three re~erendum questions-on the Viet Nam war, the bomb1ng of North V1et Nam, and the "urban crisis" are also included. Students enrolled at UNM will be aslted to indicate their age, party preference, atld whether

they ate foreign students.

McCarthy T ele-Lecture Senator Eugene McCarthy will

speak, via tele-lecture, at noon ':['uesday in the Union ballroom. The speech is sponsored by the Alert Center.

No degree or examination is required to join VISTA. A volun· teer receives six weeks of training before his or her year of assign· ment, and will then work toward the problems and potentials of the community they serve.

Instituting a pre-registration program "is the responsibility of student government, and student government can accomplish this," Dines said. He called the pre­registration idea "vital for a school this si:te."

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