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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1976 e Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 11-10-1976 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 58, 11/ 10/1976 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1976 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 58, 11/10/1976." 80, 58 (1976). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976/131
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University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1976 The Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980

11-10-1976

New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 58, 11/10/1976University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1976 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 58, 11/10/1976." 80, 58 (1976).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976/131

LDBD Wednesday, November 10·, 1976

H·ead of Film Commit·t Announces Resignation

By Chris Hammond Citing her lack of accounting and financial abilities

a,s reasons, Margaret Ott, acting chairperson of the ASUNM Film Committee, submitted a Jetter of resignation Tuesday to ASUNM President Damon Tobias. ·

In her letter, Ott said·. "It is clear that I do not have the financial or accounting abilities to continue my position. I do not feel that my resignation will un­tangle the confusion which has. occurred in the Film Committee's accounting this year and in Ute pa'st few years."

A $1170 discrepancy of the Film Committee's financial records was discovered by ASUNM Attorney General Brian Sanderoff during an investigation.

Sanderoff's report to Tobias states, "Damon Tobias .receives a weekly report from the chairperson of the Film Committee on the revenues generated by gate receipts. This reported figure should be equal to the amount of money deposited in the business office. From Sept. I to Oct. 16 the reported figure has ex­ce~;ded the deposited figure by $1170. ''

Ott said her figures of unaccounted deposits are closer to $1700, not $1170.

"It is my opinion that the 'improprieties' will continue until guidelines are set," said Ott.

There is little on paper to reinforce Ott's con- _ jectures.

Ticket receipts are the only proof of supply pur­chases.

All tickets for admission to the. movies were awarded a $1 denotation whether they had been allotted to st)Jdents, to children (who pay half-price) or to students who had bee.n awarded free tickets.

Refunds were also not taken into consideration. "We recorded head counts, not admission fees

received,:'.Ott..l!!tid. · .. · ''The Film Coriiiilnte'e'ineets with Damon Tobias

every Tuesday for a business meeting to discuss all our problems," said Ott. "A list of receipts for the week was given to Tobias along with the amount of

money." Ott said, "We had to submit a financial statelJlent at

the end of the seventh week and it.was all right there." Billing is a problem for the -Film Committee, said

Ott, because it is' not allowed to keep invoices and there is no way of knowing when a bill has been paid.

"The committee is often billed twice for a film it thought it had paid (this happened four times this year),'! Ott said. •

The SUB Theater has undergone reconstruction and last year's Film Committee office no longer exists.

"We have to use the projection booth as our office which means during· a film we can't conduct business," Ott said.

Ott said the Film Committee was unaware that a business phone was available for its use in the student government offices and had been using residence phones to establish bookings and other committee business.

"It takes two months to get reimbursed so I just took the money to cover my phone costs," said Ott.

There has been controversy over the fact that Ott. · has held at home some "loose change" of $297.25.

"The committee is still waiting for a set of keys so that loose change and supplies may be locked up," said Ott. "We couldn't deposit the money because the business office lost our locking money bags last year.

"There are other-than-financial problems con­cerning the Film Committee," Ott said. "The mechanics of the theater also need aid.''

The Film Committee· is in the process of having a marquis constructed because people have difficulty finding the place, and they are looking into the possibilities of establishing a concession in order to make more money.

"I resigned because I'm afraid to do anything for · fear of being illegal," Ott said, "and I don't want to see the theater closed down. ••

Ott's letter said, "I feel that there is interest in the committee when things go wrong but there is very little assistance on a daily basis to prevent problems."

But Aspects Still To Be ·Considered

William E. Colby, former director of the night in Popejoy Hall.

Ex-CIA Director Explains Spy History

By John Carnahan To a very small and attentive

audience William Colby, ex­director of the CIA, explained the history of spying activities and the future role of the intelligence organization.

Using the Bible as an example, Colby cited the role of Delilah, Samson's mistress, as the world's undercover agent.

"Spies were even sent into Jericho to see which were the best ways to breech the .walls of that city,••· Colby said.

Moving to the more recent past, Colby explained how spies were of immense importance in the winning of the American Revolutionary War against England.

"Mr. John Honeyman informed General Washington of the British plans to celebrate Christmas Eve. With this information Washiltgton's army crossed the Delaware River and administered a stunning d~feat against the British," Colby said.

Colby compared the fable of the

six blind men ,;lnd the elephant to the American citizen's perception . of the intelligence agencies.

Briefly, the fable tells of how the six blind men all felt a different part of an elephant. Each blind man then proceeded to project a false total image of what the elephant was like.

"We have projected an image of the CIA because of all the stories of scandal and intrfgue. We are just as wrong as those blind men were," Colby said.

He stressed that the image of scandal and intrigue was true for 3'0 or 40 years ago but that image no longer can be used as an example for today's CIA.

Colby said, "We have ex­perienced within the last thirty years an information explosion. And if this information tan be brought together and analyzed, a great deal can be learned about tbe rest of the world.

Davis Backs U. Control of BCMC

"ln the CIA, we have gathered together a great number of ~xperts to analyze all this free moving in­formation. With this information, we can predict with reasonable ac­curacy the way in which the world is going to move. This scholarly business has become a critical fac­tor in the intelligence field."

Colby attributed the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal as being most responsible in making drastic changes in the operations of the intelligence agency.

By Karen Moses Giving UNM complete control of

the Bernalillo County Medical ·Center would be a giant step forward for the University and the state, said UNM President Bud Davis in reference· to the BCMC Board of Trustees' unanimous decision Monday to study the feasibility of the transfer of the Center's control to UNM. ,

"We wiJI proceed as quickly as possible," Davis said, "and hop~fully the needed legislation will be made during this year's legislative session."

However, three major aspects must . be considered before legislation on the proposal can be made, he said. First, the exchange of buildings and land from the county to the state must be arranged.Second, an agreement must be made with the county concerning the care of indigent patients. Finally, the legislature must permit the acceptance of the Center's. responsibility and property by the state and University.

BCMC is currently under a joint­powers agreement which was drawn

William Davis

up in 1969 by the Board of County Commissioners and the Regents of UNM. It gives UNM the operational control of the Center, while giving the county fiscal control.

Commissioners and one ·representative from the All-Indian Pueblo Council. However, the Regents have revised the board twice since its beginning in 1969. At first, it consisted of 5 regents, one County Commissioner and an All-

The county has the power to Indian Pueblo representative. This review and pass or reject the was changed in June 1974 to lower budgets submitted. by the the number of regents to three. It University. It also retains title to all was amended in December 1974 to real estate, buildings and equip- add one more County Com­ment. · missioner to the board at the

"Because of these two events, the operations of . the CIA is now responsible to American law. The President has total say in what we can and can't do. We now have a Senate committee to supervise our intelligence gathering operations," he said.

On the future of thl! CIA, Colby ·said, "One major problem -this country will face is our relationship with the growing powers of the world. They see a monetary and technological gap widening.

The agreement gives UNM the power of ,operating and managing BCMC and its associated clinics and emergency facilities. UNM also appoints all personnel employed at the Center including the ad­ministrator. It also prepares the annual hospital budgets and submits them to the County for approval.

The joint agreement also gives the UNM Regents the power of making changes in the structure of BCMC's Board of Trustees, Davis said. This is covered in the section of the agre~ment that states:

The University shall make such rules and regulations governing the conduct of the BCMC and such organizational arrangements for its internal control as the University shall consider in the best interest of the BCMC and may amend the same from time to time. ·

The BCMC Board of Trustees is currently ·made up of four University Regents, two County

County Commission's request.

"It would simplify management ·greatly if total management was given to the President (of UNM) and the Regents," Davis said. ''Whenever you have a split authority, even under the best of condi$ions, problems arise."

Colby sald that some of the leaders of Third World nations might start thinking in terms of sabotage to narrow this gap.

"The great power ·of nuclear weapons is increasingly being developed in a large number of these growing 'nations," he said.

Candidates' Statements Candidate statements of students runni~g for the ASVNM Senate

must·be submitted to the LOBO no later than Sunday, Nov. 14 at 3 p.m.

Statements must be typed and double spaced. The LOBO has typewriters available for those who do not have access to one; .

There is a 250-word limit for the statements. Statements are subject to editing and cutting to fit space limitations. . .

If the candidates want to have a photo run wtth theu statements, they should submit a black-and-white photograph by Friday, Nov. 12. All material should be left in room 138, Marron Hall.

Candidates should call the LOBO, 277-4202, to arrange for an ap­. pointment to meet with the LOBO staff.

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5 Gas C.ut To Hit Industry ·> z WASHINGTON (UPI) - Natural gas shortages • may plague industry this winter but will have little

2 impact on homeowners and small businesses even if 3 the winter is unusually cold, government and industry

that "barring extremely cold weather this winter there will be no serious impacts due to natural gas cur­tailments."

~ officials said Tuesday. ·o; A warning that industry will bear the brunt of P shortages and an assurance that residential and most 8 commerci(!l ne~ds will be met came from Vice

·;;: Chairman John H. Holloman III of the Federal Power ~ Commission in opening testimony at· House hearings

But while residential users should have "no dif­ficulty," McGrath said, there would be ''substantial curtailments for industry."

Holloman said the FPC had done all it could to cope with a "sorry state of affairs" but that further action was needed by the commission and Congress.

~ chaired by Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich. He said 15 states appeared to be the "most

susceptible" to ecor{omic dislocation in the event of abnormally cold weather: Alabama, Arizona, California, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Nevada, North C!lrolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and West Virginia.

z Pipeline industry spokesmen also testified there would be enough gas to heat homes but that the

N " amount available for heavier industry would :depend' gf largely on the weapon.

P-< Tlie hearings were called by Dingell, chairman of the House Energy and Power Subcommittee, in an effort to determine the impact of a projected 22 per cent reduction in interstate gas deliveries this winter.

Dingell said the planned cutbacks will be about 25 'per cent greater than those of last winter.

Holloman said that even though residential and small commercial customers probably would be unaffected, the natural gas shortage continues to worsen and current figures are "stark and extremely unsettling."

One of the industry leaders, Jerome J. McGrath, executive vice president of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America, said an FPC study showed

Dingell said the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, asked for a long-range weather forecast, advised him there was a "statistically fairly good chance" winter would be colder than normal throughout the South, the Southern Great Plains and in the Ohio Valley. It should be "milder than normal" in the Northern Great Plains, the Northwest and along the California Coast, NOAA said.

"Such other areas as the Northeast Atlantic Coast, the Upper· Midwest, and the Intermountain Basins of the West must be considered indeterminate- equally likely to go either way," NOAA said in a letter to Dingell.

UN Passes .Te·n Resolutions Against S. African Ra~ism UNITED NATIONS (UPI) - their struggle, by all possible Af~1ca. Bntm~, France and the

The U.N. General Assembly passed means, is legitimate." Umted State~ killed. such a proposal 10 resolutions against South Before the vote, Israeli last month w1th a tnple veto. . Africa's apartheid policy of racial Ambassador Chaim Herzog An appeal for a total econo~1c discrimination by landslide margins strongly objected t9 one resolution embargo w~s approved 11.0-6 Wl!h Tuesday, including demands for singling out and condemning Israel 24 t.ransn~t10nal corpor~t10ns slill arms, trade' and sports bans against as a special collaborator with South tradmg w1th South Afnca ~nd a the White regime. Africa. Although receiving the request to the International

One of the strongest resolutions, smallest vote, the resolution still Mo~etary Fund to stop t?e ex-adopted by a vote of 108-11 with 22 passed 91-20, with 28 abstentions. tens10.n of further credits to abstentions, proclaims "that the The arms embargo resolution, Pretona. racist regime of South Africa is passed 110-8 with 20 abstentions, The recommendation for a total illegitimate and has no right to asked the security council to make a sports ban excluding all racially represent the people of South ·new attempt to impose a mandatory segregated teams,was pa~s~qJJ.S-0, Africa." anus· embargo against South with 12 abstentions.

The United States voted against ( five of the resolutions and ab­stained on three. The two others were passed by consensus without a vote.

South Africa did not participate in the debate on the resolutions and was not present during the voting.

Among the measures were resolutions calling for an arms, trade and sports embargo against the White minority regime, in­cluding a ban of further foreign investments in South Africa.

Another declared that the two · liberation movements in South

Africa "are the authentic representatives of the majority of the South African people, and that

Justice Dept. Asks Draft Cases Delay

NEW YORK (UPI)-NBC news reported Tuesday that the Justice Department has advised U.S. attorneys to hold off on prosecuting cases agmnst accused Vietnam war draft evaders until President-elect Jimmy Carter's attitude toward them has been determined.

NBC correspondent Carl Stern said U.S. attorneys in New York, San Francisco and elsewhere have decided to "wait to see precisely what Mr. Carter has in mind." Ite said the attorneys have said, "There is no use prosecuting draft resisters if Mr. Carter is going to pardon them and that's why this week the word has gone out to hoi>! off on such cases.''

Stern said arrest warrants are still active for.about 4,000 draft evaders, most of them in Canada.

\ll(JJ~[!ID ~~WQ

·By United Press International

Christians ·Warn Peace Force BEIRUT, Lebanon-New fighting exploded in Beirut Tuesday with

prospects for a major confrontation between advancing Arab League peacekeeping troops and. Christian commander~ who vowed to "open fire" on the peace force.

Rightist and leftist military communiques said fierce fighting and artillery duels erupted on all fronts in the capital Tuesday night, from the gutted Port District in the North to the front-Une suburbs south of the city.

Auto Union Threatens Strike CHICAGO~The United Auto Workers Union announced

Tuesday its 43,000 members at International Harvester Plants across the nation will go on strike at midnight Nov. 17 unless a new contract is reached by then.

The UAW issued t-he strike notice to the Chicago-based manufac­turer of trucks, farm and construction equipment on the same day Deere and Co, resumed full production after a 39-day strike by the UA W affecti~ its 27,000 workers.

Arafat Acts as Mediator CAIRO, Egypt-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Libyan

·leader Col. Moammar Khadafy will hold face-to-face talks in a bid to resolve their three-year-old quarrel,- Palestinian guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat said Tuesday.

Arafat, who has made several trips to Libya and Egypt over the past weeks in an effort to mediate Libyan-Egyptian differences, told the Libyan News Agency, "The two presidents have responded to my efforts and agreed to meet."

Hearst Changes Prisons SAN FRANCISCO-Patricia Hearst was spirited secretly Tuesday

from a campus-like federal prison near San Francisco to another prison 400 miles away in San Diego for "security" reasons.

The heiress' attorney, Albert Johnson, said the transfer was for "security" reasons but declined to comment further.

Warden William Garrison of the Federal Correctional Institution in Pleasanton, Calif., said the newspaper heiress, serving a seven-year term for bank robbery, was driven to San Diego by U.S. marshals.

Female Legislators Up 1% WASHINGTON-With ratification of th~ Equal Rights Amend­

ment at stake, the proportion of women in state legislatures increased only I per cent during the 1976 election, according to figures an-nounced Tuesday. ·

ERA was a central issue in many state legislative races. The overall outcome was claimed as a victory by both opponents and supporters of the proposed 27th mnendment to the Constitution.

Stallion Causes Paternity Suit

WALLED LAKE, Mich.-Martha Carleton has filed a $2,500 "paternity" suit against the riding stables where her horse was ren­dered in a fmnily way by a stallion.

The suit, filed in Walled Lake District Court, cites an 1867law that holds stable owners responsible for such unplanned romantic in­terludes ..

Albuquerque Children$ Theaf.er p

~--~

.TheCL~WN PRlNCE

PRESENTS Four Performances

at POPEJOY HALL

Join Snipe the jester, Gaspard the magician, and Damon, the prince who would rather be a clown, on their hilarious search for Diana, the princess who has run off to be a gypsy, in THE CLOWN PRINCE, a delightful comedy for children of all ages.

PLUS

The Albuquerque Children's Theatre BALLI:T COMPANY

in "The Raymonda Variations"

Ballet

Saturday, November 13th &

Sunday, November 14th 1:30 and 3~.30

each day '-----

bY Bill HaYden

IN ADVANCE-$1.25 or $1.110 for groups of 10 or more All Tickets SI.SO DAY of PERFORMANCE

Tickets at Popejoy Hall Box Office· 277-3121 and Albuquerque Ticket Agency -

at Coronado Center 883-1080 For further infonnation, caD A.C.T. at 268-6561

White House Fellowships open competition for ()ne year work assignment.~ with executive branch offidals in Washington, D.C. Applkanrs must be 23·3'• by Scpl. 1977 and US citizens. Application dc<~dlinc i~ Nov. IS. Contact Lynzcc at271-4467.

Graduate Student A~oc. Office hours arc Mon. thru Thurs. 9:~0 a.m. to 3:30p.m. Vice-prcsidcnt 1s hour~: Tuc~. and Thurs. 12:30 to J.:30 p.m. Rm. 248, SUB.

New Mexico

DAILY LOBO Vol. 81 No. 58 Box 20, University P .0., U.NM Albuquerque, N.M. 87131 EditoriatPhone: (505)277-4102, 277-4202.

fhc New Mexico DaUy Lobo is published Monday chrough Friday every regular week .of the University year and weekly during the st!rn• mer session by the Board of Student Publications ot the University of New Mexico, and is not financially associated with UNM. Second cla5s postage paid ·at Albuquerque, New Mexico 81131. Sub!icription rate is $10.00 for the academic year,

The opinions expressed on the editorial pages of The Daily Lobo arc those of the attthor solely. Unsigned opinlbr'l is that of the editorial board of The Daily Lobo. Nothing printed in The Duily Lobo necessarily. represents the views of the University of New Mexico,

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Daily LOBO Perspective Letters

Editorials Opinions

Editorial

Class Shoppers Plague the System

~ The semi-annual, mad dash of preregistration is half over. But Z the problems are only just beginning. "<~". Students are caught lJP in the classes they are muddling through 1;t this semester, and really are not terribly concerned with any future ~ other than getting through this semester.

So the old, "fill the preregistration card with anytbing and everything that fits" game begins. This game is the trick of preregistering for as many courses as possible,· attending those courses for a couple of weeks and then choosing the four or five easiest courses and dropping the rest. ·

The administration caught on to this game and has managed to cut into it by charging for hours over 18 and not refunding that money. While this is a problem for some serious students, it has helped a lot of the rest of us get into classes which would otherwise have been filled by class shoppers until it was too late to be added. Although the possibility for this type of class shopping has been eliminated, we are still faced by another type of class shopping.

The second game is the "fill fn at least 12 hours for preregistration" ploy. Most students will readily admit that they use preregistration in order to make sure they get into the one or two classes that are important to their field of study ..

However, the other three or four courses which .are logged down by the student are merely filler hours so the amount of tuition.will not change when they go through drop-add at the beginning of the next semester to straighten out the tangled mess they've created.

This type of class-juggling; as the other one, takes up a lot of computer and personnel time.

The problem with this second type of class padding is that a lot at" courses are closed by students who fill their gaps with courses they intend to drop. These courese then begin to have vacancies right around the start of school.

It would be nice to think that students will eventually realize how unfair this method of class padding is to other students, and that they will stop doing this on their own.

But it seems more likely that the administration might be required to limit the number of course changes a student can make.

What seems to us to be the fairest method would be a blacklist system. The Registration Center could keep a list of students who consistently make major 'revisions in their course selections. These students could then be required to discuss their course changes with an advisor.

It is well-known just how much students hate the amount of red tape found around campus.

If the students who abuse the system were forced to see an ad­visor for course changes, then perhaps the additional obstacle would cause them to think twice about class padding.

DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau

BEliEVE M/3, ClYIJ/3, J'o LOVE

W. BIJT TJ.IESE E3XPENPIT/JRe REPOf<T5 HAve 70BCJN BY

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Editorial Board

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Editor-in-Chic! Susan Walton

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Exxon, Motherhood, Apple Pie? By Martin Nix

When one questions the corporate economy, immediately you are accused of attacking motherhood, apple pie, and the flag itself. But the reason for the material shortages-and the risk it brings in an age of nuclear war- is because of the nation's over-dependence on large cor­porations.

There are some good reasons why Exxon wan­ts nuclear energy and not conservation and solar energy, and why GM doesn't like transit, and why Del Monte doesn't like your backyard gar­den.

To sum it up, the large corporations are based upon an age of cheap materials and energy-and conservation of labor. As the price of materials go "up, it means that labor-intensive, local business becomes serious competition.

In other words, it is cheaper to hire more people instead of buying a new machine (which helps to solve unemployment). The fact that you dried your clothes on a solar clothes drier (a clothes line) is not accounted in the GNP (Gross National Product), yet the fact that you used a gas drier is. ·

The heat from a solar collector is not ac­counted in the GNP, nor the food from a solar­heated greenhouse. The objective of a cor­poration is to make you dependent upon them

for EVERYTHING. Anything which you or a community can do for itself is being kept off the market.

We need to again make the family and com­munity the basis of production-the technology is there and it will increase family stability.

Basically we have Chase Manhattan Bank not only doing the planning for the nation's economy, but planning the nation's lifestyle ... with some very sophisticated com­puter/marketing techniques. Why does it take less energy to recycle ore, instead of mine "virgin" ore; yet it is more expensive to recycle it?

I consider much of TV to be the latest words of propaganda from corporate America. The multinational corporations control the world (though imperfectly, as OPEC has shown) not through politics but through economics.

Is there an attempt to use the CIA, FBI, and Military in countries like Iran for corporate goals? With such "new" technology as solar, wind power, insulation, solar-heated greenhouse, small business and transit, we can make our homes and communities self-sufficient.

But will the corporations permit it if it means they lose profits? Is there a way to make the cor­

. porations accountable to the Constitution?

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Variety Show Vs. Women's Field Hockey Editor:

I would like to add my two cents to the women's field hockey issue.

It seems exceedingly stupid to me that the women's field hockey

funds were cut off. Look at our football team. They get a lot of building up a[ld publicity and they also (surprisingly) have a fairly good turnout at games, in terms of

The /Barber of Seville' Performs in Poor. Taste

Editor:

The attendance of this weekend's production of the "Barber of Seville" by the Albuquerque Opera Theatre. at Popejoy Hall left me with . amazement and disgust at the poor taste shown in the direction of this work.

As a member of the University community I take exception to the par-· trayal of the role of the music master, Don Alonzo, by Mr. Jack Morris, as directed by Mr. Sean Daniel. Incorporated into this role was a stereotyped representation of characteristics attributed to homosexuals.

Such distorted portrayals help perpetuate negative attitudes about such persons, and it appears offensive to people of some sensibility, be they hetero- or homosexual, to use'the facilities of the University to stage such a performance in the name of humor.

Mana9ing Editor Teresa Coin

News Editor Joseph Donnelly

Brigitte Goldstein

attendance. But they've lost the last four

games in a row. While the women's field hockey

team does not have the expensive build-up and large crowds, it does win its games.

I think the action by Linda Estes to cut the money from women's field hockey was not wise.

Sometimes I think the old days of college competition has been for­saken· for the commercial product of professional athletics. It's no longer a group of people out on a playing field enjoying themselves but more of a situation where they prove themselves with the glitter, marching bands and trimmings. This is not athletics but a variety show.

Maybe what we need here at UNM is to put our emphasis and money on our women's sport$. Af­ter all, they seem to be able to stand the competiton better than the men.

D. Russell

Aavertising" Manager Harry Chapman Unsigned' editorials represent a

majoritY opinion of. the Dail~ LobO 'S'fan;,•,f~jt :·ptttl!t'C'Uitlrnns, canoons and letters repfeSCnt the opinion (If the author and do not neCeS$drily reflect tho vlews of the staff,

Photo Editor Wendell T. HtJnt

Arts & Media Ken Walston

Sports Editor Tim Gallagher

Asst. News Editor

David M. Flynn Copy Editor

Karen Moses

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Daily LOBO Perspective Letters

Editorials Opinions

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A Reaction: II More Of What For Whose Money?' Opinion

By Geoffrey C. Bell Graduate Student

School of Architecture and Planning

I would like to reply to an Opinion by Brook W. Reams en­titled "Nuclear: More for Your Money" with some facts.

FACT 1: "It is a sorry state of affairs when this nation will be required to spend twice as much in 1977 to protect us from nuclear wastes and possible malfunctions as will be spent on the entire solar budget."

SOURCE: People & Energy, Sept. 1976 by Senator Gary Hart.

FACT 2: The Natural Resour­ces Defense Council filed suit on Sept. 9, 1976 charging that ERDA's plans to construct 20 new tanks at a cost of $250 million to store 22 million gallons of highly radioactive wastes was illegal until: a) ER­DA filed an environmental im­pact statement on the military waste storage program, and b) ERDA obtains an NRC license for the proposed stwage tanks.

SOURCE: People & Energy, Sept. 1976

FACT 3: An economic com­parison between nuclear and coal-fired plants indicates that a) new nuclear plants will _not cost significantly less than coal­fired plants to own and operate, b) deferral of new power plants will generally decrease rather than increase the costs of elec­tricity, c) if judged on other criteria such as construction time, lower capital requiremen­ts, etc., nuclear power is "decidedly inferior to coal and also to conservation of energy."

SOURCE: Charles Komanoff of the Council on Economic Priorities, P&E 3176

FACT 4: The House Com­merce Energy and Power Sub­committee has been advised that an accelerated coal program is better than nuclear energy.

SOURCE: Roger F. Naill of Resource Dynamics Group and Howard Odum, et al, Univ. of Florida at Gainesville, in Energy Resources Report Mar. 26, 1976.

FACT 5: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has halted emergency coolant tests of nuclear reactors due to five­year delay and cost escalation of 1,700 per cent, from $2 million to $36 million .

SOURCE: Energy Resour­ces Report, July 9, 1976.

FACT 6: "Current standards controlling disposal of low-level nuclear waste may lead to

significant health hazards in, future years due to lacking con­tainment regulations and 'long­term perpetual care' . "

SOURCE: report released by the House Government

. Operations Committee in Energy Resources Report, July 16, 1976.

FACT 7: Reactor engineer Ronald M. Fluegge has resigned from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission charging the NRC

.with "disregarding unsafe con­ditions in Pressurized Water Reactors and called for the im­mediate shutdown of 36 power plants using this cooling system.''

SOURCE: Energy Resour­ces Report Oct. 22, 1976.

FACT 8: Common Cause has concluded that there is serious pro-industry bias among Federal regulatory agencies.

SOURCE: Serving Two Masters 75p. avail. Common Cause, 2030 M St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20002.

FACT 9: Senate investigation in 1973 revealed large oil com­panies control more than 70 per cent of the U.S. [latural gas supply, between 30 and 60 per cent of the nation's coal and more than 50 per cent of the uranium supply.

SOURCE: Living in the En­vironment Concepts, Problems, and Alternatives by G. Tyler Miller, Jr., p. 239.

FACT 10: The Cornell Energy Industry Study Group report on Standard Oil of Indiana, Stan­dard of California, Exxon, and Mobil structures shows need for divestiture and that they dominate 95 per cent of the l:J.S. uranium milling capacity.

SOURCE: Gov't. Printing Of­fice, Washington, D.C. 20402; Rpt .• Ser. # 94-37(92-127)

FACT 11: Ralph Nader has accused the NRC of secretly promoting nuclear energy by proposing accident liability limits and multibillion-dollar subsidies.

SOURCE: Energy Resour­ces Report Oct. 29, 1976

FACT 12: The Price-Anderson Act limits liability damages to $560 million fo.':....':!

single nuclear power plant ac­cident while the Rasmussen Report says damages could total over $6 billion.

power plants. factor of at least two." r-< 0 SOURCE: People & Energy

Mar. 1976. S 0 U R C E ': S o m e <:r

0

FACT 15: Great Britain's Royal Commission on en­vironmental,pollution has urged the postponement of a British breeder reactor program.

Climatological Estimates of z Wind Power Availability by o

SOURCE: A Nuclear Power Policy by the Board of Direc­tors of New Mexico Citizens for Clean Air & Water, Mar. 18, 1975.

< J.W. Reed & B.F. Blackwell, <>

# SAND-75-5295. g_. FACT "18: An ERDA-funded Pl -

SOURCE: People & Energy, Sept. 1976.

study says radiation caused .o

FACT 13: The National Coun­cil of Churches has voted over­whelmingly in favor of a moratorium on the commercial development of plutonium as an energy source.

SOURCE: People & Energy, Mar. 1976.

FACT 14: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has acknowledged that there have been more than 100 bomb threats made against nuclear

FACT 16: A General Electric study says windpower can sup­p.ly 102 per cent of present U.S. electric power needs with present technology.

SOURCE: Solar Energy In­telligence Report, July 5, 1976.

FACT 17: Windpower "sup­ply exceeds total national demands [for electricity] by a

deaths of atomic workers ex- ::;; posed to levels well below ~ present "acceptable" limits, chances of dying of cancer could range from 18 per cent to 200 per cent, based on study statistics.

SOURCE: Energy Resour­ces Report, Oct. 29, 1976

"Remember, the difference between an ignorant person and a stupid person is that the stupid one prefers to remain ignorant," Mr. Reams.

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT--TONIGHT! Quit worrying and do something about it. Your slow reading problem can be solved. Permanently. Tonight we'll show you how, and teach you how to read up to twice as fast­in the process. Free. No obligation. No hassle. (Twice as fast is easy. Our average graduate reads over 5 times faster with better under­standing.) You'll be surprised how fast you can read after only one hour. And what you learn tonight you can begin using immediately to catch up on your reading. Quit being a slow reader!

DON'T KEEP PUTTING IT OFF! The load will only get worse, and the time shorter. Do something about the way you read tonight.

TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE? Our half-a-million graduates know it works. We want to prove it to you. And the best way is to give you a free sample. You'll leave reading up to twice as fast after the free lesson. Forever. Just for coming. So do yourself a favor. You've got nothing to lose and everything to gain.

NEED TO READ FASTER? COME TO A FREE SPEED READING

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Nevv Tumor Study Techniques Developed t1 ' .

i A new technique fm growing

Zo human tumor cells outside the body so that they resemble the tumor

o remaining in the body has been :§ developed by members of the UNM >. School ofMediGine faculty. 'a John M. Yuhas, Ph.D., associate I:) professor of radiology and o associate director of the UNM ·~ Cancer Research and Treatment ~ Center, described the new

technique Tuesday in a news

Z~ conference held in his laboratory at the Cancer Center.

The method consists ofremoving

Tra'(eller Is At Neds

a very small portion of cancerous tissue from the patient ·during a normal biopsy procedure, and then placing these cells in· specially prepared dishes, Yuhas explained.

These few cells grow into cell clusters, or "spheroids," and show the same tissue organization that tumors do within a patient and, therefore, should show similar responses to drugs agd radiation. Until now, cells obtained from human tumors required prolonged periods in culture before they would grow, and even then they grew only as disorganized single cells.

With the new technique, spheroids can be obtained in as few ·as· two days, and the technology required is extremely simple. Very few laboratories can, at the present time, grow spheroids due to the requirements of the older, more complicated technique, and none of them have been able to produce spheroids from human biopsy material.

While the technique will require refinement for the expected wide variety of human· tumors which need to be studied, Yuhas ex­plained, it is so simple that even the smallest of laboratories could do it. He discussed the procedure recently at a scientific meeting in San Francisco· and has given the method to a number of colleagues throughout the United States in otder to share this important tool in cancer research.

"We have proven that this technique works with human biopsy material-but its use in treatment planning is several years down the road," the scientist said. "We are now testing experimental tumors from animals to determine whether the responses of the derived 'spheroids' are able to predict the responses of the tumor when it is growing in the animal. The goal of the project is to develop a means of predicting the best treatment for an individual cancer patient. Assuming our animal

Expert To Speak Friday On Recent Viking Results "A Review' of Recent Viking

Results" will be the subject of a colloquium to be presented by Prof. William B. Hanson of the

' University of Texas at Dallas on Nov. 12, at 4 p.m., in Room 184 in the Physics and Astronomy Building at UNM.

Hanson, a member of the Viking

Science Team, is a leading wo'rld authority in the physics of earth's upper atmosphere 'and the ionosphere. He serves as director of the Center for Space Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas.

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Hanson obtained his doctorate's degree from George Washington University in 1954. He served with the National Bureau of Standards from 1949 to 1956. He was em· ployed by the Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. from 1956 to 1962.

Hanson is also a member of the Advisory Board of the National Astronomy and Ionospheric

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~ Center, U.S. Commission III and IV of the International Scientific Radio Union. He is also chairman of the Atmosphere Explorer Science Team.

Individuals who are interested in an appointment with Hanson should contact Prof. H. S. Ahluwalia of the department of physics and astronomy.

Prior to the colloquium, at 3:30 p.m., refreshments will be served in the building's lobby, and Hanson will be available to answer questions.

studies continue to show progress, the next step will be to see. if our spheroid results agree with what is observed in the clinic."

There have been a number of UNM staff members involved in this project, Yuhas said. Dr. Albert Li and Dr. Andrew Martinez of the UNM Cancer Center are studying the biochemistry and growth control processes. Dr. A.J. Lad­man, chairman of the School of Medicine Anatomy Department is concentrating on the cellular and sub-cellular characteristics of the spheroids. Drs. John Saiki, Charles Sternhagen, Michael Shaw and Morton Kligerman continue to provide the clinical effort in this joint project.

Yuhas joined the UNM faculty in January, coming from the Oak

Ridge- National Lab~ratory where he was a specialist in experimental cancer and a lecturer in biomedical sciences, and an assistant professor of zoology at the University of Tennessee. He also serves as a consultant to the Albert Einstein Medical Center, the Oak Ridge Associated University, the East Tennessee Cancer Research Center, the Nuclear Regulatory Com­mission and the National Council on Radiation Protection.

The professor holds a B.S. from the University of Scranton, and an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Maryland. He was awarded a NASA fellowship in the space sciel\ces and a research fellowship from the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.

Eng.lish Dept. Offers Literature of Baseball Who is Ralph Kiner? Or for that

matter who is Nap Lajoie? These . and other questions will be an­swered for the student obsessed with the finer aspects of the great American tradition of baseball in a new course offered by the UNM English department.

·"The Literature of Baseball," taught by UNM English professor James Barbour, will exploit the oral history, biography, diaries and journals, autobiography and non­fiction of "the great American Religion."

Other courses to be offered by the department focus on such areas as fallen women, fantasy, the Depression, American humor and the "big questions" of life.

"Fallen Women in Literature" will consider what these kinds of characters anc;l their creators have to teach to the unfallen women. The course will deal with the seduced and abandoned women, prostitutes and courtesans who have long been popular literary characters.

Enterprising students interested in writing may want to sign up for "Writing and Publishing." The course deals with writing techniques and self-publishing.

Humor and fantasy will also be

dealt with in two courses entitled "American Humor" and "The Literature of Fantasy." An academic approach will be used in the humorclass to study areas ranging from early nineteenth century humor to contemporary "sick" humorists. The class on fantasy will analyze science fiction and futuristic fantasy.

"American Literature-the Depression" will study what several American writers had to say about the time of the stock market crash and the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

"The Big Questions," a com­parative literature course involved with the events which shape people's lives, will evolve around three questions: What is Love?, who is evil?, and what is death?

Most of these courses are upper­division level classes requiring at least one or two semesters of beginning English. The English department has several advisors to help students. A student may be assigned to an advisor by con­tacting Carolyn Thi~len in room 229 of the Humanities building.

Nap Lajoie and Ralph Kiner are both Hall of Famers. If you don't know what they did to get into the Hall of Fame, take "Baseball through Literature" and find out.

UNM Mountain Club will meet Wed., Nov. 10 at 7!30 p.m. in I he third floor reading room of Ortega Hall,

Kappa Omicron Phi will meet Wed., Nov. 10 at 6:30p.m. in the Simpson Rm. of the Home Ec Bldg.

1976-77 Annual Register of Grant Support i~ available in the: GSA office Rm. 248, SUB. Orficc hours Mon. lhm.tnrurs. 9:30a.m. to 3:30p.m.

The film, "Seeking New Problems.''. will be presented Wcd. 1 Nov, 10 at 7:30p.m. in Rm. 103 in the Physics lab Bldg.

Computer Dating rorms.are on the way. Take your date to the dance Fri., Nov. 12.

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An architect's rendition. of the proposed shopping center on Central across from the University.

May House 10 Shops

New Mini-Mall Planned Near U. By Joe Donnelly above the street.

Fanning said the V -shaped building is designed to · "draw people into the shops." ' ·

New City ·Group Fights ~ Nuclear Power in NM

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An Albuquerque group has recently organize.d to fight the construction of nuclear power and waste disposal facilities in the state of New Mexico and surrounding states. The group is the Citizens Against Nuclear Threat or CANT.

The first meeting of CANT will be tomorrow evening at 7:30 at the University Heights Methodist Church, 2210 Silver SE.

At the meeting the film "Energy: The Nuclear Alternative" will be shown. Sally Rodgers of the Central Clearing House in Santa Fe is scheduled to speak.

One organizer of CANT, Dorie Bunting, cited 'the Governor's Task Force Committee R~ort on Radioactive Nuclear Waste which stated that "There is no compelling reason for the people of New Mexico to accept a high-level waste repository."

The report also said that without the approval of New Mexicans,

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"the Carlsbad area is being ex- :c: plored by Sandia Labs to find a 8 ~uitable site for a repository w~ich, ~ 1f completed, would hold :::.: nidioactive waste from across the '< nation." b

Another member of CANT, _? Thora Guinn, also reported that several firms may bring tons of low- ~ lGvel radioactive waste for burial 8~ into New Mexico. 0'

Bunting said, "Despite the P: energy crises for over two years, we ...... can afford the necessary time it _o ...... takes to make careful decisions "' about the future." ~

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Eight to ten shops and a cafe catering to the interests of UNM students are in the final planning stages for a mini-mall to be constr!Jcted in the parking lot between the Lobo Mens Shop and Don Pancho's movie theatre on Central Avenue across from the UNM Journalism Building.

Architect H. William Fanning of Albuquerque said he hopes the mall will open for business in August 1977.

He said the lower level will consist of shops, a cafe

and a brick plaia with trees which can also be used as a ::;::~=========~~===~2~6~5~-~3~4~3~5===~ dining area for patrons of the cafe during the warmer tf months.

He said there will be trees planted in the plaza and at street level.

He said the building is in the refinement planning stage and final details on construction materials would not be available until next month. He said the bids from contractors probably would pot be taken until February. He estimated the cost to build the mall

He said the building would probably be made of concrete, "rough" timbers and some glass.

"We're going to be energy conscious," he said. "The design of the building is an attempt to capture· light."

would be $240,000. . Plans for the mall show there will be a ramp and elevator for the handicapped and a 30 to 32-space parking lot in the rear of the building.

Present plans show the mall to be a two-story structure. The bottom level will be recessed four feet below street level and the upper level will be five feet The building will be owned by Nellos Bros. Inc.

Faculty Senate Elects Committee Chairmen The Faculty Senate appointed

senators to its seven CO!}lmittees and elected chairpersons for each committee at its monthly meeting Tuesday.

John Green, professor of physics and astronomy, was elected chairman of the Faculty Welfare, Professional Standards and Ethics Committee.

Chairman of the Undergraduate Academic Affairs Committee is William Coleman, associate professor in chemistry.

Chairman of Graduate Programs and Standards Committee is Richard Griego, professor of mathematics and statistics.

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Chairman of the Budget Review, Physical Resources and Campus Environment Committee is David Hamilton, professor of economics.

Chairman of the Research Policies and Resources Committee is Victor Regener, professor and chairman of the physics and astronomy department.

Chairman of the Student Affairs and Extra-curricular Activities Committee is Marshall Nason, professor of modern and classical languages.

Chairman of the Community and School Relations Committee is Joseph Zavadil, associate professor

and chairman of the English Department.

These seven chairmen and the five members of the Operations Committee will make up the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate. The Executive Committee will review different problems and suggestions brought up by each committee which will then be presented to the Faculty Senate, said Peter Prouse, president of the senate.

The· Operations Committee consists of the president, vice president and three members elected by the senate.

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Your Entertainment Headquarters Featuring Barnaby All Week .

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The Cultural Program Committee The Associated Students, UNM

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Fine Arts to Offer Course In Southwest Artistic Past

Continuity in the arts of the o Southwest will be the emphasis of a ~ course to be offered this spring by '""" the College of Fine Arts at the .?;> University of New Mexico. ·a A "Artistic Traditions of the o Southwest'' will trace the evolution ·~ of architecture, crafts, printing, ~ sculpture, music and drama of the ""' Native American, Hispano, and

Z~ Anglo peoples of the state. Students and interested members

oo· of the community will be provided ~ a general backgr.ound in each field ~ through the use of the University's

extensive slide collection and will then hear lectures by distinguished guest specialists in the various

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fields. Members of the class will work with original materials to develop their own contribution to our understanding of this heritage and its potentials for further development.

Open to all interested persons,

the three-credit course does not require the student to have had any . previous background in the arts or Southwest history. The class will meet from 8 to 9;15 a.m. on Tuesday and Thursday in room 147 of Woodward Hall.

·suB Theatre. Film Guide

By Miguel Gandert

In spite of the problems facing the Film Committee and the im­pending cloud hanging over the SUB Theatre, the films will go on. Sorry to the filmgoers and sadists who went to see Texas Chainsaw Massacre as it never came in. Sen. Coston will be relieved to know that this one was never shown.

This week's film program is varied and should have a little for all filmgoers .

Starting the week off tonight, the SUB Theatre will show films of a kind not commonly seen in Albuquerque-an evening of ex­perimental films. This group of 12 films will center around a variety of different subjects and ideas. 1 recommend this program to everyone for these films are seldom shown and explore a number of different ways of experiencing film itself. · The films are: Menilmonl

(Kirasanof!), Metanomen (Scott Bartlett), Castro Street (Bruce Bailie), Night Cats and the Dead (Stan Brakhage), Cosmic Ray (Vivian Bruce Conner), Return of the Swill (Gene Gordon), The One Romantic Adventure of Edward (Larry Jordon), Sch­wechter and Arm1/j Rainer (Peter Kubelka), and Neighbors (Norman McClaren).

Thursday night for those who love classic B movies, the SUB Theatre has a double feature, A flack of the Giant Leeches and Attack of the Saucermen. Each of

these films involves the c::lassic theme of horror movies, invasion of our beloved homeland by giant leeches or saucermen. These B classics are the films that inhabited the drive-ins of the late fifties and early sixties-a bit of science­fiction nostalgia and two films for the price of one. Because of the length of this program there will only be one showing at 7 p.m.

On Friday night the SUB Theatre will show Love Affair or the Case of The Missing Switchboard Operator. This film which is directed by Makavejev is one of the better films to come out of Eastern Europe. It is the comic tale of the love affair between a switchboard operator and ,a rat exterminator. The love affair which eventually involves a death is intercut with lectures on sexual myths and taboos.

Rounding out this week, the SUB Theatre will show the 1967 film classic Glory Stampers. This film is part two of American International Pictures' tribute to the Hells Angels. This film has plenty of booze, broads and bikes. Also included in the picture is Dennis Hopper who later made it big with his biker classic Easy Rider. Because of the length of this film there will be a 7 p.m. showing only.

Films as ·always are only a dollar and on Wednesday and Friday night they will show at the regular times of 7 p.m. and 9:15 p.m. On the other nights one showing will be held at 7 p.m.

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fl'ans MasEI'EEI 'iVoodcuts

1926 The Silver Sunbeam Gallery, Albuquerque's newest print gallery, will

open a show featuring German expressionist woodcuts from the 1920's on Sunday, Nov. 14, from 4 to 6 p.m.

· Sunday's show, the third since the opening of the gallery on Aug. 22, highlights Frans Masereel, Flemish/German artist and book illustrator.

The Silver Sunbeam exhibits original prints made from 1840 through the 1930's, including art nouveau lithographs and turn-of-the-century drawings.

' The gallery specializes in early photographic images such as daguerreotypes, tintypes, paper photographs and stereocards. Also available are original advertising, travel and movie posters.

The gallery is in the Silver Sunbeam Antique Store, 3409 Central NE. Store hours are II a.m. to 5:30p.m., Tuesday through Saturday.

"Masercel printed in black and white only. His work is small and very intense," commented Richard Levy, owner of the Silver Sunbeam. •

"His art reflects his basic feelings about what he saw. Masereel went to­Germany and observed what was happening in German cities in the 1920's. From this experience came novels without words. These woodcuts were part of one of those original books," Levy added.

The first show at the new gallery featured early and finely _printed post­cards. The Silver Sunbeam's second show highlighted art deco fashion prints from Gazette du Bon Ton, a magazine published in 1912 that became Vogue Magazine in 1925.

The new show runs through Dec. 24.

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Vortex to Present 'Godot' The Vortex Theatre of

Albuquerque opens Friday with Samuel Becket's Waiting For Godot. The Vortex is Albuquerque's newest and most promising theatre company, run under the auspices of Mime Experiment Performing Arts Collective.

relationships between people. Despite the controversy caused by Becket's play when it was first produced, Jones said the play is more realistic than most people think. Now that the novelty of

Godot is directed by UNM English Professor David Jones. Jones has directed eight plays at the University over the last few years, including Endgame, MQther Courage and Hedda Gabbler. This will be his second production of Godot.

Theatre of the Absurd has worn off, people can take a new look at

Jones sees Godot as a play about the play and see it not as a theatrical experiment but as a modern classic

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dealing with the human condition. As for the figure of Godot, Jones prefers to define him simply as "the guy that doesn't come.''

This production features Ron Guillemette as ·vladimir, Paul Smith as Estragon, Bill Pearlman as Pozzo, · Mark Hetelson as Lucky and· Stewart Hanley as the boy. Lighting design is by Joe Toulouse.

The Vortex is at I 06-A Vassar SE. Curtain time is. 8 p.m. Admission is $2.50 for everyone.

Left: Bill Pearlman as Pozzo

Right: Paul Smith as Estragon, mark Hetelson as Luck.SJ, Ron Guillemette as Vladimir.

Below: 'Godot' in rehearsal.

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"' ~ But UTEP Will Win Harrier Team Title·

Ortega on WAC First: 'Going to Be Close' 0 -

Uy Peter Madrid A short cross-country season

2 may be frustrating for a coach. For ,3 harrier great Lionel Ortega, the :» abbreviated '76 campaign has been ~ somewhat of a good omen. A Although Ortega has not raced as 8 well as he did in 1975 when he was

·>< selected as a cross-country All­<> :;?; American, he says he is better :>: prepared for the conference meet v this year. Last season Ortega broke Z. two meet records and placed second S and fourth in two other meets. So 1;t far this season, Ortega has captured ~ one First, a second place and a fifth

place finish. In a non-collegiate race, Onega took first at the ann pal Spring Bank International race, in Canada,

"I could break five meet records," Ortega said, "but they won't do me any good if I don't run well in the conference meet."

Ortega realizes he has not raced as well as he did last year, but he says he is training much better. He also said his times this year in training are much better than they were last year heading towards the ultimate showdown at the WAC meet.~ .

Ortega said, "At this year's conference meet, I see the race for first to be close between five men. The race will be decided in the last mile. There is no doubt that Texas­El Paso will again win the team scoring, but this year the individual first is going to be close."

A Little Bird Told Me ... Peace Corps/Vista

Is Coming On Campus:

Nov 17,18 Information Table: Student Union

THE CHANGING AMERICAN FAMILY: CRITICAL CHOICES

A Panel Discussion

What is Happening to the American Family?

'., ....•

Daily Lobo . '

Sports · Against UTEP in the Lobos' first

meet, Ortega came in first ahead of a contingency of Kenyan runners. Ortega said his time was better than that of last year on the same course. He felt the team· did quite well considering it was UNM's first meet and the Miners' third.

In UNM's only home meet of the season against the University of Colorado, Ortega came in a distant second behind Buff great Kirk Pfeffer. Ortega attributed his lack­luster performance to the fact that he had only had four days of rest from the road race he and team­mate Peter Butler ran in Canada. Ortega said the length of the race, 12 miles, and the traveling took a lot out of him. ·

Against Arizona State and Brigham Young, Ortega said he just

didn't know what happened. He said he expected to run a good race but thmgs didn't turn up well· for him.

"After the race in Tempe," Ortega said, "!tried to look back at my workouts to see what I did wrong. It was not the rain that affected me, I just don't know what happened."

In Saturday's WAC cham­pionship at Tempe, Ariz., Ortega said second place can go to either Colorado State, Arizona, BYU, or UNM.

Ortega said, "If the freshmen and I get together and run the best race we can, we can edge out BYU for the second-place spot. I think

\~ we are the most rested team in the lj conference. We are also the most

eager team."

·• ·: ~

i

;~ . .

Ortege sees the transition in th.e coaching staff from Hugh Hackett to Bill Silverberg as a smooth one. He said the fact that most of the team members are freshmen and no upperclassman is important in the change of coaches for the '77 season.

"If the team was made up of juniors," Ortega said, "it would be difficult to get used to the new coach. Silverberg is a good coach and a good recruiter. Coach Hackett did a lot for me. He made me the runner I am. Not in training, but in the race itself. He has 30 years of experience of watching runners. I guess it paid off for me to run for Hackett."

Ortega, a senior history major, plans to keep running until 1980, the year of the Moscow Olympics. It is his goal to make it to Moscow in 1980.

How has the family changed in the history of America? What are the main problems of contemporary middle-class families and of Indian families of New Mexico?

All-American cross-country runner Lionel Ortega thinks the UNM team has a good shot at second place in the WAC meet this Saturday in Tempe, Ariz.

"It will be hard when I'm out of school," Ortega said, "but I feel I have a good running backl\round. Besides, I hate to give it up."

Wednesday, November 10, 7:00p.m. First Unitarian Church

3701 Carlisle Blvd., N.E.

Panelists: • Ferenc Szasz-Professor of History • Margaret s·zasz-Historian and Writer

Lobo-BYU Televised Tilt Will Net UNM $95,750

• Mary Walters-Probate Judge • Rose Dilworth-Clinical Social Worker

By Tim Gallagher Although some Lobo football

fans may grumble about the early starting time of Saturday's game with Brigham Young, ABC's

This program is sponsored by the UNM College of Education decision to televise the game means and the Family Resource Center under a grant from the $95,750 to the UNM athletic New Mexico Humanities Council. department.

~;~:~:~~~~:~~;;~:~~;;~:~~;~~ With ABC dangling the money in front of the athletic department's eyes, UNM officials decided to F L I P S I DE's comply with ABC's request to move the starting time of the game from 7:30 p.m. to 11 a.m. UNM

WEEKLY SPECIAL will receive $95,750 from ABC for the rights to televise the game, said UNM Sports Information Director

POSTERS Buy One - Get One. Free

We Carry Spiritual Sky Body Oil & Incense

Elton John • "Blue moves" A S12.9811st Now i8.99

Hou(s nondo.y-Frido.y 9:30 .q.turdo.y 9:30-6:00 lundo.y 12:00-5:00

Eo.st end of

·corono.do Center 293-2124

r !

Don McGuire. The additional money means that

the department will exceed its projection of $120,000 for TV and radio rights for the 1976 football games. UNM receives $2,600 from KOB Radio for broadcast rights. UNM also shares in the profits from other televised Western Athletic Conference (WAC) games that do not involve UNM. Associate Athletic Director Bob DoBell said the combination of these funds would push the actual figure for broadcast rights far above the projected figure. The actual figure will not be known

Total Experience. Here For Hair

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until June, 1977, when the WAC pays UNM its share of the ac­cumulated from football and basketball broadcast fees.

According to its NCAA contract, ABC will pay the WAC office $383,000 for the right to televise Saturday's game. That money will be divided into 12 shares, three of which, amounting to $95,750, will be paid to UNM as the host team in Saturday's game. BYU will receive two shares, or $63,850, as the visitors. The other six WAC teams and the WAC office will each receive one share in the amount of $31,925.

The Lobo game will be televised in the Rocky Mountain area and the Pacific Northwest.

l !

j

I : I I I I I I I i I l

I I I !

I

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• ' ·""' ~ .. ,

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Susie Vigil (left} trails the leader during a recent cross­country race on Albuquerque's west mesa.

Sorry, Football Fans Due to a mix-up, the LOBO inad­

vertently published last week's football contest and winners m yesterday's LOBO.

Here are the real winners from last week's contest: 1st Linda Maddox 2nd Jeanine Henry 3rd Steve Rozell

Here are this week's games, pick the winner: UNM BYU __ CSU Arizona __ Utah Ariz .. St. __ Wyoming UTEP __ Okla. St. Kansas St. __ Texas Tech SMU. __ NMSU Fresno St .. __

Pro Tie-breaker, pick the score: St. Louis __ _ Los Angeles __ _

This contest is sponsored by Anhowe Ceramics Supply, Inc., Lobo Men's Shop, Elliot's Nest, The Gizmo Store, Quarters Discount. Liquors, Rocky Mountain Ski Co. and Stromberg's.

• ,JII~It~I_,TIL

BhUE OYS'IER

:, Be-Bop Deluxe WED., NOVEMBER lOth

8:00PM CIVIC AUDITORIUM

TICKETS AT ALBUQUERQUE TICKET AGENCY (Coronado Center)

833-1080 MAYNORDS (Old Town)

L.P. GOpDBUY- BUDGET TAPES & RECORDS CANDVMAN (Santa Fe)

TICKETS: $6-$6.50 (Day of Show)

Vig1'l's El71otion Runs Out In Cross-Country Races ~

ptlt a lot of all .I've sot into ~· everything. I've come to love it o (running) so much. l feel like I've ~ been given a special talent. I feel ~

By Ed Johnson

,.... ,....

When she was asked, "Why does Susie Vigil run?," Susie Vigil answered, "Because I love it."

member of the UNM cross country team is to "basically give JOOillo effort."

The Highland High graduate, who came to UNM because she "liked it here," has had many opportunities to do that which she

Coach Sandoval also said that that everybody has been given a '< Susie runs somewhat "out of h h ld r-' emotion.'' special talent and that t ey s ou g.

fulfill it, I'm just trying to fulfill o "I agree with that," she said. "I mine."

A look at Some lobos z 0 < s

loves. She qualified for and placed sixth in the 800-meter run at the Olympic trials. When reminded of that fact she commented, "Oh wow!" and said that ac­complishment has greatly

C1' There's a thrill-packed weekend coming up for Lobo sports fans and the a: LOBO will be right there to tell you what will happen and what happened. ,....

m·oti vated her. This motivation has prompted

teammate Cindy "Flash" Ashby to say, "Susie's a tough runner," and Jean Rostermundt said, "She works really hard and has a good attitude."

0 Sports Reporter Gino Brazil will have an in-depth look at the spirited women's volleyball team preparing for its conference matches. Senior :<; sports reporter Peter Madrid will be traveling to Tempe for the WAC ~ cross-country meet and will be watching the young harriers as they get ready for the big meet. In addition, we'll take a look at the women's field hockey team preparing for the Intermountain Conference tourney in Tuc-

To be motivated for a race Susie said, "You have to be physically prepared as well as mentally. I kind of think about the competition and try to fit everything in place."

Her coaches add to, the list of compliments. Coach Barbara Butler says, ''She trains really hard" and Coach Tony Sandoval, when talking about the upcoming nationals meet said, "l would put my money on her. The bigger meets bring out the best in her."

Vigil feels that her role as a

' son.

Come Fly With Us ...

What A Challenge!!

Peace Corps*Vista On Campus Now 17,18

Sign Up Now For lnterv!ew Placement Office:

Mesa Vista Hall

The Parka

The skiing, backpacking, snowshoeing, just hanging out parka by Class 5 is filled with 10 oz of prime goose down lofty and warm yet it's total weight is only 26 oz. The down filled storm flap, drawstring at waist, and snaps at the sleeve increase its ability to keep you warm when the temperature drops. Stash your hands in the handwarmer pockets and your gear in the cargo pockets and you're all set for winter!

$55.00 in 22 oz taffeta $65.00 in 65-35 polyester and cotton (12 oz down)

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Rates: 15 cents per word per day, one dollar minimum. Advertisements run five or more con .. secutlvc duys wil II no clumgcs, uinc ~cnls per word fJCr duy (no refunds If cancelled before rive inscrtlous), Clusslrled udverllsemcnls must be 11nid in udvance,

Murron Hall Room 13 I or by mall to: Clussiriect' Advortisiug, UNM Box 20, Albuquerque, N .M., . 87131

1. PERSONALS ATTENTION: CRAFTSPEOPLE-CHRISTMAS ornament and decoration comest. Handmade items only. Albuquerque Crafts Guild, Silver & Yale. 266· 2089. ll/10

. TOM PARROTT PLAYS the ~.;;,1 folk blues. Sunday at the Bison-Temative, 106 Cornell SE. 1_:.;11_1_2 __

TRA YELLER IS AT Ned's lll Portal. 4200 Central AvenueSE 11/15

CONTACTS?? CASEY OPTICAL Company, 255· 8736. tfn

NROTC MARINeS Happy Birthday. Lt. Sant . . ll!JO

TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate Tuesday s Puzzle Solved:

ACROSS 46 One who becomes

1 Pintail duck less harsh 5 Plundered 48 Active

10 Therefore pastimes 14 Feels pain 50 Top aviator 15 Destroy 51 Ernest

slowly Thompson . 16 Not well- -----: wild-

done life author 17 Resident of 53 Feign

1 of 48 57 Platform 19 Seine tribu- 61 Wander

tary 6 2 En g. royal 20 Ottawa and family: 2

Washington words bodies 64 "Annabel

21 Not man- Lee" and made "Lenore"

23----- up: 65 Remove all Conditions traces of

25 John: Scot. 66 Depletes 261nventor's 67 Gnat, for

grant one 29 LID conver- 68 Edifices

sation: 2 69 Sandpipers wds.

34 Wedding words

35 Not odd DOWN

tracks 10 Beat 11 Barber's

concern 12 ----Major:

Great Bear 13 Close a

hawk's eyes

18 Pitt's alma mater

22 Recitals of events

37 Sort of frightening

38 Not tall

24 Worry-warts 1 Back talk: 26 Of hair

39 Furniture compart-ments

41 Washington, D.C., airport code

42 Sports palace

44 Shrivel: Var. 45 Exchange

medium

Informal 27 Like very 2 Small much "

amount 28 Bather's ac-3 Jole de vlvre cessory 4 $1zable land 30 Something

holdings unique: 5 Umbrage- Slang

taker 31 Zeal 6 Originate 32 Legal 7 Seed vessel 33 Has a 8 Tree of Life preference

site 36 Flower 9 Put off the holder

new 43 Best

organized 45 Outline 4 7 Lived under

canvas 49 Elegant: In­

formal 52 Uneven 53 Ship's

screw: In­formal

54 Was con-veyed in an auto

55 Periods pre­ceding events

56 Sp. silver dollar

58 Artifice 59 Benficiaq

of an act 60Muddle 63 Foal's

parent

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· 25¢ BEER PARTY, OKJES, for all walkers at UCP walkathonNovember 13. 255-7084, 11/12

UNIVERSITY NIGHT AT the hockey game. Sunday Novembet 14, 7:00p.m. $1.00offwith University 10, Albuquerque Chaparrals vs. Bismark Capitols, Albuquerque Chaparrals vs. Bismarck Capitols. TingleyColiseum. ll/12

FINALLY! COMPUTeR DATES are in the mail! Date dance November 12, wat,~:h for details. 11112

ANNOUNCING! KLYT-Conternpornry Chrisuan rnusic 24hours a day-88.3 FM .. .:.'.::'1...:1;:6 ___ _

WANTED! MAN INTERESTED in becoming a Scout leader for work with growing local troop . Personal Reward r1nd Satisfaction guaranteed. Must be willing to take training. Call Doug 268-4863 or Joe 26S-0489, ll/16 '

COME SEE SHREW. Find out why I'm laughing at Dumas' "review(?)." 11/16

$45.00 in gift certificates given away this week 'to LOBO football contest winners. Check today's LOBO for winning names & to enter this week's contest. 11/10 ·

2. LOST & FOUND FOUND: BIKE HELMET, Identify & claim. Call 265-4065. Found in SUB, 11110

FOUND IN FRONT of MH a jacket between 1:30 & 3:00 ll/2. Describe, call 294·3248 after 4:00. 11/10

FOUND: PSYCHOLOGY book Rm. 219ln Mitchell Hall. Describe and claim, Marron Hall, Rm. 131. ll/12

FOUND: SMALL DRAWING instrument. Describe '&claim Rm JJI Marron Hall. ll/12

FOUND: Roll of Microfilm 11/8. Call 266-9275. 11/16

FOUND: ART BOOK at Cornell Post Office. Call and describe, 299-9245. 11/15

3. SERVICES PAINTING INTERIOR EXTERIOR. For free esti· mates, call evenings. 898-0810. 11/12

FAST ACCURATE TYPING-editing. Reasonable. 266-3953. ll/11

DARRY'S ELECTRONIC REPAIR, 118 San Pedro SE, 265-0335. Color TV's, tape decks, stereo, ampli­fiers, auto radios. Install burglar alarms. l0°fa dis­count for students with !D's. Quick strvice. Used TV's for sale. 11/18

TYPING, M.A. English, Selectric, on campus. 296-8564. ll /22

PASSPORT, IDENTIFICATION PHOTOS. Lowest prices in town! Fast, pleasing, near UNM, Call 265-2444orcome to 1717 Girard Blvd. NE. tfn

LSAT-MCAT EXAMS. Prepare now. Call Pro­fessional Educators of New MeKico, Inc. 842-5200. lfn

SI.OO OFF with University ID at University Night at the Hockey Game. Sunday November 14, 7:00 p.m. Albuquerque Chaparrals vs, Bismarck Capitols. Tingley Coliseum. 11/12

1969 BMW 200i. High mileage but good condition. Runs super w/extras. Make offer, 268-4050. 11/15

SCHWINN LE TOUR. Excellent condition, new. $170. Will sell for$105. 296-8454. ll/12

SALE: 3-PIECE DENIM suits. Were $90, now $38.50 at California Fashion Outlet, 2318 Central SE, across from campus. Open 10-6. 11/l 5

STEREO DEPARTMENT CLOSING out all 1977 new stereo equipment, Pioneer, Sansui, Kenwood receivers, 8-tracks, reel to reels, 40 to 50 'l'a off. While they last, 255·7534. ll/15

DULCIMER, SPRUCE AND Mahogany. Beautiful, excellent condition. Call 266-1764. 11/15

DUE TO DIVORCE. Brand new 1977 Kirby. Assume payments of $7.47 a month. Ne\\ warranty, 255-7535. 11/15

65 OLDS F-85, V-6, AT & AC, rebuilt engine, $800. 298-2298. 11/15

COLOR TV. COLOR and tint controls. Assume pay­ments of $7 a month. JO-ycar warranty, 255-7534. 11115

LANGE SIS BINDINGS. Bought at Ski Swap, Ski boots, size JO!Iz. 344-1320 after 6 p.m., ask for Tom. Ji/15

SINGER SEWING MACHINE leli ;,; layaway, not claimed. Equipped to zig-iag, buttonhole. Pay $19 and take machine. 255-7535. ll/15 ·

1974 PLYMOUTH. FULLY equipped $2,300; 1974 Ford Pinto fully equipped, $2,000; 1974 VW Super­Beetle with air, $2,300; VW 4-speed w/air 1974 $2,200. Coronado Credit Union. Call 277-2431, Velasquez. 11/15

NORDICA SKIBOOTS, 10, used once, $25. 843-8736. tfn ·

PRIDE MOTORS NOW open Tues.-Sat. 8:30-5:30, Offers complete, competent service of all imports • Specializing in sports and touring autos. 256-1763. ll!JO

SALE. KENWOOD 4600 RECElVERS 40 watts/ RMS, 2-year warr~_nt~$2,10. Kent, 268-0333. IJ/10

FISCHER STEEL SKIS w/bindings-used, '•lep-in, typc,$60firm.266-0354. ll/10 ·

.131CYCLES• WE HAVE the lightest weight for the money you 'can buy, Some on sale. R.C. Hallett'.s. 843-9378, tfn

BUY I GET 1' FREE. Mond~y thru Saturday 7-9, lJnclc Na1ty'1. 12/J

-PO_T_T-ER--S~W~_-H_E_E·L--, _S_T_E_R_E_O_ $50. 298-

8641. ll/11

--------------~~--10-SPEED, GOOD CONDITION. $50. 843-6247. 11/12

SMITH-CORONA-t20 electric typewriter, pica, 4 years old; just overhauled. $100. 821-6422, Krey. 11/12

1974 DODGE CHARGER-P,B., P.S., A.T., A.C. Excellent condition. 292-1218, tfn

VASQUE HIKING BOOTS, ladies, 5, used once, Excellent condition. $35.345-9675, 11112

74 250 YAMAHA MX. HARDLY ridden, $595. 265-0403, ll/12

1964 FORD PICKUP new engine w/shell & boat body in good condition. ask. $1,500 call 842-8148. ll/1 i . .

FREE TO GOOD HOME, 5 weeks old part great dane puppies. eall821-4977. 11116

'71 QODGE PICKUP 20,000 mi. on engine & trans. Camper-shell new tires, extras $17<J? 255-3272. ll/16

5. FORREN!f SPACIOUS 2-br. FURNISHED APARTMENT. Utilities included, $195. References required, Also, l-br. at $SS. 266-8G74. IIIli

MALE OR FEMALE roomie-$92,50 per mo. Desperate. 298-7349 after five, 11/11

TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED apartment near University $165/mo. Call266-7698. 11/10

RENT ROOM-Nice 2-Bdrm house. Quiet neighbor­hood. $100/mo. Serious SJUdent only. 296·8306, Syl. ll/16

6. EMPLOYMENT

ATTRACTIVE GIRL INTERESTED in cosmetics, l 5 hrs/wk in cosmetic store. 292-3200. ll/10

PART-TIME JOB. Graduate students only. Must be over 21 years old. Need two part-time employees for day work. Also have positions for Friday and Satur­day nights. Apply in person only. No phone calls, please. Save Way Liquor Stores, 5704 Lomas NE, 5516Mcnaul NE. ll/12

WANT PERSON for Mech, drawing Part Time 296-7398. ll/16

PART TIME WORK College student $400 month, Call Toby255·2337 12-4 p.m. 11/10

NEED TWO PEOPLE to help me In my Business $400 monthly. Call242-8152 after 12:00. ll/10

CAN YOU TYPE, be nice to students? Work-study cligihle, you arc needed. Call277-4ll4. 11110.

OVERSEAS JOBS-SUMMER/year-round, Eur­ope, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. E~pcnses paid,-sightsccing. Free infonnation. Write: International Joh Center, Department NB, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA 94704. ll/15

STUDENT OR STUDENT SPOUSE, to work from 8:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Pay $2.30 per hour, some typing required. Apply in person, Student Publications, Marron Hall Rm 131. ll/10

TEACHERS AT ALL levels. Foreign and Domestic Teachers. Dox 1063, Vancouver, Washington 98660. ll/10

LIBRARIAN NEEDED. HOURS 8 to 11 a.m., Mon­day through Friday. Minimum typing ability re­quired. Also clerical worker for 10 to IS hours per week, a.m. only. Must type. Not like a tiger, but with reasonable accuracy. Applicants for both jobs must be Work-Study qualified. For information see Mrs. Martin in HD 217, English Department. 11/10

7. TRAVEL TELLURIDE SKI TRIP, January 9-16, $130. In­cludes transportation, lifts & lodging. For informa­tion call S42-8569. $50 deposit due immediately. UNM Ski Club. ll/26

'

ALL l1®\YJDQ~® SALE

RIDES! RIDES.! RIDESI Call Rideline .. 265-9860, (303) 449-6670 at InJercontinental Travel Centre. 11/30

INTRODUCING THE FASTEST bus in the west (cheapest, 'too), T~e Grey Rabbit! NYC-$54. San Francisco-$39, Call Rideline-.. 265-9860, (303) 449-6670 or appl>' at lntercontipental Travel Centre, 11112

8. MlSCELLANEOUS

WANTED: A WATERBED, 294-7462, ll/10

$1.00 01'1' with University ID at University Night at the Hockey Game. Sunday, November 14. 7 p.m. Albuquerque Chaparrals vs. Bismarck Capitols. Tingley Cr>li<r••m 11/12

Bearial Rites Set for US Figure

Funeral services will be held this week for one of New Mexico's most distinguished citizens and nationally known figures-Smokey T. Dear.

Smokey passed away yesterday evening in the Washington D.C. Zoo after a lengthy Illness. He is survived by his wife of several years, although it is rumored they were never married and were simply co-hibernating, Goldie and an adopted son, Smokey Jr., age six.

Smokey came to national attention as a poster bear for Ihe National Forest Ser­vice. He was found by park rangers as the sole survivor of a major forest fire in Uri­coin C<>unty, New Mexico,

It was not always easy for Smokey as he had to slowly claw his way to the top. He was never a grizzly character nor did he ever polarize his fellqw workers.

With an eternal grin and forever spor­ting his ranger hat and shovel, he always had a chuckle in his deep voice as he growled, "Only you can prevent forest fires. ••

But during the past few years, Smokey fell on hard limes and was slowly replaced in the eyes of the nation's youngsters with a moth-eaien owl sporting a European Alpine hat.

"It broke his heart and not even the C.B. operaiions' reference to Smokey could cheer him up," Goldie said.

Mrs. Bear wiped away a tear as she looked up on the mantle at the little bucket of sand with Sm okcy's name on it.

Evsn in death, however, Smokey will be remembered as he will be buried in a memorial built strictly for him in Lincoln, New Mexico.

The services will be an open-casket funeral with the following pall bearers in the bear bier: Yogi T. Bear (a distant relative with a criminal record for snit­ching picnic baskets), Boo Boo Bear, An­dy Panda, Teddy Bear, Hamm's Dear and WinnieT~ Pooh.

In lieu of Oowcrs, the family requests that donations be made to the American Anti-Taxidermy Society.

Anthropology Club meeting Thtlrs., Nov. II at 7:30p.m. in Rm, 122, Mitchell Hall.

Registration for the 4th Annual Christmas Crafts l'air is now in progress in the ASUNM Crafts area in the basement of the SUB.

The Albuquerque group of the Sierra Club will meet Thurs., Nov. J I at 7:30p.m. in the hospitality room of the First National Bank. Three experts will demonstrate equipment needed for winter camping.

UNM Mountain Club will meet Wed., Nov. 10 at 7:30p.m. in the third Ooor reading room of Ortega Hall.

SAVE $3.oo On lst Pair SAVE $4.oo On 2ncl Pair

Thurs. Sat. Nov. 11th - 13th

lobo men1 S shop

2120 Centra I 5. E. 243-6954


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