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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1958 e Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 3-6-1958 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 061, No 56, 3/6/1958 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1958 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1958 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 061, No 56, 3/6/1958." 61, 56 (1958). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1958/19
Transcript

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1958 The Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960

3-6-1958

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 061, No 56, 3/6/1958University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1958

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1951 - 1960 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1958 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 061, No 56, 3/6/1958." 61, 56 (1958). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1958/19

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Religious Council ·Plans '58 Dinner

For the third successive year, the Inter-Religious Council at UNM is holding its Brotherhood Progressive dinner to promote brotherhood on the UNM campus.

More than 160 students are ex­pected to attend the dinner on Thursday when it opens with its first course in the Lobo room of the SUB at 6 p.m.

Participating in the dinner will be four religious organizations, the United Student Christian Fellow­ship, Hillel Congregation, the Bap­tist Student and the Newman club.

Appetizers are being prepared by USCF under the direction of its president, Betty Slater. The salad course will be served by Hillel at B'nai Israel.

The Baptist students will host the main course at their Union building at the campus. Completing the four-course dinner will be des­sert served at the Newman club.

Fine Arts Faculty To Attend Meeting

The fourth biennial nf the Music Teachers Assn., Southwestern Division, will be attended by five faculty mem­bers from the UNM College o£ Fine Arts. The meeting will be held in Tulsa, Okla., March 9-12.

Dean Edwin Stein, Profs. Donald McRae, Morton Schoenfeld, John Batcheller, and Mrs. Edward An­cona will represent UNM at the conference.

Stein, dean o:£ the fine arts col­lege, will be the principal speaker at the convention's banquet. McRae will preside over two sessions of

· the meeting and serve as panelist in another,

UNM Sigma Chis Win Province Award

'l'he UNM chapter of Sigma Chi fraternity was awarded a for winning the "Best Sig vnapter in the Rocky Mountain Province'1

for the second year in a row at Sig Day activities held in Denver, Colo., last weekend.

Six chapters in the Rocky Moun• tain province competed for the an­nual award. The trophy is given to the chapter earning the most points on factors which .include scholar­ship average, campus participation, total membership and relations with other organizations.

Lettermen of Year o Be Selected

Student Council Student council will meet Thurs­

at 8 p.m. in the council room. Little will preside.

Don't iust stand there •••

STICKLE! MAKE $2 5 Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming anawers. Both words must have the same number of syllables •. (No drawings, please!) We'll shell out $25 for all we use­and for hundreds that never see print. So send stacks of 'em with your name, address, college and class to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, New York.

WHAT IS AN UNHAPPY BIRD?

IIARJORIE osraRWISE, Bobbin' Robin PJn~

WHAT IS A MAN WHO DOESN'I' PAY FOR PARKING?

WILLII.M SElF. .c.c .. rt.v.

Meter Cheater

WHAT IS AN ODD·SHAPED EYEGLASS?

MARJORIIIEHEDICT, Conical Monocle MT, HOLYOKE

C I G .A. R E T T E S

. :.•

WHAT ARE STADIUM SEATS FOR PROFESSORS?

Teacl1ers' JOHN EICHliNG, Bleachers

NORTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA STATE

WHAT IS A JOKING MONKEV1

DAVID GERSHAW, U, OF MINN!SOTA

Ribbin' Gibbon

Greco Tickets CCUN

LOOKING FOR A PARTICULAR .BOOK? If We Don~t Have It, We'll Order It

Come in and brouse FREE COFFEE

NEW MEXICO BOOK COMPANY UPTOWN 3008 Central SE Phone AL 5-7543

look for the GOLD AWNING across from the Lobo theater

where

there's life

••• there·'s

Budweiser. KING OF BEERS

ANHEUSER·BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK •LOS ANGELES

NEAT FEAT? No! Slick Trick? A thousand times no! When a magician makes a pack of Luckies vanish, it's a plain case of Tragic Magic! Connoisseurs claim there's one approved way to make Luckies disappear. That's to smoke (Yuml) every last. one of 'em! That way, you get the wonderful taste of Luc;kies' . :fine tobacco • • • light, good-tasting tobacco that's toasted to taste even better. So, Ladeez-ann-Gennlemen, observe a pack of Luckies closely. Then carefully remove one (1) cigarette and light up. Presto! You're puffing on the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked! •

WHAT IS A BANANA PEEL? WHAT IS A GANGSTER'S MANUAL?

GAIL ORtco. Fruit Suit CASt fE~NESSEE STAT!!

JOAN HEALY. U. 0~ DtLAWARI

Orook_Book

LIGHT UP A /i!J.ht SMOKE -LIGHT 'UP A, LUCKY! 9'.? j . ~L--~ £ .. -~._ .. , ~/7 ,.,. ... c., Proluct qf t./fi41~ uo~- JQUaeeD. is our m,'ddll Jiattfl"

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NEW MEXICO LOBO THE VOICE OF ~BE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO smcE 1897

VoL 61 Thursday, March 6, 1958 No. 55

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; . rN EW MEXICO LOBO Ugly Man Contest ea~IU eaMOU4d By Gail Campbell

~ ~ ...._Ucl 'l'a•do.:r, Tbwado.:r and :Frlllo.:r ot !;be Npl&r unlv..,lb' J'IW' creept dutinl' T B M 1 b 18 lllllda:r• and uamlnatlon perloda b:r !;be ANoclated Student. of !;be UnlveJSib' Of N- 0 e (] r , '5 •..-teo. Entered u HC!ODd cl&H matter at the paot oftlce, Albuquerque, Aueun 1, 1911, •

""'.13 ..._ the act of Karch I, 1B7e. Printed b1 the Univ&JSib' l'rintinl' Plant. Sub1CI'IPtlon •

You can never damage a smile by using it too much. ~~~~~.~o-------~

!"' ...., 14.60 for the ocbool J'IIU', Jl&:rable Ia adY&nce. The annual Ugly M11n contest,

INitorlal and Bueinesa office in the Journalism Buildin&". Tel. 3-1428. sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega,

Newly elected officers of Kappa Kappa Gamma are: president, Betty Hardgrove; vice-president, Sally Ballenger; pledge trainer, Carol Ale;x;ande:r; secretary, Barbara Hill; treasurer, Ann Mills; and social chaimtan, Alice Blue. will be held March 16 through 18

Editor ~---------------------------------------------Paul Sweitzer as a part of Campus Chest Week. --------~0---------. • . An eleven.inch traveling trophy Managmg Editor ---------------------------------------Bill l!eath will be awarded the org11nization Sigma Chi will have a stomp dance ,llt the chapter house- Friday,

• • . • which supports the winner of the 'l'uesday Night Ed1tor -----------------------------Jamie Rubenste1n contest.

Music will be provided by Mel Savage and his band. · ------~0------~-

. . . Voting :for Ugly Man will be held Thursday Night Editor -------------------------------Sofia Chmura throughout the contest in the lobby

Chi Omega and Sigma Chi will have an open house next Monday after regular ·.meetings.

'd · · M' b 1 of the SUB. The Ugly Man who Fri ay Night .Editor ----------------------------Peter Dave lra a collects the most money in his jar

---------10~-------Saturday Sigma Alpha ]jlpsilon will have a Founder's Day ban­

quet and dance at the American Legion hall. Paul Muench and his band will provide the music.

Busine llf E • McCrossen will be the winner. II anager---------------------------------- nc A parade of the ugly contestants

Business Advisor----------------------------Prof. Leonard Jermaln will be held Tuesday; March 18,~ at ------~10--------noon.

------------------------- Ugly Man chairman John Allen Pi Beta Phi pledges and actives will have a scholarship dinner

Sunday night. ·

Congratulations It's a pleasure to note that three UNM students are in­

terested enough in the political life of their state to enter the upcoming primary election.

To all three of these students the LOBO wishes to ex­tend congratulations and a hearty wish of good luck.

A Speaker Within the next month two nationally prominen.t speak­

ers .will appear on the UNM campus. Tomorrow night stu­dents will have the opportunity to hear Norman Thomas, five times Socialist candidate for president, and on March 24, the law college will present Robert Maynard Hutchins in the annual Simms lecture.

Then, in May, Associate Justice Hugo Black of the U. S. Supreme Court will appear in connection with the activities of the annual Law Day.

It seems that all the prominent men come to a campus at once.

This leads to a question, directed for the most part at the administration. Why can't a nationally prominent speaker be obtained for this year's graduation ceremonies'! A really prominent one. •

The LOBO would like to suggest three men as possibili­ties: Adlai Stevenson, Chief Justice Earl Warren, and Carl Sandburg •.

And i! readers have any suggestions, why not send them in to the LOBO office? It would be nice to hear someone famous, who ·might have something of value to say, at graduation.

A Do-Something Senate Yesterday afternoon at a meeting of the Student Sen­

ate, Associate Justice Otto Raabe of the Student Court made a long speech in which he "unofficially" denounced the Preferential Voting System.

Then, after a few remarks about the Student Court, he lashed the Senate for not conducting any serious debate on the voting question. ·

In no uncertain terms, Raabe informed the senators that unless they acted·quickly to resolve the voting situa­tion it could come up "year after year."

Raabe's last point was probably his most important one. If the question of the voting system is not solved now, while interest in it is high, the present mess could conceivably continue for a good while.

Raabe;s remarks about the lack of real work in the Sen-• ate served to bring to attention for the Nth time that the

Senate is usually a pretty useless body. Past Senate presidents have realized this, and Don Fed­

ric realizes it now. Last year Jack Little tried to insert some vitality into the legislative arm of student govern­ment and managed to get to first base. Then his side was retired.

This year Don Fedric has harangued the senators, in­sulted them, and in various other ways tried to snap them into some life. He hasn't done too well himself.

The Student Senate on this campus could be a powerful body. Instead, what is it?

Most people call it a rubber stamp created only to ap­prove Student Council actions. Others term it. 11a body which meets regularly and accomplishes nothing."

With this voting system question pending, the current senate could have the distinction of being a 14do-something'' body. · Now is the chance for the senators to conduct some really serious debate, probe all sides of this ticklish ques­tion thoroughly, and come up with a sound answer to the problem. ·

Even if their recommendations on the voting matter are rejected by student body president Jack Little, and they probably will be, if only a "clean up" bill gets through, this senate will go down in history as at· least having tried to do something.

-PAS

said recently that "This is a contest of real men." ·

He added that contestants should have qualifications of extreme ugli­ness, na&ty disposition, and slouchy posture. ·

Applicants for the contest must notify Allen, at Box 5, Mesa Vista dormitory by March 9, Pictures will he taken March 11.

2 Deboters Given Forensic Gronts

Two members of the UNM junior men's division oi the debate 'Squad have been awarded Freshman For­ensic Scholarships of $100 each.

Richard K. Miller and William Demeter were recipients of the awards. Given annually, these scholarships were set up by W.

. Peter McAtee, widely known AI· buquerque attorney.

Demeter, who comes from Orinda, Calif., averaged 2.0 for last semes-ter. ·

Miller, an Albuquerquean and a graduate of Highland High school, was credited with 3.0 average for his first semester. In recognition of his scholastic standing, in addi­tion to the forensic award, he has been given the Kiwanis Highland Scholarship of $105.

Both students participated with the UNM debate squad at the Southwest Speech tournament at the University of Arizona, Tucson, last weekend.

.Justice ·to Give, Law Doy Speech

JUstice Hugo L. Black of the U.

-------0·-----Newly initiated actives of Kappa Alpha Theta ara; Sue Carter,

Nancy Jones, June Nelson, Carol Measday, Joan Julian, Ann !41ndall, Susan Levins, Jane Fussell, Zoa Keller, and Mikie Huntington.

--------0 . Sigma Phi .Epsilon and dates will have a :record dance Friday.

-----10 . . Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Phi Epsilon will have an open

house next Monday after regular meetings. ---------0---------

New Alpha Chi Omega actives are: Jane Alling, Barbara Becker,· Bee BurmeisterpNancy Crow, Monya Haile, Muriel Bite, Mary Jean Houser, Arlene Olson, Kay Shane, Nancy Robinson, Judy Zanotti, Helen Cummins, Bobbie Wyloge, Carol Thompson, and Gail Hanks.

. 0-----Saturday Alpha Delta Pi and dates will hav0 a dinner at the chap­

ter house. ---------0--------

Newly pinned: Carl Brogan, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, to Kathy Gil-belt, Pi Beta Phi; Bob Gross, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, to Francie Vin­cent; Bill MaQPherson, Sigma Phi Epsilon, to Barbara Guttman; and Jim Mullins, Alpha Phi Omega, to Martha Mersman, Alpha Delta Pi.

Going Steady: Haig Boudour, Kappa Alpha, and Marilyn Theis, Alpha Delta Pi; Roger Sperry, Sigma Phi Epsilon, aJid Jan Poirier,

--------0--------Phi Delta Theta will have a house dance Friday. --------0----------Tau Kappa Epsilon actives and pledges will leave this weekend

for a TEKE Regional' Leadership Conference to be held in El Paso. Among the new members who have recently been pledged include: Jerry Who1ton, Gerry Hauer, David Bennett, and Dale Carlton, all of Albuquerque. •

--------10--------Kappa Alpha Theta pledge officers: Pat Nickle, president; Barry

Busby, vice-president; Sylvia Jones, secretary; Nancy Standley, social chairman; and Lori Dwinell, scholarship chairman.

--------'0--------Pi Beta Phi and Phi Delta Theta will have an open house after

regular meetings Monday. --------'0--------

• Newly elected officers of Delta Delta Delta are: president, Ann Easley; vice-president, Donna Rinn; treasurer, Judy Emery; social chairman, Jan Hopper; rush chairman, Dawn Fritz; and house presi­dent, Janet Hoyt.

------------->0-------------Engaged: Jim Thompson, Sigma Phi Epsilon, to Barbara Scott,

Town Club; and Bill Cox to Donna Church. --------'0--------

New pledges of Town Club: Nancy K. Robinson, Marilyn Calkins, Mary Wishard, Sondra Howard, Margaret Muller, Penny Franks, and Betty Pollack.

. 0--------Newly pledged to Alpha Delta Pi are: Carol Wilson and Carol

Rice. -------->0--------

Lambda Chi Alpha officers: John Miner, preaident; Peter Hen-drickson, vice-president; Jimmie Linney, treasurer; David Nevin, sec­retary; Bob Ghattas, social chairman; and Presley McNeal, rush chairman.

S. Supreme Court will deliver the banquet address ending the two­day Law Institute sponsored by the Student Bar Association at the Uni­versity of New Mexico May 9-10. h-------------------------

Marvin Baggett, president of the UNM Student Bar Association, said today that invitations are going out this week to members of the State Bar Association to attend the two­day meeting.

Baggett said that outstanding trial attorneys have been asked to take part in the Institute which will center around the theme, "Trial of Personal Cases.''

Officers of the Student Bar Asso­ciation include: George Fettinger and Booker Kelly, both vice-presi­dents; Boston Witt, secretary; Gar­nett Burke, treasurer; and Baggett, president.

Justice Black spoke at UNM in 1952 when the new Law College

We, the varsity cheerleaders, would like to take this opportunity to thank all of the students, and in particular, the UNM Letterman's club, for their outstanding support of the Lobos during the last bas­ketball game. It is at times such as this that we are proud to be a part"of the University of New Mexico. We hope you will continue to give the Lobos the support they need at this time.

See you tonight when we play Utah State and Saturday night when we play Brigham Young University!

Vicki Brooks Lynell Burns Jayne Graves Martie Mills Yvonne Wolfe Jack Strom

building at the University was ded- ------------------~------icated. While in the state, Justice 2 F It M b l p f Black . will visit his so~, S~rli~g acu y em ers aW ro eSSOr r~=~~~:oc:.· whose family hves m c I Ph D E Named to Council M hi B kf omp ete • • xams Prof. Henry Weihofen, member

onf d rea . a. Sf . of the UNM College of Law fac-

planne by. Club Two UNM f_aculty memb~rs ~ave ulty, has been ~:~,ppointed a member completed their final exammat1ons f th ti 1 d • '1 to for the Ph.D. degree. o e na ona a VIsory counm

The monthly Communion. break- R. :M. Duncan, chairman of the the Law-Medicine Research Insti-fast will be held at the Newman department of modem and classical tute. ·· center Sunday after the 8:30 Mass, languages, announced' that Mar- Weihofen is qne of 15 men on the president David Rees said. There shall R. Nason and Francoise Gour- council, Harold. C. Case, president will be an executive meeting after ier have resumed their duties · in of the institute, said. The organt~ the breakfast. the department after completing zation, established at Boston Uni-

The Forty Hours devotion . will their doctorate work. . . versity, is working cooperatively begin Sunday afternoon at 1. Stu- Nason will receive his degree there with the schools of law and ~ents may sign up for the devo· fro~ theUn~versi~y of qhlcago. medicine. It will establish a pro-tion at the Newman center. Miss Gouner will rectnve her de- gram of research and training In

------· -- gree from the University of Cali- the interdiaeiplinary areas of law, Okinawa is 67 miles long ar1d 3 fornia at Los Angeles at the June medicine and the beha'Vio:ral sci-

to 18 miles wide. . · commencement exercises. ·ences.

- 1 -- Cagers W·illlry To Whip Utogs··

New Mexico's basl;:etball Lobos will try again tonight to·. break a l'ecord losing :;;treak when they iace

·.the Utags from Utah State. The Utags have the distinction

of being the second lowest teall!- in this year's hot Skyline conference basketball race.

New Me;&ico is firmly launched in the bottom spot and, even if they should win their two :remaining games, have little hope of getting out.

However, the Lobos and their head coach, Bill· Stockton, are not giving up. They hope to pull a sur­prise out of the bag for the fans tonight and· are looking forward to giving tough BYU a hard time on · Saturday night.

, 'Stomp Dance , . Lettermen Appro:xiwately 140 people at- ·.; ElecHgn of lettermen of the year

tended the Mesa Vista stomp dat}ce in the various sports by the Letter· which was held in the SUB ball- men's club has been postponed'until room last Friday. next Tuesday,

t/0

. 'YORK UNIVERSITY Communication Arts Group

Anna.unces THE GRADUATE INSTITUTE

OF BOO~ PUBLISHING ~·' ...... .

• Opens September, 1958 • A full·year program designed to train men

and women of exceptional prdmise for careers In tlie book industry.

• Academic study with outstarldipg lecturers· in literature, philosophy, and political science.

I • l ' I I. I I I I -· I In both games, Stockton plans

to stick with the starting line-up that he has used throughout the season. John Teel, shooting ace for the Lobos, will start at forward along with hustling "Rusty" Good­win. Both Teel and Goodwin are leading Lobo scoring with 320 and 246 point:;; for the season respec­.tively •. ·

WAITING FOR ACTION to start in Tuesday night's pro tennis , matches held in Johnson gym are Pancho Gonzales (left) and Jack Kramer. Kramer is the promoter of the tennis troupe which is cur· rently touring across the United States. The featured stars of the troupe are Gonzales and Australian tennis whiz, Lew Hoiid. (Flores photo) ·

• Workshop courses with expert:; from the industry.

• ·Apprentice training in New York book publishing houses.

• M.A. Degree • Limited to Wrti-!itudents.

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+ Starting at 'the center post will

be Lovington sophomore Bill Cates. Cates stepped into the starting pivot position when Dick Petersen was side-lined at the beginning of the semester due· to academic troubles.

Starting guards will be :free-shot ace Bob Martin and Dale Caton. Reserve guard Eddie· Miller will also see plenty of action.

. Wolfpups to Conclude Brilliant '58 Season

The UNM Wolfpups, possibly the best frosh cage squjld the school has seen in five seasoJis, will put a finale to the 1958 season with two games this week.

Tonight the baby Lobos will take on an Air Force team from Man­zano base and Saturday night they will clash with the New Mexico Sellers from Santa Fe.

C o a c h B o b Sweeney's boys avenged an earlier defeat at the hands of the DU frosh last Satur­day night when they downed the Denverites 98-67.

Progressive Dinner Tonight at 6 in the Lobo room

of the SUB the Inter-Religious Council will kick off its annual Brotherhood Progressive dinner. Georgia Phillips, IRC social chair­man; is in charge of the affair.

GETTING READY for his match against Pancho Gonzales in Tues· day night's tennis exhibition at Johnson gym is Australian star Lew Hoad. Perhaps Hoad sees the defeat that he suffered at the hands of Gonzales as he looks into the future here. Hoad is cur­rently on tour of the U. S, wi~ Jack Kramer's troupe of tenms greats. (Flores photo)

WITH ~ONFIDENCE WINS CONFIDENCE

3310 Central SE

Albuquerque's finest Selection of Bridals,

Bridesmaid's Dresses, and formals

OPEN TUESDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS AL 5-2450

MEXICO CITY COLLEGE Spring Quarter ..•............... March 20 to June 5

Summer Session ·-----··-······-June 23 to August 23

Short Summer Session ....... June 23 to August 1 Latin American Workshop ..... July 1 to August 8 Anthropology field Study: , ·

Ancient Mexico ......... June 23 to August 23

Fall Quarter •......... October 6 to December _19 Approved for Veterans

Information: D'ean of Admissions Mexico City College M·exic~ I 0, D. F.

Psychology Coffee · Planned Today

The Psychology department will hold a student-faculty coffee break this afternoon from 2 to 4 in the North-South lounge of the SUB.

For 1nforrnatlon and application write: John Tebbe!, Director Graduate Institute of Book Publlshlne .New York University Washington Square New York S, N. Y,

_{

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A Campus-to-Career Case History

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Roy Vaughn (left) discusses a central oJ]ice power installation with Switchman R. F. Heider.

"I like (and get) 'start-to-finish' engineering assignments"

''When it comes to making a j oh inter· esting, I think the assignments a man gets are more important than the size of the project he's worklng on," says Roy Vaughn of Illinois Bell Telephone Company. "I found that out soon after I graduated. My first job was with an organization where the projects were big, but the individual engineering assign· ments lacked variety and scope.

"After this experience I looked over powe:r engineering opportunities in a number of companies. I joined Illinois Bell because it promised the most inter• esting and challenging work. That was three years ago. My work with IBT has everything that I was looking for.

"My job is to engineer the power re­quirements fo:r telephone central offices.

The work never gets routine. One job lllaY he for a new building, the next for expanding existing plant. And power needs vary tremendously from little rural dial offices serving a few hundred tele· phones, to big metropolitan telephone plants serving hundreds of thousands.

"But what I like best is that I generally handle the job from start to finish. I de­termine the operational and emergency power requirements of the facilities to he served, and order the equipment needed. And I'm usually on hand during installation to see the job through.

"Not only does this kind of engineer· ing assignment keep work interesting, hut I find it is helping me become a better manager. And that improves my chances for advancement."

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Roy L. Vauglu1, Jl'., graduated from ]lUnols Institute of ®· • IJ Technology in 1954 with. a B.S. in E.E. degree, He is one ·. . ! 1 of many young men who are finding interesting and rll· 1

I wilrdinr careers in the Bell Telephone Companies. Find I I out about llareer opportunities for you. Talk wid1 the BELL 1 1 Bell interviewer when he visits your eampus, and read the TELEPHONE l I Bell Telephone hooklet on ffi.e in your Plaeement Office, COMPANIES I I ' I .., . . . ;}

~---------~------------·---~-~-------------------~-----------------~

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Newman Center '

To Be Dedicoted Dedication ceremonies :for the

Aquinas Newman center will be held Friday at 4 p.m. with the Most Rev. Edwin V. Byrne, Archbishop of Santa Fe, officiating.

After the blessing, a Pontifical Low Mass will be celebrated at 4:30 by the Most Rev. Sydney M. Metzger, Bishop of El Paso.

The sermon will be delivered by the Most Rev. Maurice L. Schex­nayder, Episcopal Moderator of the National Newman Club Federation.

Present at tlie ceremonies will be chaplains from Columbia Uni­

j:!:: versity, New York University, .~ . Northwestern, Arizona, Colorado,

Houston, and Chicago Universities. A reception will be held at the

center at 5:30. Wives of three Uni­versity faculty members will act as hostesses. In charge are Mesdames W. W. Hill, Harry W. Basehart, and T. T. Castonguay.

A dinner for the Catholic clergy will be held at 7 p.m. at the Al­varado hotel. The featured speaker will be Fr. James 0. O'Brien, chap­lain at the University of Connecti- , , cut and the national Newman club chaplain, who will speak on "The New Apostolate.''

The Master General of the Do­minican Order, the Very Rev. John A. Driscoll, and the Very Rev. John

· "'"'E. Marr, w.ho will represent the

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Provincial Superior of the Domini- SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE LOBO can Order, will be present at the 1~========================!!!!!!!~~!___ _____ -=:::.._:_::::-=:::..:_:::~~::::::...:::~::::._ ____ _ ceremonies. ,-

The Re'V. Driscoll is coming from the International Headquarters of the Dominican Order in Rome, Italy.

The new building was designed in · the traditional pueblo style struc­ture with modern interiors. The lounge, auditorium, kitchen, offices, and game rooms provide for the church activities, educational facili­ties, and social programs.

The new building has_ been built in the same location of the old one, the old Sigma Chi house, and the former Albuquerque country club.

The chapel, auditorium, and resi­dence for the Dominican staff form a "U" shaped building, enclosing a parking lot and patio.

Dorm, SUB Bids Cotled by Boord

Plans for the new student union building and new men's dormitory have been released by the archi­tects, it was announced at last Sat­urday's meeting of the Board of Regents.

The student union plans were re­leased by Meem, Holien, Buckley and Associates, Santa Fe architec­tural firm, and dormitory plans were released by Schaefer, Merrell, Pendelton, and Associates of Clovis.

Bids on the new SUB were called :lor by the board and are expected to be in on April1. Bids on the new dormitory will be received from the contractors on March 25. All bids will be opened at the next regular meeting of the board on April 3.

The total cost of the two build­ings will be approximately $4,-1300,000, Plans call for $3 million to be spent on the new SUB and $1,800,000 to be spent on the dormi· tory.

The University is currently ne­gotiating bond issues to cover the cost of the new buildings.

Rodey Play Tickets Selling at Box Office

Tickets for the Rodey theater production of A r t h u r Miller's "Death of A Salesman" are now on sale at the theater box office or daily in the SUB.

Students may obtain tickets by calling the box office between 2 and 5 Monday through Friday, or visit­ing the SUB booth daily between 10 and 11 and 12 and 1:30.

"Death of A Salesman'' will open on a split engagement on March 12 and run through March 15. It will re-open Match 19 and close March 22. .

------The sl;ate bird of Washington is

the Goldfinch.

You'll be sittin' on top of the world when you change to 11M

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NEW MEXICO LOBO THE VOICE OF THE UNIVEltSITY OF NEW MEXICO SINCE 18117

Vol •. 61 Fdda.y, Ma.rch 7, 1958 No. 56

UNM Scientists . . .

Will Do Research On Cosmic Roys

ttend the Popularity Ball Tomorrow. Night.

-The Stall

·'

Council to Study Frosh CQmmission; Longhurst to Talk


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