new mexico lobo, volume 045, no 18, 1/16/1943

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1943 e Daily Lobo 1941 - 1950 1-16-1943 New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/ 1943 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1943 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1941 - 1950 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1943 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 045, No 18, 1/16/1943." 45, 18 (1943). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/ daily_lobo_1943/2

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Page 1: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943

University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

1943 The Daily Lobo 1941 - 1950

1-16-1943

New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1943

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1941 - 1950 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1943 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943." 45, 18 (1943). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1943/2

Page 2: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943

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Page Ji'our. NEW MEXICO LOBO Friday, January 8, 1943

Marriages Mark Holiday Season As Cupid Has Field Day at U

* ffi!V~ Tl/?.5 * . Roaring.West Novels In Texas U Library Committee to

Name College Use AUSTIN, TEXAS - (AOP)­Umverslty of Texas· students

WASHINGTON-A commtttee whose parents once may have

Kackle Klubs ~ete ~ushees With Tea On Saturday

The hohday season was markedl'f-------------­by the marriages of many p:romm­ent students who attended college here this year as well as former students, graduates, and a member of the faculty,

The wedding of Miss Eupha. Buck ~md Lt. Harry 0. Motrls Wflil'! solemnized in Demmg, December 24. Mrs. MotrlS was an instructor lP the umversity mathemat1cs de­partment for the past two years. Lt Morris WAS graduated here and JS a member of the New Mcxtc:o bat.

Both Mrs. Berm~ce Urquahnrt, formerly M1ss Berniece Mnrehant, and her husband Mr, Kenneth Ur quahart were students at the Um~ versity here. Mrs Urquabart was a member <If Ph1 Mu soronty,

M1ss Kathryn K1mble, former Btudent of UNM, was tlte bride of Sgt. Sharman Jones of lCJrtlnnd Fit!ld, December 26 at the Metho­dist Chr:rch, S)le was a member of Phrnte1 es and IS now enrolled at Northwestern Insbtute of Medtcal Technology in Minneapolis

MJss Jeannette HaU and Mr. W1l~ }1am Isles were married December 27 m St. John's Ep1seopal Cathed­ral. Mr. Isles graduated from the

1 University last sprmg; Mrs. Isles was a student th1s yenr and was a member of Ch1 Omega .soronty. '!'he couple will make their l!ome m Denver.

The marriage of Miss Harriet Uhler to Lt. Ralph P. Simpson was solemmzed at the home of the groom's mother, Mrs Ehzabeth Simpson, head of the University economics department Mrs, Bar­rtet Sunpson wlll recelVe her mast· ers degree this sprmg here. Lt. Simpson was graduated from this University and was a Kappa S1grna,

Miss Martha Eliznbeth Tidd was the bl'lde of Ftrst Lt. James T. Kearny, Jr. The bride was a stu­dent at the Umvers1ty and was pledged to Alpha Ch1 Omega. Lt and Mrs. Kearny wlll make their honl.e in Roswell.

Miss Ruth J can Srnit1I and Sgt James Purcell were married. Sh• 1s a graduate- of the Umvers1ty o~ New MeXICO and a member of Al­pha Ch1 Omega soronty and Xap. pa Omicron Ph1, national honorary home economics f'raterqity, For the past year she has been employed in the registrar's office.

11iss Peggy Arthur and Aviation Cadet Leon R. Thygeson were malTtcd in Independence, Kans. on Chlistmas Eve. Both Cadet and

- Mrs. Thygeson were students here. Mrn Thygc:1on was a !Cappa Gam .. ma, and he was a Kappa Sigma.

)bss Charlotte Elena Owen and Lt. Arnold Krampltz were malTled at an 1nfonnal ceremony m the First Methodist Church. Mrs. Kram. pitz attended the Umvers1ty and has been a teacher at Madr1d and Old Town School.

The marriage of MisS Maxme BlitZ' and Mr, John Elliot was an· nounccd shortly after the termm. ation of the first semester, Mr. and Mrs. Elhot were secretly wed in October. Mrs. John Elliot was pledged to Chi Omega, and he was

STARTS FRIDAY

Government to Train Women

There 1S a great demand m the Government for ClVIlmn junior engmeers. Women with college degrees in any field may quabfy for JUnior engmeer posi­tions m the Federal Ctvil Serv1c~ by takmg a short tuitlon-freq course, 1t was announced by the Umled States C1vil Sei'VJCe Com­miSSIOn today.

HOW LCNS DOE517 7i4KE 7)(/UG TI?AIN!lf) M«HANKS TO~ 4 PliiNE EAIGINE

-?-

0 f representative educatiOnal on thetr fondness :for appomted to advise the '!Wlld West" stories now have op~

chairman and the staff of tho War portunity to read _plenty of those Members of the four Gteek Manpower Comm1sston on pohctes, storms. women's qrgaruzat10ns, Alphn Chl rules and regulatwns for the utih~ The 700,000~volume library o:l; the Omega, Alpha Delta P11 Cht Ol\le zat10n of co1leges and 1miver:nties and Kappa }Cappa Gamma, Will to further the war effort, held 1ts um.vers1ty has recently catalogued

1 bl t t d t ba hostesses at a tev. Sv.turdny a! first meetmg m Washmgton, Dec. made avu1 a e o s u en s a Sl of 400 ''dlme novels,, ternoon in the basement lounge fJf

Membe1s of the committee named !written and published m the latter the Student Umon bulldmg fl)r aU 1\! >< N tt · 1 d ~ dent women mterested m pledgmg a so r. uJ.C u me u e ..,-resl of tile nmeteenth century The C. Carm1chael of Vanderbilt rortt;y.

bool<S were obtatned as supplement. d Umvers1ty, President James B. A!ternoon resses will be worn C on ant, Harvard Umvers1ty; ary readmg matena! for students by both guests and hostesses at the President Clarence A Dykstra, m an advanced Enghsh course m

h W t affa.1r which w11l last from three 1Jmvers1ty of W1sconsm, Pre~Ident the literature of t e es · ll ld .1 to five. Dean Clauve WJU dls"uss F. D. Patterson, Tuskegee Inst1- The books, o11gma y so ror a "

tute, President Robert G Sproul, mckel, are fauly scarce now as lt·ttshing rules and actiVttuJs at four Umvetstty of Califorma; Prestdent not many of them were placed m and a11 rushee::; are asked E. V Stanford, VIllanova College, hbrarJeS The LJbrary to be present iit that t1me Prestdent WJlbam p Tollt:~Y of Itself has only about In the recewnlg lme will he Syracuse UmversitYi Owen D t1tles, though 1t is estimated

h bl l d Dean Clauve, Beth Stone, Moss Young, actmg chall'man of t e least 301000 were pu IS 1e General ElectriC Co ' Wiley titles m the Texas col- Simons, Mrs Nma An.

Th1s course has been develDped by the U. S C1V1l Service Commis­Slon and the U. S. Office of Educa­tion as a part of the Engmeermg Science and ~anagernent War Traimng Ptog:rarn1 to prepare wom~n for engmee:rmg activ1t1es m order to supplement the rapidly d1mm1Shing sup_ply of male engm­eers1 many of whom are entenng

I Rutl1;dge, assomate JUStice of the are ~rcoo1 Sam and Pard, or conaJ Lomse Vlllcent, Lo1s Trum "$!1.LnNW91-M J.M!/.:1 :!1/f.L. CJ~/1$17d~'sYKEIJ. '0781~ Umted Court of Appeals; Ternble Six from Texas" ble and Mary Nell Adams

ANSW£A: /.71D'.J.l1' t;;t'N/1'/D.?Jf' ;o M~;;:J SNI.:t/1'i12ft;; .. (J'i!f~illl II' and Prestdent Edmund E Day, "Desperate Duke, the Guadaloupe Cora Oollms, Clu,Omega, Char 'a'.:i"AB'.M'OH ~IJOH E S/ ~N:?o'S .ir/1"1/.l. :19/1';/;tA/1" S'fl.l. Cornell Umver:;nty. Mr. Dykstra Galoot u

-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::....--==-= was unable to attend the imttal Graves, Kappa-Kappa Gamma1

... meeting, Owen D Young 1s ehatr- Jo Scott, Alpha Delta P11

man of the committee. Bradley, Hughes Receive and Lomse Vmcent, Alpha Chi

the armed forces.

Arrangements have been made N t" I C "I L t s • t for any mstltutlon offermg college a lona ouncl ec uro erleS 0 In announcmg appomtmen of he M C C • • Omega, piestdent of their :respect.

committee, Mr McNutt pomted out arine orps O)TlmiSSIOns IVe sorontieS Will pout• Pledges

V• that uunder the President's execu- NM from each soronty will sene. lews Gtlbert D Bradley, former U ttve .. order, the chaJrman of the War membet, and .James Rdey Art•angementfi for the tea are Manpower Cornm1sston, after con-

engmeermg trammg to g1ve- the A ks f N li course, prov1ded that a suffic1cnt s or urses 6. W number of persons enroll. It The Natlonal Nur~mg Council IVe rl r be g1ven as a 10-week, full time, War Service has Issued a call U day course or as a 27·week evemng course covermg 820 hours of lee- more young women to enter the "America at Wart" a new lecture ture, recttatiDn, and p1oblem work dunng the next' coul'se designed to g1ve an a.ll in-m such subJects as cngineenng The ComJmttee is cluslVe view of the war1 is bemg computntlons1 engineenng drawing, to enroll 18,000 new stu- offered by the Econom1cs Depa:rL-elemcntary mechnnics of matem:~ls, spring classes m schools

I ::~ti:~:~iin:. In order to meet he ment under the supervisJOn of Mr. surveymg, and job processes and method.e:. quota of 55,000 for the Evaris Although this cla:;s IS spon~

Persons who successfully com- year, a figure which must sored by the EconomiCS Depart-plate the course and v.:ho are other. stepped up to 65,000 next year ment, many <lther departments will wise quahfied are eligible for jumor the wal.' continues, engmeer posit1ons paymg an en· Extra eredtt resulting m shorter trance salary of $2,000 a year m courses ts now betng given 111 many Washington, D. C. and throughout schools of nursmg to young women the Umted Stntes. All appoint- entenng With two or more years of tnents will he war service apppint- 1\lore federal and pnvate tnents. The duties, m general, are arc becommg avatl-to perfonn such work as tesbng able, to ma'ke it possible for any and inspection of engineermg qualified young woman, regardless materta1s, design Ol' testing of ap- of her fmances, to become a nurse paratus and machmery, assisting Such scholnrsb1ps are admimstered m experimental research, drawing by the individual school of nursmg, pJans for minor projects, preparing to which application should be maps, making computationsJ com· pllmg reports, and handhng tech­nical correspondence.

College graduates who have not yet turned their efforts to war tasks are urged to secure complete in· fonnation about the course from is not work to be under-

contribute, each lecture bemg g1ven by a different mstt'uctor or outstde authority. Titles of some of the future lectures are: "Dictator­ship," "Financmg the Wat," ''Transportation," 11Naval Strat~ egy," ''Esptonage and Sabotage/' uAir Power," and ••wmnmg the Peace."

The course IS numbered Econom­ICS 60 and offu~s two semester hours general elective credit It is open to everyone except first sf.m­ester freshmen. Second semester freshmen with from 12 to 30 hours credtt and a 1 0 grade average may enroll Classes w1U be held Tues­days and Thursdays at 10 a m. m the Science Lecture Hall.

sultation wtth the Secretary of Hughes, Jr, fot-me~ student, "have bemg made by Rene McClatchy, War and the Secretary of the Navy, been commtsstoned as Second Ethyln Cturn, Frances Clark, Lois Is authDrtzed to prescribe rules and Lteutenantts m the Umted Stutes Ttamble, Catherme Morgan1 and regulations under wh1ch mst1tu- Marine Corps Evelyn Hards tlons of htgher educatton wtll be The officers :received thetr- com- Rusltees wtll register when they selected and ut1hzed for spccmhzed nusstons at Quantico, Va ' after come to ten. Informa,l rush week traimng for the a'rmed forcl!s, successfully cornpletmg a 10~week w1ll .start Monday, Januaty 11

bnl'HC course They ate now attend- E h ty Jl 1 "The new committee now meet- ac sorDri WI gn e a smg e mg Resetve Officers' School, and d th k d b '· mg will pr'lvtde )nvaluable cnunsel patty unng e wee an lm~ after three months Wlll bQ nady d F d J 15 not only in developing such rules will be Issue r1 ay,. anuary fDr assignment to a combat umt

and regulatwns, but also m deter- fDr futtlter field trammg or for mmmg policies to msure adequate- transfer to a specmbsts' school, ly-tramed specinhsts for war m-dustries and essential civutan act.. Ivities Their assi~Lance in working out procedurel:l and regulatons whereby mstttutlons of htgher edu­cation wtll be able to prov1de a flow of ciVlhan spec:mhsts will be an aU­Important part of the work of this committee/'

Because of the complexity of the program for utthzmg colleges and umvc:rs1tms for maXImum effect­Iveness, Mr McNuLt said that sev ..

A model drugstore, complete With medicaments and s1ck-room accessones, IS part of the eqmp­ment of the college of pharmacy at the Umversity nf Texas.

A dozen mtdwest umversittes have been designated to tram cooks and bakers for the navy.

A new armory IS b~ing con­structed at Umverstty of Maryland

Pikes Start New Year With Informal Dance

To start the New YP.a:r out m tl!e right sptrit, the Pi Ka_ppa Alpba social fraternity will hold a house dance Saturday, Jan. 9, from 9·12

John Herringer, social chrurman, 1s in charge: of general an:ange· ments, and Miss Jessie Hamilbm w1ll chaperone.

era] meetings of the committee would be necessary before their final recommendations would take shape. ----

IF YOU DON'T KNOW

WHERE TO TAKE HER

DON'T WORRY thP. n(lnre"t -instit•ltion whu•lt off-ers the ~m~rgttliCY jmdocl cum.iuuing need for nurses after ll t S The University of Kansas is in co ege engmeerlng r:nnmg. e- 1 alon.e." she declares. 11It 1S the the war, both here and abroad.

1 t• f ll rna b b sed its Seventy-seventh year. ec Ion ° enro ees Y e a lfx·on·tlhie warwork:forwomen nowt Nursmg is also one of the best on personal intel'VleW3 combined to be sure, and the student nurse kinds of traming :for home-makmg, with aptitude tests at the instJtu. gives immediate war servtce by and so it attracts both the 4ca:recr tion where the course 15 to be helptng release graduate nur.ses to woman' and the girl who hopes to given. jom the Army and Navy Nurse marry and rear a famlly when the 1--------------

University of Mmnesota now has a co-ed mail carr1er-Helen Han­son, a horne economics freshman.

a member of Kappa Sigma frater­nity,

Two students were married De­cember 19, Pauline Damels and Paul Wright llrs. Wright is a senior in the co1legc of education and Mr. Wright is an electrtcal engineer semor,

THROUGH ~IONDAY

Corps. But unhke many of our war IS over." at St. Joseph's Hospml now offers vital war workers, there will be a The Regma Schoo] of Nursing federal tuitton scholnl'ships --------~----------------•

WHAT GIVES SMOKERS •

THE TOP-NOTCH

Drive-In IS THE PLACE

WHAT THEY WANT

etark GABLf .ea,r~ TURnER

Also John Nesbitt in "MAGIC ALPHABET" Andy Panda Cartoon '

PARAAIOUNT NEWS

STARTS SATURDAY KiMo THROUGH

TUESDAY

• DAFFY DUCK CARTOON John Nesbitt Novelty UNIVERSAL NEWS --

YEAR RIGHT STARt tHE NE

WITH THl FOR

RIGHT ZBIN_AT~ ~ k" 1943apa<kol

Make your next poe m nd enjoy more :[ STING CHEStERFIELDS a

MILDER, BETtER• A the who\e year thr"OU'9' //}\'"'"'Ii smoking p\easu~e c bination ol the

Chesterfield's Rig I ,o:accos gives you d• b 1 cigarette o k warl s es . b I in a smo e.

h• you hke es every! IR9 I ear you hear

h "year a ter Y • that's w y, 11 y, u can't buy a

makers say, o more s THEY SATISFY." Lefler cigaretle • • •

1 '43 Tune In on Amer• for More Listening t'leosureMnnute Mustcul 'Programs teo•; Mosl PopuiCJr f~~ I~ I HARRY JAMI.S

G ·(J lhe SensohonCJ VIctory T~es 'W1fh 0~:.~t.=!~ns fl aU C.BS Stotlons

, ..

Ntw Mtx1co Loso '

Weekly Publication of the Associated Students of the University of New Mexico Z437 ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1943 No.l9

ISS CONFERENCE. TO CONVENE HERE Meteorological Training at UNM Open to Students

Army Requires One Year Of College as Prerequisite To Training Program Her~ Albuquerque and other New

Mexico men 18 to 30 years of aget Inclusive, may be ebgtble to enter the Army Air Force's program of premeteorological trainmg at the Umversity if they have completed one year or college, said an an­nouncement today from the <lffiCe of J. L Bostwick, dean of men.

Army requirements are one year of college matbemattcs, mcluding

Three Former University Students Have Received Commissions in W!V/ES

coliege algebra, trigonometry, and WUISE BEMIS nnalytiC: geometry* and successful .. completion of one year m college, Three- alumnae have received Apply to Dean Bostwick their commissions m the WAVES.

A licants who w1sh to join the They are Lou1se Bem1s, formerly unif:~ed group should call at his secretary to President Zimmer* office, Dean Bostwick said. The man; Bobbye Jl.lullms, whose father program Will s~rt M~:rch 1, and 1s executive secretary of the New those ass1gned will ~eceive the Teg- Mexico Educational Assocmltlon; ular pay of a pr1vate, $60 per month, plus $2.75 per day for .room and Dorothy Z. Brewer, daughter and board, and free tuition and of Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer of uniforms Albuquerque.

"A large group" of soldters will All received the rank of ens1gn. be assigned to the University: for Enstgn Bemis JS the daughter of the traimng, wh1ch will cover cal~ Mr. and Mrs 11. D. Bemis of Santa eulust physics, geography, cart. Fe and during her college days ography, h1sto:ry, and m1litary drill w;s a meutber of Mortar BoardJ and exercises. They will live to- and was listed m Who's Who in gcthcr, m a building n~a.r the American Colleges and Umversi· cnmpuo., under the supervnnon of ties Army officers. Ensiin Mullins, Whose home is in Regular Students May Ar-ply Santa Fe also, attended Stephens

Regular students at the Univer· College before coming to the Uni· sity who qualify may apply for veriSity, She lS a membe~ of 'lheta entrance into the program, Dean Alpha Ph1 and Delta Phi Delta. Bostwick sntd, and any Albuquel'· Ensign Brewer Joined the que people or :regular students may WAVES last July in Ft. 'Vorth,

~91 Students ~ave ~egistered ~or This Term Incomplete Registration Shows Decrease of 314 Under last Semester

All Male Students Need Three Hours Gym For New P. E. Program

25 Alumni Listed As ~risoners of

r~epresentatives Will Discuss War I •

~econstruction Beginning third semester, all A , ( • m•l· students at the Tlniverstiy XIS ountrleS w~ll be required to tt\ke at least F It d Student three hours of physical educatiOn Alumni Killed Reaches 11; acu Y an traimng per week, George White, Committees Formulate director of athletics, anounced Fourteen Reported Missing Plans for Conference to~:; announcement, m accord- In latest UNS War Survey A conference for Post War Re-ance with War Department re- Twenty-five Umvers1ty of New construction to which I·epresenta ..

Wit~ students still registering quests, 1s expected to greatly fa~ Mex1co alumni are prisoners of tivcff from ;;xteen sout11west col-for this term enro1lment may reach cihtate pre-service conditioning, the Axis, eleven have lost their leges and univeraittcs have been 950 smd a statement today from M Wh"t "d 1" · th servtces and at least tb u ·

• ffi T d t 891 t. I e sat · 1 Ives m e ' mv1ted, w11l be held on e m~ the registrars o ce. o a e At present aU Naval stu'dents fourteen others are among those 13 B .d class cards have been ta~ulated, on the campus are required to Teported as missmg, their fates EDDIE APODACA versity campus Feb, 11- cal es compared to 1,205 at th1s ttme last take at least four hours o'f gym as yet unknown, says a new sur- faculty and student :representatives,

t h federal, state and military officmls semes er training per week. vey of alumni participation in t e D f D d Men still lead ln number with 460 The third semester, to be insti· war JUSt ISSU!ld by the University rr~ t ecrer~ses are expected to atten .

registered as compared w1th 431 tuted this summer as a step in News Service. U U The Jlroj~ct i~ bemg sp~nso~ed

women. This lS a drop of about 240 the college speed-up program, will Estimates of the total of alumni College Teachers :t:ht~eu~~::::.lt~ta~~s c~~::~~~~~: m,.en and 75 women from the num~ begin the first week m May. in the serv1ces now are running~as of the IntcrnatJonal Stud!!nt Ser-ber- m schqol last semester. high &s 1,000, with the names of

vtce and will be tho first major con-Second semester last year there nearly 500 already tabulated at WASHINGTON- Even before fcrcnce of Its lttnd sponsored by

were 668 men and 514 women at- s • • ~lected UNM. the number of students enrolled m college students in the southwest. tendmg the Umverstty. All figures Pier IS The Japanese Jltisone:rfi newly the 18-19-year-old draft cut into Crystallization of Opinion mclude graduates and specml hated tms month are Major l3Ill t students. A N ~ •d t Reardon of Albuquerque, Capt. mstltutlons of higher educn tOnt Crystalhzntion of collegiate and

The dec!'ease in enroilment thJs s ew resl en James Sadler, commander of the the number of college ~nd untver. community thought and opinion on semester IS not much below that Santa Fe battery of the 200th stty teachers JD the e~:~t::c~:::; Post .. war Reconstruction problems seen for second semester in pre. • Coast Artillery; Capt, Ted Park· dropped five per c t issued to- ia the chief atm of the meeting, A vious years although It is becomtng Dr. Leshe Sp1er of the Umver· er, Capt. Tom Taggert, Lt. Jack to a prel~~in~:ry STO~~ce of Edu- report of proce~dings and .resolu-a greater percentage of the s1ty of New Mextco was elected w Bradley Lt. Fred Evans, Lt. da~ bY t • · tions adopted will be submitted to t d t b d h · · 'T h s t T" th catiOn. the International Student Service s u en o Y· President of the American Ant ro- Ed Lmgo, ec · g · Imo Y The drop occurred between the 1 1 • u •t d States

little Change Noticed in Employment Applications

• 1 S "th Staff Sgt Robert Leshe 11 f 1942 for nc uston tn a m e polog1cal _Association at Its annua Ml ' . · C 0 . fall o£ 1941 and the fa o · National Collegiate Post-War rc·

h Evans Lt Wilham • vernuer, t · b d data ob· meetmg on December 29t , ac~ S t w' 11 • N 's Lt Lee c The repor 1s nse on port of opinion. Similar confcr-

d t th g • 1 tnm orn , • • t · d from approximately one- · h ld t th cordmg to word Teceive a e Tucker Master Sgt. Jack L. Fmley, nme • • f 1 1 r cncea are bemg e a seven o er University yesterday. The Ameri- Corp. Tony King, Lt Jack L Elhs, h~~~n~~o!h;n 1::::~~~~~.0 ug IC collc~c~1 t~r~ughoutrt t~11 cb:"~~· can Anthropological Association Lt. Daniel C. Limpert, Lt. LeMDY· e The decrease in men tencbcrs 1s Yh: ~0 d c~ 11 e ;i:~l governme!t:"

Little change ln student em· ts the national organization of ne B. Stiles, TJechh. s,~rt. WE~wl m S. 7.5 per cent, and the number of arnldUco"lle•eos ntharoughout the world ployment 11as been noticed for the La d Sg·" 0 n ,, 1 coxcn h " f 11 anthropologists for the United n on,Ch •1• 8 h • J• Sgt' women teachers employed as ln- as n concrete indication of U. S. new term in spite of dra t en s • d Corp. ares nne ez, .... f d 13 r cent. d 't th ht

and a decreaS:e m enrollment, Dean States and Canada, but mclu es B d 1 F Gurule of Placitas· crease pc collegiate an commum y aug l:e e e 10 • ' More \Vomen Teachers R t tl J. rJ Bostwiclf announced yes r· many .foreign members over the Capt. Dean Craft, and Sgt. J. B. Increases in numbers of women on c~ons rue on.

day. All of the students employed world. Jcmes, son of Lt. Gov. J. B Jones t h were most noticeable in Commtttees ~t 'Vork last term have been }llacedt and • .d w·n· f c 1 b d cac ers Two commJttces under the gcn· the few addttional students em- Dr Spier, who has been P.rofes- With DaVl l lams o a: s a libern.l arts schools. In degree~ I d':r~>ction of Eddie Apodaca

' alread.,. reported to be a pnsoner t• · f s colleges and era I ~ ployed have balanced the students sor of Anthropology at the Uni~ • I't 1• amp and Pete Dom: gran Ing un1tverhs!l1e 'th t are makmg plans for the meeting. d t N y A Ed to f m an a mn c ' profcssiOna sc oo s e per cen ~ lty d . m ttce with who have dropp~ ou • • . versity since 1939, was .~ r o enicali already reported to be a 3.0· in 'unior coJleges, it was A .J.acu n visory co ml

will continue durmg the next tenn the American Anthropolog~st, the pnsoner in the Philippines, the w2:s ' J Dr. Dorothy Wood~ard, chairman as before, ns no notice of any . d f 1 • Ax. ~ s · 1 includes •Dr. Joaqum Ortega, Dr. change has been rec.eived. national journal m the fiel ' rom total of a untnt ts pnsoner In teachers colleges and norma Victor Kleven, Dr. Dudley Wynn,

Dean Bostwick and Miss Lena 1934 to 1939. He has been connect;.. reaches twenty~~vc. • schools, .the number of women Dean Lena clauve and Dean J, L. C. Clauve, dean of women, have cd through the past twenty .. five These do not mclude the hats of teachers lS close to the number of B t "ck The. student committee •-ken charge of student employ.. . t · t eleven dead and fourteen others men In this group, a decrease in • 08 WI • d f Bob Alsup sccre· I.H years w1th many prommen 1ns 1- • • b f l<>ued IS eompose o t ment re lacing Jack Feth, who lS . • er the missmg, the nurn er o women emp J tary· Judy Chapman, Gerald FIS. ..

attend the classes for l'egular col- Tex , where she was working ~s lege credit, without belonging to secretary to the Tegional adrnmLs­the Army unit, upon fulfilling the trator o£ the Federal Power Com­academic. :requuements and paymg mission. She attended UNM for the required fees. three years and the~ w~nt to

The Army umt's pragram lasts Washingtont D. C, to work m the for six months, begmning March 1, office of the judge advocate general. and upon Its completion the soldier- A new member of the armed students mll be assigned to eight forces is Paullne C. de Baca, of months' addttional work elsewhere Albuquerque, who has reported for before becoming eligible for com- duty wjth the W AACS at Des misstons in the Anny Air' Force. Moines, Ia. An alumnus of UNM, One 'or Eleven Miss de Baca is the daughter of

workmgpin Santa Fe :for the OCD. tuttons and umversttieS ov f The total of known d.ead rose took place; thoUgh ~t a slower rate cher: Charles Lanier, Vivienne Her­An average of C lS required to countt'y, as American Museum o this month to eleven -vnth word than the decrense Jn the employ~ nnndez Betty Jo Poe, George Am-

secure employment. The current Natural History in New York, that Lt. Thomas Jurgensen of. the ment of men. • • pte, Biit Hall, Ann Lightt Joe Har .. work period w1U end January 16. Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Cahf· Navy Air Corps had been k1lled Cut m Public Institutions • ley James Noble and Louise Vin-

. d the University of in action in the Solomons, and As a rule, publtcly-controlled m- cent. orma, an that Lt. HatTY" Giles was kllled stitutions J"(!ported sharper cuts m D Z' t Speak Chicago ~ 2 h" 1 than did those r.. tmmerman o • in an accident Dec. 2 . teac 1ng personnc S k on the first day will be

Owing to ~be canceUation of. the Lt. Jurgensen attended the Uni- under private contz:ol The de· Dr. P~m~erman. Following each annual mectmg of the Amencan versity irom 1937 to 1940. He en. I crease for all pubhcly-contro11ed I . ession five different round Association for the Advancem:ent hsted in the Navy Air Corps in' in~titutions was 6 8 per cent; fo_r ia~~=~i:cussions will be held at

Alpha Phi Omega is making of Science, the general orgamza- September, 1941, and was grad- prtvntely-controllcd institutions It h" h time resolutions wlil be

Alpha Phi. Omega Plans to Bloodtype Student Body

The UniVersity of New .Mexico Mr. and Mrs. T. C. de Baca. i! one of eleven instituttons throughout the country chosen :for the premeteorological training and the selection is ua- tnbute to the quahty of the Universtty's depart­ment of physics," said Tom L PopejGy, comtrOller and executiVe

plans for blood-typmg the student tion of scientists Of the country, at uated only last spring. He was waa 3 9 per cent. • :,~ulated. • body in cooperation with the the request of the Gove:nment, assigned to Hawan and in the The sharpest drop m ~ersonnel The conference committee is m

UNM Professors Elected Health Office, Biology Department Dr. Spier lS also continued m offic.e summer was transferred to the reported, 17.1. per c~nt, lS among ho es of hn.'Ving at least one nation­and the State Public Health Labor- as Vice-President of that orgam- Pacific. fleet His wife, the former men teachers m pubhcly-controlled llp k own speaker present for the

To Geolog.ICal Society atory. Information: from the Uni· zation and 1ts Chairman of Sec· Mary Worthen is now living at junior colleges. Largest propor- a Y t' n s Discussion leaders will in-

assistant Dr. Robert E. Holzer, assoc\ate

professor o£ physics, will be in charge of the. Anny unit's ac· ademic WDrk1 with Dr. E . .John Workman, professor .of physiCS and head of. the department, acting as consultant.

Dr, Holzer has returned from conferenc<>a in Chicago preparatory to settmg up the program.

Tb Have More Teachers Not only will the program bring

a large U(lW group of men to the Uttiversh.y; it w11l also mean ad­ditiOns to the teaching stoff to hl!ng ihe total requir~d for the mstruc,.aonal program up to about 20 Dr. Holzer has been combing the country for first rate men for th<! progrnm,

Salant.!s for instruction will be ~aid out of tuttion charges for which the Army is responsible.

Student Council to Meet

versity Health Office reveals an tmn H-Anthropology. Cleveland, Obi; tionat~ increase is amo~g womef ~:~:~~presentatives f'rom visiting Professors Vincent C. Kelley and urgent 'llced :for ~ hst of donors, as Lt. Gtles, who attended the U m.. m pnvatety-controUed Jumor co t chools community leaders and

Stuart A Northrop of the Um· on1y two are avallable now. B G l I d versity in 1938, was one of three leges, where a nse of 10.4 per cen ~utsta~ding' students on the versity of New Me~Ico's Geology Various hospitals call upon the Paper y a van ssue persons ktlled when a traimng lS reported. • campus Department recetved 'Word today UmversJty from tlrne to time for d • IAA S • plane crashed soon after its take- Henry C. Badger and Bcnjamm 16lnliied to Atk!nd of their ele~tion as Fellows of the blood donors, and there IS an ~p· as Secon In erleS off from a Midland, Tex. !lymg w. Frazier ?f the Office of E~u- Schools which have been invil,ed Geolo neal Society of America portumty for those regtstered With • n . V M d field. The accident occurred on Dec. cation .. who Issued the :report, ha' so to attend the conference include

Elegct"lon to fellowsh'lp in the the Health Office to bc.nefit frDm flA Mexican .r;mnter 1ews o • 22 pomt out that wltereas teac mg h U . .1 f Arizona Ari .. ll d f h M • p • t g" an article · d "d d u 1 T e mvers1 Y o ' soctety is based :primarily on out- the $25 fee usua Y pal o~ s~c ern exH~an am tn , . News of other alumni who have statys were IVl e on an eq a zona State College, Arizona State

standing research and last year servtces. Alpba Phi Omega IS a so by Jesus Guerrero Galva~ Whlc~ not yet been listed in the Alumnus basiS betw~en pubhcly and l>rl• Teachers College, Denver Univer-only Sixteen were elected from all compiling a list of do~o~ fo.:r use appeared m the November Issu~ o (Continued on page 4) (Conttnued on page S) 't U 'versity of Colorado Colo-

! h th remp1ent IS un- The New MexWo Quarterly Rc1new, SI y, Dl ' T North Amenca. The present tota lD cases w ~ere e b • d Short Paper rado State Teaehers College, ex· nm~e~m~b~e_:rs~h~i~p~i~s~7~80~·------~•::b:::l::.e..:t::o..:•:ff:.:o:.:r:d..:a~p:..ro::f::e_ss:l-on_a_l_d_o_n_o_r._lhas een Issue as .a f J • / s _I t s • as Technological College, Texas - It~ th~ ~~!~r-~~·r~:~~r-A~=~c~n nternaflona tuaen erVtCe College of Mines, West Tex~s State

A n . M I e c Teachers College) Hardtn-Stmmons Jorge. mpie ramts ura Affairs. ,... _, d 'T A . L St _I L u. "ty New Mexico Mibtacy

' Devoted lnrgelfy :"an ;v;:ua.tt~.~ r-ounae I 0 SSISr;; uaenr;;S In~~~~~:~. 'Highlands University,

P C f of the works o wo 0 EOO.c • New Mexico State Teachers Col-(""Of OSt•Waf OflTefence greatest contemporary artists, The International Student Semce, co-sponsor with the Umversity 1 New Mexico School of Mines r-4 J Cl te Orozco n.nd Alfaro W t t ege, ' ose emen • 1 • th of New Mexico :for the maJor Conference on Post- ar Recons rue ton Eastern New Mexico College and

Jorge Ampie, one of the leading student cartoonists and artists from Managua, Nicaragua, will bonor the forthcommg Southwest Post-~ar Conference to be held here February 11-13, with a canvas mural entitled uyouth in Post-Wnru the conference headquarters announced today ••

Considered in childhood as a (~natural!! fOI the wo:rld of art, Ampw came to the notice of many of the leadmg attists of hts.llative country. Th ugh grade secondary and high school, Ampte contmued to exhiblt th:oqualitiE!B ~c)st needed in those of nn a1t1st of val'ied and color.fu1 subjects, that of ingenuity and fel'V'ol' far the reabstic.

Slqueiros, Galvan's arb~ e ISh ::. problems was founded 22 years ago in Geneva, and since its :found· New Mexico State College. second of the lnter .. AmeriCari S ;t' ing has devoted itself to the cause of the students; by nsslsttng them Committee members express the Papers, the flrs~, Ri• F. Behr~ t: when in distress by helping them to make tt posaihle i()r large numbers opinion that probabl~ 200 delegates Ecouovtto Natwna tsm di h a 1 to continue thei~ mterrupted education, and by creating after the last will be present representing at least Ame~·{ca, _havmg be~~l c os~n war a comnton meeting ground where students of many nabons: tould ten of the schools. "pamphlet of the month ast. F.e .. talk er the problems they faced. • . . runty by Conmwn Seme maga'Z~nej Th ovUnited States committee of mer go\l'ernment tra1nmg mstJ-

The tlurd essay 1n the ser1e~, ISS e h 'th the UNM General tutes, U. s. student leaders ~11r?ugb Band Members Wanted The Coopt~¥a.tive Movement m rrl: w 0 WI tt s planning ISS have learned the basiC 1deas Lattn America.: Its Slgnificance in Co . erelnce co~mt1.0°n° ,0

1• the Con- that have shaped the American , h 8 lid ritu by A Fa· regtonn organtza I .1. , t• t Anyone who cnn play a

The culmination of this student's conference, and in keeping w~th 'rhorc will be a meeting of the brdlianco came Wlth an award of n the trndttlons of the orgam~abon

Student Council Monday, Jun. 18, h t the University ol under whtch this conference lS be~ at 4 P· m. Members w1ll have the1r grant ere 0

1 of 1ng co-sponsored; the InternatiOnal 1>1ctures taken, and the regular New Mexico :from t?E! S~choo der Student Servtce, the murnl wtll be business will bo conducted, , tnter-Ame~1can Af!a~rs t 1°~1es sent to Now Yo~l< C1ty for exhlbl-

thnt he mJght continue h s a ~ tion in such coliferences co·spon-

H en1.tsp ere 0 ct • , i d. f ferencc hM retained and extended democrn IC concep ' band instrument is urged to bra Ribas of Columbta s rea Y or th's atiruisttc program of. student Forelftost tn its accelerated pro- sec bandmaster Kunkel. publication and is schedulc:d to ap .. re~ief in this country and lS: devot- gram, the successfu~ International Trombone and drunt players pear shortly. . t maln efforts towards md .. Students Assembly m ·washmgton especially ate needed. AnY-.

::: U.s S, student leaders to prepare last fall c:re~ted discussion through- one who does not ,play the themselves for more effective cit.. out the Alhed world and dlsturb- drums, but would like to izenship in this country and in an ed the Axis powers to such, an ex.. Jearn to do so should see Mr • Senate Will Hold Meetina

New president of the University o! Hawah is Gregg M. Slnelair, 1912 graduate of the University of Mmnesota.

m this semi:Latm .. Amoricnn ° mo~ sored w1th other colleges. , sphere. , W , ,11 h ex· The Umted States comm1tteo of

''Youth m Post· art• w: fe the (ContinUed on page 3) hibited during the on Ire,y o

There will be an important meet­Ing of the Senate Tuesday, Jan. 19, at 5:00.

mterdependent world, tent that the German rad~o co"I!- Kunkel right away. Through regional and national startlly endeavored. to dtscredtt IL---'--------.....J

conferences, work <:amps, and sum- the Assembly and 1ta speakers.

i

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~080 ces ••• • .p. 2 ~··~·~···P·l ' •...•.. ·ll· 8

'1 ••....•.• p.

No. 1

lM • 1ew·

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ection e· 21 I to Report :chools for ling ~ gpurd and the y march music, J2 units o£ UNM final mspection a. m. June 21.

I Ommanding ofli .. ~a the reviewing 1tlng party con. r, }l. Will, Com-Dr. and Mrs.

man, Mrs. Lee m J .0. Knode. y was composed attached to the white dress um•

'n was ileaded by talion Cornman .. 1: llattalion Staff

1 Dorgan, )I. L. \ ~ed. The V -12

drum and buglo r tection o£ R. B.

Then came the ).t the command vcd by the color Johnson and in"'

'>ion, V. C. Par-

"' Ill )ntpanies of tho ' j

~ N

Mmand of n. :J. m, H. 0. Eller· ~~ F. N. Finn

wed. ,t. Comdr. A.. V. lew was a great

\l appearance of ~ tbe units. Tlie o- U, S. Naval p'• School,_ New (~dley, John Co. 1oopeland, John

~ Bruco o. El·

eeman1 Gerold ofinson, Blaine~

r 1 H. Sheffield,

'

I"'"Y· 1 ' )er wlll be sent

~. · School, Ai!-1 These include ~rt s. Balian, ~cob P. Burton, i:enneth V. Oar­\vay, Willard D. to Cozart, Rich-' Fl Falkenberg, )Ik P, Hapgoo~ illJi'in M. Hcrrlll~ ' ~ed R. James,~ .jA.. Leadabrand, jEdward L. Me.. )n, Paul L. lllo­tHa-ra, lll, Richard G. ), Paynter, lilm­t~ Putnam, Rob­bgan N. Ragle,

~seph Sbvkoff, ; Harold W .. • Ulmer, Clyde -t Plil!'lll)

\ .hingtorr ''ost ~~assistant pro- 1

I by education at New Mexico, on I, . :has written· tpects to leave

to report in Juiy 3, where

American Red pacity of OCCU·

ill She expect. to

!jlseas duty~ I~ at the Univer.

lld received her ~lty of Arizona.. lhor of several e Al'ticles and a

to such mag..­Childhood" ls a ntem ..

Page 3: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943

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New Mexico Lobo Now Mexico'• Leadln~r Collere Newopapor

Published each Frida:y of the regular college year, exeeR~ during holiday poriodo, b]' the Aooociated Studonll of the Uril· vonity of New Me>(Jco, )!lntered ao aeco11d claoa matter at the postofllce, Albuquerque, Under the Act of March a, 1879, Printed by the Unlveralty Pross. •

Subacrlptlon rate, ,1.60 per year, payable in advan~e. Suboeril'tlcn rate !or men 1n anned forces f1.00.

;Editorial and business plllee• are in room 9 of the llludent UniQn building, Telephone 2·6628.

Me'UJber

1=\srocialed CoUe{5ia!e Press JUDY CHAPMAN

Edltcr

ROGER PATTISON BwJneu .Manae-er

JtUil&DC.HT81;) YO~ lli/OTI<IIj,;.t,. 111,.1\<,.lfflii'INU 8J

National Advertising Service, Inc. Colt''' Pu{,f/thm RA'PfesmJ.J/M

420 MADI&Off AVE l'i~W YORK. H Y. CIIIC-440 • IIIOUOW • .Lo1 MUUI • ••• 1Jt.UCIICO

LOBO Has Permanent New face Last week's Lobo introduced itself m a n~w dress, The same new type faces for beadhne$" appear in this issue, and the

style has been set up as a filCed pennanent typog)'aphy for the paper. What :is .mennt JS that1 after careful study and at considerable ex ..

penae, a certain scrJeS: of modern types haa been purchased as best fitting the a1ze and needs of The Lobo, and that the Investment was made just as commercial new6pa.ptmJ make such an investment: that ts, with a VIeW of gettmg the best possible and stiCkmg to it.

Now and m :Cuture yenrs we can have more time to see what we cnn do toward glVJng the written matter of The Lobo some character and :pcrsonahty too.

Russian War Relief Will Send Textbooks to Prepare Doctors NEW YORK-American medi •. -1'------------­

cal nnd surgi~l textbooks sent to mny be addressed in care of tho the Soviet Umon by hundreds of Public RelatiOns Department of American med1cal men and stu. Russian War Relief 11 E 35th St. dents through Russian War Relief, New York City which will forward are he1ping to -prepare new doctors ]etters. ' for work w1th the Red Army and among Russin's 40~000,000 evacuees from Jm•adcd tcrritoryt 1t was re­vea1ed in letters sent to n.ussian War Rcbcf by student.' in the Fmt Kharkov Medical Institute.

(

/

./Kat.. ~ck, Joy

,/

j 'J/ r .>~ );)

So What? On Wednesday mght Professor

Wagner, as the new State Pres!• dent of' the American Civll Engmeors, presided meetmg of the state a,nd st11dent I chapters of the A.S.C.E. After a short business meeting the group attended a lecture by Dr. Stuart Nor!hrop on V1tal Minerals of New Mexico.

This "' the start of the semester for many students, the big problem of what to

wben.

:;EW MEXICO LOBO

' I .. Friday, January 16, 1948

Soil Conversation: : ·:~~ ~NNJffll Moul'l~J

Extension Division Offers four Non·creoit Classes ·

BIG SCOOP ICE CREAM

Sodas Sun dies Soft Drinks

610 E. CENTRAL Dial 2·2975

IF YOU DON'T KNOW

WHERE TO TAKE HER

DON'T WORRY

THE TOP-NOTCH

Drive-In ISTHEPL:ACE

' Make Class on Time the Sure Way

6 Tokens-51c

ALBUQUERQUJit BUS CO. "On Time Wtth Safety"

The Sun Drug Co. Your Headquarters for all

DRUG SUPPLIES and

Ladies' and Men's Toiletries Parker Pens and Pencils

Saylor's • Whitman's • Stover's • King's Pangborn's CANDIES

• Sanit01r1f Fountain Servic~

BRIGGS & SULLIVAN, Props. 400 W. Central

. FJ)iday~ January 16;.1,943

Jorge Ampie Paints Mural for Post-War Conference

NEW MlllXICO LOBO

fJ. S. Army Announcement

WAAC Labaralory Teclmidan.

WAAt:: PAY SVALE Olllcer. Dm!clar Ant. Diredor F1eld Director ht OBic:er

Equlv. Rant Coloatl Lt. Coloael Major Captain

latt MonfJJrv l'ay $333.33 291.67 25000 zoo.oo 16667 150.00

2nd 08icer 3rd Officer £nrollecf M'em.ben Chief Leader Itt leader Ted:. Leader StafF Leader TecluUeiu,3rd Grade Leader Tedmic:iu, 4 .. Grade Jr. Leader Tednuc:iu, StL Grade AoXliltry, fit C::la11 Auxiliary

lsi Lieatenaat 2nd Lieuleunt

Master Su,eao.t Fard Serae&Dt T edt. Serreut Staff Seraeut Tocl.oici111, 3rd Grado Sergeant TecL.n.icia~r; 4tJ. Grade Corporal Te.:hniciao, Sth Grade PriTatet ld Cia•• Prh·ate

• l o lh~ ttbo,.f! .,t! .:tltlt!J terlttm .:tlowancel /Dt tlrtJ submlct~t:e "'htre 4Uihorn:r4.

$138.00 138.00 114.00 !1600 9600 7800 78.00 66.00 6600 5400

ttltJ~~~e~t 1ft ~ •

Youn Army has scores of jobs in the W AAC for alert college women , •• jobs vital to the war •• , jobs that will train you for interesting new careero in the pool-war world. And here is good newo indeed- you moy enroll now in the fast·growing W AAC and be placed on inactive duty until the ochool year ends. Then you will be subject to call for duty with this splendld women:s corpo and he launched upon an advent~qe such as no previous generation has known.

New horizons ••• new places and people 1 , •

interesting, practical experience with gdod pay •• , and, above all, a real opportunity to help your country by doing essential military work for the U. S. Army that frees a soldier for combat duty. These are among many reasons why thou• sands of American women ore respondlng to the Arlny'o need.

WoMEN'S

You will receive valuable training which may fit you for many of the new careero which are openinlt to women, and full Army pay while· doing eo. And by joining now you will have excellent chances for quick advancement for, as the W AAC expands, many more officers are needed, Every member-regardless of race, color or creed-has equal opportunity and is encour• aged to compete for selection to Officer Candidate School. If qualified, you may obtain a commission in 12 weeks after beginning basie training.

Go to your W AAC Faculty Adviser for further information on the list of openings, pay, and promotions, Or inqmre at any U. S. Army Recruiting and Induction Statio~.

U.S. ARMY RURUIYIHG AHD INDUCTION IIRYtCI •

AlJXILIABY ConPs

!

~age Three

War Staff Discloses Plan to Convert Schools into Bases

NEW YORK- CACP-Lt. co1. New Spanish Harley B. West of tho waT depart.. ment general staff has dlocl~sed a Magazine Received plan for lnrge-scnlo conversion of American colieges and univerames Anyone who rends Spanish or into training bases for the armed is learning to rend tho Jnngunge forces. should be mtetested in a new

West told a meeting of the Mid· magazine being recevicd by the dlo Stntco .Arumcmtion of CollegeEt Librtny. It Jt:J entitied ''Cuadcrnos nnd Secondary Schools thnt stu .. Amcricnnos: La Revista del Ncuvo dents will bo selected from 11young Mundo," and has been -published men in the anny who hnvc demon.. since January, 1942, in Mexlco strnled apt1tude to receive such C1ty. Beautifully and fully dlus­hlgher education," and that they trated, the publication comes art­will hve under army dJscipltne and tclcs on nrt, hternturc, publtc af .. receive regular nrmy pay while m fairs, and archaeology, as wen as training. poetry and book reviews. The

Dr. Edmund E. Day, president of four sections into which lt is df .. CorneJl university, announced as vided are called "Nue.stra Tiempo," many as 260,000 service men wJil "Aventura del Pensnmicnto," be sent to colleges under the plan. i•Prcsencin del Pasado/' and 11D1 ..

Mtlftary representatives ernpha- menslon Imaginaria" sized tho government will not take A group of Spanish nnd Mexican over any colleges to which service mtcllcctunla orgahizcd to pubhsh a men will be sent for courses lasting mogazme dealmg with '•Jes prob~ from nine months to more than lema!! que plantea la continuidad

de Ia. cultura," and 11Guadernos two years. Americanos'' is the result. Jesus

"Any relation between the armed SUva Herzog, Dlreetor de Ja Es­servJces and collegiate institutions cuela Naetonal de Economta de is going to be purely voluntarY and Mexico, is the general ed1tor and there is to be no requisitioning,'' a frequent contributor. West sa1d.

Articles Appearing Joseph W. Barker, dean of the Some of the articles, selected at

Colurtbi.a ~"html Qf engineering random, are '1Dcscubriem•ento de and spec1al assistant to Secretary

of the Navy Knox, told the edu- un Pmtor Americana," by Walter Pach; ''Ideas sobre In Politfica

cator.s, "There is no desire on the Economica de la Postguerra," by part of :either the army or the navy to d1ctttte to you what you ~~~~i:;:e!!:~~s~:·lfn:~~c~a~~ must clo. We are hoping to give tro Leal; uExhortncion n los Es~ yott a maximum of leeway in pres-

• . crttoresp" by Alfonso Reyes, 1'Ln. entation of ma~r~al and ~~ rnaxx- F1losofia en el Tere:er Re1ch," by mum of a~adcmu~ fr~edom. Alfredo St«!rn; uPresentes del Arte

West said emphasiS tn mstruc- en Mextco/' by Justmo Fernandez: bon w1ll be placed on SCJentdic ''L E 1 • d 1 0 It I and techmcad courses Mdttncy a vo UCIOn .c ~s u urea n· trainfng wiU be aubordmated to d1genas en Mexico, by M. 0 .. de

• Mendtzabel; '1De Monroe a Roose .. academic work, he saJd, s,mce the lt , b 1\f 1 J Si • ''L-etr students already will have received dve u' toY. ~~nbuc 511• I ezrtav, I eds

1 ta · t t~ b £ 11 c pm, y v o a a a, an nn 1 t ry IDS rue Ion e ore enro • uMexico en Guerra,'' by Manuel

m~:hools selected for the program, A vial c_a_m_a_c_ho ____ _ Colonel West said, Will be 'jthose m posttion to furmsh the type of instruction required, w1th facihties for housu1g and feeding the men."

He stated the government, woUld

Draft Decreases College Teachers

hke to set the plan 1n operation "at (Contmued £rom page 1) the earliest posstble moment.'' vately~contro11ed msbtutiorts m

The trammg program 1s based on 1941, there was a slight tendency the supposition of a long war, he upward in the pnvntely~controlle:d satd, and men who enter the courses: groUps. Th1s fall only 49 4 per uwtll not emerge before the end of cent of the teachers were etrtployed 1943, the middle of 1944, or even by publicly.oontrolled !nstituUons 194~!' and 60 6 per cent taught 1n those

Twenty-five professors of Hoi· land1s University of Amsterdam have been dJsmissed under Naz1 pressure •

unde:r pnvate control

Weekly sale Of war stamps at the Umvers1ty ot W1sconsm has averaged more than $700.

Page 4: New Mexico Lobo, Volume 045, No 18, 1/16/1943

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Pa(1!1 Four

U Team Polishes Up After .Defeats

lltnggerinif after thrqc succqss­lve llaymnkers to the chin, the game Now Mexico University bnskotbnll squad wlll go to wo~k this week polishing up fer their series 11ero Wlth Texna Mines the twsnty-fon,th ond twenty-fifth

The Loboa did manage to win tho first gamo of the four w1th Tc~as Tech and West Te~ns State, that a Bo-28 dec1s1on ove1' tho Red Ralaors from Lubbock. The Ra1<lors took the second game 37-29.

Agamst West Texas the Wolf­pael< hustlod ha•d but it was just too milCh ball cl~b Fhckmg in bas­kets oftener than the avetaJP Tc:xan smgs 1'Thc Eyes of To"taa" 1n an off key the Buffs turned m a couple o;f eleven point decis1ons, 66-46 and 68-47 respectively Both times the towenng Duffs tan up commanding first half leads then fought off last half Lobo rallies for the dec1s!ons, Lobos Learn

NROTC Parades to Help Boost Bond Sales Here

Mattingly Stationed at Army Basic Flying Field in Texas

INavy.~OT< Team Takes Army Tilt

!In the

By BOB LANIER

Fri_,a~. January 15, 19~

Navy ~OT < leads Intramural Play

The Naval R.O.T.C. rolled such a commanding 1ea!l In the first half of mtramural play that the boys decided just to concede the Blue­

The Naval R.O,T.C. basl<etbaU team, falling to find enough com­petition In the intramurals whieh they teok almost without a strug­gle have branched out and are at th~ cuT"'ent tlme beating army •

' Not only tha• they aren't strong enough already, but the We•t Texa• teams for a pastime. • b h

.. jackets the ''Semester Champion .. -ship" and start all over from scratch this semester. State Buffalo's basketball team 1s due to be strengthened soon y t e

Saturday night as n prelba to announced eligibihty of Ray Ellefson, six-feet-nine center. And just the Lobo contest the desert sa1lor" 11 · · f t Snl.pped off' the wmga pf the 383d to prove that Jsn't· a typographtcal error we' say It agam, s1x- ee -

d mne. A couple of other Buffalos who are about ready for action are school squa<lron 28-15, Mon ay Jal:lk Maddox, veteran torw~rd, who a:pparently is on the verge of a mght they doubled back to down L d J lJ 1 tt a f rward the 55th school squadron 28-16. victory m hJs seholastio battle, and e ru aco s, e _erm n o ,

f, who IS also due to help out when he recovers from a leg lDJUry. ~nyway Fllldmg "28" asfa gotodthspoNt avYor by the tlme the Lobos make the trip down to Canyon (in early Febru-a total number o pom s 0 1 b 1 t t h t h ndl "B" team disposed of the 88th ory) the Buffs shou d e P en Y oug o a e. •

d 28 17 Just think over a Buff lineup w1th thts Johnson boy who was center, squa, ton .. ' s ti btl over at one forward; the afore-menttoned six-foot-niner at center;

The Navy teadm ha tha ~ n! Maddox at the other forward; Clark Johnson and Steckman guards. lmtt defense an <m e 0 e b bl th t th B ff uld be features the shootmg of "Slug- W1th that hneup on the. court It ,. pro a e a e u s wo . ger" Pendleton and the under-the undefeated nght now. As It IS they've never b~en over four pomt~ basket work of Amerson The 4 :S" back at the fintsh, team was sparked by the work of Over on the home basketball front the Lobos should be a lot rougher Paul Harl<W• when Frogge's hand recuperates. If banda can recuperate. Clayton

"Functional Illiterates" Outnumber College Grads

Flattley has been looking better ull the tnne at the center apot whtle at the forwards tt'll be Bill TQwnsend, Mareufi Salas, and Bobby Mac­Dougal batthng for the starting berths from here on in. M1ckey M1ller apparently has the other guard positJOn clinched.

Ch1ef' Petty Officer Milam's charges rolled up 222 points in the A League and 289 in the uB" diVJSion to spread eagle the field by much too much.

The deciSIOn to start apew came from a meetmg o'£ the mtramural managers. At the meetmg there was one r.epresentat1Ve from each orgamzatton ••• SI:X. tn all. Need­less to say the proposal to Wtpe the slate clean rece1ved fl.ve sup­porting votes and one veto. More Participation

The Lobos should have pwked up u lot of bAsketball 11aavy'' thts week nnd last, jf nothmg else, Whn.t they nptJenr to need most 1s nomebody who can really count on the tii>-ins ancl a guard to ihp them in from out front. Stanley FroggQ was in good :form for the first game agnmst Tech but hurt h1s hand and W!\S of hm1ted value tor the other throe cu .. toats.

Tho people of Albuquerque had Aviation Cadet Re>< M. Matting-

One out of every seven ,Ameri­cans over 26 years old-10,104,000 of them-are iifunctionally" lllit­erate, nccordmg to the 1940 U. S. CensuS-more than three t1mes the number of college graduates.

If they get a few more tough games under the1r belt before tourna­ment time in February the Lobos could very easily be placed under the t•too hot to handle" catego;ry. A httle accuracy on the close shots that they've been missing, a greater percentage of free throws m the. basket, the same hustle that they showed at times agamst West Texas lS about what they need.

If the Lobos ore gomg to have a traclt team they should start work­outs pretty soon. V~c Crocco, Red Smith, Lean Server, and Jack Mac­Ewen are among the boys .who should glVe the Hdltoppers a better than average squad of thinly clads.

Lookmg baCk over the last Selll­ester's mtramural program It 1St

evident that mo~e pel'sons partie .. Ipa ted than at almost any time m th~ past This was due tQ Dr H1ll's two-fold policy of havmg both an "A'' and a t'B" league and the policy of awardmg points, points, and more points fol' each entry with no maximum set on the number of partlctpants from every organization. •

lbgh pmnt man for the season 1s Bill ''Woody" Townsend who has !,\cored forty~one pomts m the .five Lobo games to date. Bclund Townsend are Frogge and Clayton Flattley, freshman center, each

a chance to ace the NROTC umt ly of Albuquerque. N. M., former on parade Thursday mornmg, The varsity tenms letterman and ICap­umt marched in the bond boostmg pa Stgma at the Umvers1ty ts procession in whlch the two man stat1oned at the Anny Atr Forces submarino that saw the sun s~t Flying School, at Pe~rm Fiel?, nt Pearl Harbor was displayed to Texas, where he 1s Tecmvmg basic thousands who lined Central flying 'trammg.

The dembon of •'functional" from Army standards which re­quJre the equtvalent of a fourth .. gracle education and t]le abihty to read a daily newspaper for the admisswn of Selectees. By thiS defimtio11, the tlhterates are barred f1 om the Army, have a restricted

I

Regain That Certain Desert Divers Come Something In Course Up to See a Warship

w1th twenty .. nme: Avenue. Cadet Mattingly attended NMU

Marcus Snlns The unit was led by tho Bat- from 1987 to 1941, durin~ which

tallnn Commander and his otaff bme he played basketball m add•­ usefulness in war mdustries and By John Bmsley Bill Scott and Max McWhirter, However tho darling of the :fans along with the sudecn piece drum

in the last couple of games was and bugle corps Also m -the parade Marcus Salas who stretches mighty were officers and men from Klrt­hard to reach Ina claimed five-feet- land and Ox~ard F1eld. Col. Frank eight. Salas, guarding a b1g num- Hackett, Col. Jo~n Fite, Cap~in bcr twenty-eight who towered WJ1J1 an~ other .mthtnry digmtartes head and shoulders above htm, along w1th Vlll'IOUS ClVlC otgnmza­scorcd twelve points in the opener tiona and civic officials includmg agnmst the Buffs although he play- the Governor. • cd less than a half. Hls perform- Followmg the p111ade a war ~nee: in this gamo..won him a start.. bond drive was held on downtown ing berth for the next contest. In sbeets this game Salas hod a lot of tough -------luck on h1s shots, but still managed 1 To help meet the war demand ~or to chime in for mght markers. And tramed physicists, the Univers1ty he managed to get the ball off the of Toxns has created a new degree, bl\ckboard n. surprising number of Dnchclor of Science m Physics. t1mes when one considers hts

tlon to tonms. Upon sutcessful com­j>letion of his traimng, Cadet Mat­tmgly wdl go to an advanced flying school.

Former lobo Staff Members ~ow in the Armed Forces

cannot fulfill thctr duttes as Come girls! To CarhsJe Gym ll'!compamed- by the o cera and citizens. Shed those lumps of excess aver .. men of the local NROTC Umt, m .. The )argest number of illiterates h d d tro USS comes from states w1th the great- dupoisJ! Come slendertze for five apected t e mo ern ~s ycr, t est population: New York, with bucks m the Gleaves new system Laffey, wh.ile the Umt was on I s more than 1,000,000; Pennsylvama of normalizmg exercises, plays', annual crmse. The Laffey was with 696,000, Texas with 642,000: and games, correctives, and accompamed by the officers and and Illmois with 462,000. By races, was a victim of the Battle of San-tho breakdown 1s 7,300,000 wh1tes, RHYTHMS I. Run to the Um-2,700,000 Negroes and 100,000 all versity Gym at 10:30 a m. on to Cruz in the Solomon Islanda,

tal 4 te after havmg given a good account others. Of the white to , ,- Mondays and Wednesdays for n Two former Lobo staff members 200,000 are native born and s, .. weeks and see if YOU don,t feel of herself. Our local yokels are

arc now in the army, Melvm Mar- 0 0 f b n striving for a berth in the future r is associate edttor last semester, lOO, 0 oreign or · better, look better, get better loo~s ' aboard a simtlar vessel. 1s now at the reception center at The Unl'Versity of Califorma 11_ and be inVIGorated!

Fort Bliss, Texas. Morris may get 5 6

't' th ~ank the army brary has a collection of 7,05 John Arthur Randall, for 14 a posi ton on e L ' • 1 Rudolf Kogan, 20, pre~med1cal newspaper pubhshed m New York. Chmesc vo umes. . • t f Mt t years president of the Rochester

Raymond Orr ',·s stationed- at A new program of basic studies stu~ent at Universt Y o nneso a Athenaeum and Mechanics insti-th A I and a native of RussiB, recently

C P Kohler California ncar ip elements of e mencan cu • overcame nationality barrters and tute, has been appointed dean of Saaomr•mento. or'r was the assistant tura1 tradibon has been mtroduccd f•- research and management at Park

a 1 f B n ton was mduct_ed tnto the army a -.cr a

Stretched out behind the Navy in the "A" L~ague were the Kappa Stgs, Kappa Alphas, Faculty, Sig­ma Chis, and the Pikes (last, and in mtramurals, least). In the ''B" L(lague the Independents moved up 'Q

to annex seeond place, followed by the Kappa Alphas, Sigma Chis, Faculty, Kappa Sg1s, and Pikes, in that ord~r. lncidr.ntally the P1kes and the Kappa S1gs were bed for last in the "B" league ln case anybody cares.

New Program The first events on this year's

program wJll be bowling and bad­minton doubles. The bowling lea­gue looks wide open whde in bad .. minton "Prince John" Troop, if he can pick up a fairly good part­ner, should gtvc the boys fits. Troop, incidentally, wears the col .. ors of the K.A/s,

G1rls m universities and colleges who will complete their courses during the current term may enlist in the women's army auxlllBry corps with the privilege of remain­Ing inactive until completion of

lleight , , . or rather lock of hc1ght, At pn;y rate he showed the best basket eye of any Lobo in tl1e series and doubtless lB marked for much future duty by Wilhe Barnes

15 Alumni listed As Prisoners courses. edhor of the Lobo last term He mto the curncu um o enm g 12-month struggle to get lD college, Parkville, Mo.

IS now enlisted in the• S1gnal Corps. college. ____ _!2~~~~~~~~~::_:::: __ _!=~:.::..::.:::.::::.::::.::..:.:..:.:._~---.!....-------------

SHAVE. HITLER

:WAR NEEDS MONB:YI

(Continued from page 1) as missing was received during December, These include Sgt. Dn. vid Kclls1 reported missing on Ba .. taan.

G1lbert Ross of Chicago may be a German or Italian prisoner, and Richard Riley is probably a prison .. er in the Phillippines. The list of known dead follows:

Lt. Jurgensen, Ensign Robert Sbllman Wilcox, 3d, Frank Eugene Furby, Marion Plomteaux, Lt. Frnnk1in L. P1erce, Lt. Kenneth Reid, Lt. Ralph M. Dienst, Lt. John WJlbur Gentry, Lt. Harry Giles, Lt James Hubbell, and Lt. Lionel 1\lclendez.

Those missing and whose names were published in the December Alumnus are Lt. Dan Burns of Al­buquerqueJ missing in an Army plane In the Pacific last sprmg; George Overmeyer. of Albuquerque, missing on BataanJ John Erbacher of AlbuquerqueJ missing on Ba­tnan; Sgt. George L. Smith o! Al­buquerqueJ missing after Corregi•

ltwiUootJtznoney todeiNiour dor· Jnck Norton of Capitan, miss­•nem,y aiJtrenor•. Your Oonrn- ing, on 'Bataan; Maynard Meuli of mont calla on you to help now. Albuquert!Ue; missing on Bataan;

Buy Delenae IJond• or Stamps Gtlbert Ross, missmg in action todiQ'. MaJc_e~re~p~darBond I early m August in an RAF raid Dq by partzClJ'atu:J.~ Jn the Pay· I over the Contmentj Lt. Russell C. 1011 SavJntJ.s Plan. I h' • · B taan ·

Bond• coat $18.75 and up H~tc mso~, m1ssmg on ~ , Staa-..ps are 10~~ :15~ and up. R1chnrd Rtl~y· probably ~ prisoner

Tho holp oi ovor.v indJrldual - in the Ph1hppmes, Lesll~ S~hell: needed. stede, missmg m the Phdtppmes,

Do 70u~ part by bUTiniJ J'Ot"' John W. Farley1 Albert Senter, of olwe twer,v pay dq. Albuquerque, Donald Wilcoxen.

STARTS FRIDAY

THROUGH MONDAY

IN THE ARMY theY' say:

"HAY BURNERS" for cavalry horses

"JUGHEAD" for the Army mule

"CHICKENS" for the eagle insignia of a colonel

"CAMEL11 for the Army man's favorite cigarette

II

ton~

I'LL

TAKE CAMELS ANY TIME! THEY'RE THE REAL THING­PLENTY FLAVORFUL

AND MILD!

Also CARTOON

SPORTS I. Q.

~ GEORGE SANDERS Herbert MARSHALL a me

PAiiAMOUNT NEWS COSTLIER TOBACCOS

ONI\IERSI'T'V OF MEW MEXICO UBR~RY

NEW MEXICO LOBO Weekly Publication of the Associated Students of _the University of New M"vl',,.

t "'A \oV

• VoL. XLV Z437 ALBUQUERQUE, WEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, JAWUARY 22, 1943

No. 20

Mrs. ~oosevelt May Attend UNM (onference

Double Door to Star Betty Ancona in Next Rodey Offer

ffiirage Queen Sandwich Meeting Inaugurated By POLITICAL ASPECTS

OF RECONSTRUCTION AFTER WAR IS TOPIC

To Be Selected At Delta Phi Delta New York about the year 1910if--------------

IS the settmg for the latest Rodey outcome Will be surpr.smg to Sub Dance reb. 6 Theatre presentation 'IDouble many. Members of Delta Plu Delta, Door, f' dtrected by Ellen B Crowe, The suppoz t111g ca!lt ls made up starrmg Betty Ancona as V1etorza of both veterans and new.comers to ..

Word was received today by Van Bret and ably sqpported by a Rodey, The cast will be Dorothy Candidates To Be Selected hono1• soc1ety fo1• students maJor­mg in nrt, have dov1sed n now type of meetmg They can 1t n snnd­wich meeting for two .,.easons. One of the reasons 111: becaused it IS

~'sandwiched'' m between classes m ordet to do away with the tlans­portatlon ptoblems that come up when the meetings nrc. held in the evenmg The ethel' xcyason It is called a sandwich meeting ia be­cause the membets brmg sand­Wiches to cat dut!ng the meeting so they won't 1mss their lunch

Eddie Apodaca, chn1rman of ,a stu. cast of camptts players The doors Lan¢1 as Avery; Chester Morris as dent commlttee for a southwestern open the mght of February 17 and Telson; Edward Balcomb as Wdl- From Women's Groups; conference on post-war plans at the the ptesentation 1s scheduled to 1am, Lms Witherspoon as Lamse: Umverstty of New Me;)I:ICO, that l'Un thtC'Ugh the 19th Patty Retd a~ Carohne Van :Sre:t, Must Be In By Thursday Eleanor Roosevelt, who IS a mem- The theme of the play will be Betty Ancona as V1ctor)a Van her of the executlVe committee Qf that of a strong Willed woman Bret; Richard Cox as Mr. Chnse, the Jnternattonal Student Service, :rulmg her household w1th an Iron Harold Sultemen as Mortm10re may attend the conference, set on hand and at.temptmg to fashiOn Neff'; John Conwell as David Van the Ul'{M campus f01 Feb 11-13. the pattern of the hves of hct Biet; Wilham Vorenl;mrg hS D1

Monica Owen1 general secretary assacu:1.tes This theme has many John Sully and Everett Watt as of the International StudE"'nt Sei'V- expre11sive demarcatiQns and the Lambert. Jce, told Apodaca nthere 1s an im-1--=--------------'-------------­mment poss1b~hty that lli[Ts Roos­evelt mtght be nvn1lab1e for an openmg plenary sesswn.u

Members of t~te student com­mittee, made up mostly of gov~ ernment majors, sent an mvitatiOn to Westbrook Pegler to attend the conference when the posstbihty that Mrs. Roosevelt might .atten4 dev~loped

Twenty-one southwestetn col­leges have been invited to the con­ference, which was origmated and I$ being wo1ked out by students at UNM

Barbs Nominate Sigma Xi Alumni New Officers Wold Supper Meet

The annual Mirage Beauty Bull Will he held Febtuary 6 m the Student Union ballroom accordmg to an announcement by Eel Harley, Mirage edttor.

Cand1dates for Beauty q,nd Pop~ ulanty QueE;!ns are to be selected by each woman's socml group and Hokona Hall and turned in to the Mirage office by 5 o'clock Thurg .. day afternoon

Music for the formal Will be furmshed by B1ll McCann's orches­tra Tickets will sell fQr $1 00.

Students Named To Committees

Tho last meetmg was held at noon on Wednet:~da:r m the Fine Atts budding. M1ss Mela Sedillo, a mcmbe1• of t11e art depal'tlnent faculty and of the society, nd­diessed the group on the projects they might undettnke tlus year to IIClp the war effort.

The Olganizntion decided to con­centtnte on lll'Ojects that would aid m t1Je wnt work

Conference Sessions to be Open to Everyone Round Table Discussions to be Held on Theme

Top1c;s i'or the Southwestern Confcumce on Post-War Reaoustruc­tion Problems PlOginm we~tc complete today, Eddie Apodaca, Gcn~nll Conference chntrman, revealed early this morning.

Fotmal opening plenary sessiOn for the. conference has been scheduled fo1 10:80 n. m. Thu1'Sday mornins- at tho Umve•"Sity gym­nasium where a}leechcs will be g1vcn on bl)half of the UnivOlsity, the State of New Me~ico, the University student body and the Inter­

Alpha Phi Omega Plans to Plant Flag on Administration

nntionnl StudCJ)ta Service, he said, First ia Politlcnl

The first to!Jic plenary seas10n will be hold during tho luncheon l1our ThUl'Sdny when n nationally known f!peuke1• wnt apeuk on •'The Politicnl ,l.spects of Poot-Wal' Re­

Reports from round table dtscus­stons at the conference Will be for­warded to the Umted States com­mittee of the International Student Service, and will be combmed wtth reports f1 om seven othe1· l'egiOnul conferences bemg held on post-wa,L topics, founulatmg a repott of na­tional collegmtc opm10n ml post­wat plannmg.

Inde}Jehdent Men held nomma­ttons for new officers at a busmcss meeting Monday, January 18. Those nommated were· president, Charles Barnhart, Gordon Rosen, and .Arthu1 Marrow; vice-presi~ dent, 0. J Bradley, Leroy Engheh, Ted Hawley; secretary-treasurer, Stdney Liberstem, John Cunmng-ham, Steve Watkms, 0" J. Bind­ley; somal chairman, John Lantow, mtramu1 al manager, Leroy Eng~ hsh: assistant manager, Ted Haw­ley, Stun Davis; sgt of a1ms1 Joe McGonag1Il

Twenty members of the alumni chapte1 of the S1gma XI, science research honorary, met for sup­per ~t the A1rport.. Restaurant Monday evening, Other members arnved later m t1me to hear Dr. Michel PlJoan read a ynper which dealt w1th the chemical natUte and study of v1tainm C.

Dr. P1poan 1s employed bY. the Umted States Ind1an Service for ehmcal phys10logy research~ In connection w1th tlus work there IS a laboratory on the campus whtcb does research m var1ous nuh'lbon­al probleins wlnch are connected with Dr. Pipoan's work Miss Carrie Ann Elkin IS the research assistant of this laboratory, and Miss Roberta Warren and Miss Kay Woods ate student fellows.

Dr. Nanninga To Fourteen com1mtteos tomght Add p L T

were named to expedite campus recs student matters for the fhst South- J • • • western Conference on Post-War

Alphl\ Phi Omega, the national c:ons~ruction," Apoduca contmucd. servlcn fraternity :recently organ.. Following thiS: will be five l'Qund izcd on this campus, is coll'ducting tables on vnr1ous nspccta of Po .. a membership drive Combining :for litical reconstruction discussions. both Independents and Greeks the 11Tho Economic Aapec:ta of a chnnco to serve the campus, com .. Just Pence" wJJl bo a second plcn. mumty, and country nnd to got to- nry session topic whicl1 llPs been gotliCr for social nctivitica, this .scheduled for 8 p~ m. Thursday otganizabon is a c1Inptcr of one of night. the largest fraternal organizn- People's Century DJscus!Jed tions Ill the United States,

Cooperatmg with the Univer- Roun~ tubles on tl1is .tepic will

faculty Replies Indicate Active Cooperation For P·W Conference

To draft two amendments to the constitution, n com1mttee consist­Ing of John Lantow, 0. J. Brad1ey, Arthur l\larrow1 and Don Chance was chosen.

Elect1o11s Wlll be held at the next meetmg, Monday, January 26 Dean Bostwick will speak on ' 1The I Place of the In4;lependent Men on the Cam11Us u All unaffihated men

Faculty cooperation with the on the campus are urged to attend. Conference on) Post-War Recon·

five Schools Send Prompt Replies To Conference Inquiry

Reconsttuction _p1oblems, Confer- Dr S, P. Nannmga Will speak at ence headquarters announced to.. the next mcetmg of Pi Lntnbda day. Theta on FebtUal'y 1. Assisting

Named by the General Confer· Dr. N~nnmga in the panel dls­enee committee to eha~rmanships cussion on t'The Schools m a De· of md1vidual committees were

mpci:acy11 will be Miss Cnrolmc Schmidt, Mrs. Mal'y Watson, Miss Erna Schroeder, Mrs. Ruth Logan, and Miss Harriet McKmlen

The members o! Delta Kappa Gamma, women's teaching sorority, have been mvJted to attend. Mrs Ehzabeth Sunpson and Dr. Selma Herr will be the hostesses.

sity their CUl'I'cnt plans arc to be runmng Frldny ntorm~g o.t ten llave an American flag placed over \'VIlcn such subjectfl as Tho Re .. the Administration Bullding and tm?ing St~dent," ,.T110 ,End of Im,; to build .a the place m tho park at pctJalism ~~ m n Pcopl~s Ccnt~ry,u the side of tJ1o stadmm te be avail- a~d tho . The Returmng Sold1er, nblc to all University orgnnfza .. wtH be discussed. tions. In .,Powrn~10n w1th the 'rho third plenary session will American Red Cross they arc start- convene Frtdny noon when a. lunch"" mg to establish n blood bnnk: such con session on 11Tho Citizen's no .. as the Miami Chapter organized sponsiblllty for Attalmng the and wh1ch was responsible for Peace" will be held~ Round tablosoJ ... saving the lives of several hundred will ;fo11ow during the .aftornoon. torpedoed off the Florida coast A fou1:th plenary scsslon on

Parties, picnics, and other social (•The Social and Ethnical Aspects events are also bllmg planned. of Posf:..Wnr Recon$tructionn wJll Most of tbcse projects are already be held at 8:30 p, m. Round tables Alsup, Wyss, Brinegar

Head Debate Council

struct1on Pioblems has been e-VI­denced in the numerous replies re­ceived by Conference officmls m­dii"dlt'!! that membcts of the Um­verstty teaching staff Will cooper­ate to the fullest extent by ment1on- Bob Alsup, semor government mg and keepmg the student body major, waf:! elected president of informed on the developments of the Debate counml at its first the Conference plans through time- meetmg of the second semester, ly notices of such activ1hes m held Wednesday~ Dr. C V Wicker, their respect1ve classes faculty advis01, announced

Wen pleased and deCidedly cia- Mark Wy.ss, educat1on senior,' ted at such an enthusiastic re- was elected secretary, whJJe Mau­sponse, the General Student com- nne Brmegar, JUnior in the col­mittee has pledged to dessimmate lege of arts and sCiences, was all pertment news concet nmg the elected socml chairman of the mcreased achvities o! the Con- group.

Five schools mvited to partici­pate m the first Southwest~rn

Post-War Conference to convene on the Umvers1ty of New 1\:lextco campus, Febt uary 11 .. 13 had re­phed to inqlllnes concermng their mterest to send delegates, Con­fetence Secretary Bob Alsup an~ nouneed thts morning,

Bill Hall, publiCity; Lomse Vm­cent, housing and meals; Mary Eu­mcc Waggoner, en,tertainment~ Joe Harley, finances, Charles Ln· mer, tound tables; 'Beth Graves, attendance; Ellen Ann Lembke. host and usher; B11l V01enberg, student musiCal; Betty Jo Poe, tegi.~tration; Lucille Wilson, date bureau; Ann Light, correspond~ ence; and Evelyn Harris, secretar~ ial.

Judy Chapman, editor of the LOBO, was..named collegiate publi­city coordinator whose duty it will be to contact all newspaper editors and student body presidents of co1Iegcs attendmg the conference Named by the committee as mem­

bers of comm1ttees were: Public1ty -Miss Chapman, Betty Jo Poe,

Last Monday night the members m fo\-cc, but to be of real benefit will follow SAturday lnornlng. of P1 Lamda Theta, national or~ to the. school and the war effort ganization for woman in the col- more members arc needed. lege of education, had n craft Anyone interested in bceoming laboratory where they made spat- a part of such an active orgnniza­ter ;patterns and costwne jewelry, t1on will be very welcome to attend

Rafferty leaves For State Office of War Information

the meoting on Tuesday, January 26, at 7:00 o'clock in the Sub Lounge.

Hospitallnterneship For

Saturday afternoon three joint student and faculty committees will meet to :formulate resolutions that llavo been adopted by round tobles and pleruny session discussions, .l}poduca emphasized.

A banquet and tinnl plenary ses­sion has been scheduled for Sat­urday night, 7 p. m, when A nu­tionally known speaker wlll give the cllnwctlc address on uThe Post-. Will' Era and Amcrlcn's Responsi .. bility m World Peace," Apodnca ended.

(Conti11Ued on page 4) The appointment of Keen Raff-

erty, formerly head of the Univer- Medical Students Abolished ferenc.e by means of general news Fmancial matters of the Coun-Ieleases to the faculty from time c'l d 1 aL d t th .. 1

The colleges sending 1mmedmte answers and mdicatmg avid in­terest tn parti<~lpatwn were the Umvcrsity of Texas; New Mexico State Teachers College, Texas Mmes1 New Mexico A & M, and El Rtto N onnal.

Sigma Tau Initiates Four In Afternoon Ceremony

sity News Service, OS state inR formation officer of' the Office of MILWAUKEE, WIS.-(ACP)­War Information was announced Another a1gn of the times· at Mar~ Wednesday by Eugene Cervi, re- quettc university is announcement gwnal direcr,or of OWI, Denver. by the Rev, Raphael C .. McCarthy,

A dance, sponsored by A WS in hono1· of the delegates, will follow the finn) plenary session and end the three-day conference.

I were eeg e o e ne\..-y to hme, a member expla.med elected busmess manager1 T T. •Aiding m th1s effort of g1ving McCord, .Tr, semor economtcs the facts to the student body of major. Rephes are expected £rom 16

other colleges invited to :partici­pate, by the end of this week, Al­spp said.

This afternoon~ in the lounge of the Student Umon building, the national engineering honorary 1raterity, S1gma Tau; is imtiating :four new members: Charles Gund .. erson, Paul Adams, :Miles Reed, and Robert Hutchinson,

the Umversity is the -:Faculty Ad­vu:;ory committee under the chmr­manship of Dr. Dorothy Wood­war(!, Other members of the fac­ulty committee u:clude Dean J L Bostwick, Dean Lena C. Clauve, Dr. VIctor E. Kleven, Dr Joqum Ortega, comptroller Toru L Pope .. JOY and Dr. Dudley Wynn.

Scholarships to be Granted To· Sociology Majors Soon

Special spring and summer scholarsbips will be granted to students meetmg the scholatships requuoments of the New York School of Socuof Work, according to WOld receJVed from that school today, by Dr. C. E. llutclunson, actmg head of the SociOlogy de­partment.

The school, which is an adJUnct of Columbm Umvets1ty, will grant to qualifying candidates $500 from which a tmtmn fee of $125 Will be deducted. Candidates wtll be con~ sidered who have had some back­ground m socml work1 etther m college or in the field.

The scholarship comnuttee IS es~ pecially intetested J.n -odbtainm~ qualified candJdates to further then eduMtion m the :tl..eld of public. asststnncc.

Anyone fee1mg he. 01 shE! IS qualified for one of the scholar .. ships HI asked to contact Dt C. :E HUtchihson m the SoCiology de­partment offices in the Old Science building. Those interested should see Dr. Hutchmson as soon as pos­sible. as the time for filing ap .. plicatiOn has only been extended for a month

Orgamzati.onal m tenor, the Council's imttal actiOn was limited to maktng plans to stimulate in­terest m debate' and discussion on the campus. A possibility of re­vivmg Tau Kappa Alpha, national honorary debate fratermty1 was also placed before the counctJ

In order to increi.lse campus de­bate mterest, the counctl will hold an open meeting 1\:londay, Feb 26 at 4 p. m. in Hodgm 22, for all those interested in the future pos­stbihbes of debate on campus

-----Behrendt to Be Speaker At Texas-ISS Conference

Dr. R F. Behrendt of the School of Inter-American Affairs vnll be guest speaker at a :forthcoming two day conference revolving about the theme 11The Future of the Amencns" to be held at Austin, Texas, February 20·21. The meet­ing is to be conducted under the

Tattoo needles irom Samoa, co~ joint sponsorship of the University conut shell cups from Guadalcanal, of Texas and the International and nat1ve ornaments from New Students League Caledonia are .. fentures of a collec- Earlier m the school year Dr. t10n recently donated to the Uni-1 Behrendt attended a similar ses~ VelSJty of Califorma Sion in the state of Washington.

Sigma Tau fratennty lS an honor group whose members are chosen not alone for scholastic ;.t.bllity, but :for proved qualities of _practic­ality and sociability, as well

The group being imtiated this afternoon are the first new mem­bers to be taken 1nto the organ­Ization since the sprmg of last year

One of the projects of Sigma Tau for service to the compos and to the engmeermg students, is the dtstr1bution of freshman engineer .. tng handbooks, compiled and dis­tributed free by the local <:hapter, to all incommg engmeers.

·-----------------~-------------

Southwest Post-War Conference Committee Members Work Feverishly in Preparation

By TOM McCORD The Setting

ThA northwest corne1· room of the Sub patio- strewn With papers,

ink and many used stencils, This one has the general setting of the madhouse ()f activity.'' The Characters

pencils, ashtrays and cigarette The General Conference com­butts. Furthex p1ops mclude five mittee for the t:!otmng Southwest

Poat-War Conference. This, :fellow tables placed lll a rough U forma· students~ 1s the delegation which tmn, upon winch are evidences of .is striving night and day, hterally, hectic day and mght work, There to uput over" a conference the likes are, convemently placed around of wliich has never been seen here these tables1 about a dozen straight 'before backed chatrs 0Jt the aforemen-tioned tables reposes-, n'ot only Tlte Aetion paper, envelopes, ashtrays and The commtttee's rampant and typewriters, but an antiquated exhaustmg talk~:~~ conferences, sub­mimeograph machine replete with committee meetmgs, cauca.ges, pol ..

icy maldng and general duty Which are encountered in such :a situation. It 1s ln this phase that the new­comer IS perplexed as to whether he lS m the news office, air-raid, or just plain Las V cgas. Comings and goings of tho committee members ate a constant source of draft. The Results

The resUlts Will be paraded be­fore the eyes and ears of the Uni· vcrsity student body, the city, the stateJ the nation, this CoMing Feb­ruary 11-13 m the form of planned talks, discussion groups and all ac­tivities whic:h nre included in tlte Southwest Post-War Conference,

The principal function of the president, of abolishment df the office according to Mr. ,JJervi will requirement for one-year hospital be to coordinate public"" informa~ internship by students in the school tion activities and publicity of the of med1cine before they receJVe various federal war agencJes op- their doctor of medicme degrees. eratmg in New Mexico. A reason for the change is that

War Stamp Sales Booming Again in Booths on Campus Mr Rafferty is a former assist- the speed-upJ year-round medical

ant news editor of the :Baltimore curriculum brings irregular grad~ Sunh and since coming to New uation and thus makes admims­Mronco has served on the faculties tra.tJon of the lnterne plan lnore and admmistrative staffs of East- d1fficult. Marquette has held to the ern New Mexico College, High- reqUirement for more thun two lands Umver.sity, as well as here of tdxty~seven four-year medical at the University. While here Mr. decades and is one of only nine out Rafferty taught Journalism and schools in the country which have served as a faculty member of the insisted upon intcrn3hips before Publications Board graduation.

The Univers1ty.. News Office is t<J That fact produces another real be managed by Betty Jo Poe, form~ reason why Dr. Eben J. Carey, erly Mr. Rafferty's secretary, dean of the schoo11 and his execu-

tive ,faculty urged the move. 1\far­

Committee Has First Draft Of Student Constitution

A committee appmnted from the Student Senate and the Student Council has completed the first draft of the newly revised consti­tution and will continue the .rewrit­mg of the document at its next meetings. The committee is con­ductihg this work m response to the conditions brought about by the warbme rearrangement of the

quette mterncs, addressed as 41Mr." Were thrown into cohtact wtth internes from other schQo]s wlio were addressed as 44Drl1 They naturally did not hke 1t.

Internships will be served by practica1ly all of the Marquette medteal men after their graduation smce they arc required by the army and navy medical corps, as well as by 22 states and several terntories All of the male medfcal students at Marc_:uctte have been commissioned ln the army or navv medical corps

University's schedule and activities. ;--------,------:-

The committee meets with Dean Greensheet Meeting Bostwick, dean of men, and Miss CJauve; dean of wornen It con­.Ststs of the two presidents of the Senate and Council, Charles Lamer adn Gerald Fischer, assisted by Elaine Spaberg, Jane Agnew and Bob Simpers of tho Student Coun­cil, and Judy Chapman, Reba Rut,, and John Shelton from the Stu­

An Important meeting of all engineers interested m working on the Greensheet this year "ill be held at "/:00 p. m, Wednesday, January 27, in the civil enginecr~ng samar des1gn room. Bab Tat­ge wiU be in charge

The War Stamp sales of last se­mester have been revived and nrc now W>Tkmg fun f·~rce .. Booths are to be: open every Wednesday in the Sub and Ad buildings from 9-4; ar1d on Saturdays from 10·5 in four do,vn-town atores, J{istler CoJ..­listers, Beatus Shop, ,Voolworths, and Penny's.

Patr1cut Hannett is in charge of the sales and the se11ing committee consists of Umversity girls; both Gt eeks and Independents. Last Wednesday the first sale of the .semester was inaugurated and about forty dollars in stamps was sold on the campus.

New X-Ray Machine Will Disclose Defects in Metal

ROCHESTER, N, Y.-(ACP)­A giant 1,000,000-Volt industrial X-ray machme, capable fo disclos .. ing defects m thick metal castmgs in a matter of m1nutes1 soon wi11 be 1n operation at the University of :Rochester.

The :ma.chine1 described as one o£ tlte ~imost powerful ill the World," ts being installed with cooperation of etght local industrial firms, whtch wHl share lts :fac1hties.

dent Senate.

The apparatus, housed in a- spec-101 building of extra-thick con­crete walls, is ncompletely shock­proof/' Heavy castings wut ba moved ins1de the x .. ray room by

l '-------------...!..·1 a 10wton <)Verhead crane,