University of UNM Digital Repository

1985 The aiD ly Lobo 1981 - 1985

1-17-1985 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 089, No 80, 1/ 17/1985 University of New Mexico

Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1985

Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 089, No 80, 1/17/1985." 89, 80 (1985). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1985/5

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The aiD ly Lobo 1981 - 1985 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1985 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ~t?;rta 15 31~·~ 0r&~~ '0u,f1,ll 1<{8'5 a.Jl .. T!' ;' _,. •.. :--tt rG\r.·.. ··.. · ·:0 Vol. 89 ' 1•1•"· ... I Thursday, Januory 17, 1985 Lujan tells N.M. House.federal funds will be tight Education fund Former Gov. Apodaca elected regent president; bill introduced From Staff and Wire Reports SANTA FE-Beginning the day he's pleased by honor but not suprised by vote with an address from U.S. Rep. By Juliette Torrez Manuel Lujan, New Mexico Bouse members Wednesday introduced a Former Gov. Jerry Apodaca, t)urry of bills including a request for newly appointed to the Universi­ education funding totaling more ty of New Mexico Board of Re­ than $1.26 billion - not much less gents by his successor, Gov. than the governor's $1.4 billion , was elected presi­ 1985 state-budget request. dent of the board at a Wednesday The request, House Bill 3, which afternoon me,eting. Regent Anne followed Lujan's address, was intro­ Jourdan of Hobbs was elected duced by Rep. Samuel Vigil, D-Las vice president. Vegas, as the Education;\! Approp­ Jordan made the rnotion to riation Act of 1985. It is co­ elect Apodaca president. Regent sponsored by Reps. Robert Hawk, John Pacz seconded the motion. D-Albuquerquc; Robert Corn, R· Paez nominated Jordan for the Roswell; and Murray Ryan, R· position of vice president, with Silver City. fellow Regent Colleen Maloof In a joint session heM in House seconding his motion. chambers, Lujan praised state legis­ Apodaca said he was not sur­ lators for their past efforts, but prised. "I was obviously pleased warned of national deficits totaling the four other regents selected $200 billion a year. me," he said. "It's a great pri­ •'That means the pressures for the vilege for me to be selected as federal dollars will be greater than president.'' ever before," he said, ''That also Paez was elected secretary­ means that the role of the state treasurer through the nomina­ Legislature is going to be increased, tions of Jordan and new Regent ,and your (the legislator's) chal­ Robert Sanchez. lenges arc going to be more diffi· "There is going to be a great cult.'' amountof interchange as· we try Lujan, who entered Congress 17 to mnve~ne.· 'Jnivei~'ity· for­ years ago, said partnerships between ward," said Sanchez. Wedncs­ federal and state government will be day'snteeting,.hesaid, was ·~ust a necessity in the coming years. a formality.'' Lujan also called for state-funded After much discussion, the re­ research, development and demon· UNM President Tom F11rer •nd the newly llppolntlldpresident of the Bo•rd oiRegeflts, Jerry gents approved contracting with stration projects to encourage the Apodoc•. location of new industries and the ~ontinulld on page 6 expansion of existing industries in New Mexico. Among his proposals was a "Spanish Colonial Research Cen­ Governor's speech conciliatory ter>~ for the University of New Mex­ ico, to be funded and operated t>y the National Park Ser.. ice. Because of the scale of research State Republicans commend Dem·ocrats efforts, the center would "become the focal point for the SOOth By Harrison Fletcher ployees than the 1983-84 Senate.'' a conservative coalition controlling anniversary of Columbus' impact on Lujan .added that he wanted to both chambers, Lujan said. the New World,' 1 ifappnwed by the ''compliment those conservative SANTA FE.-... State Republican With the help of Sen. Les Hous~ U.S. secretary of the interior, he Party leaders, commenting on Gov. Democrats who have put the best ton, 0-:Bcm., and three other Demo· said. Toney Anaya'sopening•day address interests ahe;~d of their party affi­ crats, a conservative coalition con­ The requested education measure and the election of Rep. Gene Sam· liaton this year tobring better, more trols the 42-.membcr Senate, and, seeks $49 .million for the . Depart­ berson, O-Lea, as House speaker, efficient government to our state. with Samberson's election, con­ ment of Education, $508.9 million stated that both .events reflect con­ "Tugether with these ·conserva­ servatives in the 70-member House for higher education and$709 .) mil­ servative attitudes strengthened dur­ tive Democrats, Republicans will should constitute a narrow majority~ lion for elementary and secondary ing the November elections. government,. higher education and have a major say in the setting of schools. public schools. State GOP leaders also outlined A( a news conference early state policy," he said. priorities for the session, such as The appropriation would be made .. Clearly, he understands that last up of $959.9 million from. the Wednesday, Edward Lujan, state November's election was a mandate It has been 52 years since Repub• funding for the state correctional Republican Party chairman; Sen. Ucans have had working control of system, campaign laws, education, General Fund, $156.2 million from for a more streamlined, efficiently­ various other state funds and $150.9 William Valentine, R-Bem., Senate run state government that is paid for the Senate, and it is the firsttime in strengthening DWI laws and a slow­ majority floor leader; and Rep. the state's history that there has been down in growth in state government. million from federal funds. Robert Moran, R-Lea House Minor• with tax increases as a last resort," The General Fund portion of ity floor leader; each read statements said Lujan. uThe governor is mov­ whatever the Legislature finally pas­ thanking Anaya for the ..concilia· ing closer to Republican positions Anderson School of Management ses for educational funding would tory" nature of his address and com­ than he ever has before!' come from the budget it finally mending the Democrats who made Moran said that while the gov~ approves. The various state funds ernor's comments werell't com­ designates interim-dean prospects and federal fullds would not be Sarnberson 's 36~34 election pletely consistent with past stances, possible. accounted for under the general state he was "very encouraged to heat the Anderson School of Manage• associate dean and as acting dean for budget. ment faculty has designated both a semester, He is president of the Lujan said he was very pleased to Anaya's new themes of fiscal re~ The bill seeks more than $4.38 Associate ~an Rod Lievano and New Mexico Technological Innova­ see that Anaya is 'beginning to en· sponsibility and cooperatoR with the million for t\te New Mexico School Legislature ... Professor ·aay Radosevich as tion Ptogram Inc. and teaches an dotse economic policies that Repub­ ••aceeptableu prospe,9ts for interim entrepreneurial class. for the Visually Handicapped in licans have advocated "aU along." Commenting on Samberson's Alamogordo, more than $6.39 mil· narrow victory over last year's dean of the school. A committee appointed by the lion for the New Mexico School for With no rnenlion of a tax increase, speaketofthe House, Ray Sanchez, Dean J'el'fY Jordan. announced faculty will interview both Lievano the Deaf in Santa Fe alld $25.28 Anaya's address outlined what he D·Bem., Valentine said that ''this Monday that both Lievano and and Radosevich and wiU make a re· million for the Technical and Voca• called a "m()(!est"listofbudget in­ action reflects the prevailing atti­ RadoS

rf. Page 2, New Mexico Daily l-obo, January 17, 1985 P~gc ;3, New Mexico Daily Lobo, January 17, 1985 By United Press International Wire Report. Student lobbyists to seek new credibility Sikh leader shot in . ln.dh~.. ,, By Julietle Torrez NEW DELHI India- Three suspected Sikh gunmen shot and wounded China reports new border clashes the high priest of the Sikh religion Wednesday, hitting him with six bullets Educ~tion and corrections .arc" a couple ofthc gm1ls" for the New Mexico fired from a speeding motorcycle, police said. ~gislature and funding would go to "whoever lobbies the most," said PEKING~ China, vowing to support anti-Hanoi Guangxi Province, which together with Yunnan forms Two other priests also were wounded in the assassination attempt against Sharlene Begay, chainn?.n. of the Lobby Committee for the Associated Cambodian guerrillas "to the best of its ability,'' China's southern border with Vietnam. , Kirpal Singh, spiritual leader of 15 millioo Sikhs, in the village of Maniani, Students of the University of New Mexico. . Wednesday reported a new outbreak of fighting along China and Vietnam fought a brief but bloody border near Ludhiana, 155 miles northwest of New Delhi, police said. "Legislators have a misconceptior\ over students. It depends on thc1r its rugged southern frontier with Vietnam. war in 1979 and have reported numerous clashes since No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack but police said political spectrum !IS what.they thin!\ a student is,'' said ASUNM lobbyist Peking officials said several Vietnamese "invad­ then, many of them coiuciding with Hanoi's military it was the work of militant Sikhs who have been fighting for an im!epcndent Carlos Rodriguez. "That's due to ineffective Iobbying.out the University in ers" were killed or wounded in the latest lighting and offensives in Cambodia. state in the northern Indian state of Punjab. the past." wamcd that China ''will certainly counterattack" i.f The attack appeared to be a revival of bloody feuding within the Sikh Begay said she didn't have records from the ASUNM Lobby Commitcc there arc further intrusions by Vietnam. "Over the past few months, the Vietnamese author­ from the last legislative session to see how they lobbied. ''1 don't know what ities, while attacking along the Cambodian-Thai bor· movement, divided between moderates who favor negotiations with the. Western diplomats said the latest fighting could b~ government on autonomy in Punjab and the radical separatists. Analysts said they did,'' she said. an attempt by China to ease pressure 011 the be­ der ancl intruding int.o Thailand, have also intcnsifiecl '''They sure didn't leaven legacy," said Carlos Rodriguez. "No one is armed provocations against China along the Sino­ Klrpal Singh had not taken a stand. leaguered, Peking-backed resistance forces battUng In New Delhi, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi said "the act deserves the t~lking :tbou~ those grea~ studettt lobbyists.'' Hunoi's troops along the Thai·Cambodian border. Vietnamese border," Foreign Ministry spokesman Last year, formerASUNM President D:111 SctTnno and the ASUNM Lobby Ma Yuzhen said. strongest condemnation. The use of violence should have no place in a free China is the main arms supplier to the Cambodian and democratic society." Committee didn't register with the Secretary of State, as required by statute guerrillas attempting to topple Vietnam's puppet gov­ "Since New Years Day, Vietnamese troops have until after the oversight had been discovered and publicized. ernment in Cambodia. But, the Vietnamese recently further stepped up provocative activities of intruding Begay said this year's lobbyists were properly registered. "We waul to launched a fierce offensive ncar the Thai-Cambodian into, harassing and bombarding Chinesf,l border make ourselves noticed as credible lobbyists,'' said Rodriguez. border to try to crush the resistance, areas,." Ma said, India, Pakistan battle, for glacier Over the past few days, Begay said the com1nit1ee has received appliclt· Fighting mgcd near the Thai-Cambodinn border ''Under such circumstances, it is only natural that tions for volunte,cr student lobbyists. "We have to see how serious these Wednesday between Cambodinn resistance fighters Chinese frontier guards were compelled to fight back JAMMU, India -Indian and Pakistani soldiers waged a "fierce" three­ people arc,'' she said. ''If they want to be effective and they are going to do ved his neck; An examination revealed tials of break dancing - and neck breaking the patients were break dancing," said three room of Bellevue Hospital witlt a fractured he injured some of the llcshy areas in his neck. and worse, doctors warned Wednesday. New York doctors in a letter to the editor of the neck after landing on his head while trying to After about seven days the pain went away. A 25-year-old professional break dancer, New England Journal of Medicine, do a flip while dancing. He wore a soft neck for example, was instantaneously ren~ered a The three cases they cited arc only a few of brace for the next three weeks and his condi­ "We wish to alert the medical community quadriplegic when he attempted a f11p, but the many examples of break dancers being tion improved. to the neurologic risks of break dancing," said landed on his head. injured. There was also a well-publicized case The third injured break dancer was a 15· the letter by Drs. Duncan McBride, Lawrence The University Area's "These acrobatic dance movements are not of a break dancer in Chicago being left with no year-old boy who injured himself while spin- Lehman and John Manglardi. Full-Service Guitar Center QUALITY Free Books ··················································t Lessons • Sales .HEALTH '100 worth of free boOks, , Rentals • Repairs from our new '"si.1elfree'~ shelves i INSURANCE with ttdiN. no lllltngt atlllthaf. 143 Harvard SE • 265-3315 one pu cuttomer only p_~ate. • at .._IOI!IIble rates RECORD All LP's $1.00 olr : HOSpilalltatkm SAL£ thtough Janual)'. t ~t1l:MJIJ\T•a:, .Major Mtdlcal ·: •• • \~ WI~S'I\ 4~ • •. • · Mate'llity Benefits r>l~ : America's Army & Navy Store!! : Insurance Management Corp. : I'm te[p~, the one. 265-6777 • : 1st ANNUAL : 171 San Mateo.NE • : STOREWIDE : ~!~~AV!>. .l:!llf HARVARD !>E. 2~'1.ZO'f t Hi. J've heard you're going to UNM in the spring. and J • : CLEARANCESALE : thought 1 would introduce myself. Statistical and Reporting Software : Everything 10·35% off : HIIIIIHIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIHJIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIHJtllllllllllllllfiiHI!HHHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIHIJI •i i • -~ • Leather laL'kets • My name is SIGMA PHI EPSILON (Sig Ep for short), a f : : RUSA F FJight Jac kels : for IBM 0 5 0 1 Graduate Student Association ! PC/XT and AT* • - ay an un· 115~$ • • national fraternity at UNM.I was born at UNM in 1929 and : • • Swi~s Anny Knives • SPSS/PC Is the most comprehensive statistical • • Union Suits • COUNCIL MEETING I have been a proud UNM fraternity since then. • : · • Wallace Beery Shirts • package available for performing simple or complex Saturday, ·:~':ry 19, 1985 i I'm the ONE that has won the President's Cup for out . : tasks, regardless of data size. It maintains feature : ~:::d:y~·;: ;:~·;~ : I • J!verythlng in the !itorc • • standing fraternity the past two years! i• and languilge compatibility with mainframe SPSS~ • is on sale • while optimizing for the PC environment. : thruugh Jan Jl. 1985 • Room 231A, NM Union I f I'm the ONE whose members are ASUNM senators, • ~~~wr ~"1660 Eubank NE : All graduate students are welcome. : COIMI~~~ lb!'.tMJMIMJn SOOOat\dConsMI.Qfl'e :presidential ~cholars, trail.blazers and Outstanding Young i Designed to maximize your productivity, SPSS/PC • I,GdliiM'· • Coffee and doughnuts will be served. I 293-2300 • offers three-leHer tnlncation Of commands; the ability to •••••••••••••••••••• President Farer will be the guest speaker. i Men of Amenca to name JUSt a few. . .. • batch process commands; save and enter commands IIH MIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIRIRIIIIIIIIIIIildillltMHIIIiUIRMIIIftliiiiiiUI8.111-IIIIIIIItlllltllftll • I'm the ONE that has aggressive. competitive sports • . ~ in groups; receive on·line help; redirect input and output .r :teams, among the top on campus. t to screen, disk and/or printers and more. Super Clearance f I'm the ONE who won the sweepstakes trophy for out- i Statistics range from simple descriptive to complex multivariate, including Multiple Regression, ANOVA, All Clothing fstanding.. · · ho.use .disp.·I.ay d. uring.UNM.. Homec.rcall24:7·4299and t For mo.-a information, contact our Marketing Thursday, January 17 : ask for Joe Monge. Fratern1ty rush begms rile frrst week of i . Department at: at the Get 1 Free • school. I hope to see you there! . SPSS Inc., 444 N. Michigan Avenue, Dapiist Sf\!dent Center <40f IJntvenlty Blvd. . : Chicago, IL 60611. 312/329-3500, On the comer of on .all .Jewelry . Unl\lenlty and Grand In Europe: SPSS Benelux a.v., P.O. Box 115, 243-5401 4200 AC Gorinchem, The Netherlands. All Shoes ·1/2 Price j Sigma I Phone: +31183036711.1WX: 21019. • Jol~ us for some greet laod! VISA, MasterCard and American Express accepted. •Dring your favonte Teddy fleer for the ~odot O'Reilly beor judging conresr General Store : Phi i • Dress up like your fovculte M'A'S'fl character 8117MeaaaiNE 403 Cordova Rd. ..iiiC. PRODUCTIVITY RAISED TO THE HIGHEST POWER'" if you wont to. Weet • Wotch 1M lost episode ·f Epsilon. i 'SPSS/PC run. on the IBM PC/Xf wftH 320K memory and a hilrtl diSk; and IBM PC/AT with hard disk. An 9087 COi>nlCeSsot is recomme.nded. Contact SPSS Inc. lor Other Santa Fe compatible COIT\Jlllters. IBM PCIXT and PCIAT are trailematlts ollntemational Business Machines Corporation, dBase UIS a trademark tlf Ashton· Tate, H·31s a trademark o/ Of M'A'S'H on television. Lotus DEMilopm~nt Cotp()rallon, SAS is a mgistel!!d trademark of SAS lnst~ule, Inc, SPSS and SPSS/PC ars trademarks of SPSS Inc. for its proprietary computer soltwail!. Sponsd(ed by rhe IJapfllt 5/tJdenr U,!M 111 Harval'd SE • • ©COpyright IMS, SPSS fllCi (across from UNM) 1...... 1 Page 5, New Mexico O&ily Lobo, Jnnuary 17, 1985

Page 4, New Mexico P~ily Lobo, January 17, 1985 Sharon wins partial GO GREEK! SCHOLARSIIIP GO GREEK! Forum verdict in Time trial BY GARRY TRUDEAU . NEW YORl( (UPl) ~A jury gave Israeli Gen. Ariel Sharon a partial ,.commentarg VIctory We.dn~sday m his $50 million libel Sllit by ruling that Time magazine defamed h1m m a paragraph about his .actions on the eve of a massacre of ~ Palestinians. · Budget committees merger ~ .Af!er returning a partial verdict in its third day of deliberations in U.S. D1stnct Court, the panel of four women and two men retired to the jury room FRATERNITY to deliberate the other two issues. shows hope for magic cure For Shll!on to win his suit, the jury m11st also conclude that the Time paragraph 1s false and that Time published it maliciously. A. "mini-trial" will By Edwin M. Yoder, Jr. then be ~eld on how much money Time mllst pay Sharon. If the jury returns only one verdict in Time's favor, Sharon loses his case. RUSH! WASHINGTON -One h~rdly knew whether to laugh or cry when it "One down, two to go," Sharon's attorney Milton Gould said outside the ·- was reported the other day that some Republicans in the new Con· co11rtroom. ''Gen. Sharon and I are delighted.'' gress are thin~ing of "reforming" (maybe the word Is re·reforming) . Time's managing editor, Ray Cave, criticized the partial verdict, saying the major congressional reform of the 1970s: the 1974 Budget and Jllrors ''completely misread" the disputed.paragraph by finding it defamed Impound mont Act. the former Israeli defense minister. ~ Jan. 10-21 This was tho act that established the "budget process'' of which we "C!f collfSe, we are disappointed," Cave said, but added that Time Inc. rJJ hear so much but receive so little. Like many oddities, It was born of remam~ confident it will win on the remaining two issues. 0 the Nixon years, when Richard M. Nixon invoked expansive preslden· BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed The JUrors sent a note with their verdict just before 11 a.m. to Judge Abraham Sofaer, ~ tial powers. In this case it was the power to Impound, or temporarily 'itEM:MOff.li HAVe 51ifff oiiJHN M/165 tUNRCY IS OPEN HOUSES ·~ suspend, appropriated funds for reasons of economy. PeU!f.er/1/ J/6ff,'lfXJ f!Fli!R HE! .Whe~ ~ofaer read the note to the hushed CO!Irt, Sharon grinned and his =o ~ Congress had (though always grudgingly) recognized this power, MUaY 81i&Vff(1 fOf< iJ(JI/6/f ff/IMP!1NT ON 111E w1fe, L1h, turned and beamed at reporters. Time attorney Thomas Barr, t.rj r1!iM: {li)IJ.Y Flll?rON flllfJ 80Y Wednesday, Thursday & ~ so long as presidents exercised it circumspectly. &~RWMU81iRl~K~~~~~~ seated at the counsel Cable, slowly bowed his head. But Nixon, who will go down as the Charles I of American pres!· EIJC!A! SCENe w!!n17f t.rj f/~B~!Wm&ttrllfR, iTiiM 1/,: ·;)PR€' IWP Y()V 71(01/GHrYOI/ Barr.as~e~ the judge to call the jurors into the courtroom so they could be z dents (the executive who quarreled disastrously with his legislature rfiYI1ifl. ~NP Cilf/.1. p(/f/IST§/1/ HAVF · WoCOJIRNPI/11& IT! polled tndi.VIdually on the v.erdict. Under questioning by the judge's clerk, ~ Friday evenings C") over every available theoretical issue, and usu;~lly lost), was never ~'· !!aN (lflnN&.'' • · ":N~~E !l Jllrors repbed they agreed with the verdict. ~ ~\. • .Nt'l'r r . 6:30-9:00 p.m. circumspect. He impounded wholesale, merrily paring billions of ·<-- ·~~~ .~~~J MIAP.I SNORt ?.t ~" ~ The ~~rors follnd .the 71me paragraph defa?Jatory becallse it implied ·- dollars from the social budget he Inherited from Lyndon Johnson, ·~~ rn --~-r "-'\ol '>-' ;...,/ --• , •• - .~ . •. t_~->-)} Sharon conscJollslymtended'' Israel's Phalang1st allies toslaughterPalesti· (...... ~-;;::,;L-..; ."') J/" '"~ __:J!Y' :;x_.. ·.< .... '¢ ·) • ·' What Nixon called "economy," the liber;~l Democrats called flag· _;_.,.t; .':..., \.' nian civilians in Beirut in 1983. r- -·· ~~ . / w·.. ·· rant presidential reversal of congressional intent, and heavyweights ·--- -I·; ·. The jury rejected another possible meaning claimed by Sharon: that the '***** ******************** like Ed Muskie of Maine and Sam Ervin Jr. of North Carolina called _u· . 'Q\k para~raph also meant he "actively encouraged" the slaughter. presidential usurpation of the spending power. The courts generally { K"= 1-t_---, .f . -- Tm~e was forced to concede to the jury last week that it made a mistake in RUSH TABLE IN THE SUB lJ - .,__...... u_ .\. ,..,,,""...... ;~ . agreed. ···- reportmg that a secret Israeli report was the basis .for its allegations. The C") So Congress curbed Impoundment. It also tacitly conceded Nixon's magazine published a partial retraction Monday. Monday-Friday major premise-that Congress had lost all capacity to check its own The paragraph in Time's Feb. 21, 1983, edition reported that on Sept. 15,- CI'J 0 spending. 1982, Sharon "discussed" with Lebanon's Phalangist leaders "the need to t.rj 9:00am-4:00pm That capacity would be revived by a new budget process. A nonpar· take revenge for the assassination" of Lebanese President-elect Bashir C") tisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) would furnish reliable facts Gemayel, commander of the Phalangist militia. ~ and figures. Budget committees, one in each house, would set gross The next day, Sharon sent Phalangist militiamen into two Palestinian ************************** =o limits for spending in every sector. These limits would be made refugee camps in Beirut to root out terrQrists. The Plialangists sla11ghtered t!j Prophet's role more difficult this year ~< binding by resolution. The appropri;~tlng committees would then 700 Palestinians. ' Cj Academics* Sports* Social Life t!j have to honor them. .. Atthetrial, Sharon contended the Time paragraph was a "bloodlibel" that *Community Service It was the most wonderful vision since Second Isaiah. And so long By Fred McCaffrey have lots of learning to do. Some point on, any number can play. {alsely implies he condoned or encouraged the atrocity. · t.rj ·~ as Ed Muskie stuck around, as senate Budget Commitee chairman, to are already dismayed to find out This year there will be half a thunder against poachers, it worked- .after a fashion. SANTA FE-This time of year, how much more difficult it is to dozen or more annual budgets FRATERNITIES ••• A Lifetime Experience ·- But that was before the dozens of spending committees and sub· the question from those who fol­ run things than to be the loyal being passed from hand to hand, committees learned how to make end runs and quarterback sneaks low politics usually turns out to opposition. and fed from computer to com­ past the budget resolutions (and Indeed co-opted those resolutions to be: "What kind of a legislative As a result of that slow start, puter. What is finally voted out Apodaca------their own purposes.) session do you expect?" the closing weeks will be even could well be a combination of continued from page 1 I knew the "budget process" was In deep trouble the day a friend The completely honest more crammed than ever. That's the budgets produced by those also said the faculty was con.· GO GREEK! FRIENDSHIP GO GREEK! called me about the "raisin bill,'' a little number that some subcom­ answer to that is that nobody often the way poor legislation who win the early-day scuffles to the Jaynes Corporation for con· cerned with the' 'inadequate flow mittee chairman was brazenly driving right through Ed Muskie's really knows. In any year, this gets passed- in the crush at the determine where the power real· struction at the UNM-Valencia of information to the corners of budget-resolution stoplights on the Senate floor. Multiply the raisin group of 112 individuals is hard end of a legislative session, ly lies. Branch. the University." Fater said he .------~-----~------~------~- llill by dozens and you have the size of the problem. to predict in advance, and this when bodies and minds are we­ TEMPER TANTRUMS: The The recommendation was not was also organizing and meeting reviewed by a finance committee with variolls "advisory boards" Someday, of course, historians will return a less impressionistic year the prophet's role is even ary and almost anything goes. governor begins the session 1I S·.·AN· . LUIS. (Second701. Seco. and Stover, nd St., SW I or President Farer prior to the to the University. verdict on the budget process. But for whatever reason, the two more difficult. But keeping in BUDGETS AND MORE with an evidently well-meant re­ I ,3 Blocks from Greyhound Station) I budget committees have never acquired the clout to check the logroll· mind the fact that the first gavel BUDGETS: New Mexico once solution to keep himself out of meeting. Paez suggested post· The request of the Committee ing that prevails In the spending committees. just fell Tuesday, let's try to spe· had an orderly process for fund· things as much as possible. That poning a decision,. but, d11e to a of Governance to approve the I PLASMA CENTER, INC. Phone: 842-6991 f To be sure, the Budget Act isn't a total loss. It has given Congress city what few things can almost ing government for the next is a wise and laudable decision. ''time problem," the recom­ amendments to the UNM con· some long-needed independent staff work in budget forecasting. The surely be expected. year. What is more likely to happen, mendation passed with the condi­ stitution was also accepted by the plucl(y staff folk at CBO, and on the two budget committees, have Before the Legislature con­ however, is that he Will start off tion that other contracis of "simi­ board. The amendments will re· bravely served up the bad news to their principals for 10 years. Butt he venes, both the governor and the quietly and remain so until lar magnitude"are reviewed by a duce the size of the Faculty Sen· principals have ignored it, and opted for magic, The monument to• Legislative Finance Committee something about the way legis· committee before approval by the ate .from 83 members to approx· their belief in magic is a trillion-doHar deficit in five years. would prepare comprehensive lators are carrying on touche" a board. imately 40. So now one reads- is it to laugh or to cry?-that the Republicans; budgets of projected expendi· nerve end. Then look out. Sanchez said, "The Universi· Pacz and Jordan reported on ty is a business,. and businesses the newly established Greater INEED. . . CASH?I. I may propose to merge the two separate budget committees into one lures for next year. The House The fact of the matter is that, joint committee- a change that looks suspiciously like joining two Appropriations and Finance with all the things Gov. Anaya don't operate in such a casual Albuquerque Ed11cation I­ manner. Alliance. The alliance, said I paralytics In the hope that with mutual support both can walk. Committee would then go to has on his mind at the moment, I' Help yourself while helping others! Become a plasma donor for a few hours 1 There is a spurto ali this. For if Congress cannot soon find a way to TAKE•OFF TIME: The actual work. and prepare an over-all including what is still to come "The more detail, the more Paez, is a three-year cooperative I police spending, the pressure for a constitutional amendment hard work of legislating for the budget, usually somewhere be· from that federal grand jury, his formality there is," said San· effort between the Albuquerque I each week and earn up to $98 per month as a new donor or $86 per month as I (perhaps confining federal speMing to a fixed percentage of GNPJ next fiscal year and thereafter tween what the previous two nerve endings are very near the chez, ''the mote productivity Public Schools, T-VI and UNM I a return donor. I will surely grow, and perhaps irresistibly. Will probably start later than ever asked for, and present it for con· surface. That makes his conduct there will be." to "identify areas of a duplica· I Those of us who shared the high hopes of 1974 thought the new this year.. That's because the sideration. Normally, it would even more unpredictable than The board also approved Ber­ tion of effort." I BONUSPROGRAMS I ry-Hill Galleries Inc. of New "The meeting Went very I I budget process would be the best boon for fiscal prudence and opening of the session is going pass with only relatively few before. NEW DONORS: Receive an extra $5 cin the first donation, and another I legislative responsibility since the Framers. We were wrong. We did to be so taken up with jockeying changes. He tries hard to hold himself in York and Wildlinc Galleries of smooth," said Farer. "Every­ I I not foresee the atomizing forces- television campaigns, and PACs, for position that there will be lit· That all ended in 1984, when check, but if somebody crosses Albuquerque as the sales repre­ body was enthusiastic on both I extra $5 on the third donation. I chiefly-that have made individual entrepreneurs out of congress· tie time for substantive effort. some members discovered they him, it's Katie bar the door. You sentatives for the Raymond Jon· sides of the table." I son art collection. Farer said the board was "very I I· men. We did not foresee thatthese forces would increasingly sap the The fact is that the conserva­ could write their own versions of can almost srreyycount on se• I Also, WITH THIS AD, receiue $2 extra for your first donation. I ability of Congress to function, in budgetmaking or any other impor­ tives who have· come into some that HAFC act, tradtionally desig­ rious, even dangerous, out· In his administrative report to positive." "I am extremely opti· I the board, President Tom Farer mistic," he said. I tant way, as a responsible collective body. power in the 1985 session will nated House Bill 2. From that bursts from him in early 1985. I I I RETURN DONORS: Receive a $4 bonus on every fourth consecutive I I donation. I I I Donors witk car and valid driver's license: Bring in 3 or more nl!w ot return donors plus yourself, and if funds------~ at least three ofyour party donate that day, you, as the driver receive a $3 bonus! continued from page 1 House Bill 5, which seeks to estab­ ~LObO •Eastern New Mexico University: lish a 14-memberSentencing Guide· *Be prepared to show a valid drivers license and your car. Dililg *All of your party must come in at the same time, $37.16 million. lines Commission. Its pllrpose 38l400 •New Mexico Highlands Universi· would be to "ensure that the punish· Vol. 89 No. 80 ty: $16.12 million. ment for criminal offenses is prop­ The New Maxictt Daftv L_oba ts published Mc:mday.lhi'OOgh Frid&y everY regular weok of the •New Mexico lnstitllte of Mining ortionate to the offense and to the All Donors: Ui11versltv voar,weekty during closed and finals-weeks and weeklY during thO summer-session1 and Technology: $24.23 million. criminal history of the offender.'' 1 J Must be between 18 & 65 years of age -by lhe Board of Sludant Publleatlons of the. Uni\letsity of Now Mexico. Subscript~Ofl .rate is $15. House Bill 19 calls for the 2) Doctor in attE!ndance pot academiC yoar. Second class postage ~atd at AlbUQlltHque, 'New Mo:-t:lcD 9'113f. •New Mexico Military Institute: The opinions expressed bh the OdltOrial pai)BS il'tha NiJWMditico Dsily ~_obD e"ta thOse of1he issuance of severance-tax: bonds and 3) Open Mon-Fri, new donors 8am-lpm, return donors 6:30am-3:30pm &u1hiU $olcfy. UnSigned opinion rs that of the editor 1;1nd r('lff_ectstho editorial polfcy oftne paper# $10.03 million. the appropriation of$425,000 to but does not necesufuv represent the views of the members of t~e Daity· LobO staff. be I· 4) Clean sanitary environment. Professional friendly courteous staffi •Western New Mexico University: used by the Environmental Improve- t 5) Free parking in rear of cenwr. ~.att•rs Subn'llillon_POIIcy: letters to the editor rnust ba· tVped, doubhi·spaeild ar~d no mcue $9,63 million. ment Division in cleaning up hazat· than 300 words. All maillld·in letters most be !lgned by· the author and include addreu and telephone nunibet. t:lo name:s will be withheld, Thd Dai1YLObodo~!J not !1UBtentea publication Among other bills introduced was dous s11bstance spills. Please Help! tutd w111 edit lenars for length and libeloUs content. Your plasma is ~ueh '!eeded ~y t~e medJcal profession. Some ofthe uses of plasma: treatment o(

Edifof •••••.•.••••.•••. 1. CamJlle Cordova Arts Editor •••. i •• ~H u;. I •••• Aafael 'Oliva; shock. & burn pat!ents, 1mmumzabon agamst tetanus, mumps, pettussis and treatment ofhemophi· Managing Editor •• , ••• ,, •••• -•• Jim Wiesen Entertainment flepoltttf, •. , David ·cteminet ha to name JUSt a few of the reasons why you and your plasma are 11e~ded, Thank You. . Assoc. Managing Editor •• ,,, •• Jo-Schllling Senior R:epottet. ,..•• ·~, •• Harrison Fletch of 1 News 'Editor ..... ,,, ••• ,, •••••• ,Jeff Wens ltOportet ••••• , •••.•.••.• •1 ~ Juliette Torrez (All bonus programs and normal fees may end without notice.) Photography Editor •• ,.• , , , • -Scott Caraway Reporter~ , ~ •.. , , •., .•• ~ ••.• , •• David Marlon Daily We print the news tOne coupon pt>t nev.· dunor-J I Staff P~otogrilph~t •••.••• ~·. John Samota Edilori81 Assbtant •• , ••••• Marfa OeVaril:nne Staff P_hotographer ... ·~ •• ~.•••• JoG_ ~ttcf1ell D_av Prodtit:tion Mngr •• , .Craig Chtlsshigtir . _ !Not to he u•ed with other coujlonSI . . . . . I Capo;· l:dltor...... , ••••• , • , , • Joe1 McCriUri- Night Production M1111r, ••• , • , Stott Wllson COpy Editor., ••••••• , •• , •• ·~~- SfaCV Gu:iiln Advenfsing Mngr •••• , ••••••• Carolyn FOrd 1 Y.Ot1 want to read SAN LUIS (corner of Second and Stover, I Sf>Or1• Editor ...... , .... John Moreno cra ..Jfled Ad Mngt...... , ...... Ky ShltiBV ._Lobo ______.. ______.... ______...... ______PLASMA CENTER, _. ______INC. . . 3 bloclts ...., ______from the. Greyhound station) ....._I Member, New Mexico Press Association Po~c 6, New Mexico Daily (.oho, Jmwury 17, !985 Page 7, New Mexico Onily Lobo, January t7, 1985 JACK'S LOUNGE & RESTAURANT Bill seeks end to lame ducks will be hosting a . SANTA _FE, N.M. (~PI)- Scver~l proposals were every two years. 10troduccd !n New Mextco Senate durmg &brief session If the joint resolution, which proposes to amend the JACK DANIELS Vfedncsday, incl~di~g a mc&sure for elected state offi­ ·state constiiUtion, is approved by a majority of both cials to serve unhmttcd two-year terms. houses, it wj)) be presented to the voters. It would apply Under current state law, the top state offici~ls are to the offices of governor. lieutenant governor. secret­ BIRTHDAY PARTY ,_:<, :'' elected for four-year tenns, but cannot succeed them­ - 'u ::~-~'3.. .¢'OJ.~<-·, ary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, attorney Tuesday, January 29th selves. general and land commissio1111r. ''lt.'sobvious that we have a situation here now where watch for further details we're electing our executive officers as a lame duck Stahlsaid ifapproved, it would go into effect in 1990. Jackis 1504 Central SE when they're electe!l,"' said Sen. Jack Stahl. R,. He said office-holders elected to four-year tenns in Albuquerque. "lt's an unresponsive type of situation 1986 would be eligible to run for office again in 1990. They're not held accountable." ' A bill introduced iu the Senate We<;lnesqay would New Mexico vot~r~ in the past have rejected propos­ require local units of governments to approve horse­ PUBLIC NOTICE als to allow the ofhctals to serve more than one four­ racing dates at tracks in their areas. The bill calls for the year ter~, but Stahl said he thought the public would Albuquerque City Council to approve any racing dates ASUNM TEXTBOOK accept hts proposal because it would give voters a at the state fairgrounds and county commissions to CO-OP chance to give an opinion on an official's performance approve racing dates at tracks in their counties. HAS TEXTBOOKS Stone Age cuisine could be prevention FOR LESS against modern illness, says researcher Biology 121 & 122 Computer Science 150 MONTEREY, Calif. (UP I) -A The human body is built for that Tobian said th!t( finding prompted diet similar to the one consumed by kind of diet, he said. him to wonder if arteries leading to English 1oo, 101 ,1 02,& supplement prehistoric man could help protect "Over a span of 4 million years, the brain might also be protected in a Math 102,120, 150,& 180 modern men and women against you have a lot of evolutionary forces similar fashion. stroke, heart attack and kidney dam­ going on," Tobian said at the final Using a set of test rats bred to be age related to heart disease, a res ear­ Psychology 101 & 102 A warm Wednesday afternoon prompted students to crack their.new textbooks on the grass session of the American Heart Asso­ prone to strokes, Tobian compared and many other sections cher Said Wednesday. ciation Science Writers .Forum. the effect of potassium on their near the duck pond. The Weather Service promises another nice day today, but watch for Early men and women's diet con­ "These evolutionary forces, just health. Come In And Compare Our Prices clouds and possible snow showers on Frid;~y. sisted mostly of fruits, outs, roots, as it works on any species, would "After four months on a diet with We're Located In tubers and an occasional piece of have acted on man to literally mold a 'normal' potassium content, 20out meat - a menu that was high in him to fit into this kind of diet. Real­ of24 ofthese rats had died," Tobian Rm 24A SUB Basement potassium and low .in sodium, ly, we were designed to run on this said. "When similar rats had sup­ Phone 277-3701 Hours Posted ...... ''The high-potassium diet, which type of diet." plements of potassium added to the Free stress workshops offered is similar to levels of potassium in Tobian said the body has a great diet .•. only one ratin 50 had died FIGHT Cost RIDO"s the diet of present-day hunter­ capacity for conserving sodium and during four months of feeding.'' By David Morton busy schedules - just to name a McCracken said. gatherers or of prehistoric humans, for getting rid of potassium. The results of these tests have not l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii few. But, according to one UNM "Some people will feel mentally affords .a remarkable protection He said members of Stone Age yet appeared in medical journals. Most university students a.re professor. students are often una­ on-edge, but it varies from indi­ against death from strokes as well as civilizations living today in remote There is also supporting evi!lence UNM Chapparals shQW off one of their dance routines a familiar with the difficulties accom­ ware of the stress manifested by vidual to individual, she said." kidney damage," .said Dr. Louis To­ parts of the world have low blood in the general population of man, recent LQbo basketball game. The Chapparals' performances panying higher education: money those problems. McCracken said the workshops bian Jr., professor of medicine and pressure on the average. where whites in the eat are one of the many activities at UNM's basketball games. worries, homework overloads and Douglas Ferraro, psychology de­ will teach students time­ chief of the hypertension section at In studies, rats fed a high-salt diet about 30 percent as much potassium partment chairperson, has instigated management skills, relaxatio.n tech­ the University of Minnesota Hospit­ developed high blood pressure and as did primitive man. Does Your Club a stress-management program "to niques, and provide assertiveness al and School of Medicine. kidney damage when they also re­ Blacks in the southern United Prisons' budget help students recognize stress, and training. "There is .an excellent chance that ceived "normal" leve(s of potas­ States and the people of Scotland cat DISPLAY ADS Need U$~ to help them cope with it." ''The idea is to change your reac­ a return toward this prehistoric sium. With potassiu111 supplements, only 15 percent as much potassium IN THE If your non·profil group (club, bond. said inadequate The stress-management clinic, tion to the events around you and cuisine would greatly benefit kidney damage was reduced by half llS prehistoric man and both those sororily, fret. etc.) need~ ~- here IS on associated with the Department of learn to assert yourself by express­ hypertensive individuals who are even though blood pressure re­ groups have a very high incidence of DAILY LOBO opportunity to help 1he N. M. Special SANTA FE, N.M. (UPI)-Cor­ Psychology Clinic and the Student ing your needs,'' she said. characteristically susceptible to mained constant, Tobian .said. strokes and heart attacks. Olympics ond ro~e Sfor your group os strokes and kidney disease.'' ARE SEEN well. For more informollon coli 256· rcctions Secretary Michael Francke Mental Health Center, will offer Professor Ferraro said, "We hope Thickening of the walls of the 0348. said Wednesday the level of funding UNM students five free stress­ that faculty and staff members refer Tobian does not advocate taking arteries is .. one of Jhe cpmmon for his agency recommended by the management workshops this students to the clinic if they seem to masssive amounts of potassium. In­ damaging effects of high blood Legislative Finan.ce Committee semester. be having difficulty with their stead, he suggests modifying the pressure. Kidney damage is another 2300 Central SE would not permit the payment of "Students can come to the stress­ coursework or otherwise struggling diet to include such high potassium hypertension by-product. But for the overtime owed to prison guards. management clinic before their with stress." foods as potatoes, bananas, most rats that received potassium supple­ SIGMA PHI EPSILON FRATERNITY (Across from UNM) problems reach a crisis stage,'' Fer­ Three series of stress­ vegetables, oranges. grapefruit ments, that thickening was com­ The proposed LFC budget would raro said. management workshops have been juice, skim milk and melons. pletely prevented. AND THE 268-4504 appropriate $76.7 million for cor­ Kathy McCracken, a graduate scheduled for Tuesdays, beginning rections next fiscal year, compared student in psychology and clinic Jan. 22 through Feb. 19, at 2 p.m. ALBUQUERQUE TROLLEY COMPANY with this year's budget of $70 mil­ coordinator; said, "Some people and 4 p.m., and for Thursdays, be­ invite you to a 8700 Menaul NE 299-6666 lion. The agency had sought $92 have expectations that are too high, ginning Jan. 24throughFeb.l9, &t3 million. and they just can't live up to them. p.m. Advanced enrollment is re­ Need a reason to get out 1835 Candelaria NW 345-8568 They tend to deal with stress in ways quired for the workshops. of the house? "The committee's recommenda­ that make the problem worse,'' such "You don't have to be seriously SOUTH OF W. Central at S. Coors 836-0142 tion means the department will not as not exercising, smoking and disturbed to enroll in a program like Read "Stepping Out" in be able to catch up on more than drinking too much coffee. Stress has this," McCracken said. "Almost 5500 Academy NE 821-7262 98,000 overtime hours owed to cor­ been linked to high blood pressure anyone could benefit from it.'' the Hew Mexico Daily Lobo rections officers and other staff, the and heart attacks, she said. fi'Anyone needing more informa­ THE BORDER Rio Rancho Shp. Center 892-8880 turnover among officers will in­ Some physical signs of stress are tion about the workshops can con• crease and training and morale will insomnia, headaches, stomach tact the Department of Psychology suffer," he said. problems and muscle tension, Clinic at 277-5164. Afro-American Studies Spring '85 FIESTA 04884 102..001 Sw1h1IIIJ ...... ~ ...... -... u••··'"*··~M6:30.9:15 04885 215-400 Afro-American Hlalory II ...... TT 9:30-10:45 048111 2111.001 Communlly Economic Development ...... Tll6:30-8:15 featuring ASUHM Popular Entertainment Committee Presents: OC887 217.002 Cullurt•nd P•raon•llty ...... TT11:0CJ.12:15 (),1888 &7.003 African Polttlca ~···········~··••·,.·········•"•• ...... Arr. ''Molly'' & ''Guacarriolly'' Trolleys! 04819 2117-1104 AKe •nd Amerrc.n u...... W &::J0.8:15 04890 217.005 A-rch Melhodi!Mfnorlly ...... MWF 10:00-10:50 Upcoming Events - Spring 1985 041191 3110-001 Alrlc8n Ll!8f81Urt ..... , ...... MWF 11:0CJ.11:50 041112 39CJ.001 818CII Theology tnd Phfloaophy ...... MWF 8:0CJ.9:50 041197 397.001 BIKk Lodeni In 1118 U.S ...... ••• ..W 3:0CJ.5:45 94 ROCk & PEC ENGLISH Present Bow Wow Presents Bow Wow Presents Dodge Trucks Big River Presents 01548 2f1'005 Alrlc8n Ltl8f81UN ..... , ...... ,.",,. .MWF 11:ocl-11!50 EDUCATION FOUNDATION Presents 02liSI 5111oC101 Comf11118lt,. EduC811on ...... w 7:ocl-9:45 Bomp Recording A Solo Evening The Retum of •.. Artists with Kenny & GEORG£ Jonathan CRAWLING Dolly THOROGOOD " ••• THE TRUTH SHALL SET YOU FREE" Richman and the • . . . IOHNB:31 WALLS friday, Jan. 25tb together for the DESTROYERS (60s Psychedelia) 7:00p.m. first time/ Dascovel' some answel's Corne join the Sig Eps and their Little Sisters, The Girls of the Golden Heart, for a ride With Subway Station Wednesday, Feb. 6th to life's important questions. The Nelsons Tickets $4 through the city on Albuquerque's own trolley System followed by a Fiesta fit for a THE CADDIES · Popejoy Hall EtuoU in an accredited Bible course at the Cbristidn Student Center Wilh 8atur~,Jan.26tn King! 8:00p.m. Ti~kels $13 The Muttz Monday, Jan. 21st UNMArena Tickets go on sale SPitiNG COURSES Lots of food, music and FUN! Jan. 18th at noon. Friday. 7:00p.m. Tickets t7.tl0 Bible 2301 Old Testament Survey 9:30-11:00 a.m. MW > 8:30p.m. See tomorrow's Lobo classified Subway Station for info. oh Bible 4367 Early Church His lory (The Book of Acts) 10:30·12:00d.l!l, TTH WHEN: TONIGHT 6:30pm sua aauroom Tickets $3 preferred ticket locations. Bible 4360 'l'ha Book ol Revelation . S:30-9:30 p.m. Tu Bible 1314 New Testament Survey 1:00-2:30 p.m. TTH WHERE: SIGMA PHI EPSILON FRAtERNITY ~ These classes may be taken ctedil/no credit 1705 Mesa Vista NE, l Block Southeast of University & Lomas 247"4299 Nelsons, Walls and Richman Tickets available in advance at ilow Wow records, 103 Amherst S.E. Fee $10.00 per course Kenny/Dolly and ThorogQOd tickets at all. Giant Outlets, Including The General Store at 111 Harvard Registralion at Christian Student Center ot al first class meeting Sigma Phi Epsilon· S.E •• 75~ cent service charge. CHRIST!Aff STUDENT CENTER Academics, Sports, Service, & SUCCESS! 130 Girard NE 265·4312 The Lifetime Experience! Call or 243·3208 for !'age 8, New Mc~ico Daily l..obo, J~nu~ry 17, 1.985 Page 9, New Mexico Daily Lobo, January l7, 1985 STUDENT open 24 hours UNM Arts Arts - HEALTH CENTER ••All Students Taking Six Qr More Hours Are Eligible Not jazz, not folk What's In It For 'You? Free Office Visits. • General Medical Care • 10 Specialty Clinics • Women's II(•alth Care • Physical Therapy & Nutrit.ion • lnfinnary/Ph>\rmacy • Lab & X·.Ray • 24 Hour George Winston plays what's recorded, then some l~mcrgency S(•rvice • Mental Health Service Psychotherapy Group For Men & Women 0~ heroines in offices, Thun., Jan.11, '1 p,in.1 at the Newman Center. D)SPLAYA1is·=.-·· ". phone number and name of orpnllaii!Jn and periOD ASUNM FIJm Commlllet- prcsrnts WoOdy Alleo's_ ONGOING v factories, and kitchens , I In Chll'l:t] to room tlS, MalTOn Hall, UNM Campua, ..Stardu.st Mr:morirs, .. Thurs., and Fri•• 7:17 and Spanish Coutu for To11rblt and Bui.lnrii wJII be across America by i (one] p.m. of the day priOr to lntenlon. 9:15p.m. in the SUB Theatre. Caii277~S608 fo1mor~ ptt!iented by the Jnternatlonal Center, uartln!' Feb, IN THE Anaounctirlrnll "ill be n1n thr day btfo" th~ ~~·nrt Info. 4th and eomlnulns far the next 8 wecb. Clas1 will be II Dild thr dQJ' of tht e~·tni Ofi a qHJCt liVIdlt~blr btuls lmpad: An informal dme· of WeirJhlp for students. tau.qht by Entarna Abella an Monday C\'tnin_gs, 1·9 How to say goo~bye" . . . . DAILY LOBO {ptease note the thru Lip Senkt ctteaotlts listtd toma!i Every Thurs. from 4:30-5:30 p.m. at the p.m., at the Jnternattonal Center, 1808 Las Up Srnke annountt"meatJ trt available flft of Baptist Compelling drama returns to PopeJOY Wednesday w1th 'mght, Mother, the 1983 rec•· btlow]. Lip Senlte annouacemtnts •·Ill not bt toktn Student Union. 401 Univeulty Nl!. For more Info. NE. For more Into. tall Ms. Abella at266·994l or the chllrat to ora•nlladou praentlna meellnp, ovtr tht phonr. · 'Jnlc:rnatlonar Center It 2 n,.z94l;, RODEYTHEA1RE pient of the Pulitzer Prize for plays; Mercedes .McCambridge, Academy Award winner ARE SEEN cali243·S401. Student Rush January 17, 18, for All the King's Men and nominated for the award in the classic James Dean film, The for performbo, Juouury 17. 1985

raking A UNM SCUBA course this semester? sports Sports PRESENT THIS AP P~US STUDENT IDJ:N1'1FICATION AND GET 25% off on American pie IIIASKS, FINS, SNORKEL, BOOTIES Lobo swimmers begin to taper By John Moreno Spahn said. New Mexico's men, meanwhile, The University of New Mexico swam against two Western Athletic women's swim team will nost High Conference teams, Wyoming and ; ~,~~~, ~f'~?.!~~ motherhood, missions and military Utah, in a double dual meet. The Country Athletic Conference rival ., The NCAA took stands for ch 11 rch, fed~ration, •, said 'Wd~~e~t tow~rd In~, .both Within t!le NCAA and tiona !~ the five-year eligibility rule setting up a restricted pass list in­ Utah Saturday in Johnson Pool at I Lobos beat the Cowboys, 72.4 I, but country and motherhood Wednes- Director Walter B " xecutlve Withlll the Amencan Footbal! for 1mhtary service and church mis­ stead. lost to the Utes, 76-37. p.m. day while wrapping up one of its more considerati/er;. The,re was Coaches Association, for toughen- sions was shot down by an over­ One of the final actions of the 1 •me To En The Lobos' first meet of the new most congenial conventions in rna.ny !ems." · · n others prob- ing penalties against chronic chea- whelming vote. And there was even UNM finished second in the ° con~cntion was to elect John R. year was last Thursday, when they WAC last year and although Utah years B . te.rs, less opposition to granting a one­ Spring and Summer : . yers s.a1d action on financial aid •'Th · 1 year extensim\ for pregnant women. J?avls, faculty athletics representa­ trounced non-conference opponent finished fourth. Spahn said they had W1th the more controversial and inte dt were ··. · . ere 1s. a ot of support for tiVe at Oregon State, pres idem of the Northern Ari~ona, 92-47, winning issues of autonomy, drugs and because are t del mamly strong pen_alhes and for getting the Jean Cerr~ of Missouri brought UNM Student Health Insurance a "great recruiting year." The gap ~he~e aye~ ~CAA to succeed John L. Toner, Enroll: • STUDENT HEAll11 CENTER nine of the 12 individual swimming in the scores, however, may have academics dealt with on Tuesday the agend f th he to~ Items on c~nstant V}olators out of the profes­ down the house when, while moving director of athletics at Connecticut. Keystone Representative available events. UNM also took both relay been caused by the fact that Utah the final session of the 79th annual NCAA P:Csid~nt e ~eetm.g ~f t~e SI_on," sa1d Byers. "We're begin­ for passage of the pregnancy propos­ January 14, 1985 ·J-3 pm MWF events, and Lobo sophomore Mela­ finished its hard training about two convention was highlighted by the June "and 1 th~ k ommlssmn m n~ng t_o move dramatically in the al, said, "At last you have a chance In his inaugural address, Davis, nic Marshall won both the one- and weeks ago, while the Lobos have rejection of a proposal that would were' waiting for~~ :~e ~elegates dl.~cuon of increasing penalties to vote for motherhood. Need I say Who will serve for two years, suid his Student Representative available 100 "1-3 prn Th three-meter diving events. just begun to taper in their workouts. have taken eligibility away from commission , , lrec rom that WI .the hope that it will make viola- more?'' administration will address two or at: • CASHIER'S OFFICE UNM's Kathy Dixon, a senior, "We were swimming tired," Spahn athletes who go on religious mis- Byers said the~ . . . tors m the future think twice." The NCAA Tuesday eliminated issues - "academic eligibility and Regular plan can be purchased was a winner in four events, the 50· said. sions or serve in the anned services. e IS a strong feel- A proposal to eliminate excep- complimentary tickets for athletes, progress." yard freestyle, which she swam in at Cashier's Offic:e, Student Services He also was cautious about And, along those same lines, the Building until Feb, 1, 1985. 2!):56 seconds; the 100-yard butterf­ Kathy Dixon delegates agreed to allow an extra ly, I :00.52; and she was on both Wyoming's team, which he said is • AGENT'S OFFICE ''better than they showed." We're year of eligibility for female athletes D1.1ily during regular office hours winning relays. who b~come pregnant. In the 200-yard-medley relay, going to have trouble beating them Representative Patricia Matthews later in the year," Tuesday, the convention gave the Keystone Life Agency Dixon teamed up with freshmen major colleges autonomy to set their Laverne Lopez, Gorcl Hagelin and The Lobos beat Wyoming in six 2625 Pennsylvania NE of nine individual events, both re­ own limits for athletic scholarships Solar 1 Buiildi112 Suite 30!1 Sarah Spochr for a time of I :55.26. and coaching staffs, but delayed ac­ In the 400,yard-freestyle relay, Dix.· ll!ys and both diving events, which were won by junior Kurt Burgeson. , tion on banning performance­ on swam the first leg, followed by e'nhancing drugs and raising freshmen Karen Snyder and Alison New Me11ico, however, lost all II swimming events to Utah, but· academic standards. Hamilton, and sophomore Karen ''I think the highlight of this con- Nixon in a time of3:5I.l9. Burgeson was good enough to main­ Lobo head Coach Sill Spahn was tain his top standing even against the I'm an A1r Fotcu of· .. . .. fleer iHld this Is mY surprised his team won the meet. He Utes. sweet chariot. When I Vtslt home plloplc ar'e said he thought the Lumberjills happy to see me. And would have presented tougher com­ Ripples: While the women are proud, They S.;tY f'm DAILY domg my part m the petition, but acknowledged that his home on Saturday, the men's next commtJn1ty by show· meet is in Las Vegas, Nev., at the mg the young_people team is much improved from last nnd tho uduUs that Rebel Classic on Jan. 25-26. The LOBO you rca_lly .cnn make year's squad which finished fourth it. You renJiy can got in the HCAC. women will also swim at that meet. your share of the The next home meet when both good hfe. DISPLAY 1 also reel good "This team (the Lobos) is .100 teams will compete is on Feb. 1-3 at aboot my position 111 tho A1r f:'orc;li 'COmmtJ• percent better" than last year's, Kurt Burgeson the New Mexico Seniors meet. nlty. 1'ni a. ·Jeader ., ADS ARE there~. too. I'm SQme· tJne tho other broth·

Cr!~in lllldtho SISterSservice J meetcan NOTICED look to. And It r0as· r· • sures them to know thoy have n vole~ in Air-Force. tiUi. lters that concern thom. .. Lobo alpiners not .. peaking- yet Thn Air F'oreo needs more lcadcrsv.Pilots ••• airc:row mtHnbcr.& "It does concern us," Be berg .• ,mnt.h majors ... scl· By John Moreno took third in the GS and fifth in Visiting AUthor cncc and cngino(lring the slalom. continued, "but we feel we can majors. Vou might be stephen Milliken one of thc.m and tlic Last year, when the Lobo ski "On the alpine side, we were ski better." In sizing up the com­ best way to find thal coming from behind, like last petition, he said Wyoming Teaches aut Is in .:iii Air ~orcc team finished third in the nation ROTC program. There behind Utah and Vennont, the year,'' said assistant Coach Paul appears to be a stronger team than a.rc two, tfUuble. "They need to do some tt, btothcr. serious recruiting ifthey're going under Afro·Amerlcan studies UNH Air Force ROTC because they beat Colorado and "build slowly and not peak too 380-001 and English 211•005. Wyoming. These schools, the soon. He's playing it safe, but to be in the thick of things next Phone: 277~4602 Lobo coaching staff said, reside they'll ~ome around." The year;'' Be berg said. Put it all together in Air Force ROTC. in the "ski states,'' especially national championships are in The Lobo nordic skiers next Colorado. March. . stop is at Winter Park, Colo., But there was cause for con· But are the nordic skiers peak" where they will ski in a free-for­ cern last week when the Uni­ ing too soon? Beberg admits all type ofrace open to all com­ Full Vegetarian Ante Pasto Bar versity of New Mexico ski team that's a legitimate concern, but ers. It's 25 kilometers long for finished fourth at the Utah Invita­ "we have very golld skiers and women and 50 kilometers for tional behind host Utah (482 we're not worried about that, be­ men. •DINNER points), Wyoming (374) and Col­ cause they can ski better." "We have an open date on the orado (358.5) with 3.52 points. Indeed, thecross-_country team schedule, and we take this as a Although both UNM's men was coming off a double victory tuning race," said Beberg, who PREPARED TO ORDER and women .finished second in from the week before the Utah · also said it •s good for the media the eros~ country competition, meet when it won both the men's exposure it brings the UNM the alpiners didn't fare quite as and women's divisions. But as in program. • Catering well. The men finished second in Utah, the downhill team's show­ You don'tget to be third in the the giant slalom, btlt seventh in ing was less than impressive, and nation without thinking of all the FOR ANY OCCASION the slalom. The Lobo women was plagued by many falls. right angles. Need Auto ' Display Advertising~] · . . Insurance? r~:~:a:e~~v!~~ble .. Super reflections - Joe I Callthe I .q.~· Willie backed up mouth ISpecialists I STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) - then biggest television audience in I •Lowdown I Department Twice in his brilliant career •'Broad­ football history. . . 1 payment 1 way Joe Willie" lliamath was the Namath completed 17 of .28 pas• • Money-saving I of right man at the right time for profes­ ses for 206 yards in directing a Jets' I deductibles 'l'fc>e Psychology sional football. offense that generated 337 yards, in· I • Ai'fordabie pay. I eueGAHT Clinic The first occurred when he signed eluding 121 rushing by Matt Snell. 1 rnent plan I announces his initial protessional contract with Where is Namath now and what is • 24-hour claim I BeAR the New York Jets ~ for a then he doing? I service Stress Joe took up residence in Los a testauta~t unheard of $427,000. I . 0111 or vlolt uotodoy 1 Management The second came in Super Bowl Angeles and is busy making televi­ for afrn rate .,Uotatlonc Ill when he ''guaranteed" on the sion commercials and, according to Workshops Thursday before the game that his his attorney, lames Walsh, is I 26S-s69s I offered free to any 10-4 Jets would beat the 15-1 Balti­ "acting in plays around the I 8016 Zuni SE I UNM student. more Colts. country. " , 1. SulteE 1 M9n.-Friday 11 am•2pm Sessions begin week of Namath became the toast of foot· Namath, once one of sport's most January21. ball fans everywhere when he led the eligible bachelors, startled his Tue.-Sat. 6pm-1lpm for further Information, 1 Criterion 1 or to enroll call277-5164. Jets to a 16•7 upset of the Colts three friends and fans last November 'INSURANCE COMPANY I 3416 CENTRAL 1 days later before a crowd of 75,3S9 when he married actress Deborah in Miami's Orange !Jowl and the Mays. It's his fitst marriage. 411 CLIP & SAVE • l'llgc 12, New Mexico Daily Lobo, Januury 17, 1985

prq~cd!!rcs, .and computer e~J>I'rlcnce. Prefer a Las Noticias w~;J(;IIT l.OSSI (ilJARANTFJ.;i> to lose 10·29 $1 SO/mo plus V. utilities. sn, .. ~93 evenln.s.l and A.DMINIST~~ TIV.E ASSISTANT- WPRK.study lbs./month. :10 dny, IOOIJJ r.efund guaraotec• Th.e business or account in~ stu~~nt. ApplylnMarron Hall qualified. (lffice . e~perlence, lnde~ndent, en• (;J;T u:u:o 'J'ONITf; PI the 5igrl1a ChlllawaUan W(ekends. 1/18 Qnly thittgyou have to lose il weight. Gene 898·7740. 131, Work·study qtJallfic~>m with Tl)TORS JljJ;EDED WOIU>·study qualiflc PERSON FOR boy, age 4, our home. M~F subject~. OrieOiatlon. Rm 231.CandPSlJJl, January CIn AIIIINM studcntiWcit and tum your bodl<1 around the nl,e!t ~TfRACTIVf., CLEAN TWO.beSON~DI.F; MicrQwave, WMher/dryer. New .carpet, paint, blinds, prl~es. l'lipcrs, manuscripts, word processing, theses. tlnulng Education dept. Call Claudia at277·1 167. Huntue llluhm lland Satur., 12th at !be OitarUtline Cell Dh>logy P.yc Clinic, across from l..allelles, 5019 Menaut Nl!. IMMEDIA.'J'E OPENING: SANDWICH cook. Wl'l'll llNM. Korfbnll Club. Men nod couples, no pets. Open Sundays. 1$20 University NE. Ill S/85 nonl1 parking lot area, 817·16~2. 1123 1:\xml\1.~~: 888-4778. tfn Work days Mon-Fri. Start mi.nimum unllltralned. "'unten nercled to jrolr 111 run nnd exciting c~rrec 243-2494. tfn PERFORMING ARTS S'fVOIO 2219 Lead A.Ve Sl!, APPlY 3:30.~ pm. swenson's Ice Cream, 8216 CAR I'EY l'OUNU ncar Popejoy, Claim Rm 131 'port Nn <~locrtente? No problem! Carlisle gym, FOR RJ:NT: f.FFICIENCY apanment, 1410 Giriud Marron Hall. 112.1 ~56-106l.llnllet, Jazz, Vocal coaching, M!>ntgomery NE. 1121 Wednesdays nt 7:00p.m. 1/22 N,l!,, $250/mo., for one person, $270/mo. for 2 CAR OR MOTORCYCLE key, Claim Rm, 131 tfn persons, all utilities paid, $!7S s~urity deposit. Fully liTUDENTSI PHONERS/l!RIVERS .needed for .MA'S"ii- lt~Slll TO wdcomc back all !tUdent.\1 Marron Hall, 1/18 lbunday, JtUI ..17, 7 pm. naptlst Student (:enter, CON'l'~Cf POI,.ISIIING, SOLlJTIONS Casey f!lmislled·securlty locks and laundry facilities. No community outreachlfundralslng. Part•lime evenings. CaiiACORN247.9792. 1/21 MICHAEL LEE BENTON found }'1/Ur backpack, corner ur llnivcrslty nrtd ortlon. Right To. Cboosc. For Sale WORK·STUDY QUIII.IFIE)) pmo!\ for office and fits keys. Chris's Indoor Store, 119~ Harvard Nutalnnunt lmcremd, cull Jon, Gene :162·0947. SJ!, directly behind Naturn!Sound,262·2107. tfn 1/21 294'0171. trn a55istant II for division of llmergency Medicine. Research libra!')' for medicallileraturc contact whh J~tl·~'i'f.sliRV!VOitS ·nmRAPY Or~up, ('on• !'REGNANCY Tf~'HING & counseling. Phone 247• QUEENSL~ND BLUE Ht:ELF.R pups, pure bre~. 1 9819. tfn $6,·5100. Calll96·9054, 1123 medical recmds for medkal charts, also x-ra~s, Miscellaneous lttlenual, ~t:n•lliYe group for women. Individual mands,typlng, etc, Ca.ll ScoiiYDohme, 277·6268, ,nun ..tmg ulm nvnllable. ConlaCt Caryl Trnner, 11173 TOYOTA CORONA stationwagon 5900. Will 1/18 KAUfM-'.N'li STI)REWIDE CLI'ARANCE, 10- M A , ~66-606(). l/28 Housing consider panlnltrade,.Call Shawn, 293·2813, 1118 3$0/o off Everything. Hurry! Sale ends January 31st. C()NPOMINIUM f-OR Rf:NT, I bdrm. 5340, all PRE·Mf.D/NURSING/PIIARMACY $tudent 'iTA 11 r'nn: Nt:w semc.~ter tJ&htl Make nresolution 1968 VW CAMPER van. Nleel 5!195. Call Frank, wanted for research aldell position with the division No rnln ~hecks. Kaufman's. A real Army• Navy Store. tn ln-.r wctght nud r~cl gr¢nl! With all nnt~ral herbs. utilities paid, unfurnished. Access to all common 266·6216. 1/23 1660 Eubank NE, 293·2300. 1122 ground facilities, Call294·3172. l/18 or Emergency Medicine. M~st be work·study Mk tnc how, 683·(>608. free delivery and con· .1966 VOI,KSWAGON FASTBACK. Needs door qualified, Call Sue 277·6268. · 1118 STOREWIDJ<,: CLF.AIL\NCE SALf., Everything 10- \uhauun l/21 MAU: OR f'EMALI': roommate still needed to share repair, rront.scat, Gels good milwge, has new bra~es, WAI\tTED: RESPONSIBLE, RELIABLJ<,: babysitter 350/o Off .thru January 31st. No rain-checks. Kauf­ c4U~o off llllll!lcruftcd itelll8 ]ll~nls, cords a.t sctnl·furnlshcd two·bdrrl1 aptnc~r UNM (University S600, Also 1970 VW Fastback. Running parts, car, iiJ>rr() 1 for 1 yr, old, in my home. Appro~:Z0.2S hrs per w~. man's West. 1660 llubank NJ;, 293-2300, 1/22 nucl Coal nren), Must he qule! ~nd responsible, No 1\lh~ult>etquc ( 'r!lfts r pets. $140 a mon!h plus !h SLEEP ON .FUTONS: Student discount. Bright D,\Lf.BOOT POWDER BOOTS Men's 7·8, S7S 345-4005. 1/18 Future futon Company, 2424 .Garfield Sl!. 268·9738, Peisonals Ulilltlcs. $50 security depuslt required. Avallablc Jan. OBO. Steve, 294•'012 or292-4787, 1/22 20. Cralg242-4642 (H), 277-5656 (W), 1/18 MONE)'l YOU CAN make thousands and enjoy 1125 S('OTI'Y: W IIEI'I nm you start smoking7 I need IIOUSE FOR SAI,E by owner, Good shape, north doing ill We dol 884-9456, 1/18 VINTAGE 1985 A. Good Year lor Old Clothes from, llm•r •hithb nuwt And we'll probably neea warp ROOM FOil REN'r: to Jnnture non smoker. Oreal valley, $47,000. ASSUmable loan at 7l40Jq, nei~hborhood, private bathroom, private entrance, Bt:CAUSE YOU CAN'T be too thin or too rich The Turquoise Flamingo, 120 AmherstNP.. 1/18 pnwer,tt~u.lf you fail, you're fired. - !(irk. 1/17 $278/month, city utilities, 3 bedtooms, :2 bathrooms, you'd better not .be too busy to call 293-3262 or 242· share kitchen, SI 7 S per month, uti! Included. 266· IO,O.sq,ft, !II ncrefeoeed. 344-6359. 1/22 IMPORTED RECORDS. BRAZil,., Africa, Ireland, • tNH:IU'RISI·: ·-'OilS IS Klingon Spa~e. i'repare 4·149. l/18 9057. 1/18 Latin America, Available at BlbliOddlties. 32U llhlte. · · ('mnmnnder Jrcfi:rably frotn Japan •. !ndia. 842·5!199. 1/22 PARAPS'VCIIOL(lGY CLASSES: OPENING your 11hutun torpciiUcs. llhum: Get 111e that Klingon Mideast or Egypt who heed$ room in home. $12S Suntenl Needs tun .. up and new bauery. 3250 mites on 247·4l9'J. 1/18 townltoliSe .near UNM. SIHO plus ll1 utilities, 265· it, Includes repair book, heary chain and tom· HSBI. 1/17 blnatlon lock. S140 negotiable. No checks please, Services .ROOMMATE WAN'l'ED TO share a one bedroom Craig242-4642(h), 271>5656 (w). 1/17 I (lVI"'G Glt~NDMA Wll,l. babysit evenings, all apartment. Call mornlnss and nights. $192,50; IIONDA ACCORD 1979. Tan, original owner. All nosht n1 weckencl. Excellcnl references. Marian 265· Utilities included. NearUNM. 241·3461. 1/22 mnint. records. AM/FM cas NU house with one other woman, ¥o mile to campus. IIONDA CVCC 1917 ~-speed, AM·FM c~5ette. bn~-,u m her home. Very close to catiiPIIS. Monday Cull 266·2461. Rent $200 plus \li utilities. J/18 Runs good. 51700 OBO. 843-6976, 265-3945. Leave thrtough l•r!dny, rte~lble hours. St.SO per hOur. Call UOOMMATE NEt:DEDTO share two-bedroom apt, messnge. 1/21 Jane, 26~·2688. I/Z2 Swimming pool, extra storage, laundry room, dish· 1982 IIONDA PASSPORT 70, Well maintained, ACROSS 46 Interfere PREVIOUS JIOl'SESI'rn;R AVA liABLE. RESPECTFUl,. washer, new car~l, security lock, ~eritral heating, air 4000 miles. SSOO. Phone 843-9388 atter4 pm. i/21 1 Ms. D'Orsay 49 Utensils PUZZLE SOLVED •cry responsible. I' hone 867-$881. Local relerences, conditioning. Nke quli:t clean neighborhood, 2.3 5Simulates 530ncemore miles from UNM. Bus service. .Rent SI94.SO, utilities WIITF.RBED 560. INCLUDES frame, double 1/18 mattress and heater, Call Donna 268-4892 eves. 1/21 9Swagger 54 Metal usually $20, pl1one S7·101 deposit S7$, Move In Feb. STJtt:t'r GlJ NG t'UlA martial nrt/ltrelch strength '74 AUDI FOX 4-door, standard, Looks great Inside 14 Opposed: 55 Direction nnd selr·defense/llear UNM. Ph.- 268·1103. 1122 I. Park Terrace Apu2SS·4102. 1121 UOUSEMATE WA.NTF.D: NONSMOKER. Four and out. Oood lransp, levels: Laura . STUDENTS, TICKET HOLDERS Featuring Neopolltan, J.:iarnerl6S-U$2. 1/25 CAU · Mort-Sat Sicilian and whole PROBLF.M WITH MATIIMATICS1 Statistics? TODAY! 8 to 6 Seicrtecs1 Paul can help. 265•7799 evenings. tin , .. JOHN RAOOSEVICH wheatplua WOR)) PROCESSING: liiF.SI~, term papers and RAOOSEVICtl UULTI·UNE INSURANCE 121 Horvord SE 'h blk S. of Cenrrol ~ripts. Reasonilble rates. 266-8332. _ tlili 140Q Carlisle Blvd. HE L-----~~~'-----J.

There's Always Something Happening at the SUBWAY STATION down under the NM Union daily 10-4 g77-1969 MTV • Dances • Lounge •Snacks NEWI Non-AicohoUc leer and Wine NEWI Trivia Bits . . • m • NEWICoffce e and!ltu~ e ''The Social Sp0f on Campu1 11 ·-";1 • ••••••••••••••••andup. e