New Student Record, 1977 University of New Mexico

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New Student Record, 1977 University of New Mexico University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository UNM Yearbooks - The irM age Campus Publications 1977 New Student Record, 1977 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/unm_yearbooks Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Student Record, 1977." (1977). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/unm_yearbooks/15 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Campus Publications at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in UNM Yearbooks - The irM age by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • ' J n n n n BOX 5 0 UNfV. STA 110N ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. 87131 AREA CODE 505 277-5808 A Message from the Alumni: The Alumni Association is pleased to be the coordinator of this first edition of the Freshman Record. We believe it will be a wonderful keepsake and picture log of your friends and acquaintances while attending the University of New Mexico and could prove of significant value to you during your entire lifetime. The fact that you have chosen the University of New Mexico to pursue your formal education makes you a very special person in the eyes of UNM Alumni, some 50,000, all over the world. We, too , have enjoyed the privilege of an asso­ ciation with the University and cherish many fond memories of the faculty, friends , and happenings from the period of time we spent on Campus. We hope you will be free to visit our office and ask our staff to assist you when you need help or information, and certainly, upon graduation, we hope you will leave us your permanent address and keep us informed of any change, that you will allow us to assist you in job hunting and in learn­ ing the whereabouts of your friends as well. Do drop by our office. You are always welcome! President U Association Gwinn "Bub" Henry Executive Director UNM Alumni Association 2 Fiesta: UNM's Annual Spring Fling Dear UNM Student: Welcome to the University of New Mexico. By definition your university is a "community of scholars." You are as much a part of that community as the professors who will be teaching your classes and laboratories. More than ever before in your education -- far more than in high school -- what you will receive from this institution will depend upon your own efforts. That ' s because education at the university level depends upon the student finding the classes which offer the most benefit, and upon establi?hing intellectual relationships with the men and women who teach those classes and with fellow students . I hope that you will take full advantage of what this univer­ sity has to offer and that you will participate fully as a member of our community. This register, a project of the UNM Alumni Association, is intended to facilitate that participa­ tion by making it easier for you to know your fellow students. When the day comes when you are also alumni, it is our wish that you can look back on your time as part of the University of New Mexico as your most fruitful years. With best wishes, 4/i/L~ William E. Davis President The l'niversity of Neu: Mexico i• the largest of the 1tate's publicly supported institutions of higher education. Its fall 1976 student population of over 23,000 was nearly equal to the combined total enrollment of the state's 11 ix other public college11 and universitie1. UN!rl has been one of the nation's faltest growing univer1ities, with enrollment more than doubling each decade ~ince 1950. About 90 per, cent of the 11tu"denta are New Mexico resident•, u1ith more than 65 per cent coming from Bernalillo County. The remainder come from all49 other •tate• and more than 50 foreign coun· trieJJ. Fifty-three per cent of the student• are men and 47 per cent are women. l .lUI President William£. Davi1 reportl that, "Today, the University of .'\'eat1 Mexico stand• as Number One in the nation of major alate unit1ersitie• as the leader on all levela, including unde,rgraduate, graduate and professional program1, in percentage of minority 1tudent participation." Minority student8 at UNM reflect a perl.'entage of the total student body that il three times the national averagP. at undergraduate and professional lt.->vels of education and more than twice the national average at the graduate let,el. It breaks down this way: minoritie• make up 22.63 per cent of UNM undergraduates (the national average is 7.11 per cent); 15.69 per t'ent of graduate students are minorities (the-national average is 7.22 per t'fmt) and minoritie.s represent23.09 per cent of UNM'• professional studentl (the national average is 8.15 per cent). {''VM's teaching faculty number• nearly 1000 men and women. The University ranks high in the per.centage of its faculty who hold earned doctorates or other terminal degrees. There are chapters of the American Auocia· tlon of Unia,ersity Profeuor6, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Sigma Xi, and a t'CJriet)· of oaher profeuional and acholarly organUationa. Establuhed by an act of the Territorial Legislature, the University of New Mexico began imtruction on Sept. 21, 1892. The original campus of 20 acres and a single building has grown to more than 600 acre• and about 150 building•. The Territorial Legidature designated the Univer•ity of 1\'ew Mexico as the irutitution to "provide the in­ habitants of the State of New Mexico with the meam of acquiring a thorough know:kM!ge of the vario branche6 of the literature, •cience and art1. ''More recently the New Mexico Commi• ion o~ Statetcide Higher Education Problem• confirmed thi1 musion by stating, in 1964, that UNM 11hould conti'lf'e as "the one in· stitution in the .tate offering at allleveu of higher education a broad spectrum of programf o dtfgree• iralhe . humanities, social ~eiences, and •ci.ences, as well as the technical.. and profeuiotaaf area • " , In line with this miuion, the University offers instrul.'tion in 1l.,..:hools and colll,es: Arcl,itecture and Plan­ ning, Arts and Sciences, Bu1ineu and Administrative Sciences, Education, Engineering, Fine Arts, th~ Graduate School, Law, Medicine, Nur1ing, and Pharmacy. There also i1 an academic division, the Unj.,ersity lit College, in u•hich all fre~hmen and many sophomores are enrolled pri9r 10 •electing an acijlemic nlfVor. Th~ Univer1ity College admini1ters the bachelor of university 11tudies degre program as well it} 1everal a ..ocia&e degree program11. Ther.e are 56 imtructwnnl department~ a~tl non-departrvJlt~~ uhoolJ and Q~,, itrl the ma•ter's dE'gre..e offeTed in 53 11chools. The dbctorate may be earned)n 26 p gr;am•. The Un ,..iiYi cUae of 227 Group I V imtitutiom, lua1 been ful · ccrediled by_ the North c8i tra , oeialion .-ince 1912. Centro I Compu1 legend of Buildings Centro I Compua legend of Building• ~·.cD'LMI .. ,N..-.n.c:ol~,oog 1T~ por• -.tWat .......... ~ .._ .............. .... ~., ......... ,...,.,~ ...... ~..... ,.,. ttt. ...............,.........,.._ ................. a.o; ~......,...., c.ooo • ..__ ...<IICIItu ilxot.IOf!...,- 2 M~.-of'fC.,..,.._A,.~... • ~---... Sc:f~oe.·.,.... 10 G-> ~- •• -l , • ........, .... ............. o.. 7$ G-> -- •• Gy.t .U...rode .... o.-."-"' U7 C. II • c.. •• ... ,.,..... ~. •.s .s c.t............ ... ... .t.rcl'·~l.$1 ... , • ,_...... Mol ().7 Aft_.. '«'Y'f NoAt• .,... ,, • .........ft!- •• ..... G-9 ...... tO M-,._,.._ ~ tW •• 1 2 M~• 107 ..·-- ......._ 1-$ Aft ~ .. 1). 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