New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 088, No 111, 3/5/1984." 88, 111 (1984)

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New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 088, No 111, 3/5/1984. University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1984 The aiD ly Lobo 1981 - 1985 3-5-1984 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 088, No 111, 3/ 5/1984 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1984 Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 088, No 111, 3/5/1984." 88, 111 (1984). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1984/37 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 1984 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NEW MEXICO Vol. 88 No. 112 Monday, March 5, 1984 Parking Lack ~Never Going To Get Better~ By Douglas Earick operation in the near future, possibly by '85," but said that the money has to be allocated by the state Legisla­ Lack of parking on the University of New Mexico's ture before the project can be started. main campus will continue to plague the school and will The second planned parking structure is a 3 V2-story actually grow worse because of building projects sche­ building to be erected in the C-zone parking Jot south of duled to be done over the next few years, said the Johnson field. "It would be built somewhere between director of Parking Services. the Stanford entry and Redondo," Couffcr said. "1 think tt will definitely get worse before it ever gets The structure would supply parking for about 870 better . if it ever will," said Fred Couffer. vehicles. Couffer said additions to the Anderson School of Couffcr said that even with the I ,670 spaces these Management, Johnson Gym and engineering will result structures would supply, UNM's parking problem will in the loss of about 250 parking spaces. continue. "We will be losing the economics and sociology About 4,400 zoned parking spaces arc now available parking Jot, half of the parking lot between fine arts and on campus. Couffer said these spaces must suffice for the motorcycle area, and 43 spaces over by electrical almost 7,000 faculty/staff members and more than engineering," he said. 23,000 students. He added that Roma Avenue, which runs past the "We've got to satisfy faculty and staff first, and then dorms down to the campus police station, will be lost to what's left over we can give to the students," he said. a landscaping project. Another landscaping project will As of January, 2,544 permits were allotted to faculty enc9mpass Yale Boulevard from Mitchell Hall to the and staff, and 3,401 permits were given to students, journalism building. Couffer said. ''This wiU mean that another SO or so spaces will be Certain zones are oversold by a small percentage lost," Couffer said, Included are 10 handicap spaces because not all students are on campus at any one time. along Yale, which will limit the total number of these Co\lffcr said the department oversells 1,543 spaces each spaces on campus to 66, he said. year. "I can sec the future coming - things arc never Each July, Parking Services sends out about 30,000 going to get better," he said. applications to students who may want parking on cam­ Plans to increase parking around main campus in­ pus. "Not all students need permits, but for those who clude two multi-level parking structures. do, there is a big demand for a relatively few spaces,'' The first of these structures is a 2!12-story complex he said. that would be situated in the parking Jot by the Compu­ An additional 800 to 1,000 daily visitors to the cam­ ter Center, across Lomas from the UNM Hospital. pus use parking meters and buy temporary parking Couffcr said this structure would supply parking for pcmtits. This creates an even greater demand for park­ ... ' about 800 vehicles . ing, Couffcr said. .. The top floor of the structure is allocated for the Couffer said he thinks UNM will eventually become hospital, with the rest going to students and faculty. a" closed campus" for all automobiles except emergen­ Priority is given to this structure because of the UNM cy vehicles. The picture he draws is one where all Hospital parking dilemmat'' Couffer said. parking will be around the perimeter of the main He added that the complex is "scheduled to go into campus. .. Her Stewardess Plans Fell Short, But • Scott Caraway Despite parking expansion plans, the parking situation on Wo111an Astronaut Will Still Fly High campus will continue to be tight. By Steve Shoup Tereshkova, Svetlana Savitskaya the city on women in science and and Sally Ride. Sometime early next engineering. Trained as a civil and The day is coming when women year, the name of Dr. Mary Cleave environmental engineer, Cleave was flying on space missions will not be will be added to that list. selected to be a mission specialist in •!nusual. So far, the list of women Cleave was in Albuquerque Fri­ the space shuttle program in May Discrimination Seen spaccfarcrs is made up of Valentina day for a series of presentations in 1980. She is one of eight women astronauts in the U.S. space program. By Campus Women Like most astronauts today. male and female, she fits the ''right stuff .. By Jo Schilling Graduate Student Association image only in that she has been a President Marie Mound described licensed pilot since she was 14. She University of New Mexico female the difference in teaching styles as is a civilian and concedes that her staff members are paid about 19 per­ .. intense discussion versus aggres­ only crash was in a Cessna 150 into a cent less than men holding similar sive debate. •• She said graduate cornfield. positions, and discrimination occurs seminars need not be the battleg­ in faculty promotion and tenure de­ rounds that they sometimes arc. "It never occurred to me that I cisions, says a UNM professor. Mound said some professors, should be a pilot. I wanted to be a Addressing an audience Friday at usually male, undermine a female stewardess," she said. She said the the concluding session of the Collo­ student's confidence by interrupting best thing that probably ever hap­ quium for Research on Women, her more often than male students, pened to her was finding out she was associate law Professor Ann Scales by completing her thoughts for her too short for that job. said tenure decisions arc made be­ and by asking her impossible ques­ She has not been a.o:;signed to a hind closed doors in a "peer review tions. Mound called these tactics specific flight or duty yet. so repor­ process,. whose deliberations are .. power maneuvers ... ters at Friday's press conference "confidentiaL" Mound said learning is an emo­ asked her about the future of space Female faculty members denied tiomtl experience and that lack of travel. One reporter wanted to ask promotion or tenure may 11ever respect . for a student is defeating. about a planned space station but know the actual reason for denial She said these attitudes make it diffi­ was reluctant to use the word because of this confidentiality, she cult to develop mentor relationships "manned." said. with professors. She also said the "That's okay," Cleave said. Scales said women and men are casual socializing over beers or a "l'm one of the boys.,. evaluated differently for similar game of racquetball between male The "manned" space station, qualities. At one college, a woman professors and students is an area which will cost about $1 billion by was denied tenure and was criticized closed to female students. the time it's in orbit in 1992, would because she "thrived on technical Mound said work is under way on be very useful in producing ultra­ matters," but a male colleague was a "sexual harassment'' section for pure metals and pharmaceuticals, praised for his ''mastery of technical the faculty handbook, and the com· Cleave said. matters,,. she said. pleted proposal will be presented to Women are denied promotions the Faculty Senate. The new hand­ The future of several other space because of typically "female" qual­ book will be published next year. projects. was discussed by Rep. ities that are incorporated into their A sex discrimination class will Manuel Lujan, who also attended teaching styles, Scales said. One also be offered next spring at the press conference. woman was termed "too reticent" UNM's law school which Scales, a Funding for a Mars orbiter set to to be an effective seminar leader 1 but former civil rights lawyer, will study the red planet in the late '80s her students said they appreciated teach. and for a low earth orbit environ­ her leadership style because they She said Gov. Toney Anaya Alexandria K~ng mental research satellite, scheduled found it to be a more nurturing learn­ pledged in his election campaign to Astronaut/engineer Dr. Mary Cleave for launch· in 1986, will be in the ing atmosphere. continued on page 1 1985 federal budget, Lujan said. l'<~~··· .'. "<t•w M~Xll'u !Jaily l.obo, Mar<b S, I <JX.j Page 3, New Mexico Duily Lobo, March 5, 19.84 Wire Report by United Press International 1724 Lomas NE (University & Lomas) Khomeini Rejects Peace Talks Agreement Criticized 6300 San Mateo NE Iran'' Ayatollah Ruhollah chemical weupons in desperation, Kuwait for talks with officials on (Far North Shopping Khorm:ini on Sunday rejected peace causing I ,000 Iranian casuulties. ways of ending the blood.shed.
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