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1983 The aiD ly Lobo 1981 - 1985
3-2-1983 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 087, No 109, 3/ 2/1983 University of New Mexico
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Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 087, No 109, 3/2/1983." 87, 109 (1983). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1983/34
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 1983 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ~~M-s· 3 7 l>~ '7 lSc;\ ~ ' ' ·~: .... .j:.. D ~ j ~- .,..: 't ..- VN 3QVJ )Ct$'3 N~WMEXICO MAR2 1983 'fi\Mc:J ;;L ____n_·.· _at_.ly Lobo Vol. 87 No. 109 Wednesday, March 2, 1983 Senate Approves BEF Student Voter SANTA FE (UPI) -The Senate going to be placed over .the interests approved a bill Tuesday that would of all New Mexico," Barnett said. . pennit one of two students on the He also said student body presi Boa!P of Educational Finance to be dents - the only students eligible come the l2tli voting member of that for appointmenrto the BEF ~ are panel. not always the top choice of stu The measure, a committee substi dents. Barnett cited an example tute for Senate Bill 92, was where a write-in candidate at East approved on a~ 1-8 vote after a hand-'" em New Mexico University over ful of senators voiced opposition to whelmingly defeated the "only it. qualified studenf' on the ballot. The bill goes to the House for further consideration. Sen. Tom Rutherford, D Bernalillo, supported the mftasure. ''(' m very impressed by the quali ty of the student leaders throughout the state," Rutherford said. "I would urge this body to give these students a chance to vote on this board." As written, the biU would allow one of the BEF's·two student mem New Regents bers, now unable to vote on issues before the panel, to cast l\ vote on all matters considered by the 13- To Take Oath member board. " The voting student member The University of New Mexico the student body president from one Regents will swear in two newly of nine separate institutions - appointed Board members in their .Joe Cavareua would be rotated on an annual basis meeting today, in addition to elect SEND OFF for the UNM men's swim team as they venture to Provo, Utah tor the WAC so that a!l schools would be equally ing officers an'tl making commitee championship meet included this strip-o•gr11m sent by the women'$ team. represented on the board. assignments. Sen. Billy McKibben, R-Lea, Dr. John .Paez, an Albuquerque said the student members of the BEF dentist, and Colleen · Maloof~ an would not have enough experience Albuquerque businesswoman, will to vote on crucial matters. be given the oath of office. Paez is a ... For years we've been trying to new appointee to the Board; Mrs. Film To Preserve New PrOgram get the BEF to be as responsible and Maloof was reappointed by Gov. conservative on capital outlay re Toney Anaya. ·. A documentary film about a unique program to pre versity's primary care curriculum (PCC). quests as we could," McKibben Other items on the agenda include pare doctors for practice in underserved areas is being PCC was initiated in late 1977 with a threc-yeatgrant said. "I don't think they (student approval of degree-seeking candi produced by the University of New Mexico School of from the KeJiogg Foundation. It later received a four memebrs) have the maturity or ex dates, of the design for an addition to Medicine, year grant. to continue program refinement. The com pertise on judgment calls to let them a career education building for the The film will be written and produced by Dr. Ben bined grants total more than $1.4 million. vote on some of these crucial Gallup branch campus, and of orga Daitz, associate professor in the department of family, The curriculum departs from traditional medical issues." nizational policy amendments to the community and emergency medicine at UNM. education in several. ways, including sending students Republican Sen. Mickey Barnett Graduate Students Association con Support for the work, expected to be completed this into the ''real world'' in their first year to work side by said if students were permitted to stitution. fall, comes from a $49,550 grant from the W.K. Kel side with experienced physicians in medically under vote on the BEF, their votes would The meeting is scheduled for 9 logg Foundation. . . seved areas. be based on a narrow view, a.m. in the Roberts Room ofScholes The one-hour film will present an alternative New Mexico has faced problems of physician dis- ''lthink the interests of students is Hall. approach to medical education represented by the Uni- continued on p•ge 3 Radio Station Reflects Past, Present University · The story of the growth of student That year was also a big year for radio at the University ofNew Mex footbalL The Lobos were at that ico is one that mirrors the growth of time a powerhouse ifl the Skyline the entire University. As the size of Conference, and ranked second the student body grew, so too did its nationally in tctal offense and interests, which were often reflected rushing. over the airwaves of student radio. The football team was the No. 1 Compiled from student pttblicmions topic ofdiscussion on campus in the and minutes ofthe Radio Boatd, this fall of 1958. The homecoming game three-part series explores the his· against Arizona was billed as the tory ofsiudertt radio at UNMfrom its biggest test for the team. They won beginnings to. the present. 33·13 before a crowd of more than 18,000- the largest ever to see a Part One: Football Fervor and UNM sporting event up to that time. the Radio Naturally, the students were elated •. They were so elated that By Dennis Pohlman some 300 of them decided to pay a visit to University President Tom Most listeners who tune in to Popejoy at his home on campus the radio station KUNM at 90. 1 on the t:ontinued on page 3 FM dial probably have no idea ofthe humble beginnings of the station and the unusual circumstances of its founding on April 29,. 1960. INSIDE: Kenneth Wilkinson began operat ing a •• wireless" transmitter in J92 J CORRESPONDENCE · for the University area, but the idea SCHOOL: was not. commercially successful, and Wilkinson ca11ed it quits two SH P•fll5 years later. SWAN LAKE COMING: The story of a true University S•P•ge6 . radio. station really begins in the fall EMPTY PIT: RADIO-DIN Joclt•y Cllrol Chtlftl•n ,.•w•r • Nt:Otdl,.. In fiHI •llf•n•v• KUNM rM:Otd of 1~58, a year and a half before the SHP•g•1 llbi•IY· The st•tlon IM• com• • ~1?1 .W.~Y. -'IJOI'. '- hun:tW. -~".f!-1".~! .1!'. ~-·. , • •.. broiclcast of the first program. Page 2, New Mexico Daily Lobo, March 2, 1983 Page 3, New Mexico Daily Lobo, March 2, 1983
·~------·~ Wt·re Report bv' United Press lr.Jternational Film------I 1-----.;...._------continued from page 7 interested in establishing similar curricula. It will also tribution and shortages of primary care physicians, be used at special conferences, exhibits ;~nd a national prompting interest in the development of an alternative meeting. Arrangements are being made to air it Wrangler ~ Yale Blo~~v~!::ma, Inc. I El Salvadoran Official Rejects medical curriculum that might encourage and better nationally over pUblic or commercial television. Levi's Albuquerque, NM 87106 prepare doctors to serve in needy ijfeas. Cords I I · Other important parts of the PCC are eight months of Daitz will produce the documentary with assistance 501'5 6 study in small groups, concentrating on problems faced from Ned Judge, a producer for NBC's 'Today S/nw. Shrink To Fit I voua ~£(p ~-~NEEoEo 1Guerrilla's Call for C~ase~fire most frequently by rural New Mexico physicians, and Albuquerque filmmaker Dale Sonnenberg will be Sedgefield advanced tutorials in which clinical skills developed videographer, and KNME Television, jointly owned by SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador U.S.-supp!ied jets, killed 40 to 50 mgs on the hamlets ofTenango and during the rural clerkships are refined. UNM and the Albuquerque Public Schools, will pro Bootcut I tQ pmvide the many lifesaving vaccines produced by I _Defense Minister Jose Guillermo civilians, most of them children, ina Guadalupe left _40 to .~o peasants The videotape will be used by UNM School of Medi vide equipment and technical assistance for post Fashion Jeans Fashion Jeans 1 blood plasma donors, such as: Albumin, Gammaglo· 1 Garcia Tuesday rejected guerrilla day-long bombing sweep of rebel- dead, mostly children.. . cine faculty and students and by other medical schools production editing. bulin, Antihemophilic Factors, Tetanus Toxoid and calls for a cease-fire during Pope held territory, . Th~ broadcast prom1sed mforma- 1 many others including Hepatitius "B" vaccine. I John Paul II's visit and vowed the The. radio. said the bombings were ~!on '" later broadcasts about I army would stop fighting only if the carried out Friday on the slopes of ~other monstrous m11ss~cre ~;om I rebels surrendered. rebel-controlled Guazapa Volcano, !mtted by t,he. (U.S .supphed) A-37 Radio------$16.99 I $5 •00 Bon· US I ''To bring peace to EI Salvador, I some 30 miles north of San Sal- Dragon~y mrplanes. that are sent continued from page 7 house have started a bonfire. I won line. Jazz, classical, folk, pop and ca.IJ on (the rebels) to prolong their vador. by the h1gh .command from the San Sunday after the big game. The stu der what will happen next.'' show business tunes made up the I I truce indefinitely _ this would be Salvad?r mrport of Ilopango, the dents demanded that Monday's clas The way KQEO reported the majority of the programming, with the means to bring peace, • • Garcia ''A great massacre was carried same: atrp?rt ~here Pope John Paul I I said in an interview with UPI. out on the civilian population," the 11 wJII arnve. . . ses be canceled so that aU might events angered many. UNM Vice some scattered wire service news re· On Your First Donation celebrate the win, when you bring this coupon & valid student or military 1.0. The leader of the rebels' political radio s;~id. "Our first reports indi- . The Salvadoran Defense Mm1stry President Dr. Sherman Smith ports. The operation included 35 lobo 1 1 Popejoy said "no" three times to charged that the incidents were announcers and 20 engineers, all un Limit 1 per donor. Offer expir~s 3-4-83 I arm, Guillermo Ungo, Monday cate that the indiscriminate bomb- had no comment on the charges. I the crowd milling outside his house, ''stimulated'' by the broadcasts, and paid. 0ffered the truce to coincide with the but the students refused to take denounced the radio reporting as "a The station manager, William men's I ~· papal visit. "no" for an answer. A bonfire was distinct disservice" to the Universi Retz, confidently predicted that Asked if the army agreed to a Tornado, Storms Maul built on his fror.t lawn. When fire ty community. KNMD would expand to cover all of shop !r • .I Page 4, NGW Mexico Daily Lobo, M~rch 2, 1983 Page 5, New Mexico Daily Lobo, March 4, 1983 Forum HARRY'S PLACE BLOOM ALL YOU CAN EAT ---Ed I•t Ofla. I ------&:.C:OUNTY Opinion PANCAKES Six Years Too Long ' ·~JY,·. Berke Educationist Candor & 1 CUP OF COFFEE Breathed.< " ' ' l For Inhaling Fumes More Like Gibberish $1.19 OPEN 8a.m.-8p.m. MON-FRI ®\Y..:1HeR6'5 ANOTH€R By Richard BE!rthpld Art department officials must take immediate action to repair the ON6 ...1Hf51!M6 roN'T 10a.m.-6p.m. WEEKENDS ventilation system in the screenprinting shop before students start rx; 1\ 10TA'- passing out in there. IGNORAMV6 • OkAY! Ct!N'T Dean David Colton of Education recently said; "It is not necessary, Students have been inhaling potentially noxious fumes in the shop I FRe5WR~ Me! or even desirable, to concentrate speqifically on training students to since the opening of the art building in 1977. A poor ventilation be tE!achers now." But I had thought the whole purpose of the vast system has failed to air the room correctly, allowing students to get /, Education esta~lishment was in fact to train teachers, to supply the high from solvents used to clean screens. school system with cadres who will pass the torch of basic learning to the younger generation. The Albuquerque Poison Information Center say the solvents ere· Perhaps Colton is attempting simply to put the best face on what ate fumes that contain hydrocarbons · potentially hazardous if in· has become the reality of American public education. It is painfully New Mexico Union· haled in large doses. clear that in the last decade the one thing the colleges of E!ducation Art department officials h . Daily Lobo GEGEEEEEGEE~ Vol. ·3ar4oo ~·------~~------~87 No. 109 This Weekend Friday March 4, Saturday March 5-8:15 PM Tho Nsw Mell/co Dslly lobo Is published Monday through Friday every regular week orthe Un_iv~rsity year, weekly during closed and flnalsweoks and weekly during the s_umme·r se~sion Adults: $20, $18, $14 by the Boord of Student Publications of the University of New Mexlto. Subscription rate Is s11i per acad!~lt year. Second class postage paid at Albuquerque, NeW. Mexico 87131. The o~1nron9_ expressed on the edit~rfal pages of the New Mex;co Dally Lobo· are: those of the Sunday March 6-2:15 PM author solely. Unsigned opinion Is that ofthe editor and reflects tho editorial policy of the paper Adults $16, $14, $10 .but does not necessarily represent the views of the rnembers of the Osily Lobo Staff. t letters St.lb~lslf_o·n 'POIIc~~ Le~e_rs t~ the !Jditor _must be ty·ped~ double-spaced ·and ;, 0 more UNM Students, Faculty, Staff, Children (High School and Under) than 100words. All malled·1n letter. must be signed by tho author and Include address and teleph?ne number. No namoswlllbewithheld. The DsilyLobodoes not guarantee publication 1f:t Price All Performances and Will edft letters for length and libeloUs content. Mastercharge & Visa Phone Orders Accepted Editor ...... , ...... , .. , l • Page 8, New Mexico Daily Lobo, March 2, 1983 appliances, $165, utilities free, 266-5528. 3/8 EARN UP TO $400/mo. part-time. Flexible hours. TAMAI,ES 89 CENTS each. Cnsa Del Sol, New IIALF BLOCK FROM campus. One bedroom, Call before I p.m.! ~92-7679, 317 Mexico Union. 3/2 t'urnished. 898.0921. 317 SUMMER CAMP COUNSELOR R~rultment Day SEEIUNG ANONYMOUS INTERVIEWS with PRIVATE FENCED YARD. One plus bedroom, will be held March 2, 10 a.m.·2 p,rn., in the we!! people who have been Involve(! in abusive Daily Lobo lobby of Johnson Oym. Come talk to camp relationships. Contact Laura at the Lobo, 227-5656. den, huge modern kitchen, utilities paid, $125, 266- SS28. 3/8 representntives. 3/2 3/7 TilE CITADEL-SUPERB location near UNM and RECEPTIONISTS, SECRETARIES AND other WANTED; CAMI'AGNOLO BICYCLE parts. 266- downtown. Bus service every 30 minutes, I bedroom office help needed now. 266-5528. Job Data. 3/8 6940, . . 312 Classified Or crricicncy, $240 to $320. All utilities paid. Deluxe APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN for positions at WANTED: GOOD IIICYCLE with double-butted kitchen with dlsl!Washer and dispospl, recreaUon the Girl Scout Summer Camp in t!le Jemez Moun frnme. 266-6940. 3/2 room, swimming pool, TV room and laundry, Adult tains. Need nurse, riding staff, counselors, handyman BEAN IIURRITO Sl. 'casa Del Sol, New Mexico couples, no pets. I 520 University~. 243-2494. tfn and kitchen aides, Call243-9581. 3/3 Union. 3/2 NORTHEAST OF CAMPUS. Two plus bedrooms, CRUISE SIIIP JOBS! $14-$28,000, Carribean, ADV.ERTISE IN Till': Daily Lobo. Come to 131 1 Vz baths, fireplace, den, bright modern kitchen, Hawaii, World. Call for guide, directory, newsletter. Marron Hall. tfn Advertising $19S. 266-5528, 3/8 ~/31 1·916-722-1111 eXt. UNEWMEX, t'OR RENT: EFFICIENCY apartment, 1410 Girard Pi\Rl'·TIME JOB afternoons an;SO missions now through March 21 for the 1983 Per 3/3 degrees, All food, equipment and transportation formance Series. For more info, call 277-5656. 3110 Deadline is 1:00 p.m. of the day 70 PLYMOUTH FURY, Small V-8, runs great, from Albuq. $360. Call Bob 888-7277, 3/9 UNI\f .RACQUETBi\1.1. CLl}BI Beginners and Reliable transportation. $500. Call842-5648, 3/8 SPRINGJIREAK RAFTING! HALF-day trips at women welcome! Call Conrad, 266-0151, evenings 64 JAGUAR MARK X. Must sacrifice. Immaculate Pilar, March 13, 15. $25 per person. Wildwater for mordnfo. 3/4 prior to the date of insertion. condition, Only 60,000 miles. Collector's item. Rafting Inc. 266-9721. 3/11 I>ANCE TO STRAIGHT Razor and Running Dogs 884-8753. J/8 moo. MAZATLAN. LAST CHANCE, Oo for it. Dave Saturday, M~rch 5, 8 p.m. Firefighter's Hall, Coal 1981 HONDA CD900t', Excellent condition, low 881·1668, 3/3 and Cectar, 312 mileage, many extras, Must see 10 appreciate, $2650, ADVERTISE YOUR TRIP, adventure or ride needs LESBIAN AND GAY history will be the topic at 242-9981. Jill in the Daily Lobo, tfn OLSU's Wednes Wednesday March 2 8:00pm This workshop will introduce the Join Child Development program. Emerald Moon· In celebrating There will be a discussion on how to Japanese Girls Day with over 200 Kimonos achieve competency in working with & o presentation by the young children. , Albuquerque Bonsai Club Thursday March 3 4-Sp.m. 420 Central S.E. For information on the workshop .or on the Child (505) 247-0564 Development program. call. the Child Care Co·op a f. 2"'"3365. ' J ... -i