New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 19, 9/16/1976." 80, 19 (1976)

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New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 19, 9/16/1976. University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1976 The aiD ly Lobo 1971 - 1980 9-16-1976 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 19, 9/ 16/1976 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976 Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 080, No 19, 9/16/1976." 80, 19 (1976). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976/92 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The aiD ly Lobo 1971 - 1980 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1976 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. GMwio 3'7llf1 . && trw /gNew Mexico = DAILY Thursday, September 16, 1976 In Food Service Dor_m Reps Ask Changes By Martha Booth burgers and chicken-fried steak be made available to The first meeting of this year's Food Service Com­ the committee and that periodicals listing food with mittee adjourned after a two-hour exchange between prices be brought to the next meeting for committee La Posada management and student-dormitory consideration; and representatives with a decision to meet weekly until -Some other food items be sacrificed in· order to some of the problems aired at last Thursday's meeting offer more fresh fruit. are straightened out. Another student said, "i don't know anybody who Food Service Manager Jack Lockett said La Posada gets up for Saturday · breakfast," and he suggested Lester Maddox ~anagem~n~ has already taken the following steps to that the dining hall serve Saturday brunch instead. tmprove dmmg-hall service: Bob Schulte, director of Housing -Dishes are warmed before and Food Services, said this meals to help keep food hot; couldn't be done, because it would Unacceptable To -The Physical Plant Dept. was be a "breach of contract" to serve asked to insnect all kitcher equip­ 19 meals instead of 20. ment,. such as grills and steamers ' Several students spoke up to to msure that it is functioning agree with a suggestion that a sack­ NM Third Party properly; lunch option be offered on Satur­ -Meetings were held with La days. It has been a major com­ Editor's note: This is the second of instead of Maddox. Posada staff to stress the im­ plaint, said one, that if a student a series on non-major party can­ Phillips said further that this pbrtance of food quality and ser­ gets an opportunity for a Saturday didates. move was initially accepted, then vice; and, picnic, he must go outside the By Robert R. Lee rejected by the state attorney -A dining-hall suggestion box is dining hall to buy something. The American Independent Party general. Phillips said the attorney being checked regularly. Most of the representatives com­ (AlP) is one of five minor parties general's last opinion stipulated the Of the 10 students attending the plimented the salad bar that was set that will have a presidential can­ state party must either put the name meeting, only one-Bruce A. · up this year, saying, "It was a good didate on the ballot in New Mexico. of the national nominee on the Cutler of idea." The national AlP's candidate is ballot or no name at all. Laguna/De Vargas-presented a Lockett also outlined "special former Georgia Gov. Lester ''The idea for our party was to prepared list of complaints and menus" that are planned for the Maddox, which apparently is not to give people a choice," Phillips said. suggested remedies. next few weeks: the liking of most New Mexico "You can't do that with machine Cutler suggested that: Sept. 22-Spanish dinner, featuring chiles party members. politics. We wanted to give people a -At breakfast students be allowed a choice of rellenos and, if possible, live guitar music. Mercedes Phillips, state AlP choice, even if it was just in one· either two glasses of milk and one of orange juice, or Oct. 27-T-bone steak (12 oz.) night. chairwoman, said yesterday, "We state." vice versa. This would give an alternative to people And in late October, submarine sandwiches the just could not endorse him Phillips said further that the who arc not milk drinkers, he said, and it might even students will make for, themselves, buf(et style. (Maddox) as a spokesman." party will now have a write-in ballot save money as the unit cost of a glass of orange juice is Schulte said the management would discuss the Phillips said Maddox is unac­ for the presidential race. Phillips 10 cents compilr.~4-lo~7.Q cents for milk; students' suggestions, and the cost of 1mplementing ceptable as a candidate because he also said, "In the last few years -Information on=tne'· composition of the ham- them, and would bring the results t'l the next meeting. is a segregationist. we've found many (voting) Maddox was nominated Aug. 27 machines without paper (for write­ at a national AlP convention in in votes)." Chicago. After the nomination, the Phillips said she has talked with UNM State Fai-r Exhibits state AlP disassociated itself from both Reagan and Brown, and that the national party, and endorsed they said they appreciated the Ronald Reagan and Calif. Gov. efforts on their behalf, but that Jerry Brown as its presidential and the}\ could not consider themselves Focus on ·Mars and Stars vice-presidential candidates. candidates because they had en­ doded President Ford. By Lynda Sparber using inking needles suspendea The results will be mailed to the Phillips said during the petition .--Phillips said the aim of the state The image of UNM is not exactly from pendulums. The motorized "patients" after processing. drive for Malcolm Dillon, the AlP is to lose the national party's rosy throughout the state-visions machine produces spirograph-like party's U.S. Senate candidate, she right-wing image, and move the of the Love Lust po.em and the· designs. The UNM exhibit is in the talked to many people who party into mainstream politics. student riots still float about. The Science and Industry building on The art forms of different preferred Reagan and Brown to Phillips' husband, Richard, was UNM exhibit in the Scienc·e and the Fairgrounds Gust northeast of cultures of the world are displayed Maddox. Phillips said the party a candidate for state House District Industry Building at the New the Spanish Village.) This is UNM's in a showcase of ceremonial masks. then sought to place Reagan and 20, until yesterday. Mexico State Fair is in part in- 14th year at the State Fair. The masks, ranging from abstract Brown on the ballot in the state !Continued on page 51 . tended to dispel these impressions. human faces to demons to animal The exhibit this year has likenesses, were provided by the departed, though, from the past Maxwell Museum. tendency towards University public . ... >.,. ·~: relations and focused more on On more technical lines, the specific achievements at the exhibit includes some spectator University. participation projects. An elec­ Astronomy takes the majority of tronic circuitry problem and block­ space at the fair exhibit, with two balancing. ~uzzle are . open to ~i"!lll!i§i::::c photographic displays featured. anyone w1shmg to try thetr hand or i The largest pictorials display patience. A computer information .;.; centers on the Viking I mission to system will have a hotline for . Mars. Color pictures sent back to viewers to obtain their own print Earth by the vessel reveal the Mars outs. terrain. The flight route and artist's conceptions in poster-size pri"nts The computer terminal, hooked up to a main unit on campus, will ~re also featured. give fair-goers print-out maps of The photos were provided by the the state and statistics on the Jet Proptilsion Laboratory in population, property tax valuation, Pasadena, Calif. UNM Geology and resource production of their professor Dr. Klaus Keil worked home counties. with the lab as a member of the Viking's X-ray fluorescence team. The display will also feature a Dr. John Ulrich of the medical computer-programmed message school worked on method~ to about the universitY. on a television sterilize the spaceship. screen. A second photo display was loaned to the exhibit by Dr. Next to the computer display is a Michael Zeilik, a pmfessor of . photographic scenario of the Meter Maid Makes astronomy. The photos featurp dilapidated dental hygiene complex The car pictured above was illegally parked yester­ brilliantly-colored space views: on campus. The pictures of falling The "B" zone in which the car was parked wa~ the walls and an old toilet are placed day for more than one hour, from shortly after 2 p.m. area Marez was assigned to Wednesday, a parking ser­ galaxies, planets, . and science to 3:15 p.m. It was driven by Sally Marez, a UNM fiction-like terrains, next to the artist's rendition of the vices official said. The meter at which the Fiat was proposed new building. meter maid, and Was parked directly north of the parked was expired for more than an hour. Journalism Building on Redondo Drive partially in a For the mechanized arts fanatics, When asked why she parked there, Marez said, "I a "drawing machine" built and Sharing this display is a section yellow zone and partially in a zone not designated by a meter (a "B" zone). had business." She said she had not ticketed the Fiat designed by UNM graduate Mark from the Clinical Nutrition because she was not working on meters that day.
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