University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1981 The aiD ly Lobo 1981 - 1985 2-12-1981 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 085, No 95, 2/ 12/1981 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1981 Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 085, No 95, 2/12/1981." 85, 95 (1981). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1981/20 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 1981 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 0 VOL. 85 NO. 95 Thursday, February 12, 1981 BEF Cost Estimates Low SANTA FE ·- Students of New tuition bill was temporarily tabled. The fees are mandatory, he said, Mexico colleges and universities Rutherford's bill would stop any "The BBF will not recognize fees pay a m ucb higher percentage of tuition increase if the state severen· until it suits them," Ortiz said. the cost of their education than ce tax fund was higher than the Pierotti said although BEF state Board of Educational Finance budget for state universities; figures show UNM tuition is lower calclllations show, ASUNM ' than the tuition at some other President Mario Ortiz said Wed- Ortiz said BEF figures show the schools, the board may be in~ nesday. cost of educatiou is an average of eluding fees in the other school's $3,000 per student per year. amount. Ortiz .said although the BEF Since students return about Orti~ said the BEF may also be states that students pay only 9 per- $1,000 each year; students are including federal funding with state cent .of the tab, students actually paying at least 33 percent of .the funding. pay up to 50' percent of the cost of cost, he said. higher education. "NatibnWide, tuition is going up Kapke said the BEF an average of 5 percent. It doesn't Ortiz, ASUNM Vice President "manipulates statistics." make any sense," Ortiz said. _ _J)eJ,er J:>krotti and Kds_ Kapke met ____ Ortiz _said the BEF dges not in- Ortiz and other ASUNM mem­ with Sen. Tom Rutherford elude almost half of ttie -tuition bers- will teslify--Friday- wherr-- · following the senate Education costs students pay because $160 of Rutherford's bill will be beard by Committee hearing in which his the total are considered fees, the senate Education Committee. Tuition Bill Tabled Until Friday Helen Gaussoin member of the BEF was present to supportive'' of the bill and justify the tuition increa:;e. "seemed disappointed" there was SANTA FE -- A bill to limit The bill would stop any tuition no one from the BEF to testify. tuition increases was temporarily increase if the state budget for Rutherford said the bill will help tabled by the senate Education universities was lower than the state the BEF "get back on track and Committee Wednesday pending severence fund. avoid the tendency to ask for testimony by the state Board of Sen. Tom Rutherford, who spon­ tuition increases. n Educational Fjnancc. sored the bill, said he was not Sen. Christine Donisthorpe said The committee decided to table worried by its tabling. without a tuition increase, going to Senate Bill 93 afte( discovering no He said, ''The committee seems scho9l would be ''too- easy" and the students 14 wouldn't appreciate" the Opportunity. ASUNM \lice President Peter Econoiny Not So Bad, :Pierotti . said, "Education is one ,. ASUNM.PttiSident Milrio Ortiz iesf!lr!ilgtiinst ths door of Sen .. Tom very important aspect of our state. This bill will make a significant im­ Ruthtltftfld'$ office wNie Kds Kap/ce looks on. Thil /NIItwfll'tJin Santa Says Fonner Advisor pact on all students and all Fe Wednesday lobbying sgsinst e ttlition int;resse.(Photo by Helen citizens.' • Gaussoin) Marc L. Mervis expansion in our labor force, par· The interin1 pr.esident of ticularly by youth and women. Highlands University said his The key to reducing double-digit "The ability of our economy to school especially would be affected by the increase. inflation is ·re_straint in the growth provide 8.5 to 9 million newjobs in of credit, money supply. govern­ the latter part of the 1970s was a "We serve counties with high UNM Prof. McClelland ment spending, energy use and substantial accomplishlllent,'' he unemployment and ·tow per 1;apita wages; former Carter economic ad­ said. Income. Any .increase affects our" "The lesson of history is the level ability to serve," he said. viser Alfred E. l(ahn said Wed­ Sen. Francisco Gonzales said the Given Gennan Grant nesday. of social contentment or discon­ tentment does not depend upon the bill would help "the people we're "lrtflation Is really a phenomena serving, them iddLe class Charles McClelland, a UNM Humboldt Fellowship, which was of a .society that is .incapable of absolute level of material welfare. history professor, has been awar­ founded through a bequest from Jt depends upon the level of American/' disciplining a myriad of demands The bill will come before the ded a fellowship by the government the will of a noted German scientist that we place upon it,'' he told an people's welfare as compared with of West Germany. at his death in 1860. McClelland their expectations,'' Kahn said. Education Committee again on audience of nearly 500 university Friday. The award is the Alexander Vbrl was awarded the fellowship for and business leaders. "We are the victims of the suc­ 1982. He will researeh the rise of "We are not by any objective cesses of capitalism. We have modern professional organizations measure wallowing in misery in this becom~ accustomed over the last and their influence on Gern1an country. Personal income per pet­ 150 years to constantly increasing St. Valentine's Celebrated higher education from 1850 to sort in real terms, correcting for irt­ levels of material welfare 1'' he said. 1933. flationj was in 1979 at the highest Kahn, however, said an increase By Chicago Families' Bath He said the program invites point in our history." in the Grbss National Product scholars from around Ute world to the rate of growth in teal per during the previous decade is an DaveMirade shop to order' a wreath then shot. do research in Oennany, It pays Mpita disposable income was 31.5 illusion. travel and living expenses and also percent during the 60s and 24.9 per· fn the previous two decades, he him dead. 1920s' Chicago; a fierce gang ftymie Weiss, who took over the provides lifelong benefits. including cent in the 70s. said, a 25 percent decrease in defen­ the option to travel to prdfessional "This economic progress of the se budget expenditures in real tet· war infested in a battle-ridden city, gang, swore veugance. With climaxed at the end of the decade George "JluggsH Moran alld Vin· conferences in Europe atthe Hum­ latter part of the 1970s was made ms, adjusted for inflation 1 also boldt foundation's expense. possible ptimarily by an enormous helped to sustain the level of per~ with the St. Valentine's Day cent «Schemer'' Drucci, Weiss at· sonal per capita disposable income. Massacre. tempted many unsuccesful hits brt ·Kahn said inf1atiort has had har~ lhe Chicago of the l92o•s was a . Capone. ASUNMNeeds mful effects on private incentives to battlefield for the "families.'' On Oct. H, 1926, Weiss, with save and invest. Dion O'Ban ion, a quick· two of his bodyguards, started to "There are these verY serious tempered killer; controlled the nor­ walk towards his headquarters at Special Election long•term deteriorating effects on th side of Chicago. O'Banion had O'Banion's flbwer shop when productivity and continued irt­ an interest in a flower shoP. and machine guns opened up from win­ The resigatioo of three ASUNM flation... It· breeds a sense of cornered the market supplying. dows, killing Wiess and one or the senators in the ]ast month will frustration and rage to feel they wreaths for gangsters' lavish bodyguards. mean a special election, ASUNM haveto run as fast as they can, funerals and no doubt supplied cor· After the death or Weiss, a peace Vice President Peter Pierotti said merely in order to stand still," pses, too, on many occasions. conference was called. Rival gangs · Wednesday. Kahn said. , . The rest of the city was split up met and tt reappbrtioning of Having to call a special election He said the loss of American itt .. tnto separate territoties 1 and tettit<>ies was worked out. :But the "is unfortunate," Pierotti said, dustrial supremacy has ljeen grossly Cicero·; a suburb, was the center or O'Jlanions weren't eontent with because elections ate expensive, eXaMetatcd. 11The problems are opetatious for <~Scarface" AI keeping the peace. They kidnaped Pierotti said the election wiU be very heavily concentrated in Capone artd ''Tettible'' Jbhnny the owrter of Capone's favorite held "as sootl as possible ... automobiles and in steel. They are Tordo. restaurant. ftis body was later Sen. Steve Jacbbson, who the result of bad managetnenh bad Itt May of 19241 O':Banion of­ found outied in quicklime (a resigned a month ago, and Sen. mistakes, and inordinate wage set­ fered to self his brewery to Torrio powdery, acid+ like substance). Henry Miller, who resigned two tlements over the last decade, far and reti.r¢. They agreed to Capone was tiding higher than weeks ago, tesigrted for personal larger wage increases in O'Banion 's tern1s; hut not only did ever. Joseph Aiello, who had allied reasons, Pierotti said, automobiles and steel than the he double•cross them .bY tipping off with the O'Jlanionsj put out a cori· Art Meintzer, the mdst recent Teamsters lt1 the same way than the the police, but he'bragged about it.
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