New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 079, No 114, 3/22/1976." 79, 114 (1976)

New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 079, No 114, 3/22/1976." 79, 114 (1976)

University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1976 The aiD ly Lobo 1971 - 1980 3-22-1976 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 079, No 114, 3/ 22/1976 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 079, No 114, 3/22/1976." 79, 114 (1976). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1976/42 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]. .· ., U2o : 3th( ?cr· 1 .. · . Y~~ 3~ctivists in City, ' . I I t ft Paint the·'·,.J Town:\ 0 .: ' t. '. Right on Walls IJ!IIf,j' I ·· .. '~ ~.,. ,( .-~; .. ·. .• · ByLyndaSparber ~.,· ' number ·between ten and fifteen. 'i On dark nights when children One .9f, t ..h~ 'Yilll ·painters, herein ,, are sleeping and t.he latewmd~ie is caUe~.'~?,Q~ said, however, the ., ' giving way to Earl Nightel\~ale, group. welcomes the. work of what is probably the last baqd of otherwall,.cht9ota~&;; · .. activists in the city hitS \ the 'W\~Q iii (a ~eason why the street with cans of spray paint to slogans such as "U.S. out of spark the .citizenry's political Angola," and "Gayr~{ves"! appear awareness. ~ 'nhT•r"t;t\flft... ,.~ ~~'k' ~ .\ ,, ·~!·~, ., r. SC'.·•. ·.facilitieS Their targets are the wall~ of ~ . otig11but'' the c1ty"' "We're Public Service Company's (PS.C) 14careful about choosing walls," Q sub-stations and blank billboa.r­ : said. "We don't put anything up ds, among others, and their ' on. private persons'· or small messages run the gamut ... from businesses' walls." U.S. military policy to sexual The paintings usually appear liberation. 9n walls belonging to monopoly One billboard, on 2nd Street corporations, but are not limited. , and Lead, gives the audience a to these. When Okie's started was also labeled .. sexist" by the tries to make its sub-stations the painters, but none have een choice of causes. The sign states asking for a cover charge, their group. "It was· using a woman to · "esthetically pleasing to the caught yet. The ominous "Op­ simply: U.S. out of... ad stipulated "foxy ladies'' would sell alcohol," Q said. area," and that the ''graffiti is not pressed" on the sub-station wall -a. Angola ~~,;~··- ;r get in free. The ad stirred the Frank Van Gundy, public af­ part ofthe architecture!' on Silver and Cornell was only -b. Chile wall painters to spray paint fairs employee lor PSC, said the The graffiti artists have had a part of a slogan which was halted -c. Canal Zone ·"SEXIST" in large letters on the graffiti is 61obviously undesirable. few close calls when police tur· when a patrol car stopped a block ..... d. New Mexico back wall ofthe bar. defaci~g It's the property any ned down the street or aJley by !Continued on r111 ge 61 -e. All of the above. A billboard depicting a woman way you look at it. Naturally we The group does not represent dem\)rely purring, "If you've got don't like it," ·.a mass movement, those involved the salt, we've got the Sauza,'' Van Gundy stressed. that PSC Arts and Sciences Ne\N Mexico Adds 25 Full-Time DAILY Positions Next Year J; l' ... By Jo l .. opez 1r ""• ' Monday, March 22, 1976 The College of Arts and Sciences was allocated 25-and-a-half new full-time equivalent (FTE) staff membc.rs as the result of the efforts of UNM's legislative team in Santa Fe, said Arts and Sciences Associate Dean Robert Jesperson. Jesperson said 51 positions were allocated the entire University, ·Wait for Lower Drinking Age the other 25 and a half will be divided up among the other coJJeges. He - said Arts and Sciences is in .. worse" need of additional faculty since the college "gets the bulk of students wanting a liberal arts education. The other colleges tend to be professional colleges, the students Regents Stall· Campus· .Bar Idea taking those classes with a goal in mind/' Jesperson said. After compiling a list of the 20 largest classes offered by Arts and · By Marit S. Tully Sciences, cJesperson found that the classes ranged from an enrollment UNM's Regents voted Friday to wait until the of 814 (a section of General Psychology II) to 219 (a beginning an­ drinking age in New Mexico is lowered before con­ thropology and a General Physics cJass). sidering support of a UNM rathskeller. [!espite the increase in staff, ASUNM President Alan Wilson had asked the Jesperson said the college could ' Regents to support ASUNM's efforts to gain ap­ use four times as many as its new proval from the Albuquerque City Council of ser- allocation. He said UNM is con­ ving liquor on campus. , $iderably behind other colleges Wilson said Regent support would make it in its liberal arts faculty and its easier to get city council approval and would only proportion to the number "'·or be one step in the overall pl;mning of a rathskeller. students enrolled in liberal arts Any proposed liquor serving facility within 300 courses. feet of a school must have city. council approval "If the legislators want classes before obtaining a liquor license from the state, small enough for personal con· Wilson said. tact with students, they must Although Wilson said it would be wise to an­ reaJize that the faculty is ticipate the lowering of the drinking age, UNM needed." He said the new staff President William-Davis worried that the Univer~ may cut class of 500 to 250, but sity would be "flying in the face of legislat!ve _in· when a class enrollment gets into tent" by pursuing a rathskeller before the drankang the 80s and 90s, it is sUII unlikely age was lowered. I • that students can be "known as Davis said UNM .. needs a climate of public sup­ Regent Albert Simms human beings.'; port" because 35 to 40 per cent of its students a.re club to point at something concrete to show how He said there are some depart­ below 21 years of age. · . money was spent, which would encourage more ments with as many as 10 courses .iJiiL .. < ', Wilson said, ''We need to take the postbon as a ' · Lobophoto donations. which have enroJimentsof more Robert Jesperson leader rather lban as a reactor to the legislature. -Plans to remodel the anthropology lecture hall than 80. • The Regents and the administration could indic~te into one 190·seat and two 75-seat classrooms. The purpose of the legislative team, helided by UNM President I i they have faith in the students." -A tuition increase for the School of Medicine William Davis and University Relations Director Bill Weeks, was to i A motion by Regent Albert Sirnms proposing "a fr~m $630 to $720 per year for in-state students get the staff needed to reduce the size of these large classes, Jesper­ I policy that al~oholic beverages not be sold or ser­ and from $1500 to $1860 for out-of-state. son said. He said there is a possibility Arts and Sciences may get a ved on the University campus" died lor lack of a -A master's degree program in .nursing to be few more than the 51 FTEs alr.eady allocated, if the college's 1976-77 \ i second. lunded initially by the Kellogg Foundati~n and budget can cover them, he said. i Simrns said he thought UNM could get along other outside grants. The prolilem now is deciding which departments need the new staff i ' just fine without liquor on campus but if approved --A contract with the University of Houston to more. Jesperson has already made recommendations for some of ·, in the future, facilities should be the same for both provide four New Mexicans with places in its op- these, the rest will be recommended by Arts and Sciences Dean i ~ faculty and students. · · tometry program. Nathanial Wollman. Approval of these staff appointments will be 'I • '·\ ~ Also approved during the meeting were: -Re-election of Calvin Horn as Regent made by Vice-President of Academic Affairs Chester Travelstead. -.., • · -A $175,000. loan to the UNM Lobo Club frorn president, Austin Rt~oerts as vice-president, an~ The recommendations for faculty. assignment. is based on four ~ University · trust funds for improvements 'to Henry Jaramillo, Jr. as secretary-treasurer. criteria, Jesperson said. The most important of these is the student • UNM's football field, adjoining grass areas, "track --Reappointment of Professor Albert R. Lopes credit hour and faculty FTE ratio, he sa{d. This is the number of ' · · and runways, to be paid back in six equal. annual as director of the Portuguese Language Institute credit hours students take in a department divided by. the number of ; payments inel~ding interest. Regent Calvtn. Horn . uritil July 30,1976. · I full-time faculty in that department. ~·.. /. ·-- .·"'~··· · jJ'Ir .said .the i~provements would enable the booster -Faculty contracts and leaves • -:./ (Continued on pa~re &) k - ·- t • " '"0 I" oq CD Favored Lawyer Loses ~ z SAN FRANCISCO-The bank at times didn't seem that well years," Bailey said several weeks CD robbery trial of Patricia Hearst organized. but he came across ago commenting· on Browning's Texas Instruments ~ pitted a theatrical million-dollar well." recent lack of trial practice. ~ Hearst's defense team respec­ CD lawyer against a low-key, A lanky, easygoing, X relative novice in his first major mustachioed man who wears ted the work of Browning's Now froniTexas Instruments ..

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