new mexico daily lobo, volume 083, no 3, 8/28/1979 · 2020. 3. 2. · of the west to their horhe...

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University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository 1979 e Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 8-28-1979 New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 083, No 3, 8/ 28/1979 University of New Mexico Follow this and additional works at: hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979 is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the e Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1979 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation University of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 083, No 3, 8/28/1979." 83, 3 (1979). hps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979/76

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  • University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository

    1979 The Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980

    8-28-1979

    New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 083, No 3, 8/28/1979University of New Mexico

    Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979

    This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The Daily Lobo 1971 - 1980 at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1979 by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected].

    Recommended CitationUniversity of New Mexico. "New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 083, No 3, 8/28/1979." 83, 3 (1979).https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979/76

    https://digitalrepository.unm.edu?utm_source=digitalrepository.unm.edu%2Fdaily_lobo_1979%2F76&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPageshttps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979?utm_source=digitalrepository.unm.edu%2Fdaily_lobo_1979%2F76&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPageshttps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1971-1980?utm_source=digitalrepository.unm.edu%2Fdaily_lobo_1979%2F76&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPageshttps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979?utm_source=digitalrepository.unm.edu%2Fdaily_lobo_1979%2F76&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPageshttps://digitalrepository.unm.edu/daily_lobo_1979/76?utm_source=digitalrepository.unm.edu%2Fdaily_lobo_1979%2F76&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPagesmailto:[email protected]

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    ~1 ~,11~71 New • XI CO

    TWftl"f'!M_. ..... - *?

    UNM employees part of scheduled

    CETA phase-out workers within a year onto what is referted to as "hard'' money.

    UN M sheetmetal worker "Hard" money is a reference to l

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    Pag~ 2, New Mexico Daily Lobo, Angust28, 1979

    National Briefs Dancer will return home

    NEW YORK (UPJ) - Soviet ballerina Ludmila Vlasova spurned Amoric.an offers to rheet with her d.efe.ctor husband Monday and persuaded U.S. negotiators that she should be

    The West Coast and South-west, despite their major con-centrations of HispanJc Catholics, seem unlikely at this point to be included in the papal tour.

    Bison elude Mich. police

    flaslt!ig1Jts, St1.11't found the male buffalo and "started talking ,really nice l'!nd gave hhn some grain.

    Public wants masked man

    --allowed to go home to Russia. Vlasova, 36, met with

    Arherican negotiators and several Soviet representatives in a van outside the plane.

    Donald McHenry, the chief U.S. negotiator at K@nedy Airport throughout the diplomatic standoff, said Vlasova convinced him that she was not being intimidated when she said Ji'riday that she wanted to go back to the Soviet Union.

    Pope to tour U.S. in Oct.

    WASHINGTON (UP!) Pope John Paul I1 will take a trip deep in the heartland of America but the main focus of his visit will be on Eastern Seaboard cities with large concentrations of Horhan Catholics, sources said

    Sources in Washington say it appears John Paul will begin his U.S. visit Oct. l in Boston and end tt on Oct. 6 and 7 in a Washington visit to include a meeting with President Carter

    Killings· end jail uprising

    LAMBER'l'VILLE, Mich. (UPIJ - WUlard Sturt and his f

  • ['age4, New Mexico Daily Lobo, August28, 1979

    Editorials Share a ride

    Parking near UNM is outrageously difficult. The Silver Hills '1rea is now permit-only parking. On·campus parking is limited to an inadequate numher of metered spaces and zones open only to drivers with har· d-to-come-by permits. This leaves the free north parking lot and assorted erea side-streets for most commuter students to park on.

    New Mexico PJRG is organizing a progrem that could partially alleviate the UNM parkingjam-up, if it receives popular support.

    The program is car-pooling. Since .early this summer, PIRG has been matching names of com· muters from common areas. Richard Holden, PIRG treasurer, has set himself the personal goal of !3,000 riders py January, 1980. There are currently about 250 riders committed to the program.

    _"Basically, _we are waiting on the money," Holden says, The New Mexico Highway Department has approved $20,000 and the City of Albuquerque has approved $5,000 for PIRG to carry out the program.

    Letters Space case Ed ito r

    Speaking of absurd argumE>nts, how about this one from the Aug. 2 Lobo: "But was the space program worth it? Indeed, is humankind spiritually elevated, do we truly live life better, because at NASA's byproducis Tang and earthrise· over·the·moon posters? Unlikely."

    $673 billion in spinoff benefits from past space activities has been identified. This includes twenty new services; 150 new products; 100 new processes; and 35 product up.gradings. It does not include incalculables such as Earthwatch pollution monitering. Never in its history has the space program received more than 2 percent of the federal budget.

    In fact, the space program is that mre creature the government program whose benefits in real, countable U11ited States dollars far exceed its costs.

    So the next time someone offers to give you some money, stop. Don't just take it. Instead, ask

    Vol. 84 No.3 )Hf40()

    J he "o,j~w M c~lcu OaU~ lobo h publh.1ted ~·1tiOI..Ia)- thwugh f·t11.lay e\cry regular week tlf th~: l lm\'N'>IIV ~·c1u. v.cekl}' t1un11g dt1~cd ;1nd J'inJJ> l\CCJ..,, mnJ '~Cckf)' during the "1111\lllCf w,,,,pn b~ th~ Board o! S(utlcflll'uhlkation~ l1f tht.'' l!m"cnlt'f t!l New Mc~h:n, and i~ uot linant.:Jally .1 .. \nciollt:!d with t:NM. Se&;tnnl da~'-1-'H"ln~:(' paid m J\lbuqucrquc, New Mt;tl!lt.O R':'Ol. l.)uh~\·urtmn rate J'> $10.00 fur :the n'adcmk !tear.

    l'llc \lflllHnno;. !.'xprt'':~lnrk il(llbcr~:t Jctmcrtcl:

  • ,_ .----

    Page 6, New Mexico Daily Lobo, August28, 1979

    Scorpion flies termed transvestite By Debbie V 11isin

    Male scorpion flies are great mimics.

    A UNM assistant professor of biology has found that some m!l.le scorpion flies adopt female characteristics at mating time in order to steal prey from other male flies.

    Randy Thornhill. who has been studying the mating behavior of scorpion flies since 1971, is the first researcher to actually demonstrate this type of "pseudo- female" behavior in any insect.

    In the normal mating pattern of scorpion flies, the male catches an insect ~:~nd then releases a

    ~hemical scent to attract a this transvestite behavior which female. When she arrives, the clearly shows it to be adaptive, male offers his "gift" in exchange Thoruhill said, for her sex\lf!l favors. First, males who steal prey

    The female, however, initially red11ce the time between plays hard to get. She Jowers her copulations and can "make it" wings but holds her genitals out one and one-half times as often of reach. lf she finds the offering as \tsual, too small or unpalatable, she In addition, transvestite males refuses the male. But if she likes may live longer because they do the gift, she feeds on it through not have to search for prey, the mating. which makes them less

    "Male flies lower their wings vulnerable to spiders and other like the females do and predators. sometimes they can rip-off Pseudo-female behaviors other males of their prey," have been observed in other Thornhill said, "It works about insects. Thornhill said his study 25 percent of the time." suggests that these behaviors

    'fhere are two advantages to may be adaptive in other insects ;:::=:;;;::;;:;;::;:;:;;=:;:-:::-:::-~-::::; also .. SJ3QOO This month Thornhm received

    two grants totalling $125,000

    H~rn~rd from the National Science · 1.11 YU . Foundation. Over the next two U~riefn and one-half years he will

    U 1 . Y research the scorpion flies and 13+ Harvard S.E. · M-S 10-6 begin a new project concerning

    "The Evolution of Sexual Oif• ferences in Katydids and Crickets:•·-

    Problem column new feature

    .......... '· ...

    By Pat Wier

    It gets thick somelimes. ,Just when you are rr-ally feeling t lw wl'ight of that lH·hour load. Four out nf five profs wunt term papr. Hnrold. Ulli!ev c'r Mr,.,. Bonnie Gat~nn -~t 211~5644 or 5645 Afro-Atnc:r\cn_!) ,.,tt1d1.-.·.~:

    Pas;e 7, New Mexico Daily Lobo, August 28, 1979

    Reviews

    Little River Band quality rock'n'roll By John Capute

    The mood at the Little River Band conc.ert at the Civic Auditorium August 20 can be summed up from this bit of conversl'ltion I heard from two girls.

    "What's the other band called?" one girl .asked the other as roadies to1·e down opening act Jay Ferguson's equipment.

    It was obvious that the majority of the near capacity crowd were there not so much for the two billed gro'ups, but to hear rock'n'ro!L And they got it, for better and worse.

    The Jay .Ferguson Band started the evening with an hour of uninspired plodding rock. Ferguson, a veteran of JoJo Gunne and Spirit. proved himself a peformer of great. .enthusiasm

    and unlimited con_c()it and _ego,

    laying on the audience every imaginable rock cliche one could unfortunately dream of.

    The only inspired moment of Ferguson's set was during a medley which included the JoJo Gunne hit, "Run Run Run," and the Spirit classic, "I Got A Line

    ·On You." '!'he songs are so good that even Ferguson and his ham- fisted band could not ruin them.

    After a forty minute break, Australia's LitUe River Band Look the stage, Staggered on the main stage floor and an elevated floor with a screen with the group's logo ou the wall behind them, the seven-piece band chugged through an hour and a half of intelligent and tasteful rock'n'rolL

    'I'he \UsuaL focal_ p.oint d the .

    group was lead vocalist G.lenn Sharrock. Dressed comfortably in black corduroys, T-shirt and white windbreaker, the diminutive Sharrock was in full

    control of the audience and the stage. Sharrock had all tbe cool, control, and appeal that Jay Ferguson lacked.

    The Little River Band's distinguishing trademarks, harmonies and impeccable musicianship, were both in good form at the Civic. 1'he bar· momzmg of Sharrock and guitarists Graham Goble and

    Beeb B irtles are as good as any in rock'n'roll, as demonstrated in "Happy Anniversary" and 'I Lone"So!Ile Loser.''

    The group's playing was faultless, tight and consciously aware of dynamics and

    dramatics. Lead gitarist David Briggs is as good a technican as any guitalst in his field, and there were moments where his playing reminded me of Eric Clapton at his most lyricaL

    The group's set had no visible lows, only a continuous level of quality and unforced good vibes

    and energy.. The highvoints were "Happy Anniversary," (which got my feet tapping for the first time all evening) the Moody B!uesish ''I'll Be Home On A Monday," "A Long Way To Where I'm Going," which featured a searing guitar break by Briggs, and their current hit, ~ tLone$ame LOser~"

    Though their radio airplay emphasizes their more S\lbdued moments, the Little River Band proved themselves at the Civic to be a first rate rock'n'roll group. Quality is rarely &cknow !edged these days.

    I Clouds' mediocre • . HEWLETT ~PACkARD

    The Valle)' Obscured by ('ltJwis

    Frmch with En~lish Subtitlt>s llon Pancho's By Richard Hughes Appry, with no fond or water left. hut their desij.,'llCr clothE'S intact. So either pnradise is supposed to be death, or else lhey ran out of film while shooting. By that time, it really

    '!'he film centers .around ·an Australian businessman's wife who is shopping for feathers and other native knickknacks in New . Guinea. She accidentally drops a ceremonial dagger on a young ~""""'""""'""""'~~~~~~~~~ man's (oot,. and is quickly seduced by him.

    He is part of a small group of paradfse seekers. Slie joins his group, renouncing her selfish, possessive, materialistic ways for a shot at paradise (feather-fetchil1g becomes passe', n'estce pas?).

    Tf this sounds something like Emma.nllelle, lt is because it is . Jl's similarly boring, save for those rare moments when the cast starts to lose it, and they actually start parodying their characters.

    As they make their way to their Golden Fleece, the valley, they encounter many friendly natives, who, despit being from the deep jungle, have scores of police ove1'seeing them, and occasionally wore weddii'lg bands. To prove the natives' authenticity, they G:re filmed in

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    Page 8, New Mexico Daily Lobo, August 28, 1979

    Telluride festival aWash in jazz, rain By Daniel .Gibson

    The min had stopped and everyone was standing up, dancing to Willie Dixon's blues. Lines of empty beel' kegs stood before the Coors concession. Gone were 'rom Scott and band, Gato Barbieri and company, the TabQckin-Aldyoshi Big Band,

    Gil Scott-Hewn, Airto, David Flathead Newman, and 10-hours of m11sic and four hours of rain .. You'd think these people would be tired, slightly. But they wanted more.

    This was the scene at the just· completed Telluride J ~zz Festival this Satul'(;!ay around midnight.

    '!'he crowd had trickled in by

    Deletion of Name From 1979-80 Student Directory

    Any student wishing to have his/her name deleted from the Student Directory needs to stop by the Stu-dent Activities Center located on the First Floor of the New Mexico Union Building before FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1979 and .fill out the appropriate form.

    hundreds all through the wet day, witnessing an aborted other classics. Harpist HatTy her sassy and sensitive songs, all attempt to fly a hot air balloon, Duncan and g'QCst R.obynn Ford delivered in a girl-like. falsetto. and the successsfu) descent of a put thesmil(:!sback oneverytme's She squeaked "eek": her hang glider to the streets of the faces with thei; evident en· boys,"umphed" with their horns; former mining town. thusiasm. and the crowd yelled, ''more!"

    When WiUie closed with Next was sax player John But, it still wasn't over. A "Wang Dang Doodle," .the Klemmer who played a solo with show within the show followed, announcer h!ld to tell the crowd, his echo boJ>, sending weird, featuring nwre than a dozen of "We'll have to t!lke this party sometimes beautiful, sounds the Festiv

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    Page 10, Nc1vMexico Daily Lobo, August ZH. 1979

    Sports

    UNM gets tourney Basketball fans will view top action when UNM

    hosts the first Nike Cage Classic Dec. 15-16 at the Pit.

    Tony said there is a good chance the final game on Sunday will be picked up by national television.

    The announcement was made Monday by Alhletic Director Lavon McDonald after he met with Mike 'I'ony, organizer of the tournament.

    Times for the games have not yet been set, McDon!'lld said.

    The tournament, originally to .be played in Las Vegas, Nev., was awarded to Albuquerque when complications developed ln finding a facility big enough to seat the large number of spectators expected, McDonald said.

    He said Lobo basketball season ticket holders will be given first chance to buy tickets for the tourn'1, ':,:u:·- .\t~•''l tl\1,-1\ 111\ IlL! hl hi \ h,,, 1 ~~_tl!'"l till

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    TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE

    ACROSS 49 Cool drinks 1 Ban If's prov. 50 Bashful 5 Old 51 Handsome:

    10- bowl Brit.

    UNI'fEO FeJ.1t.~tH,' S\ n .. ih,""~1k· Monda~ ~s -P.u::~:le Se>~\-~.'~ct

    r;:·;;p"S -i_ '!~1~--~ .. 14 Hutch 53 Diva's solo 15 Harness 55 Stn

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    plant 54 Flower 55 Slclly sight 57 OpMing 5Sl!very 59 Liturgy GO Cable car 63 Censure

  • Page 12, New Mexico Daily Lobo, August 28, 1979 \ '

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    University of New MexicoUNM Digital Repository8-28-1979

    New Mexico Daily Lobo, Volume 083, No 3, 8/28/1979University of New MexicoRecommended Citation

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