DAILY LOBO new mexico
Caught reading see page 2
thursday The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
March 4, 2010
Gabbi Campos / Daily Lobo Junfu Han / Daily Lobo Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo Roman Martinez rides on the shoulders of teammates after the Lobos rolled to a 73-66 Martinez, flowers in hand, points to the wild, sold- Roman Martinez and Lobo head coach Steve Alford embrace on Wednesday at The Pit. victory over TCU on Senior Night. Martinez had 19 points. out Pit crowd at the conclusion of Wednesday’s game. “I guess I excan win 12 in a and nailed a basket with no time left. Mario Trujillo pect to win all row, lose a game The Lobos, however, struggled Daily Lobo of them easy, then start a 14- throughout the second half. TCU forgame winning ward Zvonko Buljan came out of the As the clock struck zero, the UNM just because this streak — those half and hit a 3 to give the Horned men’s basketball team lined up two team has done things don’t hap- Frogs a one-point lead. Both teams ladders, one under each basket, and some remarkable things,” said pen with the par- battled for the lead over the next sevcut down the nets at The Pit forever,” Martinez said. en minutes, but a fast-break layup To get there, head coach Steve Alford, donning a This caps the second consecu- ity on the men’s side anymore. freshly cut net around his neck. “But Fresh off an exhilarating road win by Hobson marked the final lead the Lobos (28tive conference championship for the UNM 73 3 overall, 14-2 we haven’t had a lot of easy contests Lobos and their first outright confer- over then-No.13 BYU, the Lobos were change of the night, 46-44, with 12:50 66 MWC) had to fend over the last three or four weeks. They ence championship since 1994. Last riding a 13-game win streak entering remaining. TCU “When that first shot went in, all off TCU. But, in have all been games that could have year the Lobos shared the title with Wednesday’s contest with TCU. TCU (13-17, 5-10 MWC) was sup- the nerves just went away,” Martinez the end, the Lobos triumphed, 73-66, went either way, but our team just Utah and BYU. earning the right to call themselves finds a way to win.” “It has been an incredible journey posed to be easy. UNM had already said. “I think we were stagnant and On Senior Night, Roman Marti- that these young men have taken all beaten them by 16 away from home. they were more aggressive in the first the lone Mountain West Conference But only leading by one going into half. And in the second half we turned champions. A crowd of 14,568 fans nez, the lone senior, scored 19 points, of us on,” Alford said. “Coaches are pushing the Lobos over the Horned fortunate enough to be part of that halftime, it wouldn’t be easy. that around. Couch got on us about showed up to witness this ceremony. The Lobos snuck out of the first our aggressiveness, and we went on Little did they know they would Frogs. journey. It is not going to sink in for a “This point, cutting down your nets while. It has been very special when half with a two-point lead after Dar- from there.” get a battle. But when the battle was over, UNM won its 28th game of the in your home gym — it is an amaz- you look at school records in an era ington Hobson lined up from the top see Roman page 3 ing experience that I will remember where there is so much parity. And you of the key, dribbled behind his back season, tying a school record.
Ro-mania
Dems: Tax hikes a necessary evil by Leah Valencia Daily Lobo
State legislators passed $240 million worth of tax increases Wednesday after a heated debate on the House floor. The measure, an essential component in completing the state budget, passed the House by a vote of 38-28, after being debated for nearly three hours. The bill will now go to the Governor’s desk for executive approval. Speaker Ben Lujan (D-Santa Fe) said similar bills have been introduced in the past and he saw it as a necessary piece of legislation. “It is not with great joy that we come into a session to increase revenues and place a burden on our citizens,” he said. “Let’s put this bill behind us.” The omnibus tax bill rolled three separate Senate bills into one. It included a measure to allow municipalities to impose a 2 percent tax on all food items. This is to compensate for the annual payments cities have been receiving to make up for revenue losses after the food tax was eliminated in 1995. The state will now eliminate that subsidy. The bill increases the state gross receipt tax by an eighth of a cent. It will also make changes to tax policies by allowing state and local deductions from federal taxes to be included as taxable New
Inside the
Daily Lobo volume 114
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Mexico income and lowering the state low-income tax rebate requirement to include more people. The bill also creates a gross receipt tax for businesses that make outof-state purchases, a practice that is not taxed under existing laws. Many Republicans opposed the bill moving to the floor before being vetted in committee, which is the usual practice. Rep. Keith Gardner said ignoring the tradition was damaging to the sanctity of the committee process. “If we circumvent that process and bring it to the House floor, members may be uniformed on the content of the legislation,” he said. “Potentially, bad policy could pass unbeknownst to many members and could have adverse effects.” Though there was a motion by Rep. Gardner to refer the bill to the Tax and Revenue Committee, the motion died at a vote of 39-24. Subsequent motions to separate the food tax from the bill and to strike it completely also failed. Democrats empathized with Republicans, Rep. Al Park (D-Bernallilo) said. Though he did not want to enact tax increases, they were necessary to balance the budget. “Yes, ladies and gentleman, ‘revenue enhancements’ is a euphemism for tax increases,” he said. “Some of these things I like; some of these things I hate, but we
have to spread the pain.” Park said though he generally did not support tax increases, the state’s fiscal circumstances called for it. “These are not decisions I relish, but they are decisions I am willing to make,” he said. During the debate, Senate leadership said that the omnibus bill was necessary to balance the budget. Sen. John Arthur Smith (DDeming) said if the bill failed to pass the House without amendment, it would violate the agreement between House and Senate leadership. “Then it would be back to the drawing board,” he said, putting pressure on members of the House. The bill was opposed by every Republican member and six Democratic members. The passage of the bill allowed the Senate to take up the state budget, which the House approved late Tuesday night. If the budget bill passes without amendment, it will be sent to the Governor’s office and the session will come to a close. If the Senate makes changes to the budget, it will have to return to the House for concurrence. By law, the Legislature is required to submit a balanced budget to the governor. The session has already run one day over what was anticipated, and the session costs taxpayers roughly $50,000 a day.
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Dirty words
Daniel Hulsbos / Daily Lobo Student Daniel Richmond pours red Jemez dirt on metal stencils at Smith Plaza on Wednesday, leaving the names of all species on the 2008 endangered species list. Richmond, a grad student, said he hadn’t realized so many species were threatened and wanted to increase awareness.
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PageTwo caught reading Thursday, March 4, 2010
New Mexico Daily Lobo
John Goldberger reads, “Ro Martinez gets ready to take his last run into Pit” in Wednesday’s paper. If a Daily Lobo staff member catches you reading the paper, you’ll win a prize and have your photo in Thursday’s Page Two feature.
Daniel Hulsbos / Daily Lobo
Potential Engineering dean emphasizes ‘experimental learning’ by Jenny Gignac Daily Lobo
What do David Letterman, Nintendo Wii, and YouTube have in common? They are all a part of Gregory Washington’s plans for UNM. In the Stamm Commons room at the Centennial Engineering Center, engineering students were given an opportunity to ask Washington, a finalist for the dean position at the College of Engineering, a few questions. “I’m not your average Dean,” Washington said before launching into his top-10 reasons — David Letterman style — why he is
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DAILY LOBO new mexico
considering a University of New Mexico appointment. Washington brings what he refers to as “experiential learning” to the College of Engineering at UNM. This is an approach that enlists freshmen students in programs that take apart components, like Wii controllers, and then puts them back together to control robots that they constructed. “Experiential learning takes the academic rigor out of what students have learned in the classroom and allows them to use it in an applied fashion,” he said. This concept facilitates a greater understanding of harder engineering concepts as students progress in Editor-in-Chief Eva Dameron Managing Editor Abigail Ramirez News Editor Pat Lohmann Assistant News Editor Tricia Remark Staff Reporters Andrew Beale Kallie Red-Horse Ryan Tomari Online Editor Junfu Han Photo Editor Vanessa Sanchez Assistant Photo Editor Gabbi Campos Culture Editor Hunter Riley
their engineering studies. Washington, who is interim dean of the College of Engineering at Ohio State University, said he has built strong relationships with Ohio’s local industries, garnering dollars for research work and providing internship positions for engineering students. Engineering student Michael Sheyka said Washington showed an interest in student experience at the college. “He’s the first guy to worry more about the student than the other deans we’ve had, or the other ones being considered,” Sheyka said. “He wants to be connected, and most deans are detached.” Assistant Culture Editor Chris Quintana Sports Editor Isaac Avilucea Assistant Sports Editor Mario Trujillo Copy Chief Elizabeth Cleary Opinion Editor Zach Gould Multimedia Editor Joey Trisolini Design Director Cameron Smith Producation Manager Sean Gardner Classified Ad Manager Antoinette Cuaderes Ad Manager Steven Gilbert
LOBO LIFE
Campus Events
Sgt. Benjamin Anthony of Israel Defense Forces Starts at: 3:30 PM Location: SUB, Rm Lobo A&B Sgt. Benjamin Anthony proudly shares his firsthand insight into the humanity of Israel’s soldiers, the decisions they take in the time of war and the moral code to which they proudly adhere. Community Television Production Class Starts at: 4:00 PM Location: 1634 University Blvd. NE For $150 you will get an introduction to pre-producing, camera operation, direction and editing, as well as the responsibilities of good community production. 505-277-0077.
Introduction to Kayaking Starts at: 6:30 PM Location: 1634 University Blvd NE Learn the skills needed to paddle any type of kayak on flat water! UNM Continuing Education is offering an Introduction to Kayaking class (2 sessions). 505-277-0077.
CAPS test taking strategies Starts at: 8:00 PM Location: 1155 University Boulevard SE CAPS offer test taking strategies workshop free for students. It will help students develop some strategies to prepare for and answer any exam.
Jar Lecture Starts at: 7:30 PM Location: Anthro Bldg, Room 163 Walter Mignolo presents “The Global South and World Dis/Order,” which will address the shift in the geography of reason and reasoning that is taking place in our time.
Changeling the Lost Starts at: 8:00 PM Location: SUB, Upper Floor Santa Ana A&B Mind’s Eye Theatre UNM presents the Camarilla’s Changeling The Requiem venue. Please call Marco at 505 453 7825 for information/ confirmation.
Sheyka said he prefers Washington over the other two School of Engineering candidates — Patrick O’Shea and Daniel Fleetwood. “I’d be more comfortable interacting with a dean who cared about me as a student and that would allow my needs to supersede administrative duties,” he said. Scott Carreathers, director of African American Student Services, said he is eager to see an AfricanAmerican man such as Washington appointed as dean of the College of Engineering. “There are very few AfricanAmerican professors at UNM,” Carreathers said. “I’d like to see if Dr. Washington could help, if
The New Mexico Daily Lobo (USPS #381-400) is published daily except Saturday, Sunday during the school year and weekly during the summer sessions by the Board of Student Publications of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131-2061. Subscription rate is $50 an academic year. Periodical postage paid at Albuquerque, NM 87101-9651. POST-MASTER: send change of address to NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO, MSC03 2230, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001. Letter submission policy: The opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Letters and guest columns must be concisely written, signed by the author and include address, telephone and area of study. No names will be withheld.
appointed, expand the number of black male students in our mathematics and science areas of learning.” Washington also has a YouTube video that discusses his educational journey as an African-American. He said his philosophy as dean would be to integrate students into the real world, whether they are graduates or undergraduates. “I don’t look at undergraduate students as being any different than graduate students,” he said. “They are all students, and I want to help them connect the knowledge they learn in the classroom with the real world and make things work for the better.”
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Community Events
SGI Buddhist Club Starts at: 12:30 PM Location: SUB 3rd floor Cherry Room If you are interested in Buddhism join us at our weekly meeting on campus. Everyone is welcome! Out Reach to Immigrant Farmers Starts at: 5:30 PM Location: 318 Isleta Blvd. Sw Immigrants who aspire to be farmers or ranchers are invited to a meeting concerning opportunities and resources available to them.
Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com
New Belgium Beer Dinner Starts at: 6:00 PM Location: 4310 Central SE Join us for a night of hops talk with New Belgium Beer Ranger Brian Hart. Includes a four-course dinner
Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar: 1. Go to www.dailylobo.com 2. Click on “Events” link near the top of the page. 3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page. 4. Type in the event information and submit!
news
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Thursday, March 4, 2010 / Page 3
Hackers penetrate HSC database by Abigail Ramirez Daily Lobo
UNM Health Sciences Center notified about 1,900 patients that their personal information was compromised by hackers. The hackers had access to a list containing some personal information. According to an HSC press release, two computers at an offsite UNM clinic were affected by sophisticated versions of malware. However, HSC’s IT security system wasn’t penetrated and neither were electronic medial records, according to a statement from HSC. Attacks like this are on the rise, said Sam Giammo, director of HSC’s public affairs. “If you have followed the national news recently, you know that
Roman
we are not alone,” he said. The file contained names and other personal information for patients who were treated at the facility between 2007 and 2009. The file didn’t contain social security numbers or credit card information, according to the press release. Giammo said he couldn’t recall any other malware attacks similar to this one at the HSC. A letter was sent out Feb. 24 notifying the patients affected by this hacker attack. “We determined it would be appropriate for us to disclose this event to patients whose names were in the file,” the press release said. Patient information on the computers has been removed and the two affected computers are no
longer in use. “The information has now been secured,” the press release said. An IT security association, of which HSC is a member, advised HSC of the malware attack Feb. 8, even though it wasn’t known if HSC was the intended target. There are more than 10 UNM off-site clinics. HSC representatives said a detailed analysis of the cyber attack was completed, but couldn’t find if the file was harvested for its data. “We will continue to take steps to secure computers from these types of problems,” the press release said. “The HSC works every day to ensure the privacy and confidentiality of the patient health information it maintains on its IT systems.”
waving his arms. And in the midst of the game, Hobson ran down the floor, eyeing the crowd and signaling for them to rise. “They were so loud several times during the game and after the game,” Martinez said. “It is truly a privilege to play here. It is more than just championships. We play for the state of New Mexico, and that is what makes us different than a lot of teams in the nation. We represent more than just basketball.”
Now the Lobos will look to do that in the MWC Tournament. For the time being, though, Martinez said he will take some time to soak in Wednesday’s electric atmosphere. “I think tonight we are going to take advantage and have a little fun and look back and see what we have done,” he said. “But Friday we are back in the grind. We want to be a special team. We want to do more than be a good team. So we want to go out and prove to the nation that we can compete at a high level.”
from page 1
Though TCU never led again, it didn’t mean the Lobos were out of the woods. The Horned Frogs hung around, never trailing by more than 11 points and pulling to within four with a minute remaining. If nothing else, Lobo fans who were stagnant in the first half of the game helped UNM prevail in the second half. When the fans didn’t stand, the Lobos prompted them to. With 11:22 left in the game, assistant coach Craig Neil stood in front of the UNM bench
The Daily Lobo is committed to providing you with factually accurate information, and we are eager to correct any error as soon as it is discovered. If you have any information regarding a mistake in the newspaper or online, please contact editorinchief@dailylobo.com.
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Contrary to what was printed in “Anticlimactic Season Closer after Intense Win vs. BYU,” Alford shared some words with BYU’s Jonathan Tavernari, not Jimmer Fredette. The error was made in reporting.
Gear In... Gear Out Sale March 5th, 2010 Johnson Center Auxilliary Gym 11:00am-6:00pm
Here is a chance to sell your outdoor gear and buy someone else’s gear you might need! Equipment check in March 3 and 4 to register for the event at the Outdoors Shop Silent auction for our used Outdoor Shop rentals will also take place. Great Deals on Outdoor Equipment!!! Don’t miss out on our Spring Break Climbing and Backpacking Adventure March 14-20
recservices.unm.edu for more info. Or call 277-0178 Check out
Young Adults Council of UNM Invites the student body to join Guest Speaker Javier Gonzales, Democratic Party Chairman in a discussion about hispanic leadership in NM, Education and the upcoming May 5 DREAM Act forum When: March 5; 5:30-7:00 PM Where: Sub 3rd Floor Mirage/Thunderbird
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STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTION PACKETS ARE AVAILABLE FOR:
PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SENATE (10 Positions)
Packets will be available in the ASUNM Office, SUB Room 1016 8AM - 5PM, Monday - Friday. Election applications are due by 5:00pm March 29th.
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LoboOpinion The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
Opinion editor /Zach Gould
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FROM THE WEB In Monday’s “Alford reprimanded for altercation with BYU player,” by Ryan Tomari, the Mountain West Conference issued a reprimand to UNM head basketball coach Steve Alford for his involvement in a verbal spat with BYU’s Jonathan Tavernari. Readers at DailyLobo.com had a lively debate: by ‘DO’ Posted Tuesday “Tavernari deserved to be called an a-hole. He was acting like one.” by ‘James’ Posted Tuesday “Alford did not ever say he apologized to Tavernari, and no one has ever heard him apologize to Tavernari. He did say he apologized to (BYU head coach Dave) Rose.” by ‘Also James’ Posted Tuesday “Alford should be smart enough to learn from Locksley: When you verbally or physically abuse people, make sure not to do it in public, so Paul Krebs, David Schmidly and the Athletics Department cabal can help cover it up. More great press for our million-dollar UNM coaches. Keep up the positive rolemodeling!” by ‘Kenalum’ Posted Tuesday “So what is UNM going to do? Probably nothing. I guess having a winning season is more important than laying down guidelines for good behavior. It’s all about the money.” by ‘And....’ Posted Tuesday “And what about Tavernari? Was he reprimanded for his unsporting behavior? While the coach should be held to a higher standard (and clearly this coach has control issues), so should the athletes. Society pampers these children.” Join the discussion at DailyLobo.com
COLUMN
The opiate of the masses isn’t for everyone
LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo office in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.
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“I’m growing it out for South America.”
by Zach Gould
Daily Lobo Opinion Editor I am not religious. At times, I’ve wished I was. I always hear people talking about religion in a way that elevates it as one of the more important things in life. But so far, God’s great glory has never fallen upon my face. And I wonder, why? So many people are devout about something. People have such reverent emotions and thoughts about the world, and I, for the most part, have been completely left out. My mom was Catholic when she was younger and is now a Unitarian (sort of ), and my dad is Jew-ish. Realistically, that is probably why I don’t have an interest in religion. As much as I would like to think that my parents don’t, and didn’t, have a heavy influence on the way I think, their lack of religious fervor is most likely why I lack knowing the Holy Spirit. But they were far from closed to religious ideas and even tried to get me to go to different kinds of churches throughout my life. I just thought the concept was silly. God never made sense to me. I remember as a 6-year-old explaining to my mom that I didn’t want to go to church, because the concept of God, in general, seemed unrealistic. As I got older and the ceremonies of adulthood came around the corner, I felt a need to at least try to gain some religious experience. I started going to the temple every Friday to see what I could get out of it. After a few months of this, I decided that religion really wasn’t for
me. It diminished my life experience rather than enriching it. I stopped going and didn’t try again. What I did learn about religion is that it’s about two things: community and ceremony. These concepts are what make up religion for a lot of people. Beyond that, people will subscribe to whatever works with their specific cultural association. We live in a Christian state, more specifically a Catholic state. Catholics here have a unique mixture of Spanish, Native and American beliefs. Tome Hill, a 2,000-year-old local pilgrimage site, is a great example of what religion means. About the time Christ was born, there were Anasazi “heathens” painting petroglyphs in honor of the hill. And as religion has evolved, the hill remains the same. The hill is not a symbol of how much Jesus suffered, but of how hot magma can get. The main thing that makes it special for people from 2,000 years ago until today is ceremonial community acts that take place at the hill, not the actual hill, or what is literally being done on the hill. If religion were gone, community and ceremony are the two things people would suffer from. Two things that could be replaced by something that doesn’t make you feel guilty for living your life how you please. Something that wouldn’t arbitrarily tell you things are wrong sometimes based on half-truths and other times just based on pure speculation. If people weren’t afraid of leaving religion, would they? Religion seems to be on every level of explanation for natural occurrences that are either difficult to describe or almost impossible to prove. Whether it be Zeus or Yahweh, all gods embody something bigger that is natural. A sense of Holy Spirit, as I have heard it described by other people who claim to have felt it, is something obtainable through other means. A sense of spirituality and togetherness with something bigger than my physical form is how I feel when I look at stars. I think there is a higher power in life, not a person with linen robes. Why would God need to be contained in an old white man’s body? Why
does something that everyone attributes to the creation of everything be limited to one person’s idea or perspective of it? The concept of religion is something that most people, even religious ones, are aware of the flaws in theological rhetoric. That is what faith is for — to patch in the places that don’t make sense. But how do you argue or even have a discussion about faith? Faith is solidifying and blind. It has to be, and the true measure of success in religion is your level of faith. The more ludicrous something seems, and the willingness to accept it, is the test of religion. The one thing that empowers religion most is its biggest problem. Religion creates martyrs. Soldiers of God are created through blind acceptance of dogma. What you can’t argue with, most people try to destroy. A pretty common argument for religion is that without it we would all be filled with sexual deviancy and immorality. The last time I checked, religion never stopped anyone from doing much of anything. Priests molest little boys, and followers around the country, including senators and congregation leaders, do drugs and cheat on their wives. In not being religious, I am not living a life of “sin.” I don’t steal, lie or cheat. I believe in moral relativism and I still don’t break the majority of the laws out there. A lack of religion doesn’t make people “bad,” just as much as religion doesn’t make people “good.” Religion is a tool to control people, and, for the most part, control is voluntarily given. That may be why people are so willing to accept religion in almost any form. People want there to be structure in life outside of the realm that they control. It is reassuring not to go through life alone. But if an adult safety blanket is what religion really boils down to, wouldn’t we be better off with something else? How many people have to die in the name of God? How many peoples’ lives need to be filled with shame and guilt before we, as a culture, decide that enough is enough and that the only man in robes dictating our lives resides on the Supreme Court?
CULTURE
NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO
THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 2010 / PAGE 5
First Friday: an artsy assortment by Chris Quintana and Hunter Riley Daily Lobo
Matrix Fine Art, 3812 Central Ave. S.E., #100-A Those seeking the abstract need to head to Matrix Fine Art. “Worli: Paintings by Kuzana Ogg” features soft spirals, loose rectangles and bright colors layered atop one another. Owner Regina Held said Ogg’s work often resembles something straight out of India with the lush, sensible and rich colors mixing and matching to form paintings that look like silk saris. The paintings also tell tales of her grandmother, who would give mangos to everyone in her neighborhood, despite rules set down by the caste system. New Grounds Art Print Workshop and Gallery, 3812 Central Ave. S.E., #100-B It’s like children’s stories for adults, Held said about Ray Maseman’s etchings. His exhibit, “Fairy Tales: Etchings by Ray Maseman,” features imagery from myths, folklore and children’s tales creating art that’s bright, whimsical and humorous. The protagonists are usually animals — giraffes, sea horses and penguins engaged in impossible tasks that succeed anyway. But why just look at the etchings when you could be making them yourself? At 6:30 p.m., Maseman presents a 20-minute live demonstration, detailing his etching style for those looking to get into the etching world. Chroma Studios and Gallery, 600 1st St. N.W. If you love Twitter, chances
are you would like Twitterscapes. Chroma’s presenting, “Twitterscapes: Paintings with Twitter” by Carolina C. Blaker. She uses the software code that comes from Twitter. The final product looks like a series of pixilated codes that might be seen on a computer programmer’s screen but engorged with color. “It’s hard for me to describe it to you, because I have never seen anything like this, and I’ve been in the art business for a long, long time,” said Aaron Lewis, co-owner of the studio. In addition, the rest of her art — latex paintings — features a similar sort of pixilation sensation. The Normal Gallery, 1415 4th St. S.W. Those hankering for a bit of oldfashioned goodness should visit The Normal Gallery. The show is a multimedia conglomeration of photography, painting and found photos that have been digitally altered, as well as other visual projects set amid antique furniture. Miller said event-goers will travel through the four seasons, starting with January. Local bands Hedia and North America are also playing looped cellos and electronic instruments at the show. Dress up in something old and something new. Continuing Education, 1634 University Blvd. N.E. If you need a little comedic break from all the art, the Continuing Education building is showing the video tour “Friends of Film, Video and Arts.” Friends of Film is a nonprofit organization that shows the work of up-and-coming filmmakers. The show is on Friday
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Frame City and Gallery, 3810-A Central Ave. S.E. Pastels priced right are the focus of Frame City’s exhibit for Friday. The studio features the work of Peggy Orbon and Elaine Koehler, both masters of the pastel medium. More importantly, these works don’t focus on landscape you’ve never seen. They are all perfectly painted and delicately detailed, featuring New Mexican landscapes, like trees near the Bosque and other Albuquerque locales. Gallery Manager Tiffany Pittman said the pictures must be seen to be truly appreciated. Also, the studio is hosting a live framing demonstration for those interested in learning how a frame is made, and, as an added treat, there will be a raffle and the winner will get the assembled frame for free.
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521 Central NW on Central & 6th
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New Mexico Tea Bar and Gallery, 1131 Mountain Rd. N.W. Suite 2 The art inclined can simultaneously soothe their throats with steaming, hot cups of loose-leaf teas. The New Mexico Tea Bar, part of the New Mexico Tea Company, rented the building next door to the Tea Company and is having a grand opening with free live music, tea, pastries and tea-leaf readings on Friday from 5-8 p.m. “The Tea Bar is going to be dedicated to one artist every month,” owner David Edwards said. “On Friday, it will be Martin Jarrett.”
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from 6-9 p.m. It includes animation, documentaries, musicals and live-action films from filmmakers all over the country. The FoFVA is promoting their third annual event, “LOL Friends of Film Funny Film Fest.”
www.ahlgrows.com
Spring 2010 For travel to Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain, and Portugal The Latin American and Iberian Institute (LAII) announces the availability of Field Research Grants (FRGs) for graduate students and faculty. FRGs are intended to support research projects in Latin America and Iberia that require limited time in the field, such as four to eight weeks. Typically awards are made for round-trip airfare to the country where the research will be conducted. Visit http://laii.unm.edu/funding/research-funding/ for application forms and guidelines.
Deadline: Friday, March 12, 2010 by 5pm in the LAII (801 Yale Blvd NE) Questions? Contact Keira Philipp-Schnurer at committees@laii.unm.edu
Source: 2002 Readership Survey by Pulse Research
Field Research Grants
LoboCulture
“Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society.” ~Mark Twain
The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
Culture editor / Hunter Riley
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Thursday March 4, 2010
culture@dailylobo.com / Ext. 131
Zach Gould / Daily Lobo
Dre Curtis prepares clothing for “Fashion Extravaganza” on Friday. He will also premier the video for his skate team, Team Dank.
out Duke City Deckin’ by Chris Quintana Daily Lobo
Do you dress for yourself or for others? There’s a full-fledged ”Fashion Extravaganza” at the SUB on Friday, complete with models, music and food. Coordinator Dre Curtis, a student at the School of Architecture, said the show will be a mélange of Albuquerque styles. “One thing, too, about this fashion show — I’m bringing everyone together,” Curtis said. “I’m bringing my DJ, Vivitous Sessions models, Samuel S.Q. of Superior Quality Jersey; NMX Sports — they work with children in sports events in the community, Nicole and her skate shop, Silver, and her art gallery, Cirq. I am bringing a lot of entities like that, people in Albuquerque who are trying to do something to keep it family based.” Designer Melisa Hart said this show will be more relaxed than other shows she’s worked in. “It’s not that we’re not taking it seriously,” she said. “It’s going to be a well put together show, but at the same time, everybody sort of just walked into it like, ‘This is for fun. We’re going to have a good time. We’re going to have a great result.’” Hart added that she liked working with the college crowd.
“I am actually closer in age to the college crowd than some of the other crowds, so I feel like I relate a little bit better,” she said. “I feel like things are a little more casual and a little more fun.” The show intertwines elements of skateboarding and fashion, said Curtis, who also manages the local skate team Team Dank. “It’s going to be the first fashion show that has a skateboard video of my skateboard team playing while the models are walking,” he said. “It’s going to be the first to have an art raffle. I am going to raffle all types of things. It’s going to be the first fashion show at UNM of this capacity, this level of quality.” And with great quality comes great responsibility. Accordingly, the first act focuses entirely on educating people about New Mexican fashion, Curtis said. “It’ll show the models’ personal clothing to show their personal style and how New Mexico college students, or New Mexico models in general, or New Mexico individuals, have their fashion sense,” he said. Contributor Nicole Montes, owner of Silver Skate Shop, said fashion in Albuquerque tends to be a step behind. “The fashions kind of get here later than everyone else,” she said. “I like people, like (Curtis), that are out there kind of doing their own
“Fashion Extravaganza”
SUB Ballrooms Friday at 7 p.m. $8 General Admission, $5 Students thing, without really caring what’s going on. He definitely ends up being a very fashion-forward type of individual … It’s refreshing to have someone like him, or a handful of people, who are doing things in this town.” There will be a halftime of sorts with a marching band from California, a pep rally and DJs. Act two features a combination of Team Dank’s skate video projected on the walls, music booming from the sound systems and models strutting down the walkway at the same time. It’s a lot to take in, Curtis said, but it works. “I hope — and I don’t hope for a lot of things in life — but I hope that’s it’s a packed crowd, sold out,” he said. “I hope that everyone goes (and) enjoys their time, because it’s going to be from little kids to the more mature. So I hope that everyone gets the feeling that there’s a young man out there that does care about them, and he wants to see everyone happy. And that’s why he put this fashion show on.”
Zach Gould / Daily Lobo Locally designed skateboard decks, like the one pictured here, will be sold at the fashion show Friday. The Silver Skate Shop carries decorated decks at 120 Yale Blvd. S.E.
Zach Gould / Daily Lobo A locally designed shirt at Silver Skate Shop can be seen at the Fashion Extravaganza this Friday. Student tickets are $5.
culture
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Thursday, March 4, 2010 / Page 7
China
Teach Travel Learn
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UNM E-mail Got You Down?
Robert Maes / Daily Lobo Student Kylie Jacobsen stretches before a tech rehearsal on Saturday. She is performing in the Department of Theatre and Dance’s “Meta Morph” production.
‘Meta Morph’ dances through Mexico by Eden Silverthorne Daily Lobo
The Department of Theatre and Dance is UNM’s best-kept secret. “Meta Morph,” this year’s faculty dance show, will provide a glimpse into what the dance program has to offer, said Donna Jewell, department head and artistic director. “There’s a lot of talent in the Department of Theatre and Dance,” Jewell said. “These are students who are going to go out and work in New York and L.A. and London. They’re going places, and I really wish the
University knew more about them.” “Meta Morph” has seven student performances in ballet, modern, tap, Mexican Folklorico and flamenco, choreographed by guest artists and faculty. The show starts with Parsons Etude, a modern piece choreographed by David Parsons of Parsons Dance Company in New York. Jewell said every night features a different Mexican Folklorico dance from eight Mexican provinces. “So this is really cool. We’re going to kind of go on a journey with that,” she said. “We’re going to be traveling all over Mexico.”
:(
“Meta Morph” Rodey Theatre March 5, 6, 12 and 13 7:30 p.m. March 7 and 14 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. Tickets range from $8 to $15 Sophomore Aaron Hooper, a dance and architecture double major, performs in the fourth
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CULTURE
PAGE 8 / THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 2010
Film folks shortchange mini flicks by Evan Bobrick Daily Lobo
M
The 82nd Annual Academy Awards are quickly approaching, and while main contenders like “Avatar” and “The Hurt Locker” are basking in the media’s speculative limelight, there are always nominees that slip through the cracks. Short films, in particular, have a tendency to go unnoticed. It’s even difficult to find them on the Internet, let alone to see them in a theater, before the Oscars have already aired. Tragically, it’s because there is no money to be made in shorts. If you can’t charge full-ticket price for admission, or even the price of a DVD, why bother? But that doesn’t stop them from being the funniest, most personal and artful films made today. The animated shorts nominated this year are no exception. The sense of humor in “Granny O’Grimm’s Sleeping Beauty” is particularly charming, perhaps
because it lacks the sentimentality that saturates three of the other films. The story shows an old woman relating a classic fairy tale to her granddaughter at bedtime. Simple and sweet, right? Truth be told, Granny is a bit of a psychopath. She rants about the stupidity of the young, beautiful fairies and about their cruel mistreatment of the old witch, spinning the story of “Sleeping Beauty” into a crazed and hilarious tirade. All the while, the poor granddaughter cowers helplessly, and we’re left with her on an effective dark final note. Similar in its use of dark humor is the perplexing “Logorama.” Directors François Alaux and Herve de Crecy have created a world made entirely out of recognizable brands and logos, and I mean entirely. The cops are Michelin U.S.A. men. The pedestrians are made up of little AOL.com and BIC guys, and the trees are straight off a bottle of Malibu Rum. Unfortunately, this fantastic venue is infinitely smarter and more detailed than the story it contains. Two cops are chasing Ronald McDonald, who is actually some kind of insane criminal, but beyond that there isn’t too much to keep you intrigued. The last shot, swooping out amid a whole galaxy of logos, is what lingers. “The Lady and the Reaper” and “French Roast” are a little less ambitious and a little safer than “Logorama,” but both are extremely well-executed. “The Lady and the Reaper” chronicles a battle between a doctor and death over the life of an old woman. Stylistically, it’s indebted to the chaos and absurdity of “Looney Tunes.” It is completely ignorant to the laws of physics, and
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act, É só Isso, choreographed by University of Iowa professor Armando Duarte. Hooper said the piece tells a story of discovery that begins on an individual level and ends with a communal feeling among the dancers. “In the beginning, there’s this thought of, ‘I’m entering this new world with a connection to other people but with intention of my own.’ So when we enter through the space for the first time … the focus is on how new the place is to each individual,” Hooper said. “In the end, we’re all connected, and there’s so much eye contact and interaction among the dancers in the last section that there’s huge community collectiveness.” After intermission, Jewell’s own choreography will be featured in a modern piece called 2 Steps Aside. Jewell said she drew inspiration for her choreography from a band she heard after one of her own performances. “They were three guys from Switzerland called Bubble Beatz, and they were playing trash — oil drums and long PVC pipes that they were playing like didgeridoos,” Jewell said. “It was jawdropping. They were phenomenal. So I bought their CD and I was like, ‘I have to choreograph to this.’” Following 2 Steps Aside is Nubes Centelladas, a flamenco piece choreographed by Eva Encinias-Sandoval and set to music by Italian composer Antonio Vivaldi. “What’s interesting here is that mine’s just percussive, percussive, percussive. And then we get to the flamenco piece, which is percussive with castanets and footwork, but it’s also melodic through the Vivaldi,” Jewell said. “I think the musical difference between the hard, brash percussion and the symphonic lushness of Vivaldi’s piece is a good contrast.”
Through Your Eyes, a modern piece choreographed by full-time faculty and Brazil native Vladimir Conde Reche, closes the performance. Vladimir said human diversity and individuality inspired his choreography. “There’s a huge space in the piece for the dancers to bring more of their individuality,” Vladimir said. “That’s the major thing for me in the choreography — who the dancer is. I want them to be themselves, be naked to what they are and let the audience see them for what they are, for the performance that they are.” Although the piece is heavy with meaning, Vladimir said it ends lightly. “A note that I give to the dancers is that there’s one thing that we do a lot in Brazil — we are not blind to all the things that are wrong and that we don’t like,” Vladimir said. “We see all these injustices, all these discriminations … and we try to change, but we don’t make our lives bitter by dwelling on them. We have a sense of happiness that persists, and that’s how we finish the piece, with that sense of happiness permeated in the air.” Jewell said she chose Through Your Eyes as the closing piece because it epitomizes the endless transformations that occur throughout the show. “As the artistic director, I saw his work and went, ‘Okay, great way to close the entire thing.’ For me, that was a pretty obvious choice,” Jewell said. “I had to decide what people are going to leave with. For Vladimir’s piece, there’s quite a human journey going on. It reflects all the different journeys and transformations throughout the whole show, and it’s very tangible. It’s something that people can really grasp on to.”
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from PAGE 7
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it moves at a furious pace toward its satisfyingly blunt conclusion. In this way, “French Roast” is its exact opposite — slow, meandering, and firmly grounded in reality. A rich man orders a drink in a cafe, but has no money to pay. It’s as simple as that. But the delicacy of it, and especially of the ending (saccharine though it may be), is really something. The best film of the five is surely Nick Park’s “A Matter of Loaf and Death.” It’s another adventure starring Wallace and Gromit, the lovable tea-guzzling idiot and his sarcastic dog. And if you’ve never encountered these two before, this is a good place to start. Park, as always, works entirely with clay, and the results are nothing short of wonderful. The film brims with personality and a kind of love that just isn’t around in most of today’s computer-generated affairs. Wallace and Gromit are bakers this time around. Unfortunately for them, someone in the neighborhood has been killing off bakers one by one, and I won’t say much more than that. I particularly like how creepy Park’s films can be, while simultaneously holding tight to the duo’s humor and sweet sense of kinship. While it may not be the best of Wallace and Gromit’s outings, that’s hardly a slight. It’s a joy to watch, and it should win the Oscar, hands down.
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Page 10 / Thursday, March 4, 2010 Sunday Pars Cuisine Unique Mediterranean atmosphere. Hookah served on the patio. Mon-Thurs 11-9 Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 5-9 Southwest Film Center A Town Called Panic 1;00PM, 3PM Information at 277-5608 Ned’s On The Rio Grande FREE Cerviche and Chicharones $3 Bloody Marys and Margaritas $2 Domestic Drafts 25¢ Wings $3.95 Huevos Rancheros. Breakfast All Day Sushi and Sake Closed Sundays The Library Bar & Grill Caliente Sundays: Drink specials start at 8pm, $3 shots of Cuervo and $3 Mexican Beers Draft & Bottles (Tecate, Negra Modelo, Corona, Corona Light, Dos Equis). Free Salsa Lessons with prizes. DJ Quico spinning your favorite Salsa, Merengae, Cumbia, and Reggaeton. The Blackbird Buvette Gerrit Krusemark - Art Opening Happy Hour 4PM-8PM $3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another 5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073 National Fiery-Food and BBQ show The oldest and largest show of its kind! Sandia Resort & Casino www.fiery-foods.com
Maloney’s Tavern Happy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM! Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters only $4.00 All Day And Night!
Monday Pars Cuisine Unique Mediterranean atmosphere. Hookah served on the patio. Mon-Thurs 11-9 Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 5-9 Copper Lounge 2pm-7pm Blue Moon, Sam’s Seasonal, Honey Brown $2.50 Pints. $2.75 Domestic Beers. $2.75 Well Drinks. 7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Cheese Burger w F.F $5. Alien IPA, Blue Moon, Shiner Bock, Hardcore $3 pints. Kamikaze or Lemon Drop $4. The Library Bar & Grill Happy Hour 4pm- 7pm Serving Full Menu for Lunch, Happy Hour & Nightime Ned’s On The Rio Grande $4.95 Frito Pie, $2.00 Corrslight Draft $2.50 Corona and Corona Light. Appetizers $3.00 4-6pm
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Maloney’s Tavern Happy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM! Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters only $4.00 All Day And Night!
Maloney’s Tavern Happy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM! Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters only $4.00 All Day And Night!
Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another 5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073
The Blackbird Buvette Geeks Who Drink - 7pm Happy Hour 4PM-8PM $3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks
Tuesday Pars Cuisine Belly Dancer with unique Mediterranean atmosphere. Hookah served on the patio. Mon-Thurs 11-9 Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 5-9 Ned’s On The Rio Grande $2.50 Tuesdays Food and Drink Specials for $2.50 The Library Bar & Grill $2.50 well, wine, & domestics from 8pm to close. Wet T-Shirt Contest every Tuesday with cash prizes!
The Blackbird Buvette Blackbird Karaoke w/ DJ Kammo – 9 pm Happy Hour All Day!
Copper Lounge 2pm-7pm Shiner Bock, Sam’s Seasonal Smithwick’s $2.50 pints. $2.25 Domestic Beers. $275 Well Drinks. 7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Tacos $1. Margaritas, Slippery Nipple, or Cosmopolitan $4. Dos XX, Rolling Rock, Tecate, Marble Blonde $3
Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Burt’s Tiki Lounge *Subculture Presents:* *BASSic EDUcation* *Fries* *Satya* *Zia Zombie*
Burt’s Tiki Lounge *Tiki Tuesdays!* *Oktober Poeple* *Birds and Batteries* *Ex-Calico* *$4 Tiki Drinks All Night*
KARAOKE WEDNESDAYS 9pm-1am
! S L A I C E P S HAPPY HOUR
$100 off all drinks except bottled beer
7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 3 - 7 PM
Featured Drinks
rry Smirnoff Strawbe .00 PBR Pints
$2
& PBR Liters only $400 ALL DAY AND ALL NIGHT
Ned’s On The Rio Grande Wednesday Live Music Heartfelt 9-Close FREE Copper Lounge 2pm-7pm Alien IPA, Blue Moon, Marble Red $2.50. $2.25 Domestic Beers. $2.75 Well Drinks. 7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Selected appetizers 50% off. All pints $3. Bacardi U- call it (no 151 proof) $4.
Outpost Performance Space Zakir Hussain & the Masters of Percussion 7:00 pm at the Lensic Performing Arts Center in Santa Fe Dazzling drumming with virtuosi from India under the direction of tabla maestro Zakir Hussain Student rush tickets only $10 the night of the show—available 5-10 minutes prior to showtime. 1 ticket per student with valid ID
Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30 Burt’s Tiki Lounge *Vinyl and Verses* *Underground Hip Hop* *UHF B-Boy Crew* *$2.50 Select Pints* Maloney’s Tavern Karaoke Wednesdays! 9PM-1AM! Happy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM! Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters only $4.00 All Day And Night!
Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another 5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073
Wednesday
Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another 5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073
Pars Cuisine Unique Mediterranean atmosphere. Hookah served on the patio. Mon-Thurs 11-9 Fri-Sat 11-10, Sun 5-9
Check out the HAPS every Thursday!
Lotus Nightclub Salsa Wednesday w/ DJ Quico & DJ 12Tribe. Salsa, Merengue & Reggaeton in the back and Top 40, Hip Hop & Dancehall in the front. NO COVER
50
325 Central Ave NW 4th and Central (505) 242-7422
The Blackbird Buvette Happy Hour 4PM-8PM $3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks
50 WELL DRINKS
DOMESTIC BEERS
50
myspace.com/libraryabq
8PM TO CLOSE
e k a S & i h Sus Ko 6 8-242
33
rean BBQ
WE MAKE IT FRESH WHEN YOU
Free all you can eat sushi!!!
Buy 10 all-you-can-eat sushi dinners and get one free! now n o i y t oca dem w L n Aca g e N no min ope Wyo &
338-24
24
ORDER
ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH $18.95 DINNER $21.95 Monday 11:30-2:30 5-9:30 Tuesday 11:30-2:30 5-9: 30 Wednesday 11:30-2:30 5-9: 30 Thursday 11:30-2:30 5-9: 30 Friday 11:30-2:30 5-10 Saturday 11:30-2:30 5-10 Closed Sundays
FUN & GOOD FOOD • GREAT FOR PARTIES!
3200 Central Ave. • Albuquerque, NM
lobo features
New Mexico Daily Lobo
by Scott Adams
dilbert©
Thursday, March 4, 2010 / Page 11
dailycrossword
Yesterday’s Solutions
dailysudoku Level: 1 2
34
Solutions to Yesterday’s Puzzle
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk
Get your name out there with the Daily Sudoku
505.277.5656
espresso coffees
buy one get one FREE
BUY ONE BIG MAC GET ONE
FREE
Redeemable only at McDonalds located at Hanover, University, Bosque Farms, Quail, Los Lunas, Bridge, Belen, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande, Redeemable only Wal-Mart (Los Lunas), at McDonalds located Moriarty, Edgewood. at Hanover, University, Expires 03/31/10 Bosque Farms, Quail, Los Lunas, Bridge, Belen, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande, Wal-Mart (Los Lunas), Moriarity, Edgewood. Expires 03/31/10
SPONSOR THIS
SUDOKU
SPONSOR THIS
CROSSWORD
Get your name out there with the Daily Crossword
505.277.5656
classifieds
LASSIFIEDs CCLASSIFIEDS Page 12 / Thursday, March 4, 2010
DAILY LOBO
DAILY LOBO
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Lost and Found
Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds
Announcements Announcements Fun, Food, Music Lost and Found Miscellaneous Services Travel Want to Buy Your Space
Housing
LOST CAMERA AND case in Edu. Tech Room 180 Thursday evening/ Friday morning. Reward offered. 328-3333 JACKET FOUND! Your jacket’s lost, it pines away, Lonely, sad and in dismay; On Friday last, near the Frontier, It longed for you to be near, But you were off to some rendezvous, The jacket left, in plain view; Reunification is quick and easy: One quick question, nothing sleazy, State its color plus brand or size, That’s all it takes to renew your ties. Email: dnaquin@unm.edu
Services
Apartments Co-housing Condos Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Property for Sale Rooms for Rent Sublets
TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799. MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown, PhD. welbert53@aol.com 401-8139. PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA. FARMERS INSURANCE. AUTO liability $30/mo, full coverage $70/mo. 9486657.
For Sale Audio/Video Bikes/Cycles Computer Stuff Dogs, Cats, Pets For Sale Furniture Garage Sales Textbooks Vehicles for Sale
ABORTION AND COUNSELING services. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 2427512. BIRTHRIGHT CARES. FREE pregnancy tests, help. 262-2235.
Employment Child Care Jobs Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Jobs Wanted Volunteers Work Study Jobs
MACBOOK PRO. 17”. Immaculate condition. Leather carrying case. $800. 890-2836.
Fun Food Music
APARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com 1 AND 2BDRMS, 3 blocks to UNM, no smokers/ no pets. Clean, quiet, and affordable. 301 Harvard SE. 262-0433. MOVE IN SPECIAL- walk to UNM. 1and 2BDRMS starting at $575/mo includes utilities. No pets. 255-2685, 268-0525. UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1 and 2BDRMS $490-$650/mo +utilities. Clean, quiet, remodeled. Move in special! 573-7839.
TUES/ SUN TAI CHI Classes turtlemountaintaichi.com 792-4519 YUSIF’S CAFE NOW serving hookah 6PM-10PM daily! Free Turkish coffee. 216 Yale 508-2790. A SALUTE TO SINATRA! The NMSO brings you Jimmy Borges, a performer Tony Bennett described as “one of the best singers I’ve ever heard,” singing amazing Sinatra music as it was intended. Visit NMSO.org for audio, tickets and info.
$590- 1 BED w/ office- Available NowMinutes from UNM, Shuttle Bus to UNM, Office available in home, Call 505-842-6640. 3BDRM 311 PRINCETON SE M/CNM $750/$500dd. 803-5349
FIRST MONTH FREE w/extended lease, STUDIOS, 1 block UNM, Free utilities, $435-$455/mo. 246-2038. www.kachina-properties.com $620- 2 BEDROOM available- Minutes from UNM, Shuttle Bus Available, Immediate Move-in Available- Reserve Now Call 505-842-6640. BRAND NEW LARGE 1BR condo in heart of Nob Hill. 110 Richmond (Central & Richmond). Walk to UNM. $1250 + some utilities. 250-6250. $535- 1 BED Loft- Lg. square footage, near UNM, Available to move in immediately, must see home, Call 505-8426640 ask for Jessika. ***1BDRM 1BA BIG rooms, 2 blocks to UNM, lots of parking, small pets allowed. 881-3540*** $390- STUDIO- AVAILABLE for Immediate Move-in, 5 minutes from UNM and Apollo College, Spacious for 1, Call at 505-842-6640. UNM/ CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Consultant: 243-2229.
Duplexes 1BDRM DUPLEX NEAR UNM, CNM. Available now through May 31. $375/mo includes utilities. 385-0544
3BDRM 2.5 BA 2-Story. Close to UNM Med/ Law School, gated community, private enclosed backyard, dishwasher, W/D, refridgerator, 2 car garage. $1,050/mo +utilites, lease required. 301-0791.
Apartments
Announcements
WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FPs, courtyards, fenced yards, houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1 and 2 and 3BDRMs. Garages. Month to month option. 843-9642. Open 7 days/ week.
Houses For Rent
STRESSED? LOG ON to spirituality.com
UN-
$480- 1 BED available for Immediate Move-in, Minutes from UNM and Apollo, It is a must see, Call us at 505842-6640.
CLASSIFIED PAYMENT INFORMATION
Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, • 30¢ per word per day for five or more Come to to Marron show Pre-payment by Visa or Master •• Come MarronHall, Hall,room room107, 131, show •• Phone: or American is required. consecutive days without changing or your IDID and receive FREE classifieds Card is required. CallExpress 277-5656. yourUNM UNM and receive a special rate MasterCard Call 277-5656 cancelling. inofYour Rooms for Rent, orRooms any For 10¢Space, per word in Personals, • Fax or E-mail: Pre-payment by Visa or • Fax or Email: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, • 40¢ per word per day for four days or Sale Category. for Rent, or any For Sale category. Master Card is required. Fax ad text, MasterCard or American Express is required. less or non-consecutive days. dates and dates category to 277-7531, or Fax ad text, and catergory to 277-7530 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING • Special effects are charged addtionally: e-mail classads@unm.edu. or email to to classifi eds@dailylobo.com DEADLINE logos, bold, italics, centering, blank lines, person:Pre-payment Pre-pay bybycash, •• In In person: cash, check, money larger font, etc. check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or • 1 p. m. business day before publication. order, money order, Visa or MasterCard. American Come room 107 Come byExpress. room 131 in by Marron Hallinfrom CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB Marron Hall from 8:00am to 5:00pm. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. UNM Student Publications www.dailylobo.com Mail:: Pre-pay money order, in-state check, Pre-paybyby money order, in-state •• Mail MSC03 2230 Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American check, Visa, MasterCard. Mail payment, 1 University of New Mexico • All rates include both print and online Express. Mail payment, ad text, dates and ad text, dates and category. Albuquerque, NM 87131 editions of the Daily Lobo. catergory.
2BDRM 1BA EVERYTHING new! 243 Mesilla NE. Adobe with brick floors. Pet friendly. Responsible adult applicant. Background check required. $675/mo +dd 620-3624
STATE FARM INSURANCE 3712 Central SE @ Nob Hill 232-2886 www.mikevolk.net
UNM ID ADVANTAGE
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES
new mexico
new mexico
New Mexico Daily Lobo
WALK UNM BEAUTIFUL 2BDRM 850 sqft, hardwood floors, garage $750/mo. 299-8543, 379-7349
Rooms For Rent FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED 25+. Gated community. Utilities paid. free wifi,and direcTv Coors and Rio Bravo. 2 small dogs in house. (505)306-7088. FEMALE WANTED TO share 4BDRM house. $400/mo. includes utilities, cable, and Wifi. 3 blocks from North Campus. Must be clean and responsible. Available immediately 908-0488. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 4 BDRM, 2 BA. Close to UNM, 300/mo+ults. Beautiful spacious living area. Whitney 505-577-8428.
$475 A MONTH. All utilities + internet included. No pets. Pool and gym. Montgomery & Carlisle. 505-507-0946. QUIET, FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 2BDRM near UNM on Columbia. $350/mo +1/2 utilities. No smoking. Call 505-577-1915. ONE ROOMMATE NEEDED. Great location at Eubank and I-40. All appliances available and your own bathroom. $350/month. 505-453-0429. GRADUATE STUDENTS WANTED to share 3Bed/2Bath house in UNM area. $375/mo. +1/3 utilities. Internet, cable, laundry. (505) 615 5115. ROOM FOR RENT, UNM area $450/mo. Utilities, wi-fi, laundry included. (505) 254-2890.
Audio/Video RCA 36’’ TELEVISION. $50 Not a flat screen. 328-8466
Vehicles For Sale 1990 RANGE ROVER, County Edition. Excellent aluminum body, never used off-road. British Racing Green with leather interior. Includes full shop manual. Located in Alamogordo, NM. $7,000. (575) 437-0220 weekdays. thank you. 2001 HONDA ELITECH80 Scooter Yellow, 1600mi, ExcCond $1100, 217-4334. 2004 OLDSMOBILE ALERO GL 4DR PW PS CD/Cassette 77k Miles New Tires/Brakes Excellent Condition! $5,300/OBO (505)263-8827. 1998 OLDS. 88. Good, sturdy, and dependable (medium-sized) student car w/ 4-doors, large trunk and 97,000 miles. Grey w/ no dents. santafeusa@msn.com or 505-2041800. 2000 FORD ESCORT Sport 76K miles. New timing belt. 4-cylinder 2.0L engine. No known problems. 32-42mpg. $2800obo. Call (575)442-0280.
REOPENED PT CAREGIVER: efficiency apartment salary of $750/mo. Cable, utilities, internet access. Daily ride to/from CNM/UNM (ideal for students) Helping person in wheelchair weekday evenings and mornings, finalists will be required to have valid DL, we pay for drug and background check. No pets or smoking. Located near Academy and Wyoming. 856-5276. DISCO DISPLAY HOUSE Inc. seeking PT counter help, phone & light physical labor, Saturdays only 8:30 - 5pm, 1/2hr lunch. 2 blocks from campus, $9.00/hr. Fill out application in person, 3123 Central N.E. (next to Yanni’s). EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.YouDriveAds.com 2010 EXPANSION!
$15 Base /Appt. Flex Schedule, Scholarships Possible! Customer Sales/ Service, No Exp. Nec., Cond. Apply. Call now, All ages 18+, ABQ 243-3081, NW/Rio Rancho: 891-0559.
Bikes/Cycles
Jobs Off Campus
K2 3.0 RAZORBACK mountain bike with clip pedals. $100 328-8466.
THE CAREER DEVELOPMENT Program, an option of the Albuquerque Public Schools/University of New Mexico Partnership Programs, offers an accelerated 17 month, 4 semester graduate program of studies culminating in a Masters Degree in Elementary Education and New Mexico Elementary K-8 Teaching License. Albuquerque Public Schools and the University of New Mexico are seeking highly motivated and academically talented college graduates (bachelors degree minimum) to participate in this teacher education program. The program consists of a semester of combined methodology and student teaching, a summer of supporting coursework, and a year of paid internship in an APS classroom. The 18 individuals selected will also receive paid tuition for 21 of the 42 credits required in the program. A 2.5-3.0 (preferred) GPA, completion of the NM Teacher Assessment Basic Skills exam, and official transcripts are among the application requirements. For program and application information, attend an information session on Thursday, March 11, 2010 from 6:00-7:00 p.m. at the APS Transitions Outcomes Special Education site at 1730 University SE, 87106. Applications will be available at the information session, but can also be picked up at UNM Hokona Hall rooms 114 or 124. The Application deadline is Thursday, September 9, 2010 at 4:00 in the College of Education Hokona Hall Room 114. Contact person: Eileen Waldschmidt, Program Manager, APS/UNM Career Development Program, Hokona Hall 124, UNM, Albuquerque, NM 87131-1241, (505) 277-6114 or ewaldsch@unm.edu or visit our website at http://ted.unm. edu/teaser1.html. Click on “Career Development Program.”
!BARTENDER TRAINING! Bartending Academy, 3724 Eubank NE, www. newmexicobartending.com 292-4180.
!!!BARTENDING!!!: UP TO $300/day. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520ext.100.
for new employment opportunities. Visit us online, anytime at www.dailylobo.com/classifieds.
For Sale COOL VINTAGE TEES, HATS, BACKPACKS PINK CAMO PEPPER SPRAY, PANTS, TEES KAUFMAN’S WEST THE MOST FACINATING STORE IN NEW MEXICO 1660 EUBANK NE MINUTES FROM UNM BACKPACK EXTERIOR FRAME A-16 men’s small $40 obo. 575-838-7189
LARRY’S HATS BEST HATS FOR ANY OCCASION HIKE - TRAVEL - WEDDING CUFFLINKS AND ACCESSORIES
3102 Central Ave SE
266-2095
FLAMENCO POR DERECHO In Concert El Rey Theater Limited Student Tix $15 Pre-sale: LA Underground, Masks y Mas, Birdland, Salsa-Baby. www.jmfla menco.com or 505-503-8737. FOR SALE: SNOWBOARD setup: Artec Gabe Taylor 159 wide, Freestyle Burton Bindings, 32 Prion boots size 12. $350 505-203-4058, jnlg88@unm.edu BRADLEY’S BOOKSMONDAY, Wednesday, Friday. 700 new arrivals!
Furniture FILING CABINETS: 2-Drawer $25 4drawer $40. Large desk 48x60 $50. Photo upon request. Will deliver. 575838-7189
Too busy to call us during the day?
NUDE MODELING FOR a new website. Email submissions@desertgurls.com for info and details. VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551. WANTED: EGG DONORS, Would you be interested in giving the Gift of Life to an Infertile couple? We are a local Infertility Clinic looking for healthy women between the ages of 21-33 who are nonsmoking and have a normal BMI, and are interested in anonymous egg donation. The experience is emotionally rewarding and you will be financially compensated for your time. All donations are strictly confidential. Interested candidates please contact Myra at The Center for Reproductive Medicine of NM at 505-224-7429.
Volunteers HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS AND subjects with and without asthma are needed for a research study looking at the effects of fat and physical activity on the breathing tubes. If you qualify, compensation will be provided for your time and inconvenience upon study completion. If you are healthy or have asthma, over the age of 18, and are interested in finding out more about this study, please contact or leave a message for Teresa at (505)269-1074 or e-mail tarchibeque@salud.unm.edu
NEED A JOB? Make sure to check the Daily Lobo Classifieds Monday through Friday
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