NM Daily Lobo 040511

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

April 5, 2011

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tuesday The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

A CASE OF RETALIATION? ASUNM ‘RIGHT-HAND MAN’ HAD DUTIES CUT AFTER ANNOUNCING CANDIDACY

by Elizabeth Cleary and Shaun Griswold news@dailylobo.com

Michael Thorning announced Monday that he is dropping out of the ASUNM presidential race, three weeks after resigning from his highranking position in the president’s cabinet. The former chief-of-staff declared March 8 he’d run against Attorney General Jaymie Roybal, and he said ASUNM president Laz Cardenas cut his chief-of-staff duties in half three days later. “I think I got the sense that it was either going to become a hostile work environment or I wasn’t going to be working there,” Thorning said. “… It sort of seemed the writing was on the wall.” Cardenas said he supported Roybal’s candidacy since October. Roybal confirmed she and Cardenas are dating. Thorning was profiled in Monday’s Daily Lobo as the presidential candidate for the New Day slate, but he said he decided not to run because he found the political atmosphere tough to navigate. He also said that after three years of ASUNM involvement, he’s tired.

“The past three weeks have been sort of a difficult situation to be in,” Thorning said. “It’s never an easy decision to withdraw from something like this, in a public thing.” Instead, Tim Mousseau will run for ASUNM president on the New Day slate against Roybal, from the Now slate.

“I got the sense that it was either going to become a hostile work environment or I wasn’t going to be working there.” ~Michael Thorning Former ASUNM Chief-of-Staff Thorning said Cardenas was surprised after Thorning told him he intended to run for president. “He already intended to back Jaymie (Roybal). It wasn’t something I held against him,” Thorning said. “We sat down, and he reiterated to me that he was surprised, and he told me at that time that most of the responsibilities I had — he wanted me to go ahead and not have those any more. I

was put on what he said was ‘restricted duty.’” Cardenas said Thorning broke his trust because he was one of the last people to know about Thorning’s candidacy. ”When you are president, you put your trust in your right-hand man, and your right-hand man is your chief-of-staff,” Cardenas said. “There are some things I didn’t tell anyone else. It’s a sad thing when you put that trust in that person, and there was no trust returned back.” Thorning was Cardenas’ campaign manager during last year’s ASUNM election. Thorning said Cardenas told him he would no longer have chief-ofstaff duties during public forums, such as the Student Housing Advisory Committee. When Thorning got back from spring break, he said he discovered his access card to the ASUNM offices no longer worked. Cardenas said this was a normal procedure following a resignation. “He lost access when he resigned,” Cardenas said. “If he was retaliated against, he would have been fired. It was Wednesday of spring break when he turned in his resignation letter.” Roybal said she, Thorning and

Mousseau were originally all part of one slate, called Spark. Thorning and Mousseau left the slate along with three of Spark’s 10 Senate candidates. Roybal planned to run for president, Mousseau was positioned to run for vice president, and Thorning was the slate’s campaign manager, she said.

”When you are president, you put your trust in your right-hand man ... It’s a sad thing when ... there was no trust returned back.” ~Laz Cardenas ASUNM President However, Thorning denied ever promising support to the Spark slate, and he said he made clear his intentions to run for president shortly after the slate formed. Roybal said Mousseau intended to run for ASUNM president since October. She said Mousseau asked her to run as vice president in his slate, but

that she told him she already planned to run for president. She said he probably regretted his decision to run underneath her. “I think in the back of Tim’s mind he was always like, ‘I should not be running for vice president. I should be running for president,’” she said. Roybal said she was shocked to learn Mousseau and Thorning planned to separate from the Spark slate. She said Thorning was a “plant” presidential candidate, and that Mousseau always intended to run in Thorning’s place. “I think they put Michael there so that Tim could run for president and we wouldn’t be expecting it,” she said. Mousseau said he disagreed with Roybal’s leadership style. “I might view the administration a little differently than Jaymie might,” he said. “That was one of the biggest issues for me — that we might not see eye to eye on when to listen to what the administration was saying and when to question what they’re saying.” Roybal said backstabbing has no place in the undergraduate student government. “All the deception and all the lies — I’m pretty disgusted about all of it,” she said. “One, who do you trust? And, two, who is telling the truth?”

Flanagan leaves after almost two decades Coach elevated women’s program to national stage by Brandon Call bcall@unm.edu

Don Flanagan, after 16 seasons as UNM women’s basketball head coach, resigned Monday after initially deciding to return to the sidelines next season. The reason for Flanagan’s sudden change of heart: Five freshmen players (Tina Doughty, Erin Boettcher, Morgan Toben, Brianna Taylor and Jasmine Patterson) intended to quit the program, the Albuquerque Journal reported. Instead, Flanagan, who didn’t return phone calls Monday, decided to leave the program, even though he had a year left on his four-year extension, which he signed in 2007. Athletics Director Paul Krebs said in a statement that Flanagan had an unprecedented UNM career. “Don turned this program around and not only made the Lobos contenders, but he impacted the lives of so many young women,” he said. UNM will hold a news conference today to discuss the position at 1 p.m. at The Pit. The Lobos finished 13-18 this season, just Flanagan’s second losing season at UNM. Former UNM point guard Amy

Inside the

Beggin, now a graduate assistant with the South Dakota State women’s basketball team, said she was privileged to have played under Flanagan.

“Flanagan is an ambassador for women’s basketball.” ~Amy Beggin Former UNM point guard “He is such a remarkable coach and mentor,” she said. “Flanagan is an ambassador for women’s basketball. He is such a great teacher of the game, and he stresses the fundamentals to his players.” Flanagan’s 340-168 career record ranks in the top 25 in the country among active coaches — right up there with the big names in women’s college basketball like Tennessee’s Pat Summitt, UConn’s Geno Auriemma and Rutgers’ Vivian Stringer. Under Flanagan’s direction, the Lobos notched 14 consecutive winning seasons and 13 postseason appearances. He led his team to the Sweet 16 in 2003 — the best postseason result for any UNM basket-

Rapid fire

Robert Maes / Daily Lobo Don Flanagan does a radio interview in March at the Mountain West Conference tournament in Las Vegas. The longtime women’s basketball coach resigned Monday after 16 years with the University. ball program. Flanagan said in a statement that his time at UNM is invaluable. “I appreciate (UNM’s) contribution and all of the fans’ support,” he said. In 1995, Flanagan inherited a struggling program that was 14-96 in its previous four seasons. Flanagan had an immediate impact, and UNM finished 14-15, the best record for any first-year UNM head coach. The following season, UNM

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improved to 18-10. By the next year, Flanagan coached his team to 26 wins — surpassing the previous record of 19 wins set during the 1978 season. In 1998, the Flanaganled Lobos were the Western Athletic Conference tournament champions and made their first trip to the NCAA tournament. Flanagan leaves the Lobos with eight NCAA tournament appearances, five WNIT berths, two conference Coach of the Year honors,

13 consecutive seasons with and a top-10 ranking in attendance. Beggin said she’ll always remember how Flanagan coaxed the best out of his players. “If you look back at the program, Coach Flanagan has taken it to the next level,” she said. “Competing against and beating some of the country’s top teams, becoming a conference powerhouse — it’s all because of him. You can just go on and on.”

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