NM Daily Lobo 052912

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

Aliens

summer

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May 29-June 3 2012

The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

UNM publishes salary book online

CONTEMPORARY WEST

by Avicra Luckey

avicraluckey@gmail.com

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Dancers Natali Radelic and Vladimir Conde Reche rehearse for their performances in “The Tale of Natali,” which is part of Wild Dancing West 2012. The festival runs for three weekends, and features modern dance from choreographers living in the western region of the United States. See the full story on page 6.

More than a year and a half after students asked UNM to provide a more accessible version of its salary book, the book is available online. Director of University Communication and Marketing Cinnamon Blair said the Sunshine Portal launched May 25. The portal contains information on UNM’s purchasing information for contracts over $20,000, as well as UNM employee salaries. Before the online version launched, the salary book was only available to the public in hard copy at Zimmerman Library for two hours at a time, and could not be removed from the building. Former Daily Lobo editor-in-chief Pat Lohmann and GPSA each requested an online version of the book in the fall of 2010, but the administration denied repeated requests. The GPSA resolution “encourage(d) the Human Resources Department, the UNM administration and University Counsel to create and update a digital spreadsheet document of the UNM Salary Book.” ASUNM also passed a resolution in the fall of 2010 in favor of putting the book online. The following semester, GPSA passed a second resolution for an online salary database. In February 2011, the Albuquerque Journal compiled the information into an online database for its website. And in May 2011, Lohmann, along with other Daily Lobo representatives, uploaded a version to the Daily Lobo website by scanning every page of the book. In November 2011, the administration began developing the Sunshine Portal, a database that would include employee salary information, but student government and the administration grappled over how much the database should include. The hard-copy version originally included student salaries, but UNM legal counsel recommended that student information be removed to comply with the Federal Education Right to Privacy Act (FERPA). In February 2012, GPSA submitted

a third resolution, requesting the salary book include student employee and graduate assistantship information, but the administration chose to take the legal counsel’s advice. Last semester, then-GPSA President Katie Richardson told the Daily Lobo that the administration could consider listing student employee and graduate assistantship information by department or position rather than by student name. But Blair said students may still be identifiable if the position they hold is in a smaller department. She said the law restricts access to student information by a third party unless the student gives written permission. Blair said the University won’t include student salary information so long as the law remains the same. “We had to make sure that we weren’t going to compromise any student information, but we wanted to make sure that we were being transparent about our accounting and the information for which people were asking and what it’s going to include,” she said. Blair said the portal was put together by several entities on campus, including IT, Human Resources, the budget office and the Purchasing and Procurement Office. “We weren’t mandated to put this up,” she said. “This is something that Dr. Schmidly thought we needed to do. It was just the right thing to do, but we needed to go through and make sure we weren’t going compromise any information.” Blair said the Sunshine Portal’s first phase is complete. The second phase will include additional financial information and increased search capabilities and will be completed in June. To access the UNM Sunshine Portal, visit sunshine.unm.edu or follow the QR code:

AIDS clinic to move, provide more services by Avicra Luckey

avicraluckey@gmail.com

The UNM HIV/AIDS clinic will soon be able to offer more services to more patients after its relocation and expansion. The clinic, Truman Street Health Services, will relocate in July. According to a press release, the clinic will move from 625 Truman N.E. to 801 Encino Place N.E. The clinic will be renamed UNM Truman Health Services after the relocation. The clinic specializes in treating uninsured and underinsured patients with HIV/AIDS. HIV Program Manager Jamie Finkelstein said the new location

Inside the

Daily Lobo volume 116

issue 154

is about 8,500 square feet, almost double the size of the clinic on Truman Street. He said the new space will allow for the clinic to serve more patients and provide more comprehensive care. “We’ll be able to expand our services to include things like nutrition services, a pharmacy, and add more mental health and substance-abuse services, as well as additional HIV testing and screening,” he said. The Albuquerque Journal reported the new clinic will include more staff and doctor’s offices, as well as nine additional exam rooms. According to the Journal, rent for the new space will cost about $165,000 annually. The old

The clinic has estimated that about 402 people in the Albuquerque area are unaware they are HIV-positive

building was 4,500 square feet and cost about $65,000. The Centers for Disease Control reported that 2,252 people had been diagnosed with HIV in New Mexico by the end of 2008. Finkelstein said he moved to

Doggy pile

Take to the river

See page 10

See page 5

Albuquerque last year from Florida, where he worked as a HIV/AIDS patient-care advocate for seven years, and has noted some specific challenges in New Mexico. “The huge stigma of HIV here and the reluctance of both the general public as well as health care providers to do HIV testing is a challenge,” he said. “There is a huge estimated number of people living with HIV that are not in care and don’t even know they’re HIV positive, here in New Mexico.” Finkelstein said the clinic has estimated that about 402 people in the Albuquerque area are unaware they are HIV-positive, and an additional 593 people are aware that they carry HIV but are

not receiving medical attention. Finkelstein said most of the patients at the clinic are have low income. He said it is important to provide them with access to one location that provides health care services for all areas of concern, including nutrition services and mental health services. He said the services the clinic provides are supported through state and federal government funding. “I believe in being able to provide everything that’s needed,” he said. “A lot of the people that we serve are low income, so they may not necessarily have the resources to get other services in the community, so we can hopefully provide and meet all of their needs.”

TUESDAY

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PAGETWO M A Y 29-J

UNE

3 , 2012

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

Career Profile: Restaurant owner

by Avicra Luckey

but decided to move to New Mexico for a change of pace. “It was very hectic, it was getting too exTony Nesheiwat, 27, co-owner of Times pensive. I got used to that way of life,” he Square Deli, said his relationship with cus- said. “But there was too much traffic, prices tomers goes beyond knowing what they like were just going up like crazy and our sandto eat on a sandwich. wich prices were staying the same, so we This week marks the five-year anniversary couldn’t make money that way,” he said. of the deli and mini-mart, located just across Nesheiwat said his family chose the from UNM on Central AvUniversity area because enue, and Nesheiwat said of the heavy foot traffic the deli will be around for from nearly 30,000 people much longer. traversing the areas Nesheiwat said his between UNM, CNM and parents emigrated in the UNMH every day. But he ‘70s from Jordan to New York said for his family, it’s not City, where they owned a just about the money. number of restaurants. They “The money is the last relocated to Albuquerque thing we’re worried about in 2006, and the restaurants right now, we care about they opened here offer the how we treat people more same New York-style deli than the money they’re and Middle Eastern fare as handing us,” he said. those back east. In addition While his family tried to Times Square Deli, the to stay as true to their New family owns Sahara Middle York recipes as possible, Eastern Eatery, which is they did add a few New also on Central Avenue. Mexican touches to the ~Tony Nesheiwat The family’s success menu. deli owner allowed them to open “We changed the names satellite locations for both of some sandwiches to fit restaurants in the SUB. UNM,” he said. “We have the University Nesheiwat said many of his customers are Special, we have the Lobo Burger Special, like extended family to him. plus we added green chile to our menu, “We know people on a personal level, which people like around here.” we know people’s families, people’s backNesheiwat said he enjoys working with grounds. They talk to us like we’re family,” he customers and helping people, but that he said. “We have the same people here five days has goals separate from the family busia week, at least.” ness. He said that in the future he plans to Nesheiwat said his family still owns attend medical school at UNM while conRobbie’s, a chain of delis in New York, tinuing to help out at the restaurants.

avicraluckey@gmail.com

“The money is the last thing we’re worried about right now, we care about how we treat people more than the money they’re handing us,”

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

volume 116

issue 154

Telephone: (505) 277-7527 Fax: (505) 277-7530 news@dailylobo.com advertising@dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com

Tony Nesheiwat Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Cleary Managing Editor Danielle Ronkos News Editor Svetlana Ozden Assistant News Editor Avicra Luckey Staff Reporters Hannah Stangbye Barbara Gomez-Aguinaga Photo Editor Adria Malcom

Culture Editor Nicole Perez Sports Editor Mundo Carrillo Opinion/ Social Media Editor Alexandra Swanberg Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse Multimedia Editor Junfu Han

Design Director Robert Lundin Design Assistants Connor Coleman Josh Dolin Stephanie Kean Advertising Manager Renee Shmitt Sales Manager Jeff Bell Classified Manager Brittany Brown

Courtesy Photo The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published daily except Saturday, Sunday and school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $75 per academic year. E-mail accounting@dailylobo.com for more information on subscriptions. The New Mexico Daily Lobo is published by the Board of UNM Student Publications. The editorial opinions expressed in the New Mexico Daily Lobo are those of the respective writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the students, faculty, staff and PRINTED BY regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content SIGNATURE should be made to the editor-in-chief. OFFSET All content appearing in the New Mexico Daily Lobo and the Web site dailylobo. com may not be reproduced without the consent of the editor-in-chief. A single copy of the New Mexico Daily Lobo is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies is considered theft and may be prosecuted. 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 and telephone. No names will be withheld.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

May 29-June 3, 2012/ Page 3

The Weekly Free by Nicole Perez

You Break It! We Fix It!

nicole11@unm.edu It’s officially summer, and while you may be feeling as free as a bird, events and concerts are still just as costly. The Daily Lobo compiled some freebies to match your mood and not break the bank. Now you can save up for that massive vacation to Vegas you’ve been planning — or just minimize the damages of not finding a summer job.

Indie film

Car show

If you’re tired of watching superheroes explode walls or Rihanna yelling “man down,” then check out an independent and locally produced film. KiMo Theatre presents an Indie Q special event with three films by Scott Milder, titled “The Water,” “The Devil’s Luck” and “VANYA.” The best part is, you won’t have seen endless previews for these three, so the films might actually surprise you. KiMo Theatre is at 423 Central Ave. N.W., and credit cards are not accepted for concessions. The doors open at 6:30 p.m., and the show starts at 7 p.m.

Albuquerque’s slickest cars gear up for the South Valley Civitan Club’s Classic Car Show. The cars may cost thousands of dollars, but looking at them is free. Don’t get too envious of the cars’ owners — at least your Honda Civic has air-conditioning. The show runs from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the El Camino Real Academy parking lot at 3713 Isleta Blvd. S.W.

Thursday

Sunday

Friday

The Vegetarians and Vegans of UNM host a weekly potluck for others of their taste. Even if meat and dairy are dietary staples in your world, the event is an opportunity to expand your palette — tofu isn’t as bad as it seems. Your culinary contribution should, obviously, be meat-free. The event is held at an organizer’s apartment at 1809 Las Lomas Road N.E., Apt. D.

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Saturday If you’re having trouble finding fresh fish at Smith’s, why not go catch your own? Saturday is National Free Fishing day, so you don’t need a fishing license to try your luck. The city of Albuquerque hosts a Free Fishing Day and Clinic at Tingley Beach from 8 a.m. to noon where you can reel in tips from the pros. Tingley Beach is part of the ABQ BioPark at 1800 Tingley Drive S.W.

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Saturday and Sunday The poetic line “My love is like a red, red rose” is an understatement for rose lovers in the Southwest; their lives are centered on roses. Members of rose societies from California, Nevada, Texas and New Mexico gather to express their floral love in a four-day convention that includes a free, two-day rose show on Saturday and Sunday. The roses are displayed singly or in collections, and they are judged for petal perfection. The convention is in the New Mexico Ballroom of the Crowne Plaza Hotel at 1901 University Blvd. N.E. and runs from 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.

Fest a tribute to paddle sports by Nicole Perez

nicole11@unm.edu Freezing white-water rapids will flood the desert this weekend when a film festival centered on extreme water sports comes to town. An international festival visits Albuquerque for the first time Saturday and packs 34 paddlingoriented films into three and a half hours. The festival features all types of paddle sports, from traditional canoeing and kayaking to standup paddleboarding, in which the paddler stands on a surfboard and paddles down a coastline, and bugging, in which paddlers sit in a seat-like floatable and navigate white-water rapids with webbed gloves on their hands. Stephen Verchinski, New Mexico host of the Reel Paddling Film Festival, said the lack of water in New Mexico is not a deterrent for Albuquerque’s paddling community. He said more people join the sport every year, and that there was a 6 percent increase in paddle sports nationwide in 2011. “We live in a desert. Where do you kayak, and who do you kayak with?”

he said. “There are all of these lakes, a lot of them are hidden, and they’re good from just a standpoint of people doing recreational kayaking to full-blown ‘I am taking out all my gear, and I’m going out on this lake for four or five days.’” Verchinski said everyone is invited to the festival, whether they have experience with paddle sports or not, but he thinks the paddle community will be especially enthusiastic. “Folks who like the water and water only, this is their thing,” he said. “I’m holding it in the middle of the day, so it’s going to be really hot, and you’re going to want to see water.” The films range from politically charged documentaries to whimsical stop-motion features to documentation of awe-inspiring feats. One of the films features a group of stand-up paddleboarders who travel 400 miles along the coast of British Columbia protesting a proposed BP oil pipeline. In another film, a man sits in a mossy canoe

see Paddler page 5

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LoboOpinion

Page

4

May 29 - June 3 2012

The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg

opinion@dailylobo.com

THE RESULTS OF LAST POLL: The Board of Regents approved a $50 increase in student fees on April 27 to fund Athletics. This amount will be added to the amount from student fees the Student Fee Review Board already allocated to Athletics. This means each student will pay $131.75 for Athletics as part of his or her student fees. Do you support this increase? Yes, athletic programs are an important part of the college experience and should be funded by student fees.

4%

Yes, even though it’s an increase, it’s a relatively small amount to pay for athletic programs compared to fees students pay at other universities.

2%

No, Athletics is costing the University too much money. In this economy, student fees should cover only expenses directly related to their education.

90%

I’m indifferent.

4%

Torture tarnishes U.S.’s China’s belligerence calls Faculty routinely work human-rights credibility for U.S. naval expansion summers without pay

Out of 121 responses.

THIS WEEK’S POLL: Which social media site do you use most frequently? Facebook Twitter Instagram Tumblr Pinterest

GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM TO VOTE

DL

TheDailyLobo would like to hear your opinion about anything! Please rant via letters.

EDITORIAL BOARD Elizabeth Cleary Editor-in-chief

Danielle Ronkos Managing editor

Alexandra Swanberg Opinion editor

Svetlana Ozden News editor

LETTERS

Editor,

Editor,

Editor,

It can be called nothing short of comical to watch the U.S. government scold communist China over its treatment of human-rights activist Chen Guangcheng and his family. That is not to say that I find the torture of dissidents to be a joking matter, but at the same time, should one who lives in a glass house really be throwing bricks? After all, let us have a cursory glance at the kangaroo court which is unfolding in Guantanamo Bay. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is being tried for masterminding the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on a confession obtained after he was tortured 183 times through waterboarding. I, for one, have never been subjected to waterboarding, which is intended to simulate the sensation of drowning, but I can’t imagine it to be a very pleasant experience. Also, if I was subjected to that torture 183 times, then I think it’s fair to say I would confess to just about anything in order to stop the torture. The Obama administration has forbidden Mohammed from discussing with his civilian attorney about whether he was tortured. So, why this strange rule? Mohammed’s attorney, David Nevin, said, “And now the government wants to kill Mr. Mohammed. They want to extinguish the last eyewitness, so he can never talk about his torture. They want political cover, so he’ll be convicted and executed.” The Obama administration wants to tie up loose ends in regard to the official story about what happened on Sept. 11, 2001. Remember that official story? The bad-guy Muslims in a cave halfway around the world somehow breached the most sophisticated air defense system in the world and killed U.S. civilians? Mohammed will most likely be the sacrificial lamb that seeks to assuage the uneasy minds of many Americans who find the official story of what happened on 9/11 hard to believe. The truth is that 9/11 was an inside job meant to justify wars abroad and erode civil liberties at home. Sorry if the truth hurts. Muhajir Romero UNM student

The U.S. Department of Defense believes China will soon have anti-ship missiles with a range of 1000 miles, B-6 bombers armed with long-range cruise missiles, aircraft carriers, 75 surface navy ships, 60 submarines and missile boats. These forces will enable China to project its influence in the Asia-Pacific region. China has claimed territorial sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, including areas near the Philippines and Japan, and Chinese ships have violated waters in close proximity to a number of Asian countries. This has prompted the U.S., South Korea, Australia and India to implement security agreements, and Vietnam, Taiwan and the Philippines have sought to foster closer ties to the U.S., India and Japan. In the face of China’s expansionist policies, the U.S. should encourage Pacific allies, especially Japan, South Korea and India, to build up their military forces. We should rethink the proposed cuts in our military, especially the cuts to our Navy. We are down to 285 ships and might eventually have fewer than the 11 carrier battle groups needed to patrol the world’s oceans. China can concentrate its forces in its region, while we have to deploy our forces around the globe. Donald A. Moskowitz Daily Lobo reader

Does Regent Jamie Koch intentionally insult UNM faculty, or is he just clueless about how the University operates? In the April 28 issue of the Albuquerque Journal, he was quoted as saying, “Obviously, (incoming UNM President Robert Frank) needs to get paid. You can’t ask somebody to work for you when he’s not on the payroll.” Apparently Mr. Koch doesn’t know that this is precisely what most faculty do every summer. They work for the University preparing classes, conducting research, meeting with students, performing University service — and they are not on the payroll. I would appeal to my colleagues to stop working when they are not on the payroll, but I know this will never happen, because they are too dedicated to their work, to students and to UNM. We do the work for free. Perhaps it’s too much to ask the incoming president to do likewise. I do not believe it is too much to ask regent Koch to apologize to the faculty for his thoughtless words. Sherman Wilcox UNM professor

Apathy supplants past’s political passion at UNM Editor, How many students know that on May 8, 1970, National Guardsmen stabbed 11 students on UNM campus? For many years, there was a trail of blood from the stabbing site in front of the SUB across from Mesa Vista Hall all the way to the bell tower. It was shellacked and remained visible for a number of years after that tragic day on our dear campus. Where is the outpouring of political concern among today’s students? Randall Biggers Daily Lobo reader

LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY

Power in selfish hands sows misery, oppression Editor, There are two kinds of people who pursue positions of authority: those who want to be in positions of authority so they can benefit themselves at the expense of everyone else, and those who want to be in positions of authority to manifest what will be of benefit for all. What is essential for those not in positions of authority is that they prevent the former of these two types of people from ever being in positions of authority for very long and ensure that the latter of these two types of people stay in positions of authority. When the opposite occurs, there is dictatorship, oppression and lack of prosperity in the land. Robert Gardiner Daily Lobo reader

 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.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Paddler

May 29-June 3, 2012/ Page 5

from page 3

Don’t worry... it kinda looks like you’re taking notes.

that looks like a log and plays the banjo, while a Muppet sings along from the shore. A stop-motion film shows a woman flying on a canoe paddle before she paddles a canoe through the forest. “It’s pretty much anything you can think of,� Verchinski said. “I don’t know where some of these guys get their filming capabilities, but they’re pretty awesome.� Jim Wood, a stand-up paddleboard instructor and founder of Blue Dog Paddle Adventures, said watching paddle sports on film is just as beneficial as trying them out. “I think the festival is important because it allows people who don’t know anything about paddling an opportunity to see something that they didn’t know existed,� Wood said. “Before someone actually sees it or does it, they have no idea of what it’s like.� The day after the film festival, local paddlers gather to lecture and teach basic safety precautions free of charge at the Alameda Open Space. “If I can teach 30 to 50 new people into the sport and tell them what the state requires and the basics of learning, I’m helping out both the community and reducing the risk of fatality out there,� he said. Verchinski said modern technology is making the sport

Reel Paddling Film Festival Saturday, noon to 3:30 p.m. The Guild Cinema $15, tickets must be purchased in advance at REI or online at ticketriver.com

Paddling Lecture Series Sunday, 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Environmental Education Building at the Bachechi Open Space Alameda Boulevard and Rio Grande Boulevard Free

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Jean-Paul de Jager sits on a paddleboard during a lesson in stand-up paddleboarding along the Rio Grande River. Stand-up paddleboarding is one of the many paddle sports featured in the Reel Paddling Film Festival at the Guild Cinema this Saturday.

daily crossword

DAILY LOBO new mexico

safer than ever. For example, he said QR codes were printed on signs along a kayak route in Florida, so kayakers could instantly access route maps and conditions. Life-jacket technology is also advancing, and Verchinski said some life jackets are just small strips of inflatable cloth. Fashionforward paddlers can even custom order them to match their leopardprint bikinis. Verchinski said the potential danger of a sport should not deter participants. “Some folks never get out of bed because they’re afraid of the world,� he said. “You can’t be afraid of the world all the time, you’ve got to manage the risk.�

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culture

Page 6 / May 29-June 3, 2012

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Modern dance eschews narrative by Antonio Sanchez

sanchezantonio24@gmail.com

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Director Donna Jewell laughs while watching a rehearsal of “The Tale of Natali.” The piece is about how transformations are crucial to theater.

New Lunch Menu Moday-Friday 11am-4pm

Original Location 5016 NE Visit our new B westLomas side location: 10051 Coors Blvd., N.W. (505) 268-0974 4901 Lomas Blvd., N.E. Open 11am-9pm 505-255-5079 8700 Menaul Blvd., N.E. 505-237-2800

UCLA professor and renowned modern-dance choreographer Victoria Marks said dance can be found in the simplest functions of the human body. “I don’t view dancing as a special domain of human activity; I think the minute that you inhale and notice yourself inhaling, you can also be dancing,” Marks said. “The minute you raise your hand to say goodbye, and you notice yourself doing that, then you’re dancing.” Marks and UNM’s Head of Dance, Donna Jewell, will each present original work in the seventh annual Wild Dancing West. The festival is held during three weekends and showcases the works of contemporary choreographers who live in the Western United States. Each weekend focuses on a different choreographer. Wild Dancing West’s marketing director Susanna Kearny said this year’s performances capture the experimental side of modern dance. “Contemporary dance is one of the most visual kinds of dance and the most immediate with the body,” Kearny said. “A lot of contemporary work you can extract meaning from … it’s not necessarily set like most traditional sets of dance and art, where there’s that expectation and story line.” Marks presents a series of short conceptual films that she choreographed alongside two new live performances. Her films “Not About Iraq,” “Veterans,” “Mothers and Daughters” and “Men” each stress the

image presented in the choreography as opposed to a narrative, Marks said. While “Not About Iraq” and “Mothers and Daughters” feature performers, she said “Veterans” and “Men” star people who don’t consider themselves to be performers. Marks said she started making “Men” knowing only that she wanted to incorporate elderly men from the Canadian Rockies. From there, she focused on capturing movement. “Making a dance is a little bit like writing poetry, except your medium is not words but action,” she said. Jewell will present and direct “The Tale of Natali,” an original contemporary dance piece that compares and contrasts reality and fairy tales. Jewell said “The Tale of Natali” is more experimental than her work at UNM, drawing influence from her work in dance companies across New Mexico and in Austria. She said the performance will be marked by bright colors and breaking of the fourth wall by interacting with the audience, while still maintaining the show’s darker theme: dealing with a catastrophic event. “I’m really exploring the moment where somebody comes to an edge, like the edge of a cliff, and they have to decide whether to go forward or backward,” Jewell said. “If you’re in your comfort zone your whole life, if you don’t challenge yourself or face something kind of painful, you’ll pretty much stay the same.” Jewell composed the piece with the show’s five performers, Natali Radelic, Vladimir Conde Reche, Avalon Jay, Dodie Montgomery and Lisa Nevada.

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Jewell said that while they each drew upon their own personal struggles, the show is not driven by any single moment or narrative. She said abstract dance often becomes more personal because people can derive their own meaning from it. “The more abstract the work is, you begin to find your own story. It’s your story, as opposed to me telling you the story,” she said. “If I keep it more abstract … you may think ‘Oh, that looks like the relationship I have with my best friend, that duet right there.’ I’m trying to keep this piece open enough and abstract enough so it still has that fantasy, magical quality and to allow the audience to make their own decision.”

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“An Evening of Film and Dance Film”

June 1 and 2, 8 p.m. Choreography and movement direction by Victoria Marks; photography, editing and film direction by Margaret Williams $15 general admission; $10 students/seniors

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June 8 and 9, 8 p.m. Choreographed by Donna Jewell $15 general admission; $10 students/seniors

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sports

Page 8 / May 29-June 3, 2012

Players, coach earn MWC honors by Mundo Carrillo

sports@dailylobo.com The baseball team outdid the rest of the Mountain West this season in this weekend’s tournament and in annual Mountain West awards. Junior catcher Mitchell Garver and sophomore third baseman DJ Peterson were both awarded MWC Co-Player of the Year. Head coach Ray Birmingham won MWC Coach of the Year. Garver, an Albuquerque native, said the award means a lot to him because he put in a lot of hard work this season. “It’s very important to me because this is what I work for,” he said. “I strive to help my team, but I’m also striving to help better myself as a baseball player. Winning an award like that, especially when you share it with someone like DJ

Peterson, is quite an honor.” Garver said that unlike other Southwest states, New Mexico isn’t a hotbed for baseball. “As a New Mexico baseball player, you don’t have all the benefits that other schools in the Southwest have,” he said. “To get an award like this is encouraging to the younger kids.” Birmingham said Garver is just one of many talented players to come from New Mexico. “I know New Mexico kids can play baseball,” Birmingham said. “He’s an example of what’s in this state.” Peterson adds this award to a cache of accolades earned throughout the season. He was named to the USA Baseball 2012 Collegiate National Team, the first Lobo to ever receive the honor, and is a semifinalist for

see Baseball page 10

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Junior catcher Mitchell Garver runs to first base after a hit against Air Force on May 19 at Isotopes park. Garver was awarded MWC Co-Player of the Year for the 2012 season.

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sports

New Mexico Daily Lobo

May 29-June 3, 2012/ Page 9

Head coach adds seasoned assistant to staff

Joseph Anders

by Mundo Carrillo

sports@dailylobo.com While the women’s basketball team didn’t win many games last season, head coach Yvonne Sanchez

Dirty Bourbon Ladies Night! Nathan Dean & The Damn Band Coaches Geeks Who Drink; $3 Jager Shots 8:30-10:30pm featuring $11 pitchers of Fat Tire, 1554 and Ranger IPA Happy Hour from 4:30-7pm Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30 Holiday Bowl College Night Karaoke 9:30pm to 2:00am Two Hours of Bowling $10 One Pitcher of Beer $4 Discounted Late Night Menu TNA Smoke Shop Tattoo and Piercing 15% Student Discount M-F 9am to 10pm 505-232-0357 The Library Bar & Grill Thursday Ladies Night 8pm-2am Feat. the Infamous BOOTY SHAKE! CA$H PRIZES $2.50 Corona and Landshark $3 Jose Cuervo

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is confident her new assistant can help boost performance. Joseph Anders, Arizona State’s former interim head coach, will join the Lobos as Sanchez’s assistant next season. Anders brings 25 years of coaching experience to the Lobos. He took over as interim head coach for the Sun Devils last season and went 20-12. In his 11 years as an assistant coach at ASU, the team made seven appearances in the NCAA tournament. Anders is bringing winning team experience to the Lobos, a team that went 11-20 last year. The Lobos won only three of their 11 regularseason conference games. “I wasn’t sure if I was going to be able to get him, to be honest,” Sanchez said. “The team did so well when he took it over as an interim at Arizona State. I am very, very

fortunate to be able to bring him here to work with this program.” Anders said he has a lot more to bring to the struggling program than winning experience.

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“This is the right fit for me because I am a teacher, I believe in people. I want to be in a place where I feel like I am making a difference.” ~Joseph Anders assistant head coach

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“The strengths I bring are an enthusiasm for the game, an enthusiasm for student athletes and also an enthusiasm for doing things the right way,” Anders said. Sanchez and Anders have a history together. They were both assistant coaches at New Mexico State from 1996 to 1999. “Coach Sanchez and I have known each other for almost 20 years,” Anders said. “There was a peace for me (at UNM) because of the history that Yvonne and I have.” Sanchez said she needed someone whose style she knew to serve as her assistant coach. “There’s a difference when you bring somebody in and you know how they work and you know how they operate,” she said. Sanchez said she is also a big fan of Anders’ recruiting and coaching skills.

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“His recruiting skills are unbelievable,” Sanchez said. “His X’s and O’s and his coaching ability were displayed last year when he won 20 games.” Even though Sanchez ranks higher on the coaching ladder, she said Anders will not be treated as a subordinate. “He’s not working for me, we’re all working together,” Sanchez said. “Everybody operates as a team.” Anders’ former coaching stints include Northern Arizona University, Mississippi State and East Carolina University. He said that at this point in his career, his new position with the Lobos is a perfect fit. “This is the right fit for me because I am a teacher,” Anders said. “I believe in people. I want to be in a place where I feel like I am making a difference.”

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sports

Page 10 / May 29-June 3, 2012

New Mexico Daily Lobo

sports briefs Track and Field

AUSTIN, Texas — Six Lobos qualified at the 2012 NCAA West Preliminary over the weekend for the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships in June. Django Lovett, Sarah Waldron, Beejay Lee, Floyd Ross, Ruth Senior and Richard York will compete in the championships in Des Moines, Iowa, from June 6 to 9. Lee posted the second-fastest 100-meter run time in UNM history with a time of 10.26 seconds. Senior posted a time of 10:21.58 in the women’s 3000 meter steeplechase to qualify for her third straight championship. Waldron came in fourth place in the 10,000-meter run with a time of 33:54.56.

Volleyball

The volleyball team will travel to Italy and Slovenia on Wednesday for a European competition. The team will play against the Italian and Slovenian Junior National teams and the Algerian National Team. Players will spend 12 days overseas and return June 10.

Baseball

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — The baseball team won its second straight Mountain West tournament over the weekend, beating SDSU 22-3 in the championship game. It defeated UNLV 13-0 on Thursday and TCU 5-2 on Friday to set up the championship match with SDSU. Junior infielder Josh Melendez was awarded the tournament MVP after going 3-for-6 with two runs scored and two RBIs against SDSU. The No. 3 Lobos are set to take on No. 2 San Diego in Los Angeles for the first round of the NCAA regional.

Swimming and Diving

Tracy Ljone resigned as the head women’s swimming coach May 8 after seven seasons with the team. Her overall record was 31-53-1 and 6-39 in the MW. Her teams never placed higher than sixth place in the MW. Despite her record, Ljone had 25 individuals break UNM school records and 12 swimmers named to the First Team All-MW. In 2010, she had 12 swimmers receive MWC Scholar-Athlete honors, more than any other team in the conference. Ljone started as an assistant coach in 2002 and became the head coach after the 2004-05 season.

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Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo The Lobo baseball team makes a dog pile on the Isotopes field May 19 after defeating Air Force to tie with TCU for the regular season championship. The Lobos clinched the MWC tournament Saturday for the second year in a row.

Baseball

from page 8

the Dick Howser Trophy, which is given annually to the best college baseball player in the country. Despite the recognition, Peterson said he is focused on winning games and playing in the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. “Awards are awards, but we still have to look forward to a regional and hopefully Omaha,” Peterson said. “I would much rather go to Omaha than win co-player of the year.”

Garver said sharing the award with a teammate adds to the excitement. “We both felt that if just only one of us got the award, it wouldn’t be as rewarding,” Garver said. Garver said Birmingham is welldeserving of the coach of the year award. “He’s brought players together from all parts of the country and made us into a team, and it shows when we play.”

Peterson said Birmingham is more than just a coach to him. “He’s someone 20 years down the road that will not be my coach anymore, but will be my good friend,” Peterson said. “He’s a great coach and a great friend. He’s just a good guy all around.” Birmingham said his players made the award possible. “The kids did it for me,” he said. “They had to give the trophy to somebody so they gave it to me.”

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JUNIOR SCIENTIST OUTREACH PROGRAM Join us for an exciting and rewarding opportunity to provide FREE informal science education to 4th and 5th graders of the South Valley in Albuquerque! Volunteer applications will be accepted until July 1st! All disciplines welcome to apply! Volunteer Orientation: Sat, July 28 from 2-5pm Camp will run M-F, July 30-August 3 (7:30 am to 1pm) Visit our website: www.juniorscientist.org Email: jsop.unm@gmail.com


lobo features

New Mexico Daily Lobo

May 29-June 3, 2012/ Page 11

Weekly Horoscopes by Alexandra Swanberg aswanny@unm.edu

Summer fun! Capricorn—The next couple of

weeks are about overcoming your strong attachment to structure and certainty. The elements are right for rolling with your curiosity in a safe, enlightening way. Use this time to surprise yourself by stumbling on interests you never thought would strike you. Along the way, you could meet some folks who will prove beneficial where your career is concerned, so approach social situations with that in mind. Aquarius—During the last week, you may have found yourself thinking life is too good to be true sometimes. If you want to stay on that wave of feeling effortlessly well and alive, abolish all doubt that it is a legitimate experience. It ends only when you get caught up in dwelling on the past or worrying about the future. For now, test yourself to see how long you can sustain the ride. This is a prime time to tie up loose ends and sever the ones that are bringing you down. Pisces—Things may be feeling quite out of hand for no apparent reason. On the surface, the situation is swell, but you’ve had the nagging feeling that doom is lurking and has its eye on you. With many inner planets positioned in Gemini, everyone is experiencing the chaos and unpredictability characteristic of the sign. When you feel it getting to you, take deep breaths, close your eyes and visit your happy place — it exists for times like this. Aries—The treasure you seek is all yours if only you see it. You’ve always had a pretty clear idea of what you want out of life and you’re certain of how to get there. Don’t let this mindset keep you from remembering your way is not the only one. Satisfy your need for selfimprovement and advancement in society by exploring a variety of means to the end you desire. They won’t all work, but you’ll learn from every new experience.

Taurus—The Gemini influence

lately is becoming an overwhelming force. Many things seem to beg for your attention and obligations are piling up faster than you feel you can get to them. It may be that you need to downsize the load you’re taking on — more than likely, it’s more than you can handle. It’s nothing to feel bad about, and besides, you aren’t benefitting anyone by exhausting yourself. Gemini—You are master of your domain, and once you realize it extends as far as you want it to, you’ll be limitless. It may be more difficult than ever to do justice to every one of the opportunities that crop up daily, but the length of experience is not as significant as the perspective you gain from it. Try not to get caught up in what you’d like to become; what’s happening in the moment is what matters most this week. Cancer—Expect your thoughts to get a little out of control, especially in any anxiety-inducing situation. The next couple weeks, you’ll be more susceptible than usual to spells of worrying. This could potentially be a productive time, but only if you’re able to get past the fear that anything you do isn’t or won’t be good enough. Generally, people are never pleased, so go with what you want. Watch for reluctance born out of your fear of what others might think. Leo—Taking control of your life doesn’t necessarily imply having to physically assert yourself, although this is the way you’ve been doing things up until recently. You can save yourself a lot of energy by thinking of ways to get what you need and want that are more innovative and outside the box. These are the kind of solutions and methods that will work best for you over the next couple of weeks. Virgo—It’s been rumored that women can get what they want from the world by maximizing

their looks, but you caught on early in life that the mind can get you farther. While Gemini reigns over the next couple weeks, you’ll find finesse and charm coming through naturally in all interactions. You are unlimited in what you can do in any sphere of your life, although be careful not to physically exhaust yourself trying to do it all. Libra—You can rule the world from you sofa if you so please, it’s all a matter of mind over matter. The next couple of weeks are not about solving your problems; they’re about seeing how few of them there are and shrinking them to a manageable size. You’ll understand the underlying simplicity in life and how its broad patterns often repeat in everyday events. Once you understand this nature, you can really take advantage of the resources at hand. Scorpio—It is easy for you to get carried away with just about anything over the next couple weeks, while Gemini rules the inner planets. If you are looking to break clean from a stifling routine, now is the time to get a feel for your alternatives. Remember to keep tabs on the obligations you decide to keep, a task that becomes increasingly difficult the further you fly from your old self. Don’t let this perceived distance scare you from getting the full experience. Sagittarius—At times these next few weeks, you’ll feel as if you’re being possessed by a kind of spirit totally unlike you. That is, you perceive it as different, but it is a sign that you’ve been lacking the very qualities you’re mysteriously in touch with. The potential has always been in you, and if you’re curious about what else you have in store, now is the time to dive in and discover those parts of yourself.

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TUESDAY 5/29 CAMPUS EVENTS

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Across 1 Canal locale 7 Exile isle 11 Young boy 14 Mount where Noah’s ark landed 15 Color similar to aqua 16 “__ was saying ...” 17 Staccato’s opposite 18 “B.C.” creator Johnny 19 Mex. neighbor 20 #1 hit by a 30-Across member 23 Longtime U.K. record label 26 Speechifier’s spot 27 Botanical puffiness 28 High-pitched flute 30 ‘60s pop group 32 Shady spot 33 Detective’s lead 35 #1 hit by a 30-Across member 40 Ain’t as it should be? 41 Bring together 44 #1 hit by a 30-Across member 49 Gasoline ratings 51 Parceled (out) 52 Sharer’s word 53 Tree juice 54 #1 hit by a 30-Across member

58 Advanced legal deg. 59 Top of the line 60 Stylish Oldsmobiles 64 PC linking acronym 65 __ Gaga 66 Catches some z’s 67 Doo-wop’s __ Na Na 68 Terrier named for a Scottish isle 69 Expansive home

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Down 1 Bud 2 “My lips __ sealed” 3 Re-re-re-remind? 4 Oman man, usually 5 Bullfighters 6 Keyless 7 Spirit of a people 8 Hamburger grading word 9 Starr of the NFL 10 ‘50s tennis standout Gibson 11 Bay leaf source 12 Undertake, as responsibilities 13 Rigg and Ross 21 Bishop’s domain 22 N.J. summer setting 23 Org. with a monthly “Go Green!” newsletter 24 Craft whose name means “peace”

SUDOKU

LOBO LIFE

Student Health Insurance Summer 2012 Enrollment Starts at: 9:00am Location: UNM SHAC Enroll for Student Health Insurance in person at SHAC Reception Area, Monday – Friday, or online @ www.macori.com/UNM. Human Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica Popular Starts at: 12:00pm Location: Herstein Latin American Gallery For more information call: 277-0818 or pheffern@unm.edu. Al-Anon Peer Support Group Starts at: 3:00pm Location: UNM Women’s Resource Center Friends and family members of those struggling with someone else’s drinking can find support in a safe and confidential environment. Every Tuesday.

COMMUNITY EVENTS Congregation Albert Sisterhood Used Book Sale Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE We are gearing up for our upcoming Sisterhood Used Book Sale 2012. Please go through all you books and pack up the ones you don’t want and/or read anymore. Salsa Dance Classes-Summer Schedule Starts at: 7:00pm Location: Aspen Santa Fe Ballet New York Style Mambo Dance Classes Classes meet every Tuesday & Thursday. Edge of Color, public opening Starts at: 5:00pm Location: Tamarind Institute Edge of Color will showcase Tamarind artists associated with the hard-edge/color-field movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

WEDNESDAY 5/30 CAMPUS EVENTS

Student Health Insurance Summer 2012 Enrollment Starts at: 9:00am Location: UNM SHAC Enroll for Student Health Insurance in person at SHAC Reception Area, Monday – Friday, or online @ www.macori.com/UNM. Human Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica Popular Starts at: 12:00pm Location: Herstein Latin American Gallery For more information call: 277-0818 or pheffern@unm.edu.

COMMUNITY EVENTS Congregation Albert Sisterhood Used Book Sale Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE We are gearing up for our upcoming Sisterhood Used Book Sale 2012. Please go through all you books and pack up the ones you don’t want and/or read anymore. Hebrew Conversation Class: Beginning Starts at: 5:00pm Location: 1701 Sigma Chi, NE Offered every Wednesday by Israel Alliance and Hillel.

THURSDAY 5/31 CAMPUS EVENTS Student Health Insurance Summer 2012 Enrollment Starts at: 9:00am Location: UNM SHAC Enroll for Student Health Insurance in person at SHAC Reception Area, Monday – Friday, or online @ www.macori.com/UNM. Human Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica Popular Starts at: 12:00pm Location: Herstein Latin American Gallery

For more information call: 277-0818 or pheffern@unm.edu. Changeling the Lost Starts at: 8:00pm Location: SUB Santa Ana A&B Mind’s Eye Theatre UNM presents the Camarilla’s Changeling The Requiem venue. Play a character as part of White Wolf Publishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.

COMMUNITY EVENTS Congregation Albert Sisterhood Used Book Sale Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE We are gearing up for our upcoming Sisterhood Used Book Sale 2012. Please go through all you books and pack up the ones you don’t want and/or read anymore.

FRIDAY 6/1 CAMPUS EVENTS Student Health Insurance Summer 2012 Enrollment Starts at: 9:00am Location: UNM SHAC Enroll for Student Health Insurance in person at SHAC Reception Area, Monday – Friday, or online @ www.macori.com/UNM. Human Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica Popular Starts at: 12:00pm Location: Herstein Latin American Gallery For more information call: 277-0818 or pheffern@unm.edu. Lobo Campus Civitan Club Starts at: 5:00pm Location: SUB Thunderbird Room Every Friday, pre-charter meetings for Lobo Campus Civitan Club! Service club working a variety of community service projects. Make new friends. Learn leadership skills. Free refreshments!

25 SALT weapon 29 Playfully noncommittal 30 “Keep your opinions to yourself!” 31 Long-bodied swimmer 34 Novelist Deighton 36 Carry the day 37 Bests in the market 38 Messenger molecule 39 Headache intensifiers 42 Afternoon social 43 Debatable mental ability 44 Poems with pastoral themes

45 Do-re-mi 46 Mount Holyoke grad 47 Lang. of Luther 48 Worthy principles 50 Pressed-pants feature 52 Yellow-and-white daisy 55 Linger in the Jacuzzi 56 Memorial Day race, informally 57 Old Nair rival 61 “Michael Collins” actor Stephen 62 Pick, with “for” 63 U-turn from NNW

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Event Calendar

Planning your week has never been easier! COMMUNITY EVENTS Plein Air Summer Starts at: 12:00pm Location: TBA Local student artist’s kickstarter project. Painting all summer long in SW national parks! Backers get original art! Congregation Albert Sisterhood Used Book Sale Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE We are gearing up for our upcoming Sisterhood Used Book Sale 2012. Please go through all you books and pack up the ones you don’t want and/or read anymore. 7th Annual Wild Dancing West Starts at: 8:00pm Location: 4904 4th NW Choreography/movement direction by Victoria Marks; photography/editing/film direction by Margaret Williams Victoria Marks.

SATURDAY 6/2 CAMPUS EVENTS Student Health Insurance Summer 2012 Enrollment Starts at: 9:00am Location: UNM SHAC Enroll for Student Health Insurance in person at SHAC Reception Area, Monday – Friday, or online @ www.macori.com/UNM. Human Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica Popular Starts at: 12:00pm Location: Herstein Latin American Gallery For more information call: 277-0818 or pheffern@unm.edu.

COMMUNITY EVENTS 14th ANNUAL ALBUQUERQUE FOLK FESTIVAL Starts at: 9:30am Location: 9201 Balloon Museum Dr. NE

Indoor and outdoor festivities include performances, dances, workshops, music jams, crafts, food vendors. Evening swing and contra dances. Reel Paddling Film Festival Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3405 Central Ave NE If you have seen the Banff Mountain Film Festival This Paddling Film Festival features the best of the best to support three not for profits, American Rivers, WildEarth Guardians and NM Xtreme Sports. Plein Air Summer Starts at: 12:00pm Location: TBA Local student artist’s kickstarter project. Painting all summer long in SW national parks! Backers get original art! Congregation Albert Sisterhood Used Book Sale Starts at: 12:00pm Location: 3800 Louisiana Blvd. NE We are gearing up for our upcoming Sisterhood Used Book Sale 2012. Please go through all you books and pack up the ones you don’t want and/or read anymore. 7th Annual Wild Dancing West Starts at: 8:00pm Location: 4904 4th NW Choreography/movement direction by Victoria Marks; photography/editing/film direction by Margaret Williams Victoria Marks.

SUNDAY 6/3 CAMPUS EVENTS Werewolf The Forsaken Starts at: 7:00pm Location: SUB Santa Ana A&B Mind’s Eye Theatre UNM presents the Camarilla’s Werewolf The Forsaken venue. Play a character as part of White Wolf Publishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com


classifieds

LASSIFIEDs CCLASSIFIEDS Page 12 / May 29-June 3, 2012

DAILY LOBO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

new mexico

DAILY LOBO new mexico

CLASSIFIED INDEX Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds

Announcements Announcements Auditions Event Rentals Fun, Food, Music Health and Wellness Looking for You Lost and Found Services Travel Want to Buy Your Space

Housing Apartments Co-housing Condos Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Property for Sale Rooms for Rent Sublets

For Sale Audio/Video Bikes/Cycles Computer Stuff Dogs, Cats, Pets For Sale Furniture Garage Sales Textbooks Vehicles for Sale

Employment Child Care Jobs Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Jobs Wanted Volunteers

Announcements FEEL BETTER AT 277-3013. Agora Helpline. www.agoracares.com

Lost and Found LOST KEYS. RED and black UNM lanyard with Nissan key and house keys. If found call 505-702-2641. LOST CASHMERE ZIP-up hooded sweater. Black. Lost near UNM Law School. If found please call 505-4141952.

NM’s best selection of Indoor Garden Supplies organic and natural • hydroponics garden supplies! • indoor grow lights • and organics!

1051 San Mateo Blvd SE • 255-3677

www.ahlgrows.com

2BDRM ($645) AND 1BDRM ($545). Rent includes WIFI and water. Student discounts. Rapid Ride stops at our door. Well maintained and roomy, freeway access, laundry room, quiet. 3236300. www.village@fourhills.com 2 BDRM COTTAGE recently remodeled, 3 blocks to UNM, off street parking, hardwood floors, $750 +gas and electric. No dogs. 842-5450. SEE THE BEST. Only 2 blocks to UNM. No need for car. Large 1 bedroom on beautiful historic Silver Street. Perfect for 1 serious student who will pamper my place. Completely furnished, even with dishes. Just bring clothes/ books. Wireless Internet, laundry, hardwood floors. References, lease. No drugs/ pets/ parties/ smoking. Crime Free Policy property. Only $543 to lucky student chosen to live here. Plan now and move in soon. 505-220-8455. bon_neal@hotmail.com 2BDRM, 1BA. CLOSE to shopping and bus. Between Zuni and Central. Deposit $250, rent $475. Please contact or text to 505-401-5347 or abqrents@yahoo.com

1BDRM 1.5 BLOCK from UNM, utilities paid, off-street parking, $520/mo. 8974303. 2BDRM. NEW PAINT/CARPETED. Laundry on-site. 3 blocks to UNM. Cats ok. No dogs. $735/mo including utilities. 246-2038. www.kachina-properties.com 313 Girard SE. COZY CASITA-STYLE studio, just remodeled, near Downtown/ North Valley, 8 minutes to UNM. Hardwood floors, secure, quiet. WiFi, utilities included. $400/mo+dd. 341-3042. 2BDRM, 1BA, CLOSE to Carisle and Gibson, bus to UNM. Deposit 250, rent $475. Call or text to 401-5347 or email to abqrents@yahoo.com

MALE ASSISTANT FOR summer/ fall semester. 20+ hours. Flexible schedule. Shared housing (optional). saintbobrakoczy@aol.com TWO GRADUATED MALE college students looking for another non-partying student to rent a private room in a 3 BDRM house by the UNM Pit and a block from the UNM shuttle. Furnished, wireless, W/D and utilities included. This a great deal for only $350/mo. Please call 505-850-2806 if interested. PLANNING ON MOVING into Lobo Village this fall? Help a fellow student out and take over his lease! Email me at reticular63@yahoo.com for more information. FREE ROOM FOR summer help. Nursing student preferred, but not necessary. Responsible individual needed. 505-867-6395.

BEAUTIFUL NE ABQ Ophthalmology Practice seeks energetic, reliable professionals for administrative, surgery scheduling, patient coordinator positions. Part time temp to hire possible for the right persons. Hours are flexible. 10.00 per hour to start DOE. JLeonard@southwesteyecare.com with your interest level and references. 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.

DESIRED: FEMALE ROOMMATE to take over lease at Lobo Village. $519/mo +1/4utilities starting in August. Will pay half of first month’s rent! Fun roommates! cjacobi@unm.edu

FALL 2012 TEACH and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government. ●$1,300/month (15hrs/week) plus airfares, housing, medical insurance. Must have completed two years of undergraduate. Last day to apply: 5/31/12. Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr

Houses For Rent

Apartments

LOOKING FOR FEMALE to take over my Lobo Village lease ASAP- until July 31 or later. Easy to get along with roommates! kmoleres@unm.edu

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

1700 COAL SE. 2BDRM, remodeled, wood floors, W/D, $695/mo + utilities, $300dd. No pets please. 453-9745.

NEAR UNM/ NOB Hill. 2BDRM 1BA like new. Quiet area, on-site manager, storage, laundry, parking. Pets ok, no dogs. 137 Manzano St NE, $650/mo. 505-610-2050.

RESPONSIBLE STUDENT WANTED. 1BDRM. $300/mo plus yard and dog care.12th and Candelaria. 505-2061891.

FEMALE NEED TO takeover Lobo Village lease starting June 1. $499/month, amenities included, contact rbarnett@unm.edu.

PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RENEE! The Daily Lobo crew hopes you have a wonderful day! Be safe!

GRADUATE STUDENTS WANTED to share 3BDRM/ 2BA house with laundry room in UNM area. $425/mo +utilities. 505-615-5115.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, courtyards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

1 BLOCK UNM- 1020sqft, hardwood floors, 1BDRM, 2 walk-in closets, east half of house, 1/2 backyard, FP, parking included. No pets. $700/mo. Incredible charm! 345-2000.

Your Space

FRESQUEZ COMPANIES IS currently hiring Crew Members, Servers and Cooks. Cooks - 2 yr. Previous Line cook experience (Work experience a plus). Servers must be alcohol certified Apply at www.fresquezcompanies.com Fax: 505-880-1015 apply in person 8218 Louisiana Blvd. NE ABQ, 87113 ALL CANDIDATS MUST SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE PRE EMPLOYMENT SCREENING.

ROOMS FOR GRADUATE students, fully furnished house, 2 minute walk to UNM/UNMH. Accepting summer/fall term applicants. Water, WIFI, Cleaning service provided. Call 610-1142.

BROKEN GLASSES? 2-day repair service only $24.95. ABQ Eyeglass Hospital, 2921 Carlisle Blvd. NE #116 (just S. of Candelaria). 10-5:30 M-F. 505884-0229. www.ABQEyeglassHospital.com

TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799.

SUMMER FIREWORKS SALES. Make 24k in ONE week. Locations still available. mullaneyk@tntfireworks.com 505504-2127.

NOB HILL, UNM: single tenant casita. FP, AC. No pets. $490/mo. Water paid. Avail. June 1st. 232-8942.

Services

INJURED? ARRESTED? FOR a free consultation call 750-1398 or 750-2423.

2 ADJACENT FEMALE rooms in Lobo Village Apt from 8/12-8/13. $519 per month per room. Craigslist ID:3030248481. Lisa 505-459-4509, Katie 505-890-3640

Jobs Off Campus

FALL 2012 ENGLISH Program In Korea (EPIK). ●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, airfare, medical insurance, paid vacation. Must have BA degree. Deadline: May/ 12 **this date is tentative and could change depending on circumstances** Please visit the website www.epik.go.kr

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT. 3 blks to UNM. Off-street parking. No pets. Utilities paid. $450/month. 842-5450.

2809 VERMONT NE. 3BDRM 2BA 2CG. Brick home near sandia high, malls and i-40. updated with large patio, yard and porch. great neighborhood. one year lease. no pets. $1095 + dd, water, utilities and rental application. 505-249-8531. NICE HOUSE, QUIET neighborhood, perfect for grad students. Charming 2BDRM, 1 3/4BA near university/base. Hardwood floors. Large carpeted den. FP. Large fen-yard. Curtains, appliances, W/D hookup. $975 + utility + DD. Available June 10. 505-250-2214. 2BDRM/1BA HOUSE, LARGE yard, storage, off-street parking, W/D, utilities included, 3 blocks UNM, $1150/mo, $600 DD. Available 6/1. 505-321-3537.

Rooms For Rent FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 2012-2013 lease on Lobo Village room. $517/mo, utilities included. Will pay application fee, security deposit, and 1st months rent. Contact Kay at 505-3311823 or kwilli09@unm.edu ROOM IN GORGEOUS, large, peaceful, historic home, 4 miles from University, Downtown/ OldTown, near parks, running/cycling trails. NS, partiers, drama. Positive, happy, mature, considerate, tidy, studious law student/professional wants housemate to respect home/people. $425/mo and share utilities. Optional study/storage room $100/mo. 505269-0894 or bigredtandem@comcast. net

UNM ID ADVANTAGE

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.

AHL Year Round Garden Supply

MESA RIDGE OFFERS monthly student discounts! One and Two bedrooms available with great views and amenities. Close to restaurants, bus line, shopping and I-40. Call today 505-836-1924.

New Mexico Daily Lobo

FEMALE NEEDED TO take over Lobo Village lease. From now until August 2013. Starting at $499/mo. Move in ready. Great roommates. Please call 970-778-9287. dredfiel@unm.edu FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north campus. $410/mo +1/4utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated community. Access I-40 & I-25. tkuni@unm.edu CLEAN, RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted. Remodeled home 2 blocks from UNM in lovely neighborhood. 2 rooms available: $375/mo or $475 includes utilities and laundry privileges. Available immediately. Call: 450-3083. LOBO VILLAGE LEASE available for one room. Must be female. Available now through August 1. $499/mo. surfing1@ptd.net FEMALE GRAD STUDENT to share 2BDRM/2BA condo Abq uptown area. Pool, gym, on-site laundry. $400/mo Includes all utilities. Available July 1. 505459-2463, email bluemrb@aol.com

Office Space EXCECUTIVE OFFICE AND virtual office package. Modern facility by UNM and in Nob Hill. Perfect for professors, grad students, Start-ups. Virtual services start at $135. Suites at $495. Call 505-314-1300.

For Sale SOLID WOOD CHILD’S desk, sides and drawers painted white. $40 OBO, Nordic Track $100 OBO, Adult desk low desktop $50, Twin day bed $200. 505-301-3074. SCOOTER FOR SALE 1993 Honda Helix, great condition $1500 OBO 750-7675 MUSIC: JUPITER TENOR sax $400, Conn Student French Horn $200. Jimi 480-7444.

KGLP RADIO, AT UNM-Gallup, is hiring an interim half-time Tech/Assistant to record announcements, prepare syndicated programs for air, and help with other daily operations. The job will be open only until filled by someone excited about public radio production and anxious to learn. For more information, please visit KGLP.org, or call station manager Rachel Kaub at 505-863-7626. M&M SMOKESHOP IS hiring for an honest sales representative. Hourly plus commission with benefits. Flexible with student schedules. Bring resumes to: 1800 Central Ave SE Albuquerque NM, 87106 from 9am- 1pm. PRO MARKETING WORLD is looking for sales professionals. Send resumes and cover letter to jobs@promarketingworld.com Call 773-655-9427.

SUMMER IN MAINE Males & Females

Meet New Friends! Travel! Teach Your Favorite Activity Tennis Waterfront

Arts Landsports

June to August Residential Enjoy our website Apply online Tripp Lake Camp for Girls 1-800-997-4347 www.tripplakecamp.com

A1 STAR CASTING. Cast and crew wanted. Be in movies and tv shows. Monday- Saturday 10am- 8pm. No experience needed. 6921 Montgomery Blvd. Albuquerque, NM 87109. MALE ASSISTANT FOR summer/ fall semester. 20+ hours. Flexible schedule. Shared housing (optional). saintbobrakoczy@aol.com

Jobs On Campus MAKE-FREE-INCOME.com Connection2Clouds.com 2Save4Ever.com

!!!BARTENDING!!!: $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training available. 1-800-965-6520ext.100.

HP STUDENT SALES Associate position at the University of New Mexico bookstore. Summer hours up to 20 hours/week, Semester hours up to 12 hours/week. $8-$12 per hour. Sales oriented, Tech savvy. Resumes: mmuntz@cmai.com

FEMALE NUDE MODELS needed for art photography. 433-9948.

Volunteers

SUMMER WORK $15 Base/Appt. Immediate openings, FT/PT, customer sales/service, no experience necessary, conditions apply, ABQ/Rio Rancho, 505-891-0559.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR Agora Helpline’s Special Summer training! Application Deadline: May 29th. Apply early, Apply now at AgoraCares.org

WHAT? FREE

Daily Lobo Classifieds for students?

Yes! If you are a UNM student, you get free classifieds in the following categories: Your Space Rooms for Rent For Sale Categories-Audio/Video Bikes/Cycles Computer Stuff Pets For Sale

Furniture Garage Sales Photo Textbooks Vehicles for Sale

The small print: Each ad must be 25 or fewer words, scheduled for 5 or fewer days. Free ads must be for personal use and only in the listed categories.

To place your free ad, come by Marron 107 and show your student ID, Hall, Room 131 or email us from your unm email account at classifieds@dailylobo.com

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