nmdailylobo082510

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

Baba ga-what? see page 12

wednesday The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

August 25, 2010

Lambert back, but under lock, key by Isaac Avilucea

managingeditor@dailylobo.com

Amie Zimmer / Daily Lobo The landlady of a fourplex house looks on in shock as firefights work to put out a residential fire at the corner of Cornell Drive and Lead Avenue.

Fire causes heavy smoke damage by Shaun Griswold shaun24@unm.edu

Albuquerque Fire Department responded to a residential fire in the 200 block of Cornell Drive S.E. yesterday evening. The fire took place in the front unit of a fourplex house. AFD spokeswoman Melissa Romero said the fire started in the

kitchen. The unit was vacant at the time, and the neighbors connected to the house evacuated quickly. “There was heavy smoke damage that entered from the front,” Romero said. “There were no injuries and everyone evacuated.” Romero said it is unclear what started the fire, but a neighbor said he saw wires hanging from the kitchen ceiling, badly disintegrated by the fire.

Natalie Livingston, a neighbor from across the street, reported the fire to AFD around 4 p.m. “We smelled smoke,” Livingston said. “We just got back from class, and we could see black smoke pouring out of the side, so we called 911.” Livingston and her roommate sat across the street at their house and shot video from her handheld camera. As smoked filled the block just

north of Frontier Restaurant, six fire trucks and three emergency vehicle units covered the street and yellow tape blocked traffic. Students walking home from school lined the sidewalk to get to get a peek. “I got a really good shot of the firefighters on the roof,” Livingston said. “It was a shock when we looked outside. We thought someone was having a barbeque.”

Lobo Gardens grow plants, social change by Chelsea Erven cerven@unm.edu

This summer, the Lobo Gardens class planted a seed for what grew into a full semester-long course focusing on community gardens and sustainability issues. Tema Milstein, the summer class’ professor, said the class is looking forward to bigger gardening projects this fall. “The class this summer was just fantastic,” she said. “We were able to transform two sort of forgotten, blighted areas of UNM into bountiful gardens.” This summer, the class worked hard to plant two community gardens that are now flourishing in the UNM Real Estate Department’s backyard and Hokona Hall’s

Inside the

courtyard. This fall, the class, called “Social Movements,” will continue to meet Tuesdays and Thursdays. So far, the class has 22 students enrolled, including many of the students who worked on the gardens this summer. Andrew Marcum, the professor teaching the class this semester, said the gardens will expand to other parts of campus, and the class is using other social movements as a model for their actions. “We are going to look at several other social movements such as the women’s rights movement and the civil rights movement and see how people can really change things and get things done,” he said. “The students in the class are not

see Lobo Gardens page 3

Prop 8

Daily Lobo volume 115

issue 4

See page 13

Emma Difani / Daily Lobo

Fragrant Tobacco grows in Hokona courtyard.

Doggone shame See page 6

For now, Elizabeth Lambert will be allowed to play, but the gag order on her right to exercise free speech has yet to be lifted. Athletics Director Paul Krebs said Tuesday that Lambert will be reinstated to the UNM women’s soccer team. Facing a possible season-long ban from the Mountain West Conference, Lambert instead served a twogame suspension. “She has done everything and more that you can ever ask of somebody,” Krebs said. “She has arisen from that situation.” Now that her suspension is over, Lambert is eligible to compete in UNM’s away game against Wisconsin-Milwaukee, but head women’s soccer coach Kit Vela stopped short of saying Lambert would start or even be in the lineup on Friday, noting the team’s success so far in the vilified player’s absence. Early in the season, the Lobos are 2-0, and Vela said a roster shakeup isn’t necessarily needed. That ease-her-in attitude might be beneficial, since some hecklers have not forgotten what Lambert did. In a turbulent, physical match, Lambert tugged on BYU’s Kassidy Shumway’s pony tail, sending her tumbling to the ground, where she writhed in pain. Unable to keep her emotions in check, after receiving a elbow to the ribs, Lambert responded with a forearm shiver to the back of a BYU player. Several media outlets, including the Daily Lobo, have inquired about conducting an interview with Lambert to no avail. Since November, Lambert has been on media freeze, much of that time spent away from the team as a part of punishment for her role in the incident in Provo, Utah. Even Tuesday, when Krebs and Vela addressed Lambert’s reinstatement, Lambert was unavailable for comment. Forced uncomfortably into the spotlight, Krebs said Lambert doesn’t want to be the center of attention and instead wants her team to be the focal point, but given her cooperation with the conditions of her reinstatement, it would have been criminal not to allow her back on the team. Krebs said Lambert hasn’t shirked her responsibilities to the community. She actively participated in community service, kept her grades up and lived up to other internal requirements demanded by the Athletics Department. “Given all the publicity, all the focus on the Internet, the YouTube sensation, I think she wants to play

see Lambert page 3

TODAY

84 | 58


PageTwo Wednesday, August 25, 2010

New Mexico Daily Lobo

where are

we?

Every Wednesday the Daily Lobo challenges you to identify where we took our secret picture of the week. Submit your answers to WhereAreWe@dailylobo.com. The winner will be announced next week. Amie Zimmer / Daily Lobo

DAILY LOBO new mexico

volume 115

issue 4

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

Editor-in-Chief Pat Lohmann Managing Editor Isaac Avilucea News Editor Leah Valencia Staff Reporter Kallie Red-Horse Online and Photo Editor Junfu Han Assistant Photo Editor Robert Maes Culture Editor Chris Quintana

Assistant Culture Editor Andrew Beale Sports Editor Ryan Tomari Copy Chief Elizabeth Cleary Opinion Editor Jenny Gignac Multimedia Editor Kyle Morgan Design Director Cameron Smith Production Manager Alex Jordan

Advertising Manager Antoinette Cuaderes Sales Manager Nick Parsons

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.

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LoboOpinion The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion editor / Jenny Gignac

Page

4

Wednesday August 25, 2010

opinion@dailylobo.com / Ext. 133

letter Only a fool would invest in GM’s morally bankrupt corporation Editor, Aug. 18 marks the day that General Motors announced it will begin the process of re-privatizing its company, taking the first major steps in paying off its taxpayer-funded loans. GM is going to offer its stock for public purchase, or an IPO. While I (and the rest of you should) applaud GM for making the attempt to reimburse taxpayers for their massive bailout, I wonder who will be fool enough this time to invest in a company that shirked its corporate responsibility, flaunted its profits with millions of dollars in bonuses and perks and completely disregarded the public that expects (even demands) pay for its failures. We’ve seen the ads GM produced with the new CEO walking around the plant letting America know that GM has paid back its government loans and was now moving forward. And every newspaper and cable news company showed how the company just borrowed more funds from the bailout money to pay off the existing loan. Nothing short of lies and manipulations awakens memories of the days of gold pinkie rings, gold chains and plaid suits. Last week we learned that GM, even though its still living off the taxpayers’ dole, felt it was time to repay some of its obligations. Did GM pay back any of its taxpayer funded loans? No. GM made several campaign contributions to sitting congressmen who strongly supported the company’s bailout. That’s right. GM took our tax money that came from our hard work and our labor to rebuild its company and keep Americans working, and they filled congressmen’s coffers and supported their re-election campaigns because those congressmen voted to give away our tax money in the first place. This is completely unacceptable. If ever there was a case for conflict of interest, this is it. This week we learned that GM is investing $500 million in a new auto plant that will produce a new line of more fuel-efficient engines as well as production of a new auto. The plant will create 390 new jobs. The problem is that the new plant will be located in Coahuila state in northern Mexico. I ask why Congress spent billions of our tax dollars bailing out a company that then makes a national commercial attempting to misconstrue its financial position and lies to the American people about paying back their taxpayerfunded bailout? I ask how a company has the right to accept tax money from the citizens of this country and then pass it around as gifts to the congressmen who voted to give it to them in the first place? Finally, I ask what kind of company takes billions of our tax money to get back on its feet, and then brags about funding and opening a new $500 million dollar plant in Mexico? I ask why our congressmen aren’t screaming at the top of their collective lungs? I know I ask a lot of questions, but I also say a lot of things as well. I say I will never purchase a General Motors vehicle again. I say I will not stop writing, telling and educating people about the madness of the GM bailout and GM’s failure to be honest with America. I say I pity the fools who would purchase stock in such a morally bankrupt company. I say, “Death to General Motors!” Matthew Waters UNM Student

Editorial Board Pat Lohmann Editor-in-chief

Isaac Avilucea Managing editor

Jenny Gignac Opinion editor

Leah Valencia News editor

Column

A new guide for your gripes at me. My skin, it’s dripping off my bones,” for everything including funerals, birthday parties, anniversaries, baptisms and pretty much anything else. Just remember not to get too fixated on whining about the heat because you’ll need to complain more about the cold when it sets in. “I’ll keep talking and maybe you’ll just get it.”

by Chris Quintana

culture@dailylobo.com A new year is beginning, which means that new complaints will be bubbling forth from every single person on campus, like the stench of yogurt left in dorm rooms. The question, though, is what to complain about. Being something of a professional complainer, allow me to guide your whining: The Heat Everyone knows the heat is terrible. Everyone. Even that guy with the weird skin condition that makes it impossible to feel heat knows how effing hot it is, and that’s because everyone is complaining about it. It’s a little-known fact that complaining about the heat actually cools the heat a billionth of a degree, so the more people complaining about the heat, the cooler it becomes. Or not, it certainly makes things seem a bit easier at least for me. Actually, my friends have stopped talking to me because my only topic of conversation is, “Oh my god, have you realized how hot it is? No, seriously. I am melting. Look

No more yellow cards Everyone’s favorite slacker method of complaining to get into class has now been yanked from them. No longer can you saunter into a class and get in because you got dropped, missed the time to register or you’re just impulsively joining a class. Let’s be outraged about this. I am not sure why, but, yes, let’s do this. If there’s anything I have found, it’s that the administration grants favors to students based solely on the amount of complaining they do. It’s not like they just close their doors to soundproofed rooms and then play computer solitaire for hours, because that would be irresponsible. So, fellow students who complain about yellow cards, bring your own yellow paper if you have to. I am sure you can buy mounds of it at Kinko’s, and it’s a lot easier than taking personal responsibility for classes you missed, or accepting you have missed them like an adult. Coming back to school Ugh. School is just the worse, isn’t it, girlfriend!? And so, naturally, we should make sure that everyone knows how upset we are about coming back to school. Those stupid professors trying to share

knowledge with us — how dare they? Don’t they know we would rather be riding our wave runners and texting while driving and complaining about the heat? So let’s make sure everyone knows how annoying school is. Make sure to tell everyone that your summer break “wasn’t long enough” or “could have been longer.” Or maybe say that “it just doesn’t last,” or some variation on the standard answer. This will do two things. One: By sheer force of will and magic, it will prolong summer instead of making its memory more bittersweet. Two: There’s a chance that if enough people say it that it will result in a flashy dance number reminiscent of High School Musical, which really seems appropriate considering Albuquerque’s sordid involvement in that whole affair. The BP Oil Spill Because complaining about the oil spill to your friends and to random individuals and nothing else will make BP clean it up faster, right? Smokers Those jerks are still smoking despite our best efforts to complain them out of their bad habits. Be sure to mention it to every smoker you meet how gross it is that they smoke, and you are personally offended by their life choices. In fact, you should do this for every unpleasant habit you run across, and then you can just complain it away. Gum chewing, obsessive compulsive disorders, someone’s unnaturally good looks can all be complained away. Try it. Trust me; it works.

Letter submission policy n 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.


news

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 5

news in brief

Pueblo gets long-awaited park, soccer field

foster relationships with the soccer communities in Albuquerque and Bernalillo.

State to accept feedback on hunting proposal

SAN FELIPE PUEBLO, N.M. — San Felipe Pueblo has opened a $785,000 soccer field and community park, aided by a donation from the Notah Begay III Foundation. The facility was largely funded by a $535,000 grant from the NB3 Foundation, a charitable organization led by PGA Tour golfer Notah Begay III. Begay said San Felipe Pueblo has waited almost a decade for the park. He said many tribal communities lack basic amenities to keep young people active and healthy. The park has a synthetic-turf soccer field and walking paths. The field will be home to the San Felipe Soccer Club, the pueblo’s only regular after-school program. The club plans to hold tournaments, camps and events to promote soccer and good health to neighboring pueblos and to

ABQ airport receives grant for solar panels

SANTA FE, N.M. — The state Game Commission will accept comments from the public this weekend on a proposal to increase the number of bears and cougars that hunters can kill. The commission meets Saturday in Albuquerque and will consider proposed changes in hunting rules for bears, cougars, deer and pronghorn antelope. The commission is expected to vote on the hunting rules at a meeting in Ruidoso on Sept. 30. At the meeting in Albuquerque, the commission also is to hear a report on Gov. Bill Richardson’s executive order to temporarily ban trapping in part of southwestern New Mexico while the Department of Game and Fish studies the risks that trapping poses to Mexican gray wolves, which have been reintroduced in the wild.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Albuquerque’s international airport has received a $2.4 million federal grant to install solar panels that will provide electrical power at a parking facility. The money comes from a Federal Aviation Administration project. It will pay for a solar photovoltaic array atop the airport’s multilevel vehicle parking facility. The award was announced in a joint news release from Sens. Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall and Rep. Martin Heinrich, all D-N.M. They say the airport is contributing to regional air quality goals under the Clean Air Act.

Unsuspecting man found with fugitive by Felicia Fonseca Associated Press

ST. JOHNS, Ariz. — Handcuffed face down on the ground, Hugh Murray quickly realized who he had been hanging out with for two days at a remote campsite as he overheard law enforcement officials say that a man detained near him was the last of the three. His mind raced back to a week earlier, when he scanned a newspaper article about three men who escaped from a prison in northwest Arizona and the woman who helped them flee. “I clicked on that,” Murray, 67, told the Associated Press in an exclusive interview Monday. “It was unbelievable until then, but then it made sense.” A SWAT team swarmed the campsite, about an hour’s drive from the small community of Springerville, last Thursday after an alert U.S. Forest Service ranger, investigating what appeared to be an unattended campfire, noticed a Nissan Sentra backed suspiciously into the trees. The ranger called in the license number, essentially ending the three-week manhunt for John McCluskey and Casslyn Welch. McCluskey was the last of three inmates who escaped July 30 from the state prison in Kingman to be captured. Welch, his fiancee and cousin, was arrested at the same time. Murray said McCluskey and Welch showed no signs of hostility toward him, never brandished the guns that authorities found when they were captured, made no mention of their recent travels — and certainly gave no indication they were two of America’s most wanted fugitives. Instead, the two were quite pleasant, Murray said. “I hadn’t a clue they had done anything deadly, until that cop mentioned who they were,” Murray said. McCluskey and Welch have been charged with murder and carjacking in the deaths of an Oklahoma couple in New Mexico, apparently because they were tired of sleeping in a car and coveted Gary and Linda Haas’ trailer, according to a criminal complaint. According to the complaint, McCluskey told investigators he fired the shots that killed the Haases and wanted to kill two tractor-trailer drivers who the trio kidnapped in Kingman but was outvoted by

Welch and a second escapee, Tracy Province who was arrested Aug. 9 in Wyoming. McCluskey, Province and Welch pleaded not guilty Monday to escape charges, as well as kidnapping, aggravated asault and armed robbery stemming from the alleged tractor-trailer hijacking. They are being held on a $1 million bond each. McCluskey was treated Tuesday after using a plastic razor to cut his neck and forearm, said Mohave County sheriff’s spokeswoman Trish Carter, adding that the wounds were serious but not life threatening. Authorities said McCluskey expressed regret at not having killed the forest ranger whose tip led to their capture and said he would have shot officers at the campsite if he could have reached his gun in his tent. Authorities in Apache County said they believed Murray could have been the next victim. “A wild guess, they might have offed me for my car and some of my equipment,” Murray said. “Good police work. I’m glad they came in when they did.” Murray first encountered a tough- and grim-looking McCluskey — the kind of appearance he called typical in the mountainous area — while typing up data Wednesday for field work on the Arizona willow, which he studies as a hobby. “He was backwards rough, but (turned out) fine,” Murray said. McCluskey asked for a jack handle to help fix a flat on the beat-up Nissan. Murray hesitated, knowing he’d have to dig through a trunk load of stuff to retrieve it, but relented. McCluskey returned the jack handle with a smile and a thanks, along with an invite to the couple’s campsite for a hamburger. Murray declined the meal but visited with the couple for about half an hour, then returned to his own camp site, about three-fourths of a mile away. The fugitives warmed up to Murray when he started talking about what he knows best — nature — and recommended hiking trails. In fact, Murray did much of the talking in the few hours they spent together Wednesday and Thursday. The trio went out Thursday to gather mushrooms that McCluskey sliced up, seasoned and served in wheat tortillas with cheese.

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news

Page 6 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A scarred but friendly pit bull named Louis Vuitton was the star witness Tuesday as an Alabama state board denied parole for the man convicted of spraying him with lighter fluid, setting him on fire and beating him with a shovel. After the 8-year-old dog was led into the packed hearing room, the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles voted 3-0 to deny early release to 23-year-old Juan Daniels of Montgomery, who was sentenced in 2009 to nine years and six months in prison, a record in Alabama in an animal cruelty case. Daniels, whose supporters said he had been sentenced far more harshly than criminals who harm human beings, will be eligible for parole again in July 2012. The dog stuck his head forward for everyone who wanted to pet him as he entered. He bears burn scars from his head to his wagging tail, including white lines on his brown body where the burning lighter fluid seared his skin. “You have to see the scars to see what was done to him,” said the dog’s owner, Dee Hartley of Montgomery. She and her husband adopted the dog after the torture incident. It’s unusual for a dog or other animal to make an appearance before such a panel. “I don’t recall every having one here before,” said Cynthia Dillard, executive director of the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles. The September 2007 attack on the dog drew wide notice. The Montgomery Humane Society got as many as 50 calls a day about the case, some from other countries. The dog was

David Bundy / Associated Press In a Sept. 20, 2007, file photo, a pit bull dog named Louis Vuitton is shown recovering at an undisclosed Montgomery, Ala., veterinarian’s clinic from burns. The Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles on Aug. 24 denied early release to Juan Daniels of Montgomery, whose sentence last year for torturing the dog was a record in Alabama for animal cruelty. Daniels will be eligible for parole again in July 2012. given the name of a French fashion brand, “Louis Vuitton,” in honor of a dog named Gucci, whose torture case in Mobile in 1994 led to passage of “Gucci’s law,” which made animal cruelty a felony in Alabama. More than 60 law enforcement officers, animal rights advocates and other supporters of Louis crowded into the hearing. Relatives and friends of Daniels also faced the board and asked that he be released. Montgomery County District Attorney Ellen Brooks asked parole board members to make Daniels serve his entire sentence because of his cruelty to the dog and the nine disciplinary actions taken against him in prison. “The first reason to deny parole is to prevent him from hurting another animal or a person,” Brooks said. She said he was accused of torturing

the dog, which then belonged to his mother, because he was angry at her for not letting him use the car. His mother, Vellica Daniels, asked for leniency for her son, so that he could get on with his life. A cousin, Thomas Hudson, said after the hearing he didn’t think it was fair because Daniels is behind bars with “folks who committed more extensive crimes than he committed.” Holladay Simmons, the veterinarian who treated Louis immediately after he was burned, told the board the dog’s wounds were as bad as she had ever seen. Matt Cooper, the county animal cruelty officer who responded to the call, said after the hearing, “I’ve worked cases where people let their dog starve to death, but this was the worst case of animal cruelty that I’ve seen.”

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news

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 7

Decapitated bodies linked to drug trafficking Sergio Flores

Associated Press ACAPULCO, Mexico — The dismembered bodies of two men were hung from a bridge Tuesday on a highway leading to Acapulco, the second such discovery in three days in a region where two drug lords are fighting for control of their divided cartel. The men were hung from their feet at the entrance of Chilpancingo, the city nearest to Acapulco along the highway connecting the Pacific coast resort to Mexico’s capital, according to police in the state of Guerrero, where Acapulco is located. Their arms had been cut off, and a message was left threatening extortionists, kidnappers, police and the Mexican army, according to the police report, which had no information on the identity of the two men. Mexican authorities say the region southeast of Mexico City has been besieged by fighting between two factions of the Beltran Leyva gang, whose leader, Arturo Beltran Leyva, was killed in a December shootout with marines in the city of Cuernavaca. On Sunday, four decapitated bodies were found hanging by their

see Bodies page 3

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Soldiers patrol streets in the area where, according to Mexico’s Defense Minister, Mexican drug cartel leader Ignacio Coronel Villareal, aka Nacho Coronel, was killed during an army raid in Zapopan, near Guadalajara, Mexico, on July 29. Coronel is considered No. 3 in the organization of fugitive Mexican drug lord Joaquin Guzman, aka Chapo Guzman. Miguel Tovar / Associated Press


news

Page 8 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010

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Lambert

from page 1

soccer and not have her picture and video splashed over the Internet once again,” Krebs said. “We want to help her move forward.” Moving forward, though, might be quite an undertaking for some people. Lambert’s rough-and-tumble play was denounced across the country and, in some cases, internationally. She was chastised on newspaper message boards, sometimes unfairly, with some over-the-top bloggers leaving perverse and overtly sexist comments. During Tuesday’s media luncheon, Vela said the incident was polarizing media-wise.

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was out who made a mistake. We tried to treat as one of our own, and she is.” From the start, Lambert appeared to be contrite and apologized for her behavior. In her only interview to date with the New York Times, Lambert said her actions on the field weren’t indicative of the person or player she is. “I think the way the video came out, it did make me look like a monster,” Lambert said. “That’s not the type of player I am. I’m not just out there trying to hurt players. That’s taking away from the beauty of the game. And I would never want to do that.”

The Hokona courtyard garden is reserved for herbs, all of which were donated by Plants of the Southwest, with the thought in mind that UNM students will cook with fresh herbs, Milstein said. Looking to build on that, Marcum said his class will focus on community outreach and address hunger issues in New Mexico. With the future in mind, Milstein and Marcum said they plan to plant another garden by the SUB and host a University-wide Lobo Gardens open house and fall harvest. They also want to start a fresh fruit and vegetable cart to make food grown

in the gardens available to students on campus and partner with a student run co-op. Co-op organizer and student Jake Wellman said the co-op plans to partner with Lobo Gardens, and he hopes they’ll open by the spring semester. “The co-op has kind of been on pause over the summer, but now that the fall semester is starting up we are definitely looking forward to starting work on it again,” Wellman said.

of mistaken identity. The U.S. consulate in Monterrey said in a statement Monday that the attack, which occurred outside a private school attended by many Americans, may have been an attempted kidnapping. The consulate said that it appeared no U.S. families were targeted but that it was temporarily pulling diplomats’ children out the school as a precaution. Garza y Garza said the guards were attacked by members of the Zetas drug gang who thought they belonged to a rival cartel. Two FEMSA security guards were killed, three were wounded and four were taken hostage and later released

unharmed. Garza y Garza said the four kidnapped guards told police their captors apologized before releasing them. FEMSA has said the guards were on standard patrols in the area when the gunmen attacked. The company has said it the shooting did not appear related to any attempt to kidnap a relative of one of the company’s executives. Companies based in Monterrey, a business hub that is Mexico’s most prosperous city, have tried to protect areas where their employees work, live or go to school amid a rising tide of drug-fueled violence.

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from page 7

feet from a bridge in Cuernavaca, a popular weekend getaway just south of Mexico City. The faction led by Hector Beltran Leyva, brother of Arturo, claimed responsibility in a message left with the four bodies. It threatened allies of its rival — U.S.-born kingpin Edgar Valdez Villarreal. No gang took responsibility in the message left Tuesday with the two bodies in Chilpancingo. The corpses were taken down before dawn. Meanwhile, in northern Mexico, Nuevo Leon state Attorney General Alejandro Garza y Garza told reporters that an attack on guards from the FEMSA bottling company was a case

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“I think the Internet and the media are great resources,” she said. “We wouldn’t be where we are without, but I think when something goes that viral, when it was an honest mistake, and I say a mistake because she was in the heat of competition, I think it’s unfortunate that it can become that negative.” On a personal level, Vela said as a mother, it was heart-wrenching to see Lambert made into a national pariah, especially because she wouldn’t want her children to be treated in that matter if they made a similar mistake. “My players are like my family,” she said. “It was like my own child

from page 1

just studying social movements, but they are actually part of a social movement with this garden.” Milstein said that the students took soil samples, surveyed the land, designed each garden, added compost and roto-tilled the soil before actually planting the gardens this summer. The garden located at the UNM Real Estate Department, Milstein said, is terraced and is roughly 75 feet by 6 feet. East Central Ministries donated 12 different types of vegetables, including tomatoes, artichokes and eggplants, which are planted in the garden, Milstein said.

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culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 9

Discover fine ABQ theaters by Graham Gentz

culture@dailylobo.com “Theater is always dying,â€? said Pulitzer prize winning playwright David Mamet. In Albuquerque, this seems to exist as a perpetual freefall in orbit of the final death, which is, perhaps, why theater people find the whole thing so appealing. Those of a UNM persuasion can possibly find such things immediately.  The Auxiliary Dog Theater is near campus, a skip from the dorms, just east of Girard Boulevard at 3011 Monte Vista Drive next door to Artisan Art Supply and barely north of Buffalo Exchange. Visitors are first greeted by a lobby functioning as an art galley with regularly rotating pieces organized by Beth Welt. The staff, like the physical theater, is small and focused, aiming to draw the sort of creative vision that a place like Albuquerque needs. “We’re doing theater for people who don’t like theater,â€? Executive Director Eli Browning said. â€œIt’s risky because the traditional crowd doesn’t always like what we do, but we hope that we are reaching out to new audiences.â€?  They are in the midst of production of “Godâ€? by Woody Allen, a batty and mind-bending play. “It’s like I always say,â€? Browning said. “If you want to be an insufferable pretentious assh*** about theater, people will get sick of what you’re doing in a hurry.â€? Theaters need that sort of

flexibility and tenacity to exist in their perpetual death throws. And such is the ilk of Albuquerque’s theater scene. A huge number of individual theater companies reside in Albuquerque: The Albuquerque Theatre Guild numbers as many as 35 troupes — a proportionally massive number compared to Albuquerque approximate population of half a million. Blackout Theatre has a creative core of radical and creative individuals. It resides in the Box performance space located downtown at the corner of Gold Street and Second Street. Jeff Anderson, the artistic director of Blackout, said Blackout looks to the future of theater for its members as exploring artists. It has offered original works, “The Complete Word of God: Abridgedâ€? by the Abridged Shakespeare company, and even “Oleannaâ€? by David Mamet. Most of what it does is educate. Blackout works with UNM, APS and the greater Albuquerque area offering youth classes and programs and sharing its performance space with Cardboard Playhouse Productions, a children’s theater company. Anderson seems overwhelmed and invigorated by the growth and success of what began as a pet project with friends. “What will we do next?â€? he said. “A musical? Shakespeare? An early 20th century American classic? A puppet show? We aren’t sure, and that’s half the fun!â€? When it comes to pulling talent from the UNM and CNM, the Vortex Theatre is indeed a leader of the

pack. Located on 2004 Central Ave., the Vortex Theater would blend in with its unassuming surroundings if not for its trademark spiral. Like most nonprofit theaters of Albuquerque, the Vortex is small, yet it has powered through hard times because of its persistence. This has allowed them to perform pieces as varied as “Three Sisters,� a play by late 19th century Russian playwright Anton Chekhov, to stage versions of Quentin Tarantino’s “Reservoir Dogs� and Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross,� cheekily nicknamed “Death of a F***in’ Salesman.� It has just concluded its ambitious “Will Power� Shakespeare fest producing three Shakespeare plays for concurrent three-month runs using dozens upon dozens of actors to fill all the roles. These theaters have a common passion and a common problem. Clearly, there is creativity and knowledge enough for there to be enough theater to constitute a localized culture for such a powerful medium. Certainly, there is no shortage of theater to enjoy as participant or audience member. For just a prolific theater town, the theater-going audience of Albuquerque is staggeringly low. Perhaps the most important communal motion to be undertaken by all is to expand this base by extending simple awareness of the wealth of art our unassuming desert town has to offer. The idea for new blood is a common one, and is, in contrast to Mamet’s axiom, a defining one.

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Agora lends a helping ear by Chris Quintana

culture@dailylobo.com Outside Agora’s booth during the UNM Welcome Back Days, a man, Jim Browning, is talking about to a volunteer about how his mother is in a hospice. He talks about the death of his brother and his stepfather, but that’s not his biggest concern. “Everybody in the family has turned to me for help, literally,� he said. “I haven’t had anyone to really turn to for help.� The volunteer listens even though she was only passing out fliers earlier. He talks for a 10 or 15 minutes and walks away, and as he does the volunteer smiles for a second. Allie Weber said that’s the feeling that comes most often when working at Agora. “Some people just have no one to talk to,� she said. “It’s very reward-

ing to be that someone to talk with them.� College can be the best time in a person’s life — that is if that person can move beyond the stressors of academic course loads, work pressures, relationship woes, and, of course, the specter of fiscal constraints. So how does a person get past that without turning to drinking, drugs or dropping out? Jeremy Jaramillo said Agora Crisis Center might be the answer. “One of the biggest reasons people drop out of school is relationship issues, mental health issues, being homesick and etc.,� he said. “Agora can really help people cope with all those things.� The goal of the center is simple, Jaramillo said. “We just want to provide emotional support for anyone in need.

That’s it,� he said. To get that help a person simply calls Agora at any time of day and is greeted by a volunteer. Jaramillo said callers’ subject matter ranges from bad days to suicidal worries, domestic violence or rape crisis calls. While the content of calls varies, the purpose is the same, Jaramillo said. “Feelings are feelings,� he said. “There are no bad or good feelings. They just are. People need to experience that.� It’s the volunteers’ task to help the callers experience those feelings. Weber said Agora’s goal is not to give advice to the callers — that’s not allowed — but to listen to them. But she said dealing with the troubled lives of others can be difficult.

THE STRENGTH TO HEAL and learn lessons in courage. #$ *"', ! ! " &"$ ! $ % % $ & * ) ! *"' $ "$ "'$ " $% ! & $ % "'$ % "!& "'% '$ & $" %% "!% " $% # $" $ #% *"' $ *"'$ " * #$"( ! ' &' & "! "! * &") $ % "" % ! % % ! "! "!'% # '% "!& * %& # ! " To learn more, call 1-866-538-0001 or visit www.healthcare.goarmy.com/l061.

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culture

Page 10 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010

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Vanessa Sanchez/ Daily Lobo Brandie Erisman answers a phone call at Agora Crisis Center on August 24. Agora volunteers spend their free time helping those in emotional need.

Agora

from page 9

“It can be hard not to take people’s problems into you,” Weber said. “I mean, sometimes you’re dealing with serious life struggles.” Another volunteer, Amanda Hurford, said the negative energy has a way of lingering. “Some stories just make your heart break,” she said. “Some people just go through the worst stuff.” Despite troubles related to working at the center, the two agree that Agora’s caring environment helps with the tougher calls. “We can come together to talk

about how we are feeling about calls or what calls we have an issue with,” Weber said. “We are trained to listen.” Listening is the biggest concern at Agora. Jaramillo said that an average person gets five minutes of listening per day, which is why it’s important that the volunteers are willing to put their own beliefs aside. “You don’t have to change your beliefs,” he said. “You just have to support someone in theirs. You have to be genuinely interested in helping other people on their terms.

agora Crisis center • Call 277-3013 •unm.edu/~agora If you come in as a person who wants to teach the world your attitude or your perspective, it’s not really what we want.”

UAC Now Offering Appointment Options New Hours for Advisement Effective August 30, 2010 Mondays: Appointments from 8:15 - 4:15 Tuesdays: Walk-Ins from 9:30 - 5:45 Wednesdays: Appointments from 8:15 - 5:45 Thursdays: Appointments from 8:15 - 4:15 Fridays: Walk-Ins from 8:15 - 4:15

Please call 277-2631, email uac@unm.edu or come to the University Advisement and Enrichment Center Room 105 (Building 85) to schedule an appointment. Go to advisement.unm.edu or www.facebook.com/advisement for more information.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 11

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Annie Zimmer/ Daily Lobo Patrick Trujillo molds a pot in his studio, Not Made in China. Studio space is available for $50 a month.

New shop invites artists to create, sell by Antonio Sanchez

sanchezantonio24@gmail.com

see Ceramics page 12

M

As a ball of clay can be stretched and shaped into a towering work of art, the tugging nature of ambition can take an idea and mold it into something grander. In Patrick Trujillo’s case, ambition led him to Not Made in China. The pottery studio and art showcase space sits on the southwest corner of Yale Boulevard and Avenida Cesar Chavez — its arms open wide to artists everywhere. “We will showcase every art form,” said Trujillo, the owner and director of Not Made in China. A UNM student with five years of ceramics below his belt, Trujillo is an artist looking to create opportunities for other artists. Not Made in China offers lessons for $10, and $50 a month buys you a creative space, which includes 50 pounds of clay, glaze, and fire. It’s an art showcase as much as it is a place to develop and create,

Trujillo said. “I’m trying to make it so that people come and do what they want to do, have fun with it, and then give me the opportunity to sell it for them,” he said. Open since September 2008, Not Made in China has a handful of local artists who stand firmly behind this studio. Painter/sculptor B. J. Quintana said he has been a fan of the store since it opened its doors. “It’s one of the best places to do ceramic art,” Quintana said. Interested in most kinds of art, Quintana was initially drawn to the studio’s accessibility of equipment, later growing fond of the calming work space. “It’s a very inspiring environment,” Quintana said. “Very relaxed … (which is) critical if you want to do art.” Draped against the studio’s walls and placed on top of display tables,

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culture

Page 12 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010 AUGUST 9 THRU SEPTEMBER 12

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Ceramics

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from page 11

pieces of work from artists across Albuquerque are laid throughout Not Made in China. Whereas handcrafted bowls and other assorted pieces of pottery appear to be the main attraction to the studio’s showcase, paintings, tiles, mosaics, prints and wire sculptures capture the eye with their blending shades of sky blue, maroon and dusty yellow. Standing out almost as sharply as the art within the studio, Trujillo

said he takes great pride in his business and its bold name. “Not Made in China is, well, it’s a symbol,” he said. “I believe when you look at something that’s made in China, there’s a whole lot of information transferred. … Everything is produced on the cheapest level. People should do what comes natural to them. They should enjoy it, and they should choose it.” Looking ahead, Trujillo’s ambition truly shines as he sees Not

Made in China expanding as the years come. “Eventually, Not Made in China is going to be, actually, a very large production company, which will employ as many people that are willing to work,” Trujillo said. “My ultimate goal is whenever I set up in a new state, to reduce the unemployment level by a certain percent. And that sounds pretty incredible, but I can never give myself limits.”

Take a dip into baba ganoush by Emma Difani

culture@dailylobao

WANT TO BE A LOBO? Open tryouts are going to be held for the following women’s intercollegiate sports programs at UNM. Please contact the head coach or assistant coach for further details. W. Basketball W. Golf W. Skiing Softball W. Soccer (Spring Only) W. Tennis W. Track & Field W. Swimming W. Volleyball (Spring Only)

Shane Flanagan, Asst. Coach 925-5772 e-mail: sflanaga@unm.edu Jill Trujillo, Head Coach 277-6668 e-mail: jktpro@unm.edu Fredrik Landstedt, Head Coach 277-5423 e-mail: landsted@unm.edu Christi Musser, Asst. Coach 925-5813 e-mail: cmusser@unm.edu Shannon Cross, Asst. Coach 925-5758 e-mail: scross@unm.edu Roy Cañada, Head Coach 925-5780 e-mall: rcanada@unm.edu Rodney Zuyderwyk, Asst. Coach 925-5738 e-mail: rzuyderw@unm.edu Tracy Ljone, Head Coach 277-2208 e-mail: tljone@unm.edu Steve Hendricks, Asst. Coach 277-2314 e-mail: steveh@unm.edu

In recent years, hummus has become a well-known snack-food staple. Its lesser-known sister dish, baba ganoush, has remained largely undiscovered by the public. Baba ganoush is Middle Eastern eggplant dip. It is prepared nearly the same way as hummus, merely replacing the chickpeas with roasted eggplant. Both are delicious, healthy snacks that are easy to prepare and fun to say (baba ga-what?). Next time you are at Smith’s wondering what to make for dinner, buy an eggplant. You’ll be happy you did. Baba Ganoush Ingredients 1 large eggplant 1/4 cup tahini 1/4 cup olive oil Juice from 1 lemon

COUPON COMPANION

Emma Difani / Daily Lobo Baba ganoush, top, and hummus make for delicious snacks. 2 cloves of garlic Paprika Salt Assorted vegetables (carrots, celery, cucumbers, olives,) and pita for dipping Directions Place the eggplant over the open flame of a gas stove (alternatively, you may roast it in the oven at a high temperature). Using tongs, rotate the eggplant every few minutes until the outside is charred. Remove the eggplant from the flame and place in a small paper bag or other sealable container to steam for about 10 minutes. Once the

Daily Lobo Fall 2010

available now at your UNM Bookstore, LoboCash & the Daily Lobo

eggplant has cooled, the skin should be loose and easy to peel away. Put the garlic and lemon juice in the blender and puree. Cut the eggplant into several smaller pieces and add to the mixture, pureeing until smooth. Next blend in the tahini. While the blender is running, slowly stream in the olive oil. Finally, add a teaspoon of paprika and salt to taste. Place in a serving dish and garnish with a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkle of paprika. Serve with a variety of fresh cut vegetables and pita for dipping.

see Snacks page 13

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culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Snacks

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 13

from page 12

Hummus Ingredients 1 can chickpeas/garbanzo beans 1/4 cup tahini 1/4 cup olive oil Juice of 1 lemon (more or less depending on personal preference)

2 cloves of garlic Paprika Salt

peas are available at any grocery store and only need to be drained of excess liquid before use.

Directions

Do you have your own recipe suggestions you would like to see in the Daily Lobo? Send us one at culture@ dailylobo.com

Hummus is prepared the same as baba ganoush, replacing eggplant with chickpeas. Ready-to-use chick-

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AP Photo This Oct. 4, 2008 photo provided by Marcos Cermak-Ochoa shows Marcos, left, and Frank Cermak-Ochoa as they sit with their dog Leah. Actor and writer Marcos Mateo Ochoa, 29, of Los Angeles goes by Cermak-Ochoa after marrying partner Frank Cermak on Oct. 4, 2008, a union legally recognized in California with 18,000 other same-sex marriages there before Proposition 8 rolled in and ended the practice. He plans to make the name switch legal once a battle over the ban is finally settled.

Same-sex couples seek name changes Leanne Italie

Associated Press In October 2008, racing against California’s gay marriage ban, Chloe and Frankie Frankeny wed legally in San Francisco with one chore already done: Chloe had taken her wife’s name two years before. “It was the only way we had to fit into a mainstream role that was understandable to anybody,” said Chloe, managing editor of a fashion website. “When I told my father I was taking Frankie’s name, he was sort of blown away because I definitely consider myself a feminist.” With a battle over the state’s ban on gay marriage possibly headed to the U.S. Supreme Court, it’s likely more same-sex couples will do the same. For the Frankenys, the name switch couldn’t magically grant all the marriage benefits denied legally wed same-sex couples when compared to one man, one wife, but it was one more way to express their union. It’s a symbol rendered even stronger now that gay marriages are on hold in California and for partners who’ve never had the option. Logistically, a name-change for gay couples isn’t always as simple as trotting out a marriage certificate, the proof most required in heterosexual marriage. Emotionally, the journey is about love, commitment and a way to

DAILY LOBO new mexico

CAMPUS EVENTS

ease anxiety over being misunderstood as non-relatives in emergency rooms or considered less-than as parents. Kirsten Palladino, who runs the online gay wedding zine Equallywed, shed Ott for the surname of her partner, Maria, last year without benefit of a state-sanctioned union in Georgia. She’s seeing more couples go to court for name changes, settling on hyphenation or one partner’s surname over the other. “We have grown stronger and are speaking out for ourselves in this way,” said Palladino, 32. “There’s nothing stopping us from taking each other’s names, even if we can’t get a marriage certificate.” After a five-year courtship, the Palladinos had a commitment ceremony at an antebellum mansion in Decatur, Ga. Kirsten became a Palladino after running a newspaper announcement of her intentions once a week for four weeks and appearing before a judge, just as people going through a formal name change for reasons other than marriage must do. “I was nervous. I didn’t know how the judge would feel, but he was great. Personally, I had to deal with some identity issues after, but becoming a family unit with my wife trumped anything else for me,” she said.

RECREATIONAL SERVICES

Recreational Services Intramural Sports

Play Hard, Play Late recservices.unm.edu

• Intramural Sports

Welcome Back Days Golf Singles Tournament Friday, August 27 Annual Under the Lights Kickball Tournament Wednesday, September 2

• Open Late Because We’re Great! Open Rec workout 6:00am-10:45pm Monday - Thursday

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Getaway Adventures Jemez Hot Springs Hike...Aug 28 Jacks Creek Hike...Sept 11 Kayaking...Starting September 9

• Get Fit ! Get “The Works” or “Wow” Fitness Pass! Over 35 exciting classes per week

• Go Camping & Go Biking!

Outdoor Shop and Bike Rentals New climbing gear rentals available!

Where the Action Is!

recservices.unm.edu 277-0178 Johnson Center 1102

LOBO LIFE

North Campus Welcome Back Day Starts at: 11:30am Location: The Courtyard Between BMSB and Nursing & Pharmacy Bldg. UNM Alumni will serve free hotdogs and drinks. Women’s & Cultural Day Starts at: 12:00PM Location: The Duck Pond Info booths from all of UNM’s ethnic &

women’s center programs and departments. Cultural entertainment will run all day. Free green chile stew and drinks!

ASUNM Senate Committee Meeting Starts at: 6:30PM Location: SUB First Committe Meeting for ASUNM Senate for the Fall 2010 Semester. Free Movie: Iron Man 2 Starts at: 7:00PM Location: SUB Theater

Iron Man 2 Free in the SUB Theater at 7:00pm.

COMMUNITY EVENTS

Hebrew Conversation Class: Beginning Starts at: 5:00pm Location: 1701 Sigma Chi, NE Offered every Wednesday by Israel Alliance and Hillel. Albuquerque Latin Dance Festival Starts at: 9:00PM Location: The Library Bar & Grill Dance lesson at 9pm and party afterwards.

Event Calendar

Planning your week has never been easier! 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!

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com


Page 14 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010

culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Requests to rebuild church ignored by Deepti Hajela Associated Press

Good ethics and positive sportsmanship are philosophies that must be displayed both on and off the playing field. We must take a leadership role to compete at the highest levels, always endeavoring to win, but doing so with grace, class, dignity and respect. Please join us in supporting the Conference’s Sportsmanship Initiative. Such an effort will help make the Mountain West Conference one of the premier athletic conferences in the country, and represent our institutions well. Cordially,

The Mountain West Conference 2010-11 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church / AP Photo In this undated photo provided by the St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church in New York, the 36-foot tall church, which was destroyed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, stands near the base of the World Trade Center towers. Supporters of the church said city and state officials willing to speak out about a planned community center and mosque near ground zero have been silent on efforts to get the church rebuilt. Islamic center, Gov. David Paterson has suggested that state land farther away from ground zero be used. He was scheduled to meet with New York Archbishop

Timothy Dolan on Tuesday to discuss the Park51 project, which is planned for two blocks north of the 16-acre World Trade Center site.

es

t

The SAAC believes that, in order for an institution to convey a message of good ethics and positive sportsmanship, it must have the involvement and participation of everyone involved with athletics on campus. This includes, but is not limited to, the President, athletics administrators, coaches, student-athletes and you – the students/fans. It is our behavior that will shape the perception of our institutions and teams by the public, the media and our opponents.

w

The Mountain West Conference Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) believes the most important aspects of sport are good ethics and positive sportsmanship. We are very pleased the Conference continues its initiative to enhance this philosophy. We need your assistance to make this effort a success.

uth

Dear Fellow Students:

s So

August 23, 2010

Conception

MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE SPORTSMANSHIP INITIATIVE

NEW YORK — Supporters of a Greek Orthodox church destroyed on Sept. 11 say officials willing to speak out about a planned community center and mosque near ground zero have been silent on efforts to get the church rebuilt. But the World Trade Center site’s owner says a deal to help rebuild St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church was offered and rejected, after years of negotiations, over money and other issues. Though the projects are not related, supporters — including George Pataki, New York’s governor at the time of the Sept. 11 attacks — have questioned why public officials have not addressed St. Nicholas’ future while they lead a debate on whether and where the Islamic cultural center should be built. “What about us? Why have they forgotten or abandoned their commitment to us?” asked Father Alex Karloutsos, assistant to the archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. “When I see them raising issues about the mosque and not thinking about the church that was destroyed, it does bother us.” In an effort to deal with the furor over the planned location of the

Conceptions Southwest, UNM’s Art and Literary Magazine, is seeking volunteer staff members for the 2010-2011 issue.

Pick up an app licatio

Questions? 249-4990 csw@unm.edu

n in M arron H all, Rm . 107


lobo features

New Mexico Daily Lobo

by Scott Adams

dilbertŠ

Wednesday, August 25, 2010 / Page 15

dailycrossword

Yesterday’s Solutions

dailysudoku Level: 1 2 3 4

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

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*URZWK (QULFKPHQW Enroll in a different kind of course. Our Growth & Enrichment program is a great place to discover new activities, meet new people, rejuvenate your creativity or just have fun. Take a look at some of our new classes: 6<:7,=+<176 <7 <0- ")*)4)0 C )::)<1>- 76 1+<176 1.- :)?16/ 1/=:- !)16<16/ C '-/-<):1)6 -);< Consumers Guide to Herbs and Other Supplements :< .7: -)416/ C //+-44-6< :=6+0 )6, 57:- UNM Students receive a 10% discount. & -5847A--; =;- A7=: %=1<176 #-51;;176

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LASSIFIEDs CCLASSIFIEDS Page 16 / Wednesday, August 25, 2010

DAILY LOBO

DAILY LOBO

CLASSIFIED INDEX Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds

Announcements Food, Fun, Music Las Noticias Lost and Found Miscellaneous Personals Services Travel Want to Buy Word Processing

Housing

Apartments Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Property for Sale Rooms for Rent Studios Sublets

For Sale

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

Employment

Child Care Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Jobs Wanted Volunteers Work Study Jobs

Announcements LONELY? LOG ON to www.Spirituality.com PARKING, 1 BLOCK south of UNM. $100/semester. 268-0525. NOT IN CRISIS? In Crisis? Agora listens about anything. 277-3013. www. agoracares.com.

Fun Food Music ALBUQUERQUE RECORD SHOW MCM Elegante 2020 Menaul Sunday, August 29 9-5PM, $2admission WEEKLY TAI CHI classes, turtlemountaintaichi.com 792-4519.

Services ABORTION AND COUNSELING services. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 2427512. ELEPHONIC RECORDING MUSIC Production & Sound Services UNM student discounts. Call 505-797-1333 PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA.

WE BUY JUNK CARS! (505)702-1483

?BACKPACK BUSTED? ABQ Luggage & Zipper Repair. 1405-A San Mateo NE. 256-7220.

Your Space GOALKEEPER NEEDED FOR men’s recreational outdoor soccer team. Contact droybal@unm.edu for info. MILLIONAIRE- SEEKING LADIES, companionship, friendship, inheritanceship, room/ board, spending money. 2654345.

Apartments UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1BDRM $490 +utilities. Clean, quiet, remodeled. Move in special! 573-7839. APARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com MOVE IN SPECIAL- walk to UNM. 1BDRMS starting at $575/mo includes utilities. No pets. 255-2685, 268-0525. 1 BDRMS, 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. Clean, quiet, and affordable. 301 Harvard SE. 262-0433. UNM/ CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Consultant: 243-2229. $750- 2 BEDROOM available- Minutes from UNM, Shuttle Bus Available, PreLeasing for Fall- Reserve Now Call 505842-6640. $585- 1 BED RESERVING FOR FALL 2010, Minutes from UNM and Apollo, It is a must see, Call us at 505-842-6640. $495- STUDIO- RESERVING for Fall, 5 minutes from UNM and Apollo College, Spacious for 1, Call at 505-842-6640. 3 BLOCKS TO UNM. Move-in Discounts! Furnished, Utilities Paid. 1BDRM $625 up. No smoking/ No Pets. 842-0058 $635- 1 BED Loft- Lg. square footage, near UNM, Available for Fall, must see home, Call 505-842-6640 ask for Jessika. $805- 1 BED w/ office- Available for Fall- Minutes from UNM, Shuttle Bus to UNM, Office available in home, Call 505-842-6640. 1BDRM, 3 BLOCKS from UNM, hardwood floors, beamed wood ceiling, new windows, light and bright. 118 Sycamore, $575/mo +utilities, +dd, cat okay. No smoking. Call 550-1579. UNM 2BDRM 1BA 1801 Girard SE Private Balcony, Laundry on-site, $575 + dd. Cats welcome no dogs, N/S, call Kathy 550-1578 Purple Sage Realty 268-5357 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.

Condos FOR RENT OR SALE! Studio condo, tiled floors, FP, secure access, assigned parking, easy commute to UNM. Great investment opportunity for profit! Rent: $450/mo, Sale: $39,000. Will 4014425.

Duplexes 1BDRM HARDWOOD FLOORS, fenced yard, off-street parking. $495/mo $450deposit. 1113 Wilmoore SE. Available September 1st. Call 362-0837.

Houses For Rent

CAREMART PHARMACY (201 San Pedro SE; 268-2411) Special Discount for STUDENTS Will Beat All Competitors Prices Fast Friendly Services All Major Insurances Accepted Locally Owned (Central/San Pedro) TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799. MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown, You CAN Succeed in Math! Get Help Early. 20% discount through September PhD. welbert53@aol.com 401-8139. PREGNANT? NEED HELP? The Gabriel Project offers monetary and emotional support to all pregnant women regardless of circumstance. Free pregnancy tests and ultrasound. Call 505-266-4100. BIRTHRIGHT CARES. FREE pregnancy tests, help. 262-2235.

3BDRM, 1 1/2 Bath Newly remodeled house in the Uptown area. Near parks, shopping, restaurants, bike trails, UNM, buslines, schools.... $1350/mo. same security dep. Tenant pays gas & electric. AVAILABLE NOW!!! 6 Mo. lease min. Call Willie, 331-1150 or Marc, 2637692 to see. 1BDRM HOUSE WITH 9’X12’ office. Available September 1st through May. Utilities paid. Partially furnished. 3blocks to UNM. $800/mo +deposit. No pets, no smokers. Contact Simone at The Mail Station 505-842-1306. 3 BDRM HOUSE for rent South Valley big lot, fence for horses, extra parking for vehicles, gas & electric. Price $900 + Utilities/month. 720-1934 or 881-3540 UNIQUE 2BDRM NEAR UNM. Rose garden, gated patio, W/D included. NP/NS. 4 blocks from UNM. 415 Vassar SE. 266-7422 or 449-8197. UNM 2BDRM $950/MO, no dogs. 8216052 FURNISHED 3BDRM + office, 15 minutes to UNM, 2669sq/ft $1500/mo 2998543, 379-7349

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New Mexico Daily Lobo 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.

2 BDRM HOUSE for rent, W/D, FP, in close barrio three blocks from UNM. 720-1934 or 881-3540 HOUSE FOR RENT 2BDRM $600/mo +utilities. Available August 23rd. Call 505-369-8544.

TOWNHOUSE 2BDRM +1.5BA, fireplace, skylight, new appliances, new carpet, new paint, no pets, 2-CG and back patio. $1000/mo +utilities. The owner will pay the association fee. Please contact 286-3332 or 264-3037. UNM 2 BLOCKS. 1BR $450/mo. 8976304

Houses For Sale WALK TO UNM 3BDRM, 2BA, 2-CG 1475sf new carpet/paint. ref. AC, $243,500. 244-3800/ 907-2480 1st Choice. UNIQUE ADOBE HOME Lomas/ I-25. MLS#678571. Will consider short term lease @ $900/mo. 220-7517.

Rooms For Rent A NICE HOUSE Seeks Friendly, Clean Roommate. Walk-in Closets, Sauna, Washer/Dryer, Internet. Near UNM. No pets/smoking/drugs. $395/mo +utilities. 505-730-9977. FEMALE ROOMMATE Nice 3BDRM house, 2BA, garage, W/D in Beautiful Rio Rancho. Rent only $400/mo OBO. Pretty Bay Windows Room Available. Call 505-235-8045 19 YEAR OLD male looking for responsible roommate at Sun Village apartments. $310/mo +electric. Please contact Nat at 505-716-1298 or ngalesic@unm.edu. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED for 4BDRM 2BA house 1 mile south of campus. $330/mo +utilities. 2 rooms available. 505-553-0618 kris10g@unm.edu. QUIET FEMALE STUDENT wanted to share 3BDRM 2.5BA home. 10 minutes from campus. $300/month +utilities. Contact Kat (505) 490-1998 GRADUATE STUDENT: FURNISHED room, W/D, cable, smokeless, free utilities, $295/mo +$50dd. 344-9765. WANTED HOUSEMATE IN Placitas. Private bedroom and bath. Clean air, water, views, space, beauty, tranquility, peace. 25 minutes to UNM. $700/mo including utilities. 505-404-8373. ROOM FOR RENT! Space for one or two. $450-one. $325-two. Utilities included. 2 blocks from UNM. HUGE backyard W/D included. Call Sam 505301-2810. PRIVATE MASTER BEDROOM Suite, full bath, Westside ABQ, near Paseo/ Golf Course, kitchen/ laundry privileges, must like dogs. Professional/ Grad student preffered. $550/mo. jgflynow@ya hoo.com (subject: 77). PEACEFUL, HAPPY HOME. Fabulous downtown location! Room available in spacious, historic home for mature, fairly quiet, clean, upbeat person. Share with outdoorsy, considerate, health-conscious housemate. No smoking, drugs, heavy drinking, loud parties. Under 3 miles to UNM. Loaded with amenities! $425/mo +shared utilities. 269-0894.

Bikes/Cycles 2007 YAMAHA XT225-LIKE NEW. NEVER RIDDEN OUT OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD! ONLY 76 MILES. $2745 505-991-1642. ADULT SCHWINN FRONTIER mountain bicycle like new $100. 299-4472 or 6157684

For Sale SMALL NEW REFRIGERATOR for sale, black color $95, please contact Dulce at davitia@unm.edu or (505)927-6194 2000 CAVALIER GREAT Condition $2300 OBO. Contact 505-513-0227 or wrecklessstar13@aol.com

Vehicles For Sale SAAB 9000CS 1993 Red 4dr hatchback sunroof, automatic, good tires, CD/MP3 Jack/stereo. 134K miles $1100. 6157692 or 299-4472 HONDA SCOOTER, YELLOW; miles 381. $800. Call 869-9198.

low

2007 KAWASASKI VULCAN 2000 No Dents or Scratches 2,700 Miles Added Leather Saddle Bags Added Chrome Crash Bars $11,500 OBO (505)553-2059

Child Care OPENINGS AT LICENSED CHILD DAYCARE HOME: 20 years experience . ICCPR trained and P.A.N. You could qualify for state assistance! 889-0511. PT/FT ADMIN WORK intern opening Children’s Learning Center. Email resume to kwcodirector@hotmail.com CAREGIVERS FOR TOP-quality afterschool child care program. Play sports, take field trips, make crafts, be goofy, have fun and be a good role model. Learn, play, and get paid for doing both! $9/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Must be able to work Wednesdays 12PM – 5PM in the fall. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 296-2880 or visit www. childrens-choice.org Work-study encouraged to apply. PART-TIME NANNY wanted every Tues. beg. Sept. email femmetahiti@g mail.com ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a wonderful and supportive team. This is a training and leadership development position. Associate Directors are trained and prepared for promotion to the position of Program Director (responsible for overall afterschool program site management). $11/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises (upon promotion – Program Director annual salary starts at $27,040). Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE or call 296-2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org WANTED: CHILD CARE for 2 older boys after school 2-3 days/wk in our NE Heights home. Experience, references and own transportation required. Call 505-856-5385.

Jobs Off Campus DAVID WEBBER CPA 617 Amherst Dr NE seeks part-time motivated marketing person. Call 243-7800 OFFICE HELP FRIDAYS 1-5pm, $8/hr, experienced, references required. 2542606. EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.AdCarDriver.com EARLY BIRD LAWN service now hiring for PT mowing jobs. Able to work w/ some student schedules. Call Bob at 294-2945 for information. QUALIFIED HIP-HOP, jazz/ ballet dance & cheer instructors. Teach ages 4-15. 1 night a week, great P/T pay. (505)8991666 GRAPHIC DESIGN / PREPRESS Fastpaced, efficient. Knowledge of Adobe Creative Suite. Mac & PC. Drug testing. Salary DOE. Apply at 4505 Menaul NE, M-Th 1-5pm. EXPERIENCED SOCCER COACH for Sat. only for 3-5 hours. Teach ages 411. Great P/T pay. (505)899-1666.

!!!BARTENDING!!!: UP TO $300/day. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520ext.100. WAIT STAFF PT/ FT for busy lunch cafe. Apply at Model Pharmacy, corner of Lomas and Carlisle. 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. EQUALITY NEW MEXICO is seeking a PT Administrative Assistant. The position would require 20hrs/wk with flexible evening hours. $8/hr. Must have a strong commitment to working for the LBGT community. Applicants must be able to work independently and organize volunteers. Contact Matt 505-7106811. LAW FIRM ASSISTANT NEEDED!! No legal background necessary: a competent, personable man or woman who can file, interact with clients, and handle basic computer tasks is desired. Relaxed atmosphere in this law firm; no dresses or suits required. Do you know what chronological means? Do you know your alphabet? Have you ever turned on a computer or answered a phone? Then you may be perfect for this job!! Please fax your resume, attn: Kim, to 255-4029. DG’S DELI IS hiring cashier (experience necessary) and sandwich artists. Enthusiastic, motivated people, clean appearance a must, Apply within 1418 Dr MLK or call 247-DELI(3354). UPWARD BOUND MALE tutor wanted2 hrs/wk for high school students in math. $15/hr; 366-2521. WANTED PT CHEF and Family Assistant: Excellent job for student! Must be organized/ reliable with dependable car. NS who enjoys cooking, kids (Girls 15.13 & 8), energetic and creative. Other duties include misc. errands & light housekeeping. Approx. 6-9am and 3-6pm, 2-3 days/wk (days vary). No weekends/ Holidays. Approx. 10-15 hrs/wk. Salary $10/hr to start. Please Call Sandy 228-1111. JOB OPENING EXECUTIVE Assistant to general manager of full service hotel. Must have experience, total computer skills, writing skills. Qualified applicants only. Call Agnes Martinez, Human Resources at 505-247-7009 or apply in person at Double Tree Hotel 201 Marquette NW. FRONT DESK CLERKS (experience preferred), Bartenders, shuttle drivers, and parking lot attendants. Call Agnes Martinez, Human Resources at 505-2477009 or apply in person at Double Tree Hotel 201 Marquette NW. LOOKING FOR COLLEGE students to tutor in 16 APS schools. Flexible hours 7:30-3:00 M-F. Starting salary $9.00 an hour. Contact: Mona Marchese march ese@aps.edu. SOLOIST MUSICIANS WANTED for church services on Sunday mornings. Classical jazz or pop. 254-2606.

ATTENTION STUDENTS: Fall Openings $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: 8910559

BRADELY’S BOOKSAlbuquerque’s best 3 day a week used bookstore! Monday, Wednesday, Friday inside Winning Coffee Co. 111 Harvard SE. Call 379-9794 for requests/ info.

SouthWest Organizing Project (SWOP) Development Intern

Furniture GOOD BEDS, FULL matt box sp and frame $75, queen matt $50. 265-5032.

Day, night, late night, weekends. Cashiers/busing positions. Will work around your schedule.

Apply in person.

2400 Central SE VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551. STAFFING COORDINATOR NEEDED for Private Home Care Agency, full time with rotating weekend on call. E-mail resume with salary history to rightathome @lobo.net LEASING ASSISTANT--LOOKING for a well-organized, energetic individual for fast-paced team environment. Will be responsible for marketing and leasing at Lobo Village, the new student housing complex serving University of New Mexico students. Excellent communication skills are a must. Prior multi-family or student housing experience preferred. Competitive salary/benefits with opportunities for advancement. Apply online @ https://home.eease.com/re cruit2/?id=518806&t=1. EOE

Jobs On Campus THE DAILY LOBO IS LOOKING FOR AN ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT! Job duties include: Revenue reports, Campus billing, mailing of newspaper to subscribers, preparing & mailing tearsheets & monthly statements. Special projects as assigned; data entry and filing. 3-4 hours/day, 5 days/week, flexible schedule, position is year-round, must be able to work during the summer (4-8 hrs/wk). Accounting experience preferred including a working knowledge of Excel and Access. Accounting student a plus. Good customer service skills a plus. $8.50-$10.00 per hour depending upon experience. Apply online at: unmjobs.unm.edu/appli cants/Central?quickFind=59135

Volunteers JOIN A MOVEMENT, make a difference, gain valuable experience! Become a volunteer advocate with the Rape Crisis Center of Central New Mexico. TRAINING STARTS IN LATE SEPTEMBER! 266-7711 volunteer@rapecrisiscnm. org www.rapecrisiscnm.org CONCEPTIONS SOUTHWEST, UNM’s Arts and Literary Magazines, is seeking volunteer staff members for the 20102011 issue. Currently, the magazine needs volunteers for the editorial staff, graphic designers, and a web consultant. This opportunity is a great resume builder and perfect for anyone interested in the field of publications. Contact Chris Quintana at chrisq6@gmail. com or 505-249-4990 for application information. 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

Listed by: Position Title Department Closing Date Salary Job of the Day

SUPER SALE!!! DORM furniture in a box includes 110 dryer small. Also, hauling trailer, plus computers, etc. Everything real reasonable. Call, we might have. JJ 259-8898.

OPENINGS AVAILABLE

Starting at $8.50/hr.

Check out a few of the Jobs on Main Campus available through Student Employment!

FOR SALE NEW automatic paper folder for mass mailing, $100. 288-9896

TI-83 PLUS Calculator $50. Call 3146722

RESTAURANT

11-09-2010 $10.00/HR

Music Theory Asst I 09-01-2010 $7.50 HR

Childcare Assistant - workstudy 08-26-2010 $10.00 HR

Office Assistant HS Library and Informatics Ctr 08-26-2010 $8.13 HR

Stagehand UNM Public Events 09-15-2010 $7-10 HR

Pharmacy Tutors 08-26-2010 $11.00 HR

Sign Shop Tech Assistant PPD Sign Shop 08-26-2010 $8 - 9 HR

For more information about these positions, to view all positions or to apply visit https://unmjobs.unm.edu Call the Daily Lobo at 277-5656 to find out how your job can be the Job of the Day!!


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