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The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

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tuesday November 6, 2012

New Mexico follows the leader by John Tyczkowski news@dailylobo.com

Campus cocaine bust by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com

Lobo men’s basketball

Daily Lobo volume 117

issue 55

Read the full story and view photos at DailyLobo.com.

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The men’s basketball team played its final exhibition game Monday night and beat New Mexican Highlands University 92-70.

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the University in the past. APD Public Information Officer Tasia Martinez declined to comment on the arrests. She said that although APD conducted the bust, the narcotics sergeant “asked that (APD) refer all inquiries to the UNM PIO (public information officer) who has been sufficiently briefed on this incident from last week, according to the investigative unit.” But UNMPD Public Information Officer Robert Haarhues also declined to comment on the bust, saying his department was not involved. “UNM had nothing to do with the arrests made on campus,” he said in an email Monday. Anderson said the students who were arrested will face disciplinary actions from the University. She said UNMPD requested reports of the students’ arrests from APD, and that the dean of students will determine appropriate punishments based on the reports. “There will be disciplinary actions to be taken,” she said. “They could even be up for expulsion.” Anderson said the bust was a successful move by police. “It’s all because it is an open location, because police patrol the area and because students care,” she said.

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An undercover drug bust near the Duck Pond ended in the arrest of a dozen people, five of whom are UNM students. According to an article in the Albuquerque Journal, the Albuquerque Police Department was undercover on campus beginning on Thursday. One student reportedly sold drugs to an undercover police officer, and the other four tried to purchase drugs from an officer who was pretending to be a drug distributor. UNM Communications Director Dianne Anderson said that although the University did not know about the bust prior to the arrests, APD briefed the UNM Police Department earlier during the day. Anderson said that because drug arrests do not happen often on campus, the recent bust was unusual, especially considering the number of arrests made. “I think (APD) was able to make a lot of arrests in one day,” she said. “It’s an abnormal situation to have that many drug dealers on campus at one time.” According to the Journal, one officer told three students that he was selling $20 worth

of cocaine for $10 and escorted the students to an undercover police car. The three students were arrested for agreeing to purchase cocaine and charged with cocaine possession and conspiracy, the Journal reported. The Journal reported that one student, a freshman, was arrested after trying to sell $10 worth of marijuana to an undercover officer. The student was charged with marijuana distribution and conspiracy. In total, five people were arrested on suspicion of selling marijuana, two on suspicion selling methamphetamines, and the rest on suspicion of trying to buy marijuana from the officers. Anderson said most of the people arrested in the bust were repeat offenders. She said that after APD started to monitor areas south of Central Avenue more closely, dealers moved to the University area thinking police would not be able to follow them. “My understanding is some of these people had prior charges, and it appears that they may have come from other states,” she said. Anderson said that although UNM has its own police force, APD is still authorized to make arrests on campus. She said APD has regularly held patrols around

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APD officers arrest students at Duck Pond

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Student Claire Gutierrez, right, gets instruction from Dorothy Baca, who teaches courses in theater costume and makeup at UNM. Gutierrez created the imitation gash across her face with silicone prosthetics and makeup. See full story Page 5.

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Adria Malcolm/@adriamalcolm / Daily Lobo

Forget “The Land of Enchantment,” a more exact state motto for New Mexico would be “The Land of Steady Voting Habits.” According to polling data for the past 56 years, New Mexicans tend to vote for incumbents in presidential elections. In the 14 elections since 1956, only twice have New Mexicans voted for a challenger instead of an incumbent. Those elections were in 1980, when the state went for Ronald Reagan instead of Jimmy Carter, and in 1992, when the state went for Bill Clinton instead of George H.W. Bush. Incumbents also tend to have a double-digit margin of victory in New Mexico: Eisenhower won by 16 percentage points in 1956; Nixon by 24.5 in 1972 and Reagan by 20.5 in 1984. Lyndon Johnson was not strictly an incumbent, since he ran for re-election in 1964 after finishing the remainder of John F. Kennedy’s term. He won New Mexico with an 18.9 percentage-point margin over Republican challenger Barry Goldwater in 1964. But exceptions to the trend of large margins of victory for incumbents have occurred in recent elections. In the 1996 election, incumbent Bill Clinton received a 7.3 percentage-point margin over Republican challenger Bob Dole, and in the 2004 election, incumbent George W. Bush carried New Mexico with only a 0.8 percentagepoint margin over Democratic challenger John Kerry. However, after a two-term presidency of any party, New Mexicans are much less clear about whom they want to vote into office next. After two terms of the Republican Eisenhower administration from 1952 to 1960, New Mexicans voted for Democrat John F. Kennedy, who won the national election in 1960. But Kennedy carried New Mexico by 50.2 percent of the votes to 49.4 percent for Republican Richard Nixon. And after two terms of Democrat Bill Clinton from 1992 to 2000, New Mexicans voted for Democrat Al Gore, who lost the presidential election to Republican George W. Bush. But Gore only carried the state by 0.1 percentage points — 366 votes. New Mexico also tends to vote for the winning candidate, only voting for the losing candidate twice during 25 elections since its statehood a century ago. These occurred in 1976, when the state went for Gerald Ford, and in 2000, when the state went for Al Gore. In addition, New Mexico’s partisan leanings in presidential elections are split, with the state siding with Democratic candidates in 13 elections and siding with Republican candidates in 12 elections. But New Mexican voters may be breaking free of these established electoral patterns. The history of narrow margins in an election after a two-term presidency disappeared in 2008, when Democrat Barack Obama carried New Mexico with 15.1 percentage points more than Republican John McCain. Historical evidence suggests that Barack Obama will carry New Mexico in 2012, given New Mexico’s history of voting for incumbents. If that trend continues, though, Obama’s win may only be by the single percentage-point margin that has occurred in the two incumbent reelections since Clinton.

NEW MEXICO VOTING RECORD

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PAGETWO TUESDAY, N OVEMBER 6, 2012

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

Today is Election Day, which means you can vote in the SUB on the second floor in the Cochiti and Isleta rooms. As with all voting centers, the station in the SUB opens today at 7 a.m. and closes at 7 p.m. If you can’t vote on campus, here are other places in the University Area where you can vote: For a list of vote centers in Bernalillo County, visit bernco.gov/vcc or follow the QR code. To see all of the Daily Lobo’s 2012 Election Voter Guide, visit tinyurl.com/d9cgcwf or follow the QR code.

Bandelier Elementary 3309 Pershing Ave. S.E. Highland High School 4700 Coal Ave. S.E. Jefferson Middle School 712 Girard Blvd. N.E. Montezuma Elementary 3100 Indian School Road N.E.

Are you voting for or against the minimum wage increase? Dennis Flannigan

graduate student, business “I voted against the minimum wage increase simply because I feel New Mexico already has one of the highest minimum wages in the country, and while it’s important to keep in line with the cost of living, it’s also important to make sure that employers can provide more than just one job.

Jairo Marquez sophomore, administration

General Obligations Higher Education Bond C The 2012 Capital Projects General Obligations Bond C aims to renovate and upgrade campus buildings and would create an estimated 1,200 new jobs throughout New Mexico. If it passes, Bond C will provide up to $120 million for public New Mexico colleges and universities. The bond will not increase taxes, as funding will be provided through the issuance and sale of higher education and special schools capital improvements and acquisition bonds. Main campus: $19 million for the renovation of Clark Hall and Castetter Hall. Los Alamos campus: $500,000 for renovation of science laboratories and provide lab equipment. Gallup campus: $1 million would fund water, sewer, and utility and fire-suppression-system improvements. Taos campus: $3 million would fund renovations and improvements for campus lighting, signage, infrastructure, parking lots and drainage. Valencia Campus: $1 million will fund road replacement, upgrades for plumbing, heating, air conditioning and ventilation systems, and the construction of a parking lot and loop road.

Minimum wage increase

The Albuquerque Minimum Wage Ordinance aims to increase minimum wage in Albuquerque from $7.50 per hour to $8.50 per hour starting in 2013. It would also set the wage to increase every year as the cost of living increases. The proposal will also increase wages for employees who receive tips, such as waiters and waitresses, from $2.13 per hour to 45 percent of minimum wage in 2013 to 60 percent of minimum wage in 2014. However, the wage increase would not affect employers who spend $2,500 annually for employee health or child care benefits.

“I’m against minimum wage because of inflation.”

Are you voting for or against Bond C? Jeremiah Heller

senior, studio arts “I did vote for that. If it had to do with education, then I voted for it.”

Andrew Santangelo

junior, business and economics

~compiled by Svetlana Ozden

volume 117

issue 55

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

Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Cleary Managing Editor Danielle Ronkos News Editor Svetlana Ozden Assistant News Editor Ardee Napolitano Photo Editor Adria Malcolm Assistant Photo Editor Juan Labreche Culture Editor Nicole Perez

Assistant Culture Editor Antonio Sanchez Sports Editor Thomas Romero-Salas Assistant Sports Editor J. R. Oppenheim Opinion/ Social Media Editor Alexandra Swanberg Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse Design Director Robert Lundin

Design Assistants Connor Coleman Josh Dolin Stephanie Kean John Tyczkowski Advertising Manager Renee Schmitt Sales Manager Jeff Bell Classified Manager Mayra Aguilar

“I voted no, because, with our spending right now, we need to get a fixed budget before we do any spending. That’s how a lot of cities in Alabama and California have gone bankrupt, through that very same logic.” 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 regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content should be made to the editor-in-chief. 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.


news

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Tuesday, November 6, 2012/ Page 3 $2.50 Coronas $2.50 Landsharks $3 Cuervo

Who are you voting for in the presidential race? Ericka Tonini

freshman, undecided �I voted for Obama. I agree with his views on immigration.�

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Andrew Santangelo

junior, business and economics

“Mitt Romney. He’s the best choice for business and economics. Freedom and liberty derive from economics.�

Student Veterans of UNM, in collaboration with the Veterans Resource Center, will host a

Celebration of Veterans Friday November 9th 2012 from 8am-2pm.

The formal event will take place in the Student Union Ballrooms A & B. at 11am with a moment of silence at 11:11am.

Cal Van Willigen

junior, international studies

There will be displays throughout the event from various organizations. In the atrium we will be collecting coins - please donate to help us fill the lobo paw. Money collected will be donated to the Fisher House.

“I voted for Gary Johnson to end the ‌ bipartisanship that’s been affecting our country for so long.â€?

~compiled by Emma Cohnheim ~ photos by Natalia JĂĄcquez

Guest speakers: Cabinet Secretary Hale, NM Department of Veteran Services, along with Brigadier General Judy M. Griego, Chief of the Joint Staff for the Joint Force Headquarters, New Mexico National Guard, Santa Fe, NM.

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LoboOpinion Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg / @alexswanberg

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Page

4

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

opinion@dailylobo.com

cOLUMN

Rightward shift robs voters of a real choice by Joachim Oberst

Daily Lobo guest columnist opinion@dailylobo.com It is remarkable that every presidential election seems to top the previous one in terms of importance. With each race, the public faces the same dilemma: right-wing corporatism flirting with outright fascism or right-wing liberalism propped up by militarism. Noble alternatives, such as third-party candidates advocating peace through justice for all at home and abroad, are deliberately ignored and consistently discarded from the public debate as nonviable, ridiculous options by the bipartisan establishment funded and controlled with corporate money whose function is the fulfillment of its political prophecies or will. It seems almost fitting that special tribute is thereby paid to the spirits of Halloween when the freakiest candidates dance on the national stage for highest popularity. Who this time is the most grotesque in the land of the free? After Nixon, Reagan and Bush, all mass murderers in their personal pursuit of American imperialism, we got McCain, and now Romney, the sneakiest political chameleon, promising the heavenly blue from the highest skies of utter impossibilities, suspiciously silent on how America’s leading job-killer could ever create any jobs for the working and middle class. He is the slimy, smiley buffoon dancing to the corporate tune. With Romney and Ryan, we know what stands at the end of the Republican road: the abolition of the state, dissolved by privatization into capitalist entities; the total destruction of nature for the idolatrous sake of the money-making business; the dissolution of society into private clubs that fend for themselves against each other to keep the senseless competition going — in short, the Romnification of America. The role of the Christian religion is to sanction the whole diabolic enterprise. Those millions of desperate souls, losers in the Darwinian struggle for survival, brought their bad luck of sickness, homelessness, poverty and uneducation upon themselves — apparently as punishment from God for not believing in the “right” way in the perpetual growth of the free market economy designed to advance the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the sanctified few. They should have known better. A race has only one winner. By divine design and demonic capitalist definition, the many are excluded from the privileged few. Resources are finite. Their “growing” scarcity makes the battle more deadly and thus more interesting. In the end, after all failures, there still are, as always, two options left to be enjoyed: coerced charity by condescending pity and the most sacred of American freedoms — the freedom to die and the freedom to be killed — “viable” options already in our current society. Consequently, the poverty draft serves as an excellent recruitment tool for a warwaging army, and the felony of poverty and higher skin pigmentation ensures that racism keeps supplying the hungry prison business with clients more valuable when locked up. All of this is consistent with Republican attempts nationwide to exclude minority voters with imposed low turnouts, purged voter rolls, restrictive voter ID laws and other legal, or illegal, measures: evidence of a deep-rooted hatred for democracy.

Column

Third parties will heal political divide by John Tyczkowski

Daily Lobo columnist opinion@dailylobo.com

These days, it’s easy to say that the two major parties have lost touch with what they have traditionally stood for. Kennedy and Obama both define “Democrat” in radically different ways, just as Eisenhower and Romney define “Republican” in radically different ways. Essentially, both parties have existed unchallenged for too long that they have become caricatures of their former selves. Many Democrats have drifted from fiscal conservatism with a social conscience to an overreaching fixation on social and environmental issues, while many Republicans have been hijacked by the evangelical right and have increasingly been bringing religion into politics. Both of these giant shifts have alienated many diverse views within each party — such as the fiscally conservative, socially liberal Rockefeller Republicans and the pro-big business moderates and conservative Democrats. It is for this reason that the two-party system no longer satisfies America’s needs and must be replaced with a multipolar electoral system that acknowledges third parties as legitimate alternatives. First, the reduction of American politics to the modern two-party system is a relatively recent phenomenon in the country’s history. For the first three decades of the United States’ existence, there were at first no parties, and then only two parties but roughly three candidates What is left in the light of this deplorable plight for the American voting cattle as they are marching into the slaughterhouses of manipulated voting machines, effectively in Republican Romney hands, is the choice for the lesser evil, or, what has become idiomatic in American English, “the least worst” — an insult to every free spirit, especially a people that deems itself the most free. Trapped in the suction of the right-wing drift within the Republican Party, Democrats have continued the American legacy: a totalitarian tyranny abroad emblematized by its drone warfare, and a spying plutocratic oligarchy at home that is increasingly concerned with its unruly dissident subjects.

to vote for per party per election. After the political-party system became well established between the election of 1828 and the Civil War, it was very common for presidential elections to have more than two parties. The two-party system didn’t begin to settle in until the 1840 election, with the Whig Party and Democratic Party taking the roles. Even then, the Whigs were defunct by the 1860 election, when the Republican Party emerged and codified the current two-party system. Also, for the century after the Civil War, third parties would periodically spring up and capture a limited array of states in the Electoral College. And despite what some might call “dangerous interference” by third parties and multiple viable candidates, the republic still managed to elect presidents successfully and to peacefully transition from administration to administration. The election of 1824 and the Civil War were the only exceptions, the only problems occurring in the 179 years from the first election in 1789 until 1968, the last election in which a third party won votes in the Electoral College. Also, the cries that opening up the political process to additional parties will only serve to give a platform to radical viewpoints are incorrect. The radicals already have their viewpoints entrenched within the two-party system, and they stamp out the moderates by refusing to allow them in. That’s right, I called both the Democrats and Republicans radical parties. As mentioned before, there are moderate elements within each party, but they never get

However, in the spooky darkness of this election season, into which an increasingly angry god seems to have spoken with the natural force of a devastating hurricane as a final appeal to reason to recognize the consequences of climate change, there is still a significant choice to be made: the choice between a flip-flopping man without a conscience and a man who has professed rational intelligence and is therefore known to have a conscience to be appealed to. Given this legacy, we shall see if the Republican assault on women, minorities and democracy at large will manage to get away — again — with another stolen election.

very far because they are shouted down for holding views that cross party lines. Bipartisanship, a lofty ideal to which both sides aspire, is increasingly rare in practice. That is why the addition of third parties would be useful: to reduce the stranglehold of radical politics by creating a spectrum of moderate parties with something for everyone. Next, the relaxation of restrictions on third parties would cause an explosion of them in the short term, as various organizations would try to get their views out, win voters and run campaigns. However, the fear that this would create a breakdown of government due to an excess of parties is also unfounded. While many third parties would exist, their existence would not assure that they would win congressional representation or electoral votes. While the Libertarians, Greens and Constitutionalists are examples of third parties that would be able to do well and have done well at the state level, there are many others such as the Socialist Workers, the America First Party and the Unity Party, to name a few, that would be subsumed within the main third parties or rendered defunct due to each having too limited an appeal for voters to gain electoral support. Essentially, there is no good reason to persist in the current two-party hegemony other than to perpetuate a system steeped in special interests. American political thought cannot simply be reduced to either one choice or the other, and, to ensure a truly representative process, third parties are needed to reflect the full diversity of the American political spectrum.

Editorial Board Elizabeth Cleary Editor-in-chief

Danielle Ronkos Managing editor

Alexandra Swanberg Opinion editor

Svetlana Ozden News editor


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Tuesday, November 6, 2012/ Page 5

‘Makeup design is really just being a good painter’ Students learn to manipulate and transform faces by Antonio Sanchez

being a good painter, a good manipulator. When you take a flat surface and make it look three dimensional and give it depth, that’s all makeup is.” Baca didn’t begin her career as a makeup artist, but as a costume designer. She first got involved with theater as an undergraduate student at UNM by helping student actors apply makeup and change costumes. Then Baca moved in the early ‘70s to Los Angeles, where she worked as a costume designer for various films and television programs. She has worked on costumes for the funkinfluenced “Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo” and on Mr. Freeze’s costume for “Batman and Robin,” among work for other films. Baca returned to UNM in 1996, where she has balanced a teaching job with working on films shot in New Mexico. Her most recent work was on “Terminator Salvation.” Baca said she keeps instruction flexible, allowing her students to try nontraditional techniques. “I think it’s just like anything else: you have to do a lot out on your own, you just keep trying

culture@dailylobo.com

Slashed throats, bruised eyes, infected cuts — theater makeup professor Dorothy Baca said she is not one to shy away from violent theatrics. “I love big accident wounds, bones sticking out, guts hanging. I love that kind of stuff. The more gore, sickly and ill, the better,” she said. Baca has been teaching UNM’s theater costume and makeup courses for the past 16 years. She said her students focus on everything from changing genders to turning into animals with makeup and students’ faces. Baca’s class recently wrapped up a project based on Día de los Muertos, in which students transformed into animated skeletons with the help of thick white-and-black makeup. Baca said makeup design is best looked at as a way to transform into a different person. “I think the advantage of makeup design is it’s really easy to create an illusion with it,” Baca said. “Makeup design is really just

see Makeup page 6

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Adria Malcolm/@adriamalcolm / Daily Lobo Charles DiLorenzo smiles across the room at his classmate during cleanup Thursday. Students said the techniques taught in the makeup class can be useful in nontheater fields such as plastic surgery or photography.


Page 6 / Tuesday, November 6, 2012

culture

The Weekly Free In between all those assignments and classes, you’ll need a breather this week, so check out these free events and other freebies if you need a pick-me-up.

GRATEFUL DEAD

MAKE YOUR OWN APP

If you’re ready to hang out with your bong and spend the evening jamming, visit dead.net/30daysofdead and watch your dreams come true. Every day in November The band releases a free, previously unreleased track recorded at a live show. If you guess the date and venue of the performance correctly, you could win a prize, and you’ll be entered to win a copy of the sold-out “Spring 1990” box set.

Brilliant app ideas surface all the time, but people don’t usually know how to make them happen. If you want to stand out from the crowd, hit up the Developing Apps for Mobile Devices workshop for tips from the pros. The info session is at 5:15 p.m. at the UNM Continuing Education South Building at 1634 University Blvd. N.E.

OUTDOOR FIBER ARTS

CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNTING

Combining art and nature is never a bad thing in my book, especially when the art is in nature. Or is all nature art? To ponder this existential question, check out the city of Albuquerque’s Open Space Visitor Center’s art gallery. The opening reception is Saturday from 3 to 5 p.m., although the exhibit is already up so you can visit it whenever. The gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and is at 6500 Coors Road N.W.

Citizen scientists have been collecting data about Christmas bird migrations in central New Mexico for 113 years. This informational session will teach you how you can get involved. It’s unclear whether the migrations only occur around Christmas or if they are “Christmas” birds, so go find out and report back to us. The event is at St. Timothy’s Lutheran Church at 211 Jefferson St. N.E. at 7 p.m.

PUEBLO MEDICINE

TAI CHI AND QI GONG

The interaction of Western and traditional medicine in Pueblo culture is an endless and stimulating topic. You can learn more about it from Ken Lucero of Zia Pueblo in Zimmerman Library’s Waters room at 11 a.m.

Yoga, breathing, stretching, relaxation and every other hippie thing you can imagine are all combined into one thing: qi gong. You can try it out at Poblanos Fields at 4803 Rio Grande Blvd. N.W. at 3 p.m.

ANY DAY THROUGH NOVEMBER

ANY DAY THROUGH DEC. 30

TODAY

WEDNESDAY

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Makeup

from page 5

things,” she said. “Makeup isn’t like math, where x plus y equals z — so much of it is your own finesse. The other day I had a student use hair gel as glitter for their lips. I’ve never seen that. They’re so nimble about what’s in their medicine cabinet, what’s in their kitchen, that they can make things work.” Student Kendra AguilarChavez said the course has helped her in her goal of becoming a plastic surgeon. “It seems unrelated, but I think the technical aspect of it — using your hands, using the hand-eye coordination — I think it’s really important to the field I’m going into, so the whole aesthetic thing is related,” she said.

Student Claire Gutierrez has applied concepts from the course to her career as a photographer. From shadows to facial structures, Gutierrez said she’s switched up her approach when applying makeup to the subjects of her photography. Baca said Gutierrez’s makeup work stands out in the class. It includes projects such as transforming herself into Oprah. “Our face shapes were different. We both have oval-shaped faces, but hers is more round in her cheeks,” Gutierrez said. “I had to completely change the shape of my eyebrows, and even change the shape of my nose. It was a lot of fun. It was interesting.”

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

~Nicole Perez

Adria Malcolm/@adriamalcolm / Daily Lobo Laura Aguayo-Hernandez fills a bullet wound to the head with fake blood. Instructor Dorothy Baca says makeup design is best looked at as a way to transform into someone else.

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DOWN 1 Emulate a beaver 2 Play beginning 3 Farm butters 4 Big party 5 Beatles tune that starts, “When I find myself in times of trouble” 6 Like some Navy rescues 7 Champagne designation 8 Set eyes on 9 “Ignorance is bliss,” e.g. 10 Upset 11 Clickable pic 12 Sandy-colored 13 Levitate 19 Humped beast 21 Sidelong look 24 Mid. name substitute 25 Anoint 26 Put the check in the mail 27 Bring together 28 Veggie on a cob 29 Pride and prejudice, e.g. 30 Caribbean resort

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

31 Like a teetotaler 32 Bergen’s dummy Mortimer 35 Scored 100 on 37 Domino dots 40 Practiced in the ring 41 Art of verse 42 Thailand’s capital 43 QB’s mistakes 46 “Well said” 47 African river

11/6/12

49 Atkins of country 50 Silence 51 Pro debater 52 Auntie of the stage 53 45 minutes, in soccer games 54 Scott Turow work 55 Roman robe 56 Smooch, in Staffordshire 58 __-dandy

SPONSOR THE DAILY LOBO YOUR BUSINESS CROSSWORD COULD BE HERE! 505.277.5656

One night a week can change your life. M.A. in Counseling

Lunch

Lunch Bento $8.95-$9.95 Mon-Fri: 11:30am-2pm Sushi lunch $11.45-$13.45 Sat: 12-2:30pm 3310 Central Ave SE (505) 265-9166

Dinner Mon-Thurs: 5-9:30pm Fri-Sat: 5-10:30pm

Applications Available Now!

Are you a junior (60 credit hours), senior, or graduate student leader with at least a 2.5 GPA? UNM is seeking applications to recognize students who have excelled in leadership, academic, and co-curricular activities. To apply: http://sac.unm.edu and download the application. Questions? Call 277-4706 2

DEADLINE TO APPLY: DECEMBER 3rd by 5:00pm to SUB Room 1018

Gain the knowledge to achieve your goals. An M.A. in Counseling from Webster University is tailored for the real world. It’s focused on providing you with the theory and skills to become a licensed counselor. The classes are the right size for learning and the perfect place for networking.

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EDUCATION MAJORS (UNDERGRADUATE/GRADUATE Degrees). Elementary, Secondary, Special Education. Regional Accreditation. NMPED Approval/ Licensure. Tuition Commensurate with UNM. Wayland Baptist University (Albuquerque Campus). 2201 San Pedro Dr. NE (505-323-9282) mccalls@ wbu.edu http://www.wbu.edu/colleges-in-al buquerque/education12-13. pdf LEGISLATIVE HEARING ON aquifer contamination, November 8th. Information 243-5806. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BOARD meeting Friday November 9, 2012 at 3pm in Marron Hall Rm 131.

Services

TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799. MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. welbert53@aol.com, 401-8139.

2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride, convenient freeway access, quiet community w/ pool, covered parking & on-site laundry MOVE-IN SPECIALS

Features • • • • • • •

Furnished studios Free Wifi Swimming Pool Dishwashers Walk-in closets On-site laundry Newly Renovated

Call to view! 505-266-8392

NEAR UNM/ NOB Hill. 2BDRM 1BA like new. Quiet area, on-site manager, storage, laundry, parking. Pets ok, no dogs. 137 Manzano St NE, $680/mo. 505-610-2050.

CATER YOUR NEXT event with Olympia Cafe. Authentic Greek Food &Pastries. Call for prices 266-5252.

Apartments

1410 Girard Blvd NE Albuquerque, NM 87106

CLOSE TO UNM/ DOWNTOWN. Remodeled one bedroom appartments. $575-$600/mo + utilities. Singles. 266-4505.

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

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UNM/CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Consultant: 243-2229. 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. STUDIOS, 1 BLK UNM, $455-$475/free utilities. 246-2038. www.kachina-prop erties.com FEMALE UNM STUDENT wanted to take over Lobo Village lease starting Spring 2013. First month rent free. Call Kate at 760-235-5667. 1 BLOCK UNM- 1020 sq ft, hardwood floors,walk in closet, 1BDRM, west half of house, 1/2 backyard, FP, parking included. No pets. $700/mo. Incredible charm! 345-2000.

Condos

AVAILABLE!

268-8686 5700 Copper NE

CLEAN 3 BEDROOM and 1 bathroom house with wood floors near Girard and Constitution. Includes W/D, dishwahser and and detached garage. Landscaped in front yard; backyard with bancos. Perfect for long term renter. Will consider small-medium dog with pet deposit. Available now. $1150/mo. +dd. 1214 Girard NE. Contact: Tim at 319-1893.

Rooms For Rent ROOMATE WANTED, TO share a 3BDRM 2BA house with 2 female students. $450/mo including utilities. Close to UNM, Carlisle and Contitution. Text Kaitie at 459-7583. CASAS DEL RIO $511/mo. Need female to take over lease. Includes: wifi, cable, elecricity. Located on campus. November rent payed, ready to move in. 505-550-6268. LOOKING FOR MALE Roommate to take over Lobo Village lease for Spring 2013. Call 399-9797. SEEKING MAN/LADY ROOMMATE to share a 3BDRM/2BA house. Unser and Central near bus line to UNM/CNM. $400/mo + 1/3 utilities. 505-440-3960. LOBO VILLAGE $529/MO. Female to take over lease at Christmas. Fully furnished, walk-in closet, wifi/cable. Text 505-603-3473. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share a 3BDRM/2BA house with two other female students. Serious, n/s, clean, mature female preferred. Call Jessica, 505-977-7766. 1BDRM AVAILABLE FOR rent off campus. $450/mo. including utilities and wifi. Must like dogs; gender unimportant. 773-931-1151. LOOKING FOR MALE roomate for Lobo Village. $300 off first month of rent. Call 429-3302. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED In 3BDRM house near Carslie and Gibson. Contact Lilliam at 713-480-3432. RIGHT ACROSS FROM UNM! Move in asap. 1BDRM for rent in a 4BDRM/2BA house, $350/mo + uttilities. Text Esteph, 307-421-5184. LOBO VILLAGE LEASE, female, $519/mo. No fees/deposit as of right now. Convenience, clean, comfort, friendly staff, nice roommates, cash incentive $$$. Available immediately. 505-320-8663.

sandiaproperties@gmail.com

BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean, 1BDRM, $550/mo, includes utilities, no pets. Move in special! 255-2685. CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE 1BDRM $590/mo, 2BDRM $775/mo utilities included. 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. 262-0433. 3 BLOCKS UNM. 1BDRM duplex, hardwood floors, skylights, FP, garden area. $525/mo. Available 12/1/12. 299-7723.

Art & Music

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

Houses For Rent BEAUTIFULLY REMODLED 3BDRM/ 2BA. 306 Stanford SE. $1400/mo. Call Kelly: 239-8234.

BE IN MOVIES no experience needed. Up to $300/PT. 505-884-0557. www. A1StarCasting.com MALE PERSONAL ASSISTANT for bookman/ spiritual director. Morning schedule. saintbobrakoczy@aol.com MANAGERS NEEDED FOR before & after school programs. 2+ years of experience with school age children preferred. $12.60-$13.00 hr. PT, Must be available both mornings and afternoons M-F. Apply online at www.campfireabq. org or in person at 1613 University NE. ACTIVITY LEADERS. TUTORS and Instructors needed to provide homework help & facilitate educational activities in before and after school programs. PT, must be available both mornings and afternoons, M-F or afternoons M-F $10.50-$12.00 hr. Experience with school-age children preferred. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE. WE MAY NOT be the biggest but we are th best! And we have an immediate opening for a positive, flexible and teamoriented Office Assistant to join our team in our conveniently located office in NE Albuquerque! Primary responsibility is data entry, but also filing, occasional phone work and occasional errands. Strong computer/typing skills, strong organizational and time management and good written/verbal communication skills required. Flexible part-time hours. E-mail your resume to deanna@ pompeo.com; Come visit us today at www.pompeo.com or visit The Pompeo Group on Facebook. OFFICE HELP FOR church experienced references. Friday afternoons. 2 to 5 PM. $8/hr. Near UNM. Call 254-2606. ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a wonderful and supportive team of people providing top-quality afterschool programs for 5-12 year olds. This is a training and leadership development position. Associate Directors work under direct supervision of Program Directors who prepare them to be promoted to Program Director. Starts at $10/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE or call 296-2880 or visit www.chil drens-choice.org

Volunteers

The Transformative Surface 10:00am - 4:00pm UNM Art Museum 203 Cornell NE The first group exhibition of its kind at the UNM Art Museum to feature innovative new media, video, and sound works of art by nine faculty artists from the departments of Art; Art History and Interdisciplinary Film and Digital Media, and six guest artists from San Francisco and Santa Fe.

Manny Ortiz Bernalillo County Treasurer The most experienced Candidate

• 7 Years Bernalillo County Investment Officer. The only candidate who has managed an investment portfolio in excess of $300,000,000 • 8 years Small Business Admin. Officer, Former U.S. Treasury Agent • Licensed Real Estate Qualifying Broker • Member Hispano Chamber of Commerce • Treasurer NM Community Loan Fund • Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration, Western NM University • VITA (Volunteer Income tax Program) Free tax service for low incomes • Former Chairman of the Board, Indian Pueblo Cultural Center Paid for by Audi Miranda MPA72

LOBO Growl UNM Student Radio is Hiring a Web Designer If you have experience designing web pages, setting up domains, and structuring a site please send resume and proof (i.e. link to an existing site)

to lobogrwl@unm.edu Lobo Growl is a UNM student run radio station that needs an experienced web designer to help get it off its feet.

Jobs Off Campus SPRING 2013 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: 11/31/12. Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr

UNM IS LOOKING for adult women with asthma less than 56 years old for a research study. If you are interested in finding out more about this study, please contact study coordinator at 925-6174 or e-mail tarchibeque@salud. unm.edu

LOBO LIFE

Dancing With The Dark 10:00am - 4:00pm UNM Art Museum 203 Cornell NE The first exhibition about Joan Snyder’s adventurous approach to printmaking, a medium in which she has worked extensively for over forty-five years. Recognized as one of the pioneering voices that championed feminism.

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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 Space, Rooms for Rent, or any For 10¢ per word in Personals, Rooms • 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 ad text, and catergory to 277-7530 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Fax • 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 Express. Come by room 107 Come by room 131 in 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.

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Public Talk/ Podcast Jim Campbell 5:30pm – 6:30pm UNM Art Museum Jim Campbell has remarked that “The biggest challenge ... working with technology and art is to transcend the medium ... and to have some sort of humanist side to the work.” With a combined background in engineering and film, his recent work centers upon the visual effect of LED sculptures and installations and the perception of information, time and memory within these displays. UNM Symphony Orchestra 7:30pm – 8:30pm Keller Hall Featuring the winners of the 2012 UNM Music Department Concerto Competition. $8/6/4.

Campus Events Voting 8:00am – 10:00pm SUB-Isleta, Acoma A & B, Cochiti Lounge Lobos Got Talent 3:00pm

SUB Ballroom C Preliminary Rounds

Election Watch Party 8:00pm – 11:45pm SUB Plaza Atrium

Theater & Films The Campaign 8:00pm SUB Theater Mid Week Movies Continuity and Change at Sinai from the Seventh to the Ninth Century: Insights from a Sinai Palimpsest 7:00pm – 8:00pm Northrop Hall Room 122 Father Justin Sinaites, is a remarkable individual. He is originally a native of El Paso and was the first non-Greek to be admitted to St. Catherine’s Monastery, Mount Sinai, Egypt - the oldest continuously existing Christian monastery in the world - where he is the librarian, using state-of-the-art digital

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Events of the Day

Things to do on campus today. techniques to photograph the monastery’s manuscripts.

Student Groups & Gov. LULAC 9:00am – 3:00pm SUB Fiesta A & B Brazil Club Meet & Greet 10:30am – 2:00pm SUB & Mesa Vista Hall East Fall Judge Chairs’ Meeting 4:30pm – 7:30pm SUB Fiesta A & B Spirit Seakers Club Meeting 6:30pm – 8:00pm SUB Alumni SGI Buddhist Meeting 9:30pm – 10:30pm SUB Cherry & Silver

Want an Event in Lobo Life? * Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organization or department * Classes, class schedules, personal events or solicitations are not eligible. * Events must be of interest to the campus community. 1. Go to www.dailylobo.com 2. Click on the “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!

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