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DAILY LOBO new mexico

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November 22, 2010

The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

INSTEELATION

Former student sues UNM

Disabled med student claims dean said, ‘get over it’ by Danielle Boudreau dbou@unm.edu

Former UNM medical student Chad Cunningham filed a civil suit against UNM’s Board of Regents and the National Board of Medical Examiners for alleged refusal of disability accommodation during his medical exams. Cunningham suffers from highblood pressure and scotopic sensitivity syndrome, a condition that is sometimes categorized as a type of dyslexia. “The students who suffer most are those who have disabilities that aren’t so obvious,” said Dennis Montoya, Cunningham’s attorney. The complaint has four counts, three of which are against UNM: deprivation of right of due process, violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and breach of contract. Montoya said that this case is not an unusual one. “There are very talented, capable Americans out there who are being prevented from succeeding,” he said. During Cunningham’s first year of medical school in 2006, he experienced intense headaches and had difficulty reading, according to his complaint. He was diagnosed soon after. After taking a medical leave of absence he returned to school in 2007. When it came time to take the Step 1 examination given to all medical students after their first two years, he requested disability accommodation during the exam and was denied based on insufficient documentation, the complaint said. “Mr. Cunningham made every effort imaginable,” Montoya said. The defendants and Cunningham disagree on the fundamentals of Cunningham’s conduct. Cunningham’s complaint stated that he had “fulfilled his duties under the written and implied agreements.” In its response to the complaint, UNM denied Cunningham’s claims that he made several requests for disability accommodation and that the Dean of Students told Cunningham to “get over it and take the test.” Montoya said he and his client could not understand why defendants UNM and NBME resisted his request. He said that accommodations could include more natural light in the testing room, more time to take the test and the opportunity for breaks. “The accommodations would be awfully simple and inexpensive,” Montoya said. In UNM’s answer to the amended complaint, it states that Cunningham “failed to exhaust his

Inside the

Daily Lobo volume 115

issue 64

Robert Maes / Daily Lobo Local artist John Davis lifts a piece of the frame for his installation outside the Greyhound bus station downtown called “A Stop on the Rio Grande” on Sunday. The federally funded public art piece is set to be completed by next month and will include 12-foot-tall steel sculptures. administrative remedies,” and that UNM’s actions were driven by state interest and business purposes. UNM filed a motion to dismiss the case Oct. 4. The University provided evidence from Gerard F. Dillon, vice president of the United States Medical Licensing Examination and an NBME employee. He outlined the process for students to apply for accommodation and explained the requirements. “In order to protect the integrity and meaning of the scores, the USMLE is administered under standard conditions,” Dillon wrote. The defense attached the 2009 Bulletin of Information for the USMLE, a document that includes information for students who wish to request testing accommodations. The motion included a second letter from Catherine Farmer, the manager of Disability Services and ADA Compliance Officer. She said Cunningham did not provide sufficient documentation for the NBME to make an informed decision. “Mr. Cunningham did not respond to NBME’s request for additional documentation, either to provide the requested documents or to confirm that no further documentation would be submitted,” Farmer wrote. She wrote that after the NBME’s request, Cunningham elected to take the exam without any accommodations on June 24, 2009, and he hasn’t reapplied for accommodation or for a retake of the test since. The two parties are still locked in pretrial, although Montoya expects to be through the pretrial cycle in around seven months.

Grads take on SUB catering by Sofia Sanchez sanchez@unm.edu

GPSA passed a resolution at Saturday’s meeting to form an adhoc committee to discuss how the SUB’s catering prices are restricting student groups from using its facilities. Graduate student Japji Hundal sponsored the resolution. He said the committee would work to create dialogue with the SUB board and the Retail and Marketing Committee about lowering catering prices and expanding food options. “This will bring revenue and also bring more recognition among

students for the SUB and be more visible among students,” Hundal said. GPSA Council Chair Megan McRobert said her organization can’t have its monthly meetings at the SUB because the prices are outrageous for groups on restricted budgets. “We have a budget of less then $100 per meeting, and so we are financially unable to meet in the SUB, and I will say that has been a hardship for us at GPSA,” she said. The SUB food policy states groups are not allowed to bring outside food or beverages for meetings. Groups have to contract the

SUB’s catering services. The council said groups want to use the SUB because it is wellknown, and it has the biggest meeting rooms. “It will bring more revenue to the SUB and also help students when they want to hold a meeting,” Hundal said. McRobert said the resolution wouldn’t just benefit GPSA but all student groups. “I think it is really important that we take a collaborative approach, and it’s about how we make the Student Union Building work for students,” she said.

DL

have a knack for design? The

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contest. We’re asking students to redesign the Daily Lobo’s flag, and the winning artist gets his/her design featured on our front page for a day. The deadline is Jan. 9. Visit our website and click on “Daily Lobo Design Contest” for more information.

Not large, in charge

An end to the violence?

See page 16

See page 7

TODAY

52 |29


PageTwo Monday, November 22, 2010

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Photo Essay: friends feeding friends

Junfu Han / Daily Lobo Viola Garcia (center) doles out lunch on Sunday in the Noon Day Ministries. She volunteers for the Friends Feeding Friends program, which serves homeless people food on the third and fourth Sunday of the month. Visit friendsfeedingfriendsnm.org to volunteer.

Junfu Han / Daily Lobo Holiday greeting cards lay on the table for homeless people to send to their loved ones. Through the Friends Feeding Friends program, free Christmas cards are provided to those who cannot afford to send them on their own.

DAILY LOBO new mexico

volume 115

issue 64

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

DAILY LOBO new mexico

CAMPUS EVENTS

Editor-in-Chief Pat Lohmann Managing Editor Isaac Avilucea News Editor Leah Valencia Assistant News Editor Shaun Griswold Staff Reporters Ruben Hamming-Green Chelsea Erven Alexandra Swanberg Online and Photo Editor Junfu Han

Assistant Photo Editor Robert Maes Culture Editor Chris Quintana Assistant Culture Editor Andrew Beale Sports Editor Ryan Tomari Assistant Sports Editor Nathan Farmer Copy Chief Elizabeth Cleary Opinion Editor

Jenny Gignac Multimedia Editor Kyle Morgan Design Director Nathan New Production Manager Kevin Kelsey Advertising Manager Antoinette Cuaderes Sales Manager Nick Parsons

LOBO LIFE

Breastfeeding Peer Support Group Starts at: 10:00am Location: Women’s Resource Center For students, staff and faculty as well as breastfeeding mothers, breastfeeding students, and nursing mothers from the community.

CAPS Grad Writing: Annotated Bibliography Workshop Starts at: 11:00am Location: DSH 317 Bring one or two textual sources (article, chapter, etc.). We’ll go over criteria for excellent annotated bibliographies and explore writing strategies.

Alpha Pi Omega Sorority Interest Meeting Starts at: 9:00pm Location: SUB Amigo Room Any college woman who is interested in being part of Alpha Pi Omega Sorority.

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com

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.

Event Calendar

for November 22, 2010 Planning your day 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!

Please limit your description to 25 words (although you may type in more, your description will be edited to 25 words. To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will apear with the title, time, location and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.


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LoboOpinion The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion editor / Jenny Gignac

Page

4

Monday November 22, 2010

opinion@dailylobo.com / Ext. 133

LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS: What should be New Mexico Governor-Elect Susana Martinez’s first order of business? Immigration

13%

The economy

49%

Education

23%

Something else

15%

Out of 37 responses.

THIS WEEK’S POLL: The pope last week encouraged condom use as a preventative measure against AIDS. Does this mean that the church is taking a more progressive stance on sexual health? Yes. No. I don’t know.

GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM TO VOTE

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LETTER Had student read, she would have known about zombie event Editor, I have to laugh at Cara Valente-Compton and the irony her letter exhibits, given that the “Zombie Apocalypse” was widely discussed in the Daily Lobo the day it occurred. I can’t help but find some humor in the fact that she wrote to the student newspaper to complain about how no one informed her. I participated in the prank, and the organizers did everything by the book: We made sure participants were clearly marked so that no one who didn’t want to be involved was caught up in it. We receivedtheUniversity’sapproval,andwefollowed through on all the of the event coordinator’s orders. UNM is a huge campus — it’s not as though Valente-Compton couldn’t simply leave the SUB if she found something objectionable. During the courseoftheactivity,Isawpeoplegotogreatlengths to ensure that people who didn’t want anything to do with the event weren’t forced to participate. On the note of her mentioning Columbine, Virginia Tech and Jonesboro, I again have to giggle. The event promoted a sense of community to the people who participated. We came together to have fun regardless of race, sex, religion or sexual orientation, and it was refreshing to see complete strangers communicate and have fun. Valente-Compton’s letter also implies something about UNM: That we had no right to organize. Well, in response, I ask: If the University’s students don’t have rights to organize here, how can we allow others? In the last few weeks, UNM has dealt with a lot of hate speeches from several religious affiliates, and I have to say that regardless of ValenteCompton’s objections, we had fun and will likely try to do it again. Perhaps she would be kind enough to join us and prove to herself that we’re not some rabble of sadists. Gabrielle Swass UNM student

EDITORIAL BOARD Pat Lohmann Editor-in-chief

Isaac Avilucea Managing editor

Jenny Gignac Opinion editor

Leah Valencia News editor

COLUMN

Healthy hookah rumor up in smoke

“Tobacco is tobacco, no matter how you get it, and tobacco smoke is hazardous.”

by Dr. Peggy Spencer Daily Lobo Columnist The appearance of full-page color ads for a hookah establishment in recent issues of the Daily Lobo prompted me to revisit the issue of hookahs and your health. Many people think that smoking hookah is harmless, or at least better for you than cigarettes. The popular myth is that the water filters out the bad stuff. Not so. Please read on. A hookah is a water pipe. Other names for hookah include nargile, sheesha, okka, kalyan and hubbly-bubbly. The pipe is used for smoking a flavored-tobacco mixture, which is placed in a small bowl at the top. From the bowl, a hollow pipe leads straight down into a chamber called the base, which is partly filled with water. The pipe extends below the water’s surface. From the side of the base, above the water line, a hose leads to a mouthpiece. To smoke hookah, you light a piece of charcoal, place it on top of the tobacco mixture, put the mouthpiece in your mouth, and suck hard. The smoke goes down the pipe, bubbles up through the water into the air at the top of the base chamber, up the hose and into your lungs. Hookahs have been around for centu-

ries, probably originating in the Middle East or India, where it is a common social custom for men to gather, smoking and chatting for hours. In the U.S., the hookah has become popular in recent years, especially with young people of both sexes. Hookah smoking is promoted as an aesthetic social activity, touting the sweet smell of tobacco and the bubbling sound of the water as pleasant, relaxing influences. A typical hookah session lasts two or three hours and involves several friends smoking from the same pipe. Commercial hookah bars have sprung up across the country. There are at least five here in Albuquerque. Typically, the mixture smoked in a hookah pipe is one-third tobacco and two-thirds flavoring. Flavorings may include molasses, dried fruit, honey and other ingredients. The resulting aroma was likened to a baking apple pie by one hookah-selling website. Sounds pretty benign, doesn’t it? It isn’t. Like many fads, it is hyped with false claims in order to increase its popularity and profits. Tobacco is tobacco, no matter how you get it, and tobacco smoke is hazardous. In fact, hookah smokers fill their lungs with more smoke than cigarette smokers, and here’s why: Cigarette smoke is uncomfortably hot if you inhale it deeply. Hookah smoke has been cooled by its passage through the water. In addition, you have to inhale hard to pull the smoke through the pipe and water. The result is cooler smoke going farther into your lungs. Add to that the duration of a typical hookah session, and the result is huge volumes of smoke being deposited into your lungs. A World Health Organization study showed that one hookah session can deliver as much smoke into your lungs as 100 cigarettes. Five packs! Rarely does a cigarette smoker get that much in one day. Tobacco smoke contains nicotine, a highly addictive substance that is not filtered out by the water in a hookah. In addition to nicotine, you are pulling other dangerous substances through that hose. Tar is not water-soluble, so it comes through

the pipe, the same amount in one session as in a whole pack of cigarettes. Tar causes cancer. Other carcinogens (cancer-causing agents) also make it through, like heavy metals and carbon monoxide. In fact, because of the burned charcoal on top of the tobacco mixture, hookah smoke has a higher level of heavy metals and carbon monoxide than cigarette smoke. Hookah smokers risk getting lung, lip, tongue and bladder cancer. As you must know by now, tobacco smoke affects the cardiovascular system, causing an increased blood pressure and heart rate and increasing the risk of heart attack and stroke. Smoke of any kind is also a lung irritant, which can trigger asthma and allergies. And, of course, the bad effects of any kind of secondhand smoke are well-studied. In addition to the tobacco, there are the smoked flavorings to consider. Unfortunately, nobody has studied the effects of inhaling dried apricots, but I would bet they aren’t all good. Finally, think about sharing the mouthpiece. It’s like kissing everyone in the group. Hookah pipes can spread herpes, flu, strep throat, a cold, even tuberculosis. I’m a big believer in social gatherings and relaxation time. By all means, gather away, and relax like crazy. But if you are concerned with the health of your young lungs, think about gathering around a cup of tea or coffee, or relaxing with exercise and a bath instead of a water pipe. And if you are already addicted to any form of tobacco, I strongly urge you to quit. Call Health Education at 277-7947 or NM Quit Line at 800-784-8669 for help quitting. Peggy Spencer, MD, has been a UNM student health physician for 17 years. Drop your questions in her box in the lobby of Student Health and Counseling, or e-mail her directly at pspencer@unm.edu. All questions will be considered, and all questioners will remain anonymous. This column has general health information only and cannot replace a visit to a health care provider.

LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY  Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo office in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.


NEWS

by Mary Clare Jalonick Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Black farmers and American Indians who say the United States discriminated against them and took their money for decades are a step closer to winning long-awaited government settlements. Under legislation passed by the Senate on Friday, black farmers who claim discrimination at the hands of the Agriculture Department would receive almost $1.2 billion. American Indians who say they were swindled out of royalties by the Interior Department would split $3.4 billion. Both cases have languished for more than a decade, and plaintiffs say beneficiaries are dying off. “The Senate finally did the right thing,” said John Boyd, head of the National Black Farmers Association. “They stepped up and told the world civil rights still matter in America.” The legislation was approved in the Senate by voice vote Friday and sent to the House. The money had been held up for months in the chamber as Democrats and Republicans squabbled over how to pay for it. President Barack Obama praised the Senate for finally passing the bill and urged the House to move forward on it. He said his administration is also working to resolve separate lawsuits filed against the department by Hispanic and female farmers. “While these legislative achievements reflect important progress, they also serve to remind us that much work remains to be done,” he said. Elouise Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet Tribe from Browning, Mont. and the lead plaintiff in the Indian case, said two people who would

have been beneficiaries had died on her reservation this week. “It’s 17 below and the Blackfeet nation is feeling warm,” she said. “I don’t know if people understand or believe the agony you go through when one of the beneficiaries passes away without justice.” Lawmakers from both parties have said they support resolving the claims of discrimination and mistreatment by federal agencies. But the money has been caught up in a fight over spending and deficits. Republicans repeatedly objected to the settlements when they were added on to larger pieces of legislation. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,

“The Senate finally did the right thing. They stepped up and told the world civil rights still matter in America.” ~John Boyd D-Nev., satisfied conservative complaints by finding spending offsets to cover the cost. The legislation also includes a one-year extension of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which gives grants to states to provide cash and other assistance to the poor, and several American Indian water rights settlements in Arizona, Montana and New Mexico sought by Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz. In the Indian case, which has been in the courts for almost 15 years, at least 300,000 Native Americans claim they were swindled out of royalties overseen by the Interior Department since 1887 for things like oil, gas, grazing and timber. The plaintiffs would share the settlement.

Cobell was confident about passage in the House, where the two settlements already have passed twice as part of larger pieces of legislation. For the black farmers, it is the second round of funding from a class-action lawsuit originally settled in 1999 over allegations of widespread discrimination by local Agriculture Department offices in awarding loans and other aid. It is known as the Pigford case, named after Timothy Pigford, a black farmer from North Carolina who was an original plaintiff. The government already has paid out more than $1 billion to about 16,000 black farmers, with most getting about $50,000. The new money is intended for people — some estimates say 70,000 or 80,000 — who were denied earlier payments because they missed deadlines for filing. The individual amounts depend on how many claims are successfully filed. The bill passed Friday would be partially paid for by diverting dollars from a surplus in nutrition programs for women and children and by extending customs user fees. The Obama administration has moved aggressively to resolve the discrimination cases after most of them spent a decade or longer in the courts. Last month, the Agriculture Department offered American Indian farmers who say they were denied farm loans a $680 million settlement.

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Mother, 3 children slain in Florida home by Brent Kallestad Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Autopsies were performed Sunday on the bodies of a young mother and three small children found slain in what police described as a violent crime scene in north Florida. The street has reopened in front of the modest, single-story home, which was otherwise quiet on Sunday morning except for a single police officer standing guard. Tallahassee police spokesman David McCranie said the autopsies are being done in the morning, and authorities working to find out who may have wanted to harm the family hope to have more information by the afternoon. The home sits in a new subdivision a few miles from the state Capitol. Detectives described the crime scene inside the home just a few miles from the state Capitol as violent, but police have not elaborated on how the family was killed. Neighbors and relatives have identified the victims as a single, stay-at-home mother and her twin 6-year-old girls and 3-year-old son, but police have not released their names. The neighborhood had burglaries in recent years, though the crimes had waned with increased police patrols. Authorities hadn’t been called to the home before Saturday, McCranie said. The home is in a subdivision built about five years ago and is surrounded by dense woods a few

miles from the campuses of Florida State University and Florida A&M University. The neighborhood is made up of a lot of families, McCranie said. “This is a very shocking and unusual case for us,” he said. The bodies were found after police received a suspicious call at 10:15 a.m. Saturday. By the afternoon, a crowd had gathered outside the house while crime scene investigators came and went. Dennis Williams, who identified himself as the half-brother of the slain woman, said the mother was 28. Williams, 35, of Albany, Ga., said the two weren’t close, but he knew her focus was on her children. Cedrica Smith lives across the street and said her kids often played with the children found dead. The twin girls and the boy had different fathers, Smith said, and neither father had been married to the woman. The deaths were a surprise to 40-year-old Antawn Ellison, who lives two doors down. He said the neighborhood has been mostly free of crime since police stepped up their presence after a rash of burglaries about two years ago. “This is a big shock to me,” he said. However, a woman who came to the scene from her home in an adjacent neighborhood said crime is still a problem. “There are a lot of home invasions out here,” Sandra Smith said.

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Guillermo Arias/ AP Photo Forensics officials carry a corpse from a mini-market as city police investigate in the Zona Norte area of Tijuana, Mexico on Nov. 16. According to residents at the scene, a man was shot to death in the store.

Leader: Mexican gang ‘in decline’ by E. Eduardo Castillo Associated Press

MEXICO CITY — A captured drug trafficker said Wednesday that the boss of one of Mexico’s fiercest cartels is physically and emotionally drained and that the leader’s recent offer to disband the gang is real. Sergio Moreno Godinez, known as “Yellow,” said La Familia was behind a letter last week that offered to dissolve if the government will protect citizens in the western state of Michoacan, where the cartel is based. The cartel is in decline and leader Servando Gomez, a.k.a. “La Tuta,” has suggested they give up, Moreno said in an interrogation video released by Mexico’s federal police. “The organization ... is in decline, it’s very badly structured,” Moreno said. Saying that La Tuta “seems exhausted, Moreno added, “It’s like he doesn’t want problems.” Police say Moreno, who was arrested Tuesday, was the major trafficker for La Familia in the port city of Lazaro Cardenas. La Familia, Mexico’s main trafficker of methamphetamine, captured nationwide attention in 2006 by rolling severed heads into a disco in the mountain town of Uruapan. Shortly afterward, President Felipe Calderon intensified the war on drug cartels, sending thousands of federal troops and police into Michoacan, his home state. The government has since deployed tens of thousands of federal forces to drug trafficking hotspots across Mexico. Several kingpins have been captured or killed, but cartel violence has soared, claiming more than 28,000 lives in four years. The violence terrorized parts of Michoacan, one of Mexico’s most picturesque states, with a colonial capital, quaint mountain towns,

sparkling lakes and famed monarch butterfly sanctuary. La Familia has been blamed for some of the brashest attacks on security forces, including an ambush that killed 12 federal police officers in June and a spasm of violence last year in which at least 18 police officers were killed. Last week, in response to the arrest of two members, the gang used burning trucks to block roads into the state capital of Morelia and sprayed a shopping mall with automatic-weapons fire, the state attorney general’s office said. La Familia, however, has sought to convince the public that it is defending Michoacan against other drug gangs. It has distinguished itself by occasionally making public pronouncements and has issued a set of rules for cartel members that proclaim family values and prohibit consuming — but not trafficking — hard drugs. In the one-page letter dropped last week in the streets of some Michoacan mountain towns and sent as an e-mail to journalists, La Familia said it is willing to disband if federal police promise to act honestly and fight to the death to defend the state. Experts said the letter could be a sign that the cartel — one of Mexico’s newest — is being squeezed out after years of fighting both the government and its rivals. Authorities have said they could not confirm the authenticity of the letter but that in any case, the federal government does not negotiate with criminals. In the newly released tape, Moreno said the letter was meant to “clean up the image” of La Familia and pressure the government to withdraw federal police from Michoacan. The federal police agency sometimes releases interrogation videos

Are you graphically gifted? The Daily Lobo is accepting applications for Designers. Visit Unmjobs.unm.edu to fill out an application

after major arrests, and the reliability of the statements made in the tapes have been questioned. In September, Attorney General Arturo Chavez Chavez said video showing alleged drug lord Edgar Valdez Villarreal giving a rambling account of his drug dealings could not be submitted as evidence because his lawyer was not present. Chavez said that in formal statements with his lawyer present, Valdez, alias “The Barbie,” did not admit to the activities he acknowledged on the tapes. Kent Schaffer, an attorney for the U.S-born Valdez, has said his client was reading from a script provided to him by police.

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

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news

Page 10 / Monday, November 22, 2010

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Noah Berger / AP Photo A parishioner worships during mass at St. Ignatius Catholic Church on Sunday in San Francisco. Some Catholic believers in the Americas greeted Pope Benedict XVI’s recent comments on condoms as a sign that the church was stepping into the modern debate in the fight against AIDS, though the church was adamant Sunday that nothing has changed in its views banning contraception.

Pope downplays condom comment by Victor L. Simpson Associated Press

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VATICAN CITY— Vatican officials insist it’s nothing “revolutionary,” but to many other people Pope Benedict XVI’s recent comments regarding condom use mark an important moment in the battle against AIDS and an effort by the pontiff to burnish his image and legacy. Just a year after he said condoms could be making the AIDS crisis worse, Benedict said that for some people, such as male prostitutes, using them could represent a first step in assuming moral responsibility “in the intention of reducing the risk of infection.” The Vatican’s ban on contraception remains, but Alberto Melloni, an Italian church historian, said Benedict “opened without a doubt a crack that cannot help but have consequences.” Benedict stepped where no pope has gone since Paul VI’s famous 1968 encyclical “Humanae Vitae” barred Catholics from using condoms and other artificial contraception. Pressure to lift the ban has grown with the spread of the HIV virus, which has infected some 60 million people worldwide and led to 25 million AIDS-related deaths over three

decades. The pope chose to make his statement not in an official document but in an interview with a German journalist, Peter Seewald, that is coming out this week in the book “Light of the World: The Pope, the Church and the Signs of the Times.” L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, published excerpts Saturday. The pope says in his own writings that he takes personal responsibility for the remarks, meaning they are not official church teaching. The conservative Benedict previously had given little sign of budging on the issue of condoms. Last year while en route to Africa, the continent HIV has hit hardest by far, he drew criticism from many health workers by saying condoms not only did not help stop the spread of AIDS but exacerbated the problem. A number of top churchmen, including the Italian Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, one of Benedict’s rivals during his 2005 election as pope, have been calling for a humanitarian gesture on the issue of condoms. Others, including prelates in Africa, have said condom use is worth considering when one partner in a marriage is HIV positive.

Benedict did not address such cases in his interview, and he reaffirmed church teaching against artificial contraception. But he said, “There may be a basis in the case of some individuals, as perhaps when a male prostitute uses a condom, where this can be a first step in the direction of a moralization, a first assumption of responsibility.” Asked if that meant that the church wasn’t opposed in principle to condoms, the pope replied: The church “of course does not regard it as a real or moral solution, but in this or that case, there can be nonetheless in the intention of reducing the risk of infection, a first step in a movement toward a different way, a more human way, of living sexuality,” according to an English translation of the book obtained by The Associated Press. The Holy See’s chief spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, issued a statement stressing that the pope’s comment neither “reforms or changes” church teaching. “The reasoning of the pope cannot certainly be defined as a revolutionary turn,” he said. Many Catholics, however, saw the remarks as a signal that the Vatican is softening its stance on condom use in general.

Suspected US drone strike kills 6 by Rasool Dawar Associated Press

MIR ALI, Pakistan — Four suspected U.S. missiles slammed into a house in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, killing six people in an area near the Afghan border teeming with local and foreign militants, intelligence officials said. The strike, carried out by at least one unmanned aircraft, was part of the Obama administration’s intensified campaign to use drones to target militants who regularly stage cross-border attacks against foreign troops in Afghanistan. The house destroyed in the strike was located in Khaddi village in North Waziristan, part of the semiautonomous tribal region in Pakistan that is almost entirely controlled by militants, said the intelligence officials. The dead included three militants and three local tribesmen who were harboring them, said the

officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. The U.S. has carried out more than 100 drone strikes in Pakistan this year, roughly twice the number in 2009. The U.S. refuses publicly to acknowledge the covert CIA attacks, but officials have said privately that they have killed several senior alQaida and Taliban commanders over the years. Almost all of this year’s strikes have occurred in North Waziristan, an area in which the U.S. has repeatedly requested Pakistan conduct a military offensive. The Pakistani government has resisted, saying its military is already stretched thin by operations being conducted elsewhere. Many analysts suspect, however, that Pakistan doesn’t want to cross Taliban militants with whom it has historical ties and who could be useful allies in Afghanistan after foreign troops withdraw.

Pakistani officials often criticize the U.S. drone strikes, calling them a violation of the country’s sovereignty. But the Pakistani government allows the drones to take off from bases within the country and is widely believed to provide intelligence necessary for the attacks. Their cooperation does have limits. Pakistan recently refused a U.S. request seeking to expand the areas targeted by the drones because of domestic opposition to the strikes, a senior Pakistani intelligence official said Saturday, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media. The official from the Inter-Services Intelligence agency would not specify which new areas the American side hoped to target, but an article in the Washington Post identified one as around Quetta, the capital of the southwestern province of Baluchistan, where Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Mohammad Omar is believed to operate.


sports

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Monday, November 22, 2010 / Page 11

lobo men’s soccer

Emma Difani / Daily Lobo In this file photo, UNM’s Travis Campbell battles for the ball with Cal-State Bakersfield Ernessto Hinojosa at the UNM Soccer Complex on Oct. 24. The Lobos were invited to play in the 2010 NCAA tournament but were defeated at Creighton 4-1 on Thursday.

From hopeful to heartbreak by Nathan Farmer

sports@dailylobo.com After a surprising NCAA tournament invitation, the UNM men’s soccer team’s celebration quickly turned horrific. Creighton demolished the Lobos 4-1 on Friday during the first round of the NCAA tournament in Omaha, Neb., marking the second CREIGHTON 4 straight season 1 UNM that UNM failed to win its first-round game. “I’m not going to sit here and say I am happy with anything,” head coach Jeremy Fishbein told GoLobos.com. “This is not how I wanted to see our seniors end their careers.” The Lobos finished 9-6-5 overall and scored 22 goals in 20 games this season. In their defense, they played six ranked teams and escaped with a 3-1-2 record against

those teams. But on Friday, the Lobos never had a chance. The Bluejays scored three goals in the first half, and UNM never recovered. “It was a good performance by Creighton, and I’m embarrassed, to be honest,” Fishbein said. “We talked about things going into the game and said we can’t make mistakes in our half because their attacking players were really good. We gave them the ball in bad spots, and they hurt us.” The Bluejays grabbed the lead within four minutes when midfielder Jose Gomez picked the ball up 15 yards from goal and scored. “It’s tough, but with a team like this our mindset is to get it back even again,” senior James Urbany told GoLobos.com. “When we lost it in transition, it became tougher and tougher because that first goal was so early.” UNM pressed offensively to find the equalizer, but instead found themselves down three

goals at the half. Bluejays’ defender Tyler Polak took a pass from Gomez and beat goalkeeper Justin Holmes, who only got a hand on the ball. Six minutes later, Creighton midfielder Jordan Greg played a pinpoint pass to forward Ethan Finlay who dribbled past Holmes and tapped the ball into the empty net. “It was not indicative of the team we are, but that third was the killer,” Fishbein said. “Going into the half down 3-0, it’s hard to come back from.” UNM dominated ball possession much of the second half. Forward Devon Sandoval scored from 18 yards out in the 70th minute, but it was too little too late. “I thought we came back and battled, but it’s a little bit of fool’s gold,” Fishbein said. “When a team is up three goals on you, they are going to play a little differently.”

BCS poll not closed for Boise Associated Press NEW YORK — Boise State has pushed closer to TCU in the latest BCS standings and seems primed to pass the Horned Frogs with one more big victory. Oregon and Auburn were still at the top of the standings Sunday. Both were off last week, along with third-place TCU. Boise State routed Fresno State 51-0 on Friday night, which helped the Broncos gain support in both the Harris and coaches’ polls. Boise State was already third in both polls, a spot ahead of TCU, last week. But coming off the blowout victory, the Broncos extended their points lead over the Horned Frogs. Boise State’s computer ranking also went up this week to fifth for a BCS average of .8860.

TCU is fourth in both polls and third in the computer rankings with a BCS average of .8995. Boise State has its schedule going for it. The Broncos play two more games to TCU’s one, including Boise State’s biggest Western Athletic Conference game of the season. The Broncos play at Nevada, which is 19th in the latest standings, on Friday night. A victory against the high-scoring Wolf Pack should give Boise State another boost. Of course, getting that victory will be tough. As for TCU, it finishes its regular season at lowly Mountain West Conference rival New Mexico — a game that isn’t likely to help the Horned Frogs on its own much no matter how lopsided a victory they post. The third spot in the BCS

standings is important for two reasons. Both Oregon and Auburn have tough opponents left on their schedules, and if either drops a game, there’s a good chance that Boise State or TCU would become the first team from a conference without an automatic BCS bid to play in the BCS national title game. Oregon plays Arizona and Oregon State. Auburn plays Alabama and South Carolina in the SEC championship game. Even if the title game is out, the Broncos and Horned Frogs are competing for an automatic BCS bid that could be to the Rose Bowl. The team that doesn’t get the automatic bid could get left out of the five BCS games altogether.

Congratulate Last Week’s

Lobo Winners! Men’s Basketball

defeated Arizona State 76-62

Women’s Basketball

defeated UC Irvine 71-59 California 63-54

Swimming and Diving

won the 3m springboard in the Arizona Diving Invitational

Volleyball

defeated Utah 3-1


Page 12 / Monday, November 22, 2010

sports

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Winslow Townson/AP Photo Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning (18) shakes hands with New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady after New England’s 31-28 win in Foxborough, Mass. on Sunday.

Manning-led comeback falls short by Barry Wilner Associated Press

Foxborough, Mass. — A little guy who came out of nowhere overshadowed the NFL’s biggest stars. Sure, Tom Brady outdueled Peyton Maning in their annual meeting, a 31-28 New England victory over Indianapolis on Sunday. Yet it was Danny Woodhead a 5-foot-8 running back from Division II Chadron State, who got most of the attention — if you could find him. The Colts couldn’t. Woodhead, picked up when the Jets cut him in September, scored on a weaving 36yard burst, showing power, speed and agility. Seconds after his brilliant third-quarter run, Woodhead made a sensational tackle on the ensuing kick return, drawing as many cheers as he did while scooting into the end zone.

“I do everything to make the play, whether I’m a runner, a receiver or on a kickoff,” said Woodhead, who kiddingly asked if he could have a step-stool the next time he was required to speak at a podium. “Maybe (I carry) a little chip, but I’m not too worried what everybody thinks about my size, weight or height. My worry is about doing my job, whatever that might be.” His job is being versatile, something his teammates appreciate. “He can kind of hide behind the guys, but on the special teams that just shows you what type of football player he is,” said Deiton Branch who caught seven passes for 70 yards. “He scores a touchdown, comes back in and makes a play on special teams and we needed it at the time.” New England also needed Brady’s pinpoint passing. He was brilliant for the second straight week, coming off a 350-yard,

three-touchdown performance against Pittsburgh. Brady had only six incompletions in 25 passes and threw for two touchdowns as the Patriots built a 17-point lead and held on. The win kept the Patriots (8-2) tied with the Jets atop the AFC East. They meet in two weeks. Brady not only beat four-time MVP Manning, the only other quarterback of the last decade in his class, but tied another quarterback icon for an NFL mark. Brady has won 25 straight regular-season home starts, equaling Brett Favre’s record when he was with Green Bay. Perfectionist that he is, Brady felt the Patriots let it get too close before James Sanders’ interception at the New England six-yard line with 31 seconds remaining clinched the win. “Any time you play these guys, you’ve got to play to the end,” Brady said. “Cer-

tainly in the fourth quarter we had some opportunities to go up three touchdowns on them, a couple of other third downs which we could’ve converted.” When they didn’t, four-time MVP Manning pounced. “We were in an uptempo mode the last seven minutes,” Manning said. “We almost scored three touchdowns. But you’re playing against the clock.” Manning blamed himself for the throw that didn’t come close to reaching Pierre Garcon before Sanders grabbed it. “I feel sick about it,” he said. “About not extending the game, not executing to give (placekicker Adam) Vinatieri a chance for a field goal. It was a bad throw.” Indy (6-4 and atop the AFC South) had beaten the Patriots in five of the last six matchups. The Colts, who won their first 14 games a year ago en route to the AFC title, are so banged-up — they were without five key players Sunday — that considering them a Super Bowl contender right now might be a reach, even with Manning’s magic. Manning finished 38-of-52 for 396 yards, four TDs and three interceptions. He got the Colts within 31-28 with 4:46 left on an 18-yard pass to Blair White who earlier in the fourth period caught a fiveyard TD toss. And Manning brought them within range of a stunning win before Sanders’ pick. “I haven’t beaten those guys in a while,” Sanders said, “and it seems like we always get ahead, get a nice lead and they always come back at the end.” Manning’s early inaccuracies were costly. He misfired high several times, including a throw to White that sailed directly to safety Brandon Meriweather. A 39-yard runback set up the Patriots at the Indy 32, and four players later, Brady hooked up with Wes Walker over the middle for a 22yard score. Unable to apply any pressure on Brady, the Colts’ defense was torn apart on a 15play, 82-yard drive capped by rookie Aaron Hernandez’s eight-yard TD catch. Then Manning found his touch, despite consecutive brutal drops by Reggie Wayne and Austin Collie. Indy converted three third downs, including some nimbleness by Manning to avoid the pass rush and float a completion to Donald Brown for 25 yards. The TD came to third-string tight end Gijon Robinson -- hardly surprising considering all of the Colts’ injuries -- from the 1. Robinson’s second catch of the season got him his first career touchdown. But the Colts’ defense again was no match for the precise Brady, who guided a 65-yard drive to BenJarvus Green-Ellis 5-yard scoring run. New England scored on all three possessions in the first half.

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sports

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Monday, November 22, 2010 / Page 13

lobo football

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Accepting Applications Now for Spring Semester Classes begin January 18TH George Frey/AP Photo UNM’s Spencer Merritt, left, and Jamarr Lyles, right, sandwich BYU’s Cody Hoffmann on Saturday at LaVell Edwards Stadium in Provo, Utah. The Cougars defeated the Lobos 40-7 in the Lobos’ 10th loss of the season.

BYU romp a fond farewell by Ryan Tomari

rtomari@unm.edu The BYU Cougars said goodbye to its seniors and the Mountain West Conference on Saturday by dismantling the UNM football team 40-7. Head coach Mike Locksley said another loss hasn’t made it easier for the players or coaching staff. “You never go into a game expecting to lose,� he said. “It was a good BYU team, and you can’t turn over the ball two times in BYU 40 your first two ofUNM 7 fensive possessions. I thought our freshman quarterback (Stump Godfrey) played like a freshman quarterback.� Now 1-10 overall, the Lobos will close their season Saturday at home against nationally ranked TCU. Godfrey, who made his first start two weeks ago in a victory against Wyoming, threw the first interception of his career in the game’s opening possession. BYU’s Cody Hoffman later intercepted Godfrey’s pass in the end zone with 14:10 left in the game. Hoffman also caught two touchdown passes. “It was a snowball effect,� Locksley said. “We prepare Stump for

what we expect to see. Obviously, when you have a freshman, every team is going to come after you with as much pressure as they possibly can to unnerve a young quarterback. But as the game progresses, he usually settles down because we’re able to get adjusted.� On the defensive side of the ball, BYU quarterback Jake Heaps tore the Lobos up. Heaps threw two touchdowns but received help from the Cougars’ running game. BYU became the fourth straight UNM opponent to run for more than 200 yards. Running backs Joshua Quezada and JJ Di Luigi shared carries, but Quezada did the most damage. He ran for 107 yards and one touchdown. “I thought again we continued to struggle to stop the run on defense,� Locksley said. “Once again, all of those things played a major role in that.�

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lobo features

Page 14 / Monday, November 22, 2010

New FOR RELEASE NOVEMBER 22, 2010

Mexico Daily Lobo

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Mal and Chad

dailycrossword ACROSS 1 Like some shortterm committees 6 How a lot of music is recorded 10 Narrow-necked pear 14 Museum with many Spanish masterpieces 15 Eight, in Spain 16 Figure skating jump 17 Consumed 18 Postal delivery 19 Knish seller 20 Henna, for one 21 Tokyo monetary unit 24 Hawaii’s coffee capital 25 Reader’s __: magazine 26 1983 Lionel Richie #1 song 31 French city where Joan of Arc died 32 Wooden nickel, e.g. 33 Milk units: Abbr. 36 Old Italian money 37 Parcel of land 39 New Age-y emanation 40 Single 41 Wine vintage 42 Thread holder 43 Desolate title tree in a 1936 Fonda/ MacMurray Western 46 It’s north of the border 49 Cle. hoopsters 50 TUMS target 53 Long sandwich 56 Vaulter’s need 57 “Today, __ man�: stereotypical bar mitzvah announcement 58 Hospital staffer 60 __ even keel 61 Shoemaker McAn 62 Spud 63 Camping shelter 64 Talks and talks 65 Hanker, and a synonym for the ends of 21-, 26-, 43- and 50Across

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$815 FULLY FURNISHED, washer, dryer, fireplace, big yard, garage, JanMay 2011. San Mateo and Lomas.Call or text 505.315.3400.

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Services ABORTION AND COUNSELING services. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242-7512.

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Monday, November 22, 2010 / Page 15

2002 TOYOTA PRIUS 85,000 original miles under warranty. $6,900. 505-2806128. 2009 LANCE 49CCS $700 1,700mi. call for information 440-8401. 1993 TOYOTA MR-2 Basic Body Mods. Air intake system. T-Top style. Power everything. New paint job. Negotiable pricing but asking $3,000. Call Sammy (505)331-6734. NEED CASH? WE Buy Junk Cars. 9076479.

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2011 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: 12/10/10 Please visit our website www.talk.go.kr 2011 English Program In Korea (EPIK) ●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, airfare, medical insurance, paid vacation. Must have BA degree. Last day to apply: 12/10/10 Please visit our website www.epik.go.kr Jai - (213)386-3112 ex.201. jai.kecla@gmail.com ANSWERING SERVICE TELEPHONE opperators needed. Excellent job for students. Swing shift 25-35hrs a week. Please call 256-4604. COMPANIONS/ CAREGIVERS NEEDED to work with seniors in their homes. Assist with the activities of daily living. Rewarding employment and good experience, particularly for nursing students. Training provided. Flexible schedules. Must have reliable transportation and be able to pass rigorous background check and drug screen. Apply on-line at www.rightathome.net/albuquerque !!!BARTENDING!!!: UP TO $300/day. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520ext.100. REGULAR FULL TIME Computer Lab Tutor (J1011-07) – Learning Resources Dept (Library) Responsibilities: Position is responsible to the Computer Center Supervisor to support the daily requirements of the computer labs. Typical duties include ensuring computer labs are operational; provide instructional assistance to students, faculty, and staff to include tutoring sessions; identify and report technical problems; provide support and resolve problems related to computer lab equipment and software; keep computer skills and knowledge current, serve as an information resource; assist with computerized data collection; assist with supervision of student employees; provides for safe, clean and secure computer labs including, but not limited to, housekeeping and safeguarding equipment; keeps the labs open during operating hours; conducts tours of the labs; performs related duties as assigned. To ensure compliance with federal and college requirements some mandatory training must be completed for this position. Travel between campuses may be necessary as assigned. Salary: $11.18 per hour Requirements: Successful completion of 30 hours of post-secondary course work to include nine (9) hours in computer related; one (1) year of related work experience; demonstrated knowledge of Windows operating systems, MS Office applications and the Internet; Current valid driver’s license. Ability to relate to and interact with a non-traditional diverse employee and student population. Deadline for application: 11-22-2010 by 5pm. Central New Mexico Community College provides an excellent benefit package that includes: a pension plan, health, dental and vision insurance, disability and life insurance, generous annual and sick leave and a 2 week paid winter break. A complete job announcement detailing required application documents is available at jobs.cnm.edu or at CNM Human Resources 525 Buena Vista SE, Albuquerque, NM 87106.

NEW COMPANY LOOKING for teachers, interns, and future teachers. Great pay, flexible hours, perfect for college students. Must be professional and driven. For interview contact 480-4461. RUNNER/FILING CLERK - Small but busy law firm needs a motivated student. Opportunity to learn while you work. Flexible hours. $8.25/hr. E-mail resume to office@gaddyfirm.com, or fax 254-9366. WEB DESIGNER/MARKETER/ADVERTISER/GO GETTER Wanted Self Motivated Individual to Market My Product.I Have an Existing Product That Needs More Visibility. First You Will Need to Create and Publish a Website and Keep it Ranked High in Major Search Engine Results. Then You Will Create a Continuing Marketing and Advertising Campaign For The Product. Make Your Own Schedule. Email Your Resume to: justcloneit@live.com

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2400 Central SE MANAGEMENT- NO NIGHTS NO SUNDAYS. 20+ Paid Days Off/ Yr! $25K. Full benefits. Fax HoneyBaked Ham 781-631-1183. WE ARE LOOKING for an exceptional, dedicated Donor Relations Coordinator to join our Donor Relations team. Duties will include: gift acknowledgement and stewardship, writing and preparing donor correspondence, reports and fundraising materials; assisting with gift agreements; maintaining collegial relationships with unit- based fundraising staff and UNM Departments to secure timely information regarding the use of gift funds; exercising professional discretion in the research, selection, organization, and preparation of data; updating systems for efficient acquisition, application, and maintenance of data related to the stewardship of gifts; performing regular data quality control to assure accuracy and completeness; support for donor relations events and UNM Foundation daily business functions. Some evening and/or weekend work is required.

Minimum Qualifications: High School Diploma or GED; Three (3) or more years experience directly related to the duties and responsibilities. Preferred Qualifications: Baccalaureate degree. For those interested in applying, please submit a cover letter, resume, and salary requirements to Tobie Webb at tweb b@unmfund.org or mailing address Two Woodward Center 700 Lomas Blvd. NE, Ste. 108, Albuquerque, NM 87102. Review of credentials will begin immediately. Visit our website at www. unmfund.org for a full job description. The UNM Foundation is an EEO Employer. LOOKING FOR ENTHUSIASTIC motivated female banquet staff to work weddings and special events at new Sheraton Hotel. Apply in person: 2910 Yale Blvd SE. 843-7000.

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LoboSports Sports editor / Ryan Tomari

Page

16

Monday November 22, 2010

The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

sports@dailylobo.com / Ext. 131

Cal vanquished in double-OT dandy by Nathan Farmer

sports@dailylobo.com The UNM women’s basketball team needed every second on the clock — and then some — to claw to its second victory of the season. In a double-overtime duel, the Lobos outlasted California 63-54 on Saturday at The Pit in a game where both teams combined for 41 turnovers. “We had an opportunity to win it in regulation,” head coach Don Flanagan said. “I don’t think we shot our free throws particularly well, nor do I think we ran our offense very well, but we persevered, and that’s extremely important to win games like that.” The Lobos had chances to win it in the final moments of regulation. G u a r d s UNM 63 Amanda Best and Lauren 54 Cal Taylor consecutively turned the ball over and allowed Cal to get back in the game with 30 seconds left. Soon after, Best missed a layup, and forward DeNesha Stallworth’s layup tied the game at 44 with 19 seconds left. On UNM’s ensuing possession, forward Jessica Kielpinski was fouled and had a chance to give the Lobos the win with six seconds left. Kielpinski missed both shots from the charity stripe, and the game went into overtime. California and UNM mustered a combined eight points in the first overtime, but the Golden Bears sputtered in the second overtime, and Best scored five of her game-high 16 points, including a 3-pointer with 3:21 left, to give the Lobos the edge. “That was really big, especially at that time of the game,” Flana-

gan said. “That gave us a cushion where we could relax a bit and run our offense a little better.” It took UNM nearly five minutes to score its first points of the game. UNM took control with a 21-3 run spanning 10 minutes in the first half. The Lobos took a 14-point lead into halftime, holding the Golden Bears to 15 first-half points. But the Lobos could not hold on to the lead in the second half. UNM was confused by Cal’s fullcourt press, which forced two shot-clock violations and caused the Lobos to turn the ball over seven times in the first seven minutes. “That was one of our problems. They were making us take 15 to 18 seconds to get the ball past half court,” Flanagan said. “Then you only have eight seconds to get a shot off, so we did not particularly do a good job at that.” In the end, forward Porche Torrance said, the Lobos came together. Torrance, one of three Lobos in double figures, finished with 10 points. “We needed this win to boost our confidence,” she said. “We can take this win, and hopefully, we can proceed and do well.”

UP NEXT

Women’s basketball vs. San Francisco New Mexico Thanksgiving Tournament Friday 7 p.m. The Pit

Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo UNM’s Jasmine Patterson is one of five Lobo freshmen who have made an immediate impact for the Lobos. Patterson scored 11 points in the first half against California on Saturday.

Guard’s play head above rest by Brandon Call bcall@unm.edu

The bigger you are, the harder you fall. That saying is probably foreign to UNM freshman Jasmine Patterson. Patterson, who is listed at a generous 5-feet 7-inches in the Lobos’ media guide, looks even shorter when standing next to opposing post players as she did Saturday when the UNM women’s basketball team faced much-taller California. The Golden Bears listed seven players at 6 feet or taller. But that doesn’t bother Patterson. She knows she’s never going to be the biggest player on the court. “Because I’m not the tallest player out there, I usually have to rely on my speed,” she said. “I know I’m not going to out-rebound another player, so I try to out-hustle them — beat them to every ball.”

Patterson’s hustle equated to 11 first-half points Saturday, helping the Lobos jump out to a 29-15 halftime lead. But the Lobos’ spark plug from Amarillo, Texas, has done it throughout UNM’s first three games. She averaged nine points coming off the bench. Head coach Don Flanagan said Patterson filled her role nicely. “With (Jasmine), she is just learning,” he said. “I have to spotplay her. I’m just hoping we continue to get that kind of quality minutes in short bursts from her in the future.” Offensively, Patterson’s nofear mentality shines, and she is not afraid to shoot the long ball or drive to the basket. That’s something Flanagan said her underclassmen teammates should note. “When we start running an offense … she’s one of those players that drives,” he said. “And it doesn’t matter who is in her way.

She’s just going to go.” While other freshmen players are intimidated to shoot, Patterson fires away. “I like penetrating to the goal,” Patterson said. “If a taller player is in front of me, I have to pull up and just shoot the ball. It’s that simple.” But Patterson said she is dedicated to mastering defensive concepts and pestering opposing point guards. “I’m working to improve my defense,” she said. “Coach wants me to stay on the other team’s point guard and try to force turnovers.” The plan paid off Saturday as Patterson notched two steals, and the Lobos forced 20 turnovers. Flanagan said he has high hopes for the freshman standout. “She’s going to be a really good player down the line for us,” he said. “Just give her some more time.”

Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo UNM’s Jourdan Erskine grabs a rebound at The Pit on Saturday. The Lobos won their second game of the season by defeating California 63-54 in double overtime.


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