NM Daily Lobo 021513

Page 1

DAILY LOBO new mexico

Successful V-Day

friday

see page 7

February 15, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Protest targets sexual assault

I WALK ALONE

‘One Billion Rising’ rallies for women’s rights by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com

In the spirit of traveling the road solo we salute the individualist in all of us. See Page 2 for more of this week’s Exposing the Occult.

Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo

While many people celebrated Valentine’s Day by giving their partners flowers and gifts, others spent the day carrying signs around the Duck Pond to protest sexual violence and the sexual assault of women. Members of UniteWomen.org, a women’s rights advocacy group, conducted “One Billion Rising,” an event at which participants silently protested for women’s rights Thursday. UNM’s Women’s Resource Center helped organize the event. Marisa Silva-Dunbar, a UNM alumna and director of the Region Five Division of UniteWomen.org, said sexual assault is a serious problem worldwide. “It’s disgusting that one in three women is going to be abused or raped in their lifetime,” she said. “We want the

see Protest PAGE 3

UNM aims to recruit more black students by Tanya Prather news@dailylobo.com

UNM has revamped efforts to increase its black student population. In the last 25 years the black student population at UNM has hovered around 2.8 to 3 percent of the overall student population, with no real efforts of targeted recruiting in place, said Scott Carreathers, director of African American Student Services. Carreathers added that only about half of all black students on campus use AASS, which he said has made outreach and retention for black students extremely difficult. In 2011 these concerns were what led faculty and staff, including Carreathers, to meet with then-UNM President David Schmidly to create the African American/Black Climate Review Report. This initiative attempted to address the issues and concerns of UNM’s African-American/ black faculty, staff, students and community members. Almost two years after the initiative began, however, the black student population at UNM has declined. Currently, black students make up 2.46 percent of the overall student population, down from the purported average. The University remains hopeful

Inside the

Daily Lobo volume 117

issue 102

that these numbers will increase within the next three to five years. To help accomplish this goal, AASS partnered up with Recruitment Services and hired Jamila Clayton as its targeted recruiter in August. Clayton, an Albuquerque native, last worked as the main general recruiter at the University of Phoenix and targeted thousands of students for the school. “I want to help African-American students because sometimes they may not know all the information to get into college or they might be first-generation college students that may not have all the resources,” Clayton said. “That’s what I really love about the position that made me want to apply for it.” Clayton began by targeting Albuquerque high schools with high African American populations. With the help of the Black Student Union at UNM, she was able to reach out to all public high schools in Albuquerque, she said. Clayton said she knows of about 40 African-American churches where she is able to target black students whom she may not otherwise be able to find. In addition to recruiting in the city, Clayton also targets smaller New Mexico towns with larger black populations such as Clovis, Alamogordo and Hobbs. As for out-of-state recruitment, Clayton said she and Carreathers are looking into Texas, California,

William Aranda / Daily Lobo Reverend Charles Becknell Sr., Ph.d, lectures to a group of students about the importance of the Civil Rights Movement at the UNM African American Student Services center on Wednesday.

Atlanta and New York City’s Harlem Academy. A Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Survey, aiming to continue the work

Post-half comeback

Under pressure

see Page 5

see Page 6

of the 2011 report, will be launched next month and administered by California-based consulting firm Halualani and Associates. The

Division for Equity and Inclusion, in collaboration with the Offices of the President and the Provost, is coordinating the project.

TODAY

52 |27


PAGETWO F RIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2013

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

Exposing the Occult Weekly Photo Forum

This week’s Exposing the Occult pays tribute to the antiValentine. Here’s to all those who

snub

the

capitalistic

pseudo-holiday to enjoy their solitude with heads held high and a smug grin. Today’s images include a sample of campus street photography and a photoshop composite. Enjoy soaking in your satisfied seclusion.

~Photo by Juan Labreche

volume 117

issue 102

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

Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Cleary Managing Editor Alexandra Swanberg News Editor John Tyczkowski Assistant News Editor Ardee Napolitano Staff Reporter Megan Underwood Photo Editor Juan Labreche Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse

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 Multi Media Editor Zachary Zahorik

Design Director Connor Coleman Design Assistants Josh Dolin Erica Aragon Andrew Quick Advertising Manager Renee Schmitt Sales Manager Jeff Bell Classified Manager Mayra Aguilar

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.

SAVE A LIFE TODAY. Follow Us...

@dailylobo

Friend Us...

facebook.com/ DailyLobo


news

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Protest

Friday, February 15, 2013/ Page 3

from page 1

world to know that we are not taking it lying down.” Silva-Dunbar said her group organized the event in part because of the recent sexual assaults on campus. On Jan. 27 two men allegedly grabbed a female UNM student while she was jogging at Johnson Field, held her down and groped her under her clothes; and on Feb. 4 a man allegedly groped a female UNM student over her clothes outside Castetter Hall. Silva-Dunbar said the community has downplayed the seriousness of the assaults and the University has mocked the incidents by calling them “gropings.” She said the event aimed to introduce the significance of the incidents to the University community. Silva-Dunbar said that today’s society has adopted a culture of “victim blaming” in which victims of sexual assaults are often blamed for being abused or raped. She said the government has not done enough to counter this culture.

“It’s disgusting that one in three women is going to be abused or raped in their lifetime,” ~Marisa Silva-Dunbar director of the Region Five Division of UniteWomen.org “Over the last couple of years we’ve definitely seen how women can be pushed to the back burners or

$2.50 Coronas $2.50 Landsharks $3 Cuervo

feat. the

INFAMOUkSe Booty Sha Contest

Ca$h Prizes!

Mark Grace / Daily Lobo UniteWomen.org volunteer Anita McDonough, 66, hands Ph.D candidate Maria Lopez pamphlets about the prevention of violence against women. McDonough stated that 1 in 3 women are said to be beaten or raped within their lifetimes. how politicians want to put us back in the kitchens,” she said. “We will not stand for violence against anyone.” During the event participants rang a bell every two minutes, which Silva-Dunbar said symbolized the fact that every two minutes a woman in the world gets beaten or raped. UNM student Frankie Flores said the dialogue surrounding sexual assault needs to change. “I think the dialogue right now is ‘women shouldn’t get raped,’ instead of ‘men shouldn’t rape women,’” he said. “We tell women that if they dress provocatively that they deserve it. I don’t think we tell men that a woman’s body is a woman’s body.” UNM student Julie Boyette said she wanted to protest against sexual violence in general and not just on women. She said the University has not provided sufficient response to the recent incidents

No annual salary for NM legislature by Barry Massey

The Associated Press

SANTA FE — The highest-compensated member of the New Mexico Legislature collected nearly $21,000 last year under a system that provides no annual salary to lawmakers but grants them daily expense reimbursements. Sen. Richard Martinez, an Espanola Democrat, received $20,922 for last year’s legislative session and attending committee meetings during the year, according to information from the Department of Finance and Administration obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request. Sen. Carlos Cisneros, a Questa Democrat, collected $19,734, and former Rep. Ray Begaye, a Shiprock Democrat who lost his re-election bid, received $19,096. Compensation averaged $11,061 for the 112 lawmakers who served in the 30-day legislative session, costing taxpayers at total of $1.2 million last year. Begaye topped the compensation list with $29,000 in 2011, when the Legislature held a 60-day session and a special session on redistricting. New Mexico stands out as the only state that doesn’t provide a yearly salary to its legislators, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Salaries vary from about $95,000 a year for lawmakers in California to $100 a year in New Hampshire. The New Mexico Legislature is part-time and members are considered citizen legislators. House and Senate members collect a daily expense payment, called a per diem, when the Legislature is in

session and while attending or traveling to committee meetings throughout the rest of the year. Those payments were $154 a day during last year’s legislative session — $4,620 for the 30-day session — and rose to $176 a day from June through October before returning to $154 in November. Voters approved a constitutional amendment in 1996 linking the payments to a federal rate for what’s tax deductible for room and board in Santa Fe while on business. The rate automatically goes up or down as the government adjusts the rate for inflation. Sen. Martinez favors switching to a system that provides a yearly salary to legislators. He said the per diem payments fail to adequately cover expenses, including wear and tear on a lawmaker’s vehicle for traveling to meetings. “Maybe if we had a decent salary we could hire a part-time clerk or something to help us with our mail,” said Martinez, a retired magistrate judge. “I carry a mail bag with me everywhere I go.” A change in the pay would require voters to approve a constitutional change. “I am not sure if the public would go along with it because I think they feel that we don’t do anything anyway,” said Martinez. Paul Gessing, president of the conservative Rio Grande Foundation, doesn’t consider last year’s payments to lawmakers as excessive. “Certainly within the taxpayers’ pocketbooks, even paying $20,000 a year to all legislators wouldn’t be extreme. It’s just a question of fairness and the legislators not trying to take advantage of the system,” said Gessing.

of sexual assault on campus. “They don’t take it seriously, and I think students also don’t take it seriously because we live in a rape culture,” she said. She said she wants UNM to provide more on-campus police patrols, better lighting at night and student education about sexual violence. Silva-Dunbar said she expects the University to spend more on campus safety and to listen to students more keenly about their demands and complaints. She also said people should learn to respect everybody equally in order for the number of sexual assaults to deteriorate. “We need to show the importance of respect for each individual,” she said. “We need to start teaching … that some things are not appropriate and they will be punished if they invade a person’s space or attack them.”

The Wesley Foundation will make a

Mission Trip over Spring Break, March 9-15, to help with such reconstruction through the Epworth Project. New Orleans is still very much in need of lots of reconstruction, and we hope you want to help. The cost is $275 a person (including food), though if you need financial help it can be given.

Please register by Feb. 15 by calling 323-1251. Call 323-1251 for more info. Thank you very much. We are excitedly looking forward to this trip to help those in need.


LoboOpinion

Page

4

Friday, February 15, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg

opinion@dailylobo.com

LETTER

Nearby probation office contributes to campus crime Editor, Once again, when faced with criminal acts on campus, UNM points to its “urban environment” as the culprit. Granted, universities in urban areas may have higher crime rates on average due to higher population density, but I think it’s time for the community and the University to stop pointing fingers and start working together to reduce crime in the campus area. A good place to start would be asking the state of New Mexico to relocate its probation office at 3010 Monte Vista Blvd. N.E. This office is located one block from UNM’s student housing on main campus. It serves between 3,000 and 5,000 nonviolent felons whose crimes include robbery, burglary, vehicle theft and alcohol or drug violations. While a majority of all the people on probation are one-time offenders, repeat offenders commit the majority of crimes in urban environments and have become a growing problem for police authorities. For example, if every repeat offender who reports to the Monte Vista probation office committed one crime per year in the campus area, that number would account for the majority of property crimes committed in our community. It is estimated that a third of all college students become victims of crime, mainly theft and burglary. The annual influx of new students on college campuses — with the requisite laptop, mobile or smartphone, television, digital camera, mp3 player, bike or car — become easy targets as most students are blissfully unaware of crime in our urban environment until they fall prey to it. It makes no sense whatsoever for our state officials to locate a probation office in a retail district within one block of its flagship university and a residential neighborhood. The lease for the probation office on Monte Vista expires and is up for renewal in 2014. Now is the time for us to come together and do something about the most prevalent type of crime in our urban environment. Every campus-area community member and organization can write a letter to the governor and other state officials requesting this state probation office be moved to a more appropriate location in the city. It costs nothing to send this message, and the result could have a major impact on crime in our community. Please send your letters today to: Jose N. Cordova, director of Probation and Parole Division: Jose.Cordova@state.nm.us Sheryl Stapleton, state representative: sheryl.stapleton@nmlegis.gov Gail Chasey, state representative: gail@gailchasey.com Cisco McSorley, state senator: cisco.mcsorley@nmlegis.gov Gov. Susana Martinez: governor.state.nm.us/Contact_the_Governor. aspx Susan Michie Daily Lobo reader

EDITORIAL BOARD Elizabeth Cleary Editor-in-chief

Alexandra Swanberg Managing editor Opinion editor

John Tyczkowski News editor

Dr. Peg’s Prescription A pox on both your ages: shingles virus is a blight on young and old Q: Recently I had a rash and I went to the doctor’s office and was told it was shingles. Isn’t that for old people? I have seen ads for a shingles vaccine but it’s for people who are at least 50 years old. Why did I get this when I am young? Is this going around? A: So sorry to hear you have shingles. I know that can be really painful. I know, because I had it when I was young too. It happened during my fourth year of medical school, on the famously brutal surgery rotation. Up every morning at 5, I hustled to the hospital, where I checked on my patients, drew morning bloods, and prepped for rounds. During rounds I presented my assigned patients to the rest of the team, straining my brain to answer tough and sometimes nitpicking questions posed by the attending physician. Then it was off to the operating rooms, where I stood for hours holding retractors, fielding anatomy pop quizzes, and hoping the surgeon would reward me by letting me stitch up the skin. After that I’d check my ward patients again, do more chores, grab a quick dinner, go on rounds again, write chart notes, and hustle home to fall into bed. Partway through the rotation, I started having pains in the side of my head, and then I broke out in the classic rash on my face. Small wonder. Shingles loves stress. So no, it is not only an old people problem, although it is more common among the elderly. We see plenty of shingles MARCH 16, 2011 at SHAC. However, that doesn’t mean it is “going around.” That would imply you can catch it from someone, and shingles is not contagious, at least not directly. You can’t get shingles from someone who has shingles — but you can get chicken pox. Let me explain. Back when you were a kid, you had chicken pox. Chicken pox is caused by

a virus called varicella zoster that causes little red, pus-filled bumps that itch like crazy and are preceded by fever, sore throat and headache. The liquid inside the bumps is full of the virus, and chicken pox is easily spread from kid to kid. You don’t get it from chickens, in case you were wondering. The name comes either from the resemblance of the bumpy sores to chickpeas — isn’t that appetizing — or to the peck marks chickens make with their beaks. After a few days of itchy misery, the pox begin to dry up, and about a week later the kid can go back to school. But that is not the end of the varicella virus. Varicella stays in the body; it retreats from the skin and hides way deep in the nerves, at their very roots in the spine. In most people, the varicella virus goes into permanent hibernation and that is the end of it. But in some unlucky citizens, varicella awakens. It yawns, stretches and strolls out to cause trouble. This usually happens when the immune system is in a weakened state — for example from stress, illness, or, yes, old age. But this time around, varicella’s reach is limited. It can only travel along nerves, which run in a specific pattern from spine to skin. Each nerve has its own pattern, and its own area of skin, called a dermatome. Shingles rashes break out in classic dermatome stripe distribution, on one side of the body only. The one-sidedness is one clue we use to diagnose shingles. Preceding the rash are a few days of pain. This pain can be quite severe, and is usually described as stabbing or shooting, radiating from the spine to the skin, often around the body in an arc pattern that echoes the nerve path. After the rash begins, the pain usually starts to subside. Shingles is treated with anti-viral medications that help shorten the course. Pain pills

might be prescribed but aren’t usually much help. Sometimes we’ll use steroids, or topical medicines. In most people, shingles is a limited illness. An unfortunate few will have persistent, chronic pain after shingles, though this complication is much more common in old people. I said you couldn’t catch shingles from shingles. However, that sleepy varicella virus still has a little potency, and if you rub your shingles on someone who hasn’t had chicken pox, they could break out in regular chicken pox from the virus. Chicken pox can be dangerous in people with compromised immune systems, so stay away from people with HIV or cancer. Just to make things even more confusing, the medical name for shingles is herpes zoster. It is not caused by the herpes simplex virus, or the herpes anything virus. The word herpes literally means creeping skin rash, so someone thought it made sense to call a creeping skin rash caused by varicella zoster “herpes zoster.” Go figure. There is a vaccine for shingles, and a vaccine for chicken pox. They are not the same, although they are related. They are both made from varicella virus, but the shingles vaccine is much more potent. The purpose of the shingles vaccine is to poke the older person’s sluggish immune system so that it will keep the varicella in the nerve root and prevent the shingles outbreak. For those of you who haven’t had chicken pox, or aren’t sure, you can come to our allergy and immunization clinic at SHAC and get tested or get a vaccine. Call 505-277-3136 for an appointment. Peggy Spencer is a student-health physician. She is also the co-author of the book “50 ways to leave your 40s.” Email your questions directly to her at pspencer@unm.edu. All questions will be considered anonymous, and all questioners will remain anonymous.

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO LOBOS

Looking

Lob for a

The University of New Mexico ® UNM™ New Mexico Lobos™ New Mexico™ Lobos ® The Pit ® Lobo Country™ Lobo Nation™

Cherry and Silver™ Be a Lobo™ Lobo Pride™ Everyone's a Lobo™ Mile High and Louder Than...™ Lobo for Life™ We Are New Mexico ®

LOCATION: ALBUQUERQUE, NM MASCOT: LOBOS MASCOT NICKNAME: LOBO LOUIE, LOBO LUCY

ESTABLISHED DATE: 1889 CONFERENCE: MOUNTAIN WEST

Did you come across someone on campus who made an impression on you? Send a message to the one who got away in an email to University of New Mexico-Los Alamos University of New Mexico-Gallup

editorinchief@dailylobo.com

University of New Mexico-Valencia University of New Mexico-Taos University of New Mexico-Rio Rancho

and we’ll publish as many as we can. You will remain 100 percent anonymous. The feature runs on Mondays.


sports

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Friday, February 15, 2013/ Page 5

men’s basketball

Men still atop MWC, face Boise State Saturday by J.R. Oppenheim

then held the Bulldogs to one field goal throughout the remainder. Fresno State missed 10 shots during that stretch.

Men’s basketball head coach Steve Alford has repeatedly discussed the level of talent in the Mountain West Conference. This came up again Wednesday afternoon, hours before his No. 19 New Mexico Lobos took the court in Fresno, Calif. This time, Alford addressed it on a national platform. “Every time out, when you play at home or on the road, it’s a difficult out,” the sixth-year coach told ESPN Radio host Scott Van Pelt. Difficult out, indeed. Last-place Fresno State gave MWC leader UNM another tight game Wednesday night. The Lobos needed to rally from an 11-point halftime deficit to stay atop the MWC standings, and captured a 5448 road victory over the Bulldogs. UNM outscored Fresno State 21-9 over nine minutes to force a close game in the second half,

“We’re sitting at the top of the league not just in wins but in most road wins.”

assistantsports@dailylobo.com @JROppenheim

~Steve Alford head coach It’s the latest example of how fierce any Mountain West venue is for a visiting team. With three wins and two losses, UNM is the only MWC team with a winning record in conference road games. No. 24 Colorado State is .500 in MWC road games with two wins and two losses. San Diego State, unranked in the AP Top 25 but pegged No. 22 by the coaches, is the only other

softball

MWC team with two road conference victories, but the team has three road losses in league play. The remaining six MWC teams each have one or fewer. Those teams are a combined 5-25 at opposing venues. “It’s bagging road wins,” Alford told the Associated Press. “We’re sitting at the top of the league not just in wins but in most road wins. We’re plus-three now, 3-2 on the road with three road games to go, and that’s huge.” On the flip side, UNM, Colorado State, Air Force and UNLV are undefeated at home with at least four wins. San Diego State is 4-1 and Boise State is 3-1 in home conference games. The nine teams have a combined .727 winning percentage in their own arenas. UNM (21-4, 8-2 MWC) has an equal split of home and road games over its remaining six

see Basketball page 6

Gary Kazanjian / AP photos

Hugh Greenwood passes against Fresno State’s Aaron Anderson in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Fresno, Calif. on Wednesday. The Lobos overcame a 13-point deficit to beat the Bulldogs 54-48.

Rough 0-7 start makes Lobos determined by Christian Naranjo sports@dailylobo.com @cnaranjo7

With a 0-7 record, the UNM softball team has beaten the 2006 squad for the worst start in the program’s 36year history. The Lobos went 0-5 in the Kajikawa Classic on Feb. 7, 8 and 9, then lost to Nebraska, and then to New Mexico State during the Hotel Encanto Invite on Sunday. New Mexico now looks to avoid a third-straight weekend without a win during the UNM Lobo Classic at the UNM softball field, which starts today and finishes Sunday.

The Albuquerque invite consists of two games per team each day. New Mexico will begin the weekend against Hampton (0-4) at 3:45 p.m. today and face off against Central Michigan (0-0) at 6 p.m. Saturday will include matchups against Hampton once again at 9 a.m. and Bradley (2-3) at 11:15. The Lobos will conclude the UNM Lobo Classic on Sunday against Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne at 11:15 a.m. and then Central Michigan for the second time at 1:30 p.m. Head coach Erica Beach said that although the team’s start has been disappointing, the Lobos are calm and ready to break through.

“We should have been over .500 (winning percentage) so far this season,” she said. “But it gives us a feel for what we have. We have a young team and it’s been a challenging start to our schedule.” Six freshmen started for the Lobos this season: outfielder Courtney Geith, outfielder Mariah Rimmer, pitcher Lauren Soles, redshirt infielder Karissa Haleman, catcher Naomi Tellez and pitcher Lisa Rodrigues. New Mexico’s first seven opponents have all been fellow Division-I opponents and have accumulated an average .733 winning percentage this year. In 2012, the Lobos lost eight

graduating players who combined for 76 home runs and 224 RBIs. Beach said that after losing power in the lineup, UNM must learn to transition to a small-ball style of play. “We’re going to score runs differently this year than last year,” she said. “We have to get the returning players to embrace our new style of play and get good at it. We’re going to hit ground balls to gaps instead now.” The UNM Lobo Classic will provide the squad with its first stretch of home games this season. The matchups against Hampton and IPFW will be the first-ever meetings between the two programs. “These games are absolutely

winnable,” Beach said. “Every game is up for grabs at this point. It’s up to the girls to determine how winnable this weekend is.” Going into the weekend, Rimmer leads the Lobos in both batting average (.316; 6-19) and stolen bases (4-4). In 2012, New Mexico sprinted to a 9-0 start to only finish 27-25, and Rimmer said there is pressure to bounce back from a poor start to this season. “Nobody wants to begin the season at 0-7 after the hot start last season. It’s definitely a wake-up call,” she said.

go s bo loo o l s go bos g os lobo o lo go b lo go os g os oo b s g bos lob o lo go l os o The list of upcoming ob o lo s go s g bos lob l Lobo athletic events is published every o lo g bo o o o b s g g week in the Daily Lobo. g o o o s s o os l l b o o g o o o Upcoming Athletic Events ob o l s go s g bos lob lob o l s l o g g o o o o o o b Softball Baseball s g bos lob o lo go l os g os g obos lob o Fri-Sun 02/15-02/17 Fri 02/15 o hosts UNM Lobo Classic ob o lo s go s g bos lob lob o l s go os g - vs. Oklahoma State 5pm l o Fri 02/15 g g Sat 02/16 o o o o o o o s s b lob o l g b lob o l g g vs. Hampton University vs. Oklahoma State 2pm o o o o s s s s l l b b o g o g 3:45pm o Sun 02/17 o o o ob o lo s go s g bos lob lob o lo s go os g bos lob vs. Oklahoma State 1pm vs. Central Michigan 6pm Sat 02/16 o o go Isotopes Park s g obo lobo o lo go os g obo lob o lo g g vs. Hampton University 9am o s s b ol g bos bo log bos bo lob o l go o vs. Bradley 11:15am s s g Men’s g o g o o o o o Sun 02/17 sSatBasketball 02/16 os bos lob go l go l s go bos obos lob go l go l s go bvs.oBoise vs. IPFW 11am 7pm s vs. Central Michigan 1pm s o os lo go os bo o lo o TheState bo o lo o l o o g Pit o o o Lobo Softball Field b b s g l g g os lob lo go l s g os g bo ob lo go s s l b o o o o o o o o b o b s lo Basketball Men’s Tennis ob loWomen’s o o l os g os g obos lob o lo go l os g os g obo s Sat 02/16 l Sat 02/16 g o o o o b s s b g l @ Boise State b g b lob o l @ University of Arizona g g o o o o o o s s o l s o l go o l go os g obos obo lob go l go os g obo obo lob gWomen’s Golf Women’s Tennis os02/16-02/17 os lob o l go l s go bos bos lob o l go l s go bos Sat-Sun o Fri 02/15 b b l g o g o o o o o o @ Peg Barnard Invitational s o l s o vs. Pacific 3pm l o s s l s l o lob o g Calif. o lob o g bo g bo o o in Stanford, o b Sat 02/16 b s s b g s g g g lo go os vs. Northern Ariz. 3pm bo o lo o lo go os bos obo o lo Good os lobo o lo go o luck to b Sun 02/17 s s b g l b g Swimming & Diving g g o g o o o o o s s o l s o l s s vs. UTEP 3pm l s l b b o o g Wed-Sat 02/20-02/23 o g o o Baseball, Men’s Basketball, o o o lo UNM Tennis Complex ob West ob o lo s go s g bos lob lob o lo s go os g bos lob@ Mountain o l l s g Women’s Basketball, o g g Championships o o o o o o b lob o lo go os go os go sin gSan Antonio, os Tex.lob Track and Field oSwimming ob lob go l s g oWomen’s s s l b Golf, & Diving, l b b o g Thurs-Fri 02/21-02/22 o o o o o o o o o s s b lob o l g Tennis, b lob o l Softball, g lo g g g @ Mountain West Indoor Track o o o o s s Men’s s s b ol g bo g bos bo lob o l go & Field Championship o s s g bo lobo o lo g g o o o o in Boise, Ida. o Women’s Tennis, s s o l s l s l b b o o o g g o o o o o o o b b g os and os lob lo go l s g os gand bTrack obFieldlo go l s g l b o o o o o s bo go os b lob o l g lo g g o o o s s s b ol g bos bo lob o l o s g bo lobo o lo g o s s b o lo o lo go os g o g o o To advertise in this special section, o b g os lob lo go l s g os g bos lob b call 277-5656! o o o o o b s l b g lo g g o s s bo o lo o l go bos s g bo lobo o lo g lo bo os g os

Fan Page

GOOD LUCK LOBOS

GOOOOOOO LOBOS!


sports

Page 6 / Friday, February 15, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

baseball

Community Bricolage in Partnership with Native American Studies presents:

Current Approaches in Community Based Research For Indigenous and Native Communities Panelists include: Doreen Bird MPH, Kee Straits Phd, Utahna Belone AmeriCorp VISTA Leader, NASIRG, and more…

WHERE: Travelstead Hall (college of education) WHEN: Monday, February 18th 4-5:30

‘We’re the team to beat’ No. 21 Lobos raring to go for MWC season

Delicious food will be served, bring a dish to share if you wish! Contact Bridget Llanes at 505-236-9241 or bllanes@unm.edu Also sponsored by GPSA and COE.

e k a S & i h Sus Ko 6 8-242

33

rean BBQ

WE MAKE IT FRESH WHEN YOU

Free all you can eat sushi!!!

Buy 14 all-you-can-eat sushi dinners and get one free!

pen O ! NNameowlastll name Da/yDaily Lobo A

338-24

24

ORDER

ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH $18.95 DINNER $21.95 Monday 11:30-9:30 Tuesday 11:30-9:30 Wednesday 11:30-9:30 Thursday 11:30-9:30 Friday 11:30-10:30 Saturday 11:30-10:30 Sundays 4-9:30

Enjoy our Tadami Room!

FUN & GOOD FOOD GREAT FOR BUSINESS MEETINGS & PARTIES!

3200 Central Ave. Albuquerque, NM

Lobby Open 24 Hours!

University location, Thursday thru Saturday

Now serving Breakfast after midnight

of equal or lesser value Redeemable only at McDonalds located at Hanover, University, Bosque Farms, Quail, Los Lunas, Bridge, Belen, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande, Wal-Mart (Los Lunas), Moriarity, Edgewood. Expires 2/28/13

Smoothies • Frappes Iced Coffee • Latte Mocha

BUY ONE BIG MAC GET ONE

FREE

buy one get one FREE

drinks

Redeemable only at McDonalds located at Hanover, University, Bosque Farms, Quail, Los Lunas, Bridge, Belen, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande, Wal-Mart (Los Lunas), Moriarity, Edgewood. Expires 2/28/13

Mark Grace / Daily Lobo Sophomore first baseman Alex Real tosses a ball to a teammate at practice last week. UNM begins its quest to Omaha, Neb. with a threegame series against Oklahoma State starting today at Isotopes Park.

by Thomas Romero-Salas sports@dailylobo.com @ThomasRomeroS

It’s time to see if predictions about the Lobo baseball team will come true. UNM is on everyone’s radar: Baseball America ranked it No. 21 and MWC coaches expect it to be conference champ again. Senior catcher Mitch Garver, a preseason All-American, said there is no added pressure in being picked the top team in the Mountain West. “We’re getting more used to (the pressure),” he said. “It’s kind of the thing of when we play our best baseball our opponent plays their best baseball. When teams play us they have to step up and play their best.” The Lobos are coming off a 37-24 campaign in which they won a share of the MWC regularseason title and took home the tournament championship. “Just like the last two years, we’re going to have a target on our back,” Garver said. “With TCU leaving, we’re really the team to beat, so teams are going to play their best ball against us.” The Horned Frogs left the Mountain West to join the Big-12 in all sports last July. Junior first baseman DJ Peterson said the Lobos are prepared to face everyone’s best effort. “We’re the team to beat, and I think every team is going to bring

Basketball

an extra edge when they play us,” he said at the team’s media day last week. UNM opens the season with a three-game home stand against Oklahoma State today at Isotopes Park. The Cowboys have a new head coach, Josh Holliday, who played 256 games while attending OSU and was an assistant coach at Vanderbilt the past three seasons.

“With TCU leaving, we’re really the team to beat, so teams are going to play their best ball against us.” ~Mitch Garver senior catcher Lobo head coach Ray Birmingham said he doesn’t know what to expect from OSU because of the its coaching staff. “It’s just a good coaching staff,” he said. “They’ve provided new energy and that’s going to be tough, because Oklahoma State is good.” OSU had one of the toughest pitching staffs last season, ranking 18th in the nation with an earned run average of 3.08. The Cowboys

lost six pitchers from last year’s 32-25 club that finished fifth in the Big-12, including pitcher Andrew Heaney, who was selected ninth overall in the 2012 MLB June Amateur Draft by the Miami Marlins. Holliday, brother of St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Matt Holliday, said the pitching staff is lacking much-needed experience. “When you look at our pitching staff right now, the biggest question is trying to get guys who don’t have a ton of experience at this level molded into a quality pitching staff,” Holliday told okstate.com. “There are a lot of unknowns, but at the same time there’s a lot of excitement to see who will handle these opportunities when they’re given.” The Lobos had one of the best offenses in all of college baseball last year, finishing fifth in batting average (.326), fourth in hits (728), 21st in on-base percentage (391), sixth in runs (468) and eighth in slugging percentage (.472). Senior shortstop Alex Allbritton said scoring runs shouldn’t be a problem for the squad. “We have a lot of good bats in our lineup,” he said. “As long as the team surrounding DJ is hitting well, we can get a lot of runs.”

from page 5

contests, capping the regular season with bouts at Nevada and Air Force. The Mountain West tournament follows on March 12-17. The Lobos return to The Pit on Saturday when they host Boise State. The two teams on battled Jan. 16 in an overtime thriller, which UNM won 79-74. Lobo junior guard Tony Snell scored 22 points in that game, and Hugh Greenwood had 15 points, including three 3-pointers, while battling flu-like symptoms. Boise State (16-7, 4-5 MWC) won three of seven games since

then, picking up wins against Fresno State, UNLV and Wyoming. The Broncos defeated the Cowboys 68-61 last Saturday behind guard Anthony Drmic’s 21 points. Boise State guard Derrick Marks added 17 points against the Pokes. The rematch pits the league’s second-best scoring team against the second-best defensive unit. In MWC play, Boise State has averaged 68.2 points per game while UNM has surrendered 58.6 points defensively. While the Broncos put points on the board, they also gave up

71.8 points a game in their seven MWC games. UNM, meanwhile, has scored an average of 64.4 points against its conference foes. Marks and Drmic are Boise State’s scoring leaders, ranking among the top seven scorers in the MWC. They’ve averaged 16.6 and 16.1 points per game, respectively, through 23 games. UNM seniors Chad Adams and Jamal Fenton have 101 career victories with the Lobos. They could tie A.J. Hardeman and Phillip McDonald’s record of 102 victories if UNM beats Boise State.


F ,F 15, 2013/ P lobo featuresLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle FOR RELEASE FEBRUARY 15, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

riday

dailycrossword

Year Zero

dailysudoku

Level 1 2 3 4

Solution to yesterday’s problem.

Get your name out there with the Daily Sudoku

505.277.5656

LOBO LIFE Friday

Compostion Studio recital 6:00pm – 7:00pm Keller Hall Yjastros 7:30pm – 9:00pm Rodey Theater See flamenco in true repertory format. New Music New Mexico 8:00pm – 9:00pm Keller Hall Directed by David Felberg.

Campus Events Delegation

Cultural Connections Beading Workshop 2:00pm – 4:00pm Native American Student Services Echo’s of the Past 7:00pm – 9:00pm SUB Plaza Game Night 7:00pm – 8:30pm African American Student Services Anderson Club Challenge 10:00am – 1:30pm Jackson Student Center Business students develop presentations in four separate categories: Mission Statement, Tag Line, Commercial and Sales Pitch.

Lectures & Readings The Eurozone Crisis and the Future of the EU 10:00am – 11:00am Dane Smith Hall Room 125 Presented by Dr. Joseph Jupille, University of Colorado, Boulder. “So, That’s the Monster:” Interpreting Maternal Ambivalence in Contemporary Hollywood Film 2:00pm – 3:00pm

Public Athletics/American Studies lecture 1:30pm – 3:00pm Honors Forum Presented by Melanie Armstrong. Earth and Planetary Sciences Colloquium Series 2:00pm – 3:00pm Northrop Hall “Confronting Global Warming Denial” presented by Mark Boslough, Sandia National Laboratories. Philosophy Colloquia Series 3:30pm – 5:30pm Mitchell Hall, Room 102 “Epistemological Attitudes” presented by Professor Wayne D. Riggs, University of Oklahoma. Chemistry & Chemical Biology Spring Seminar series 4pm - 5pm Clark Hall, Room 101 “Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics: Advances in Materials and Devices” presented by Samson A. Jenekhe, University of Washington. Physics and Astronomy Colloquium 4:00pm – 5:00pm Dane Smith Hall Room 125 “How Competing Bacterial Colonies Can Survive by Killing Siblings” presented by Dr. Harry Swinney, University of Texas at Austin.

Meeitngs Student Affairs Initiative 10:00am – 10:30am SUB Sandia Women Empowerment: Develop Global Leadership 2:00pm – 3:00pm Women’s Resource Center, Mesa Vista Hall, 1160

Sports & Rec Women’s Tennis vs Pacific

ACROSS 1 AOL and NetZero 5 Alley biters 9 Like some questions 14 Medieval defense 15 Slim woodwind 16 Having a designated assignment 17 Intangible quality 18 Rise dramatically 19 Capital name derived from an Arabic term for “the conqueror” 20 Catch that’s burnt sienna and cerulean? 23 “Platoon” war zone 24 Peevish mood 25 Battery terminal 27 Not just search for 30 Adenoid, e.g. 31 Reclassification of 2006 32 Soufflé recipe word 33 One of the Smurfs 36 The world total was approx. $70 trillion in 2011 37 Paid endorsement, in slang, and an apt title for this puzzle 40 Say nothing good about 41 Dating from 43 “__ uncertain world ...” 44 Hit on the head 46 Napery 48 Charley, in Steinbeck’s “Travels With Charley” 49 Tax-exempt entity, usually 51 Ergo 52 “__ So Fine”: Chiffons hit 53 Result of Pepsi shortages? 58 Roll out of bed 60 Dollar alternative 61 Airline with bluestriped jets 62 Slips through the cracks

2/15/13

By Donna S. Levin

63 They may be loaded 64 Rest area rester 65 Dog in a horned helmet 66 Chatty bovines? 67 Nailed obliquely DOWN 1 Eye-catching Apple 2 Grow displeased 3 Normal beginning? 4 Patronizes, in a way 5 Herding dog 6 Member of the Kaiser’s fleet 7 Heliport site 8 Wink without batting an eye? 9 Marina Del Rey craft 10 Author LeShan 11 Bootblack’s buffer? 12 “WarGames” org. 13 Carol start 21 Victorious 22 Common ’80s’90s failure 26 Cool 27 Stacy Lewis’s org.

Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

28 Auto pioneer 29 Spec on an architect’s blueprint? 30 Senate wear 32 1975 film sequel 34 Water holder 35 Fantasy author McCaffrey 38 Deceive 39 Near 42 Cone home 45 Least pessimistic

2/15/13

47 Superlatively sweet 48 Stages 49 Opposite of order 50 Shoebill’s cousin 51 Ruse 54 New Balance rival 55 Dairy bar 56 Identify 57 Decreased 59 Msg. from the Bible

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

SPONSOR THIS

SUDOKU

Campus Calendar of Events

Humanities 108 Presented by Dr. Penelope Ingram University of Texas at Arlington.

Art & Music

UNM World Affairs Conference 8:00am – 6:00pm SUB

age 7

ebruary

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

3:00pm Lobo Tennis Club

2:00pm Isotope Park

Baseball vs Oklahoma State 5:00pm Isotopes Park

Men’s Basketball vs Boise State 7:00pm The Pit

Softball hosts UNM Lobo Classic 3:45pm vs Hampton University 6:00pm vs Central Michigan Lobo Softball Field

Women’s Tennis Arizona 3:00pm Lobo Tennis Club

Student Groups & Gov Community Experience Meeting 2:00pm – 3:00pm SUB Santa Ana A Lobos Love St. Baldricks 3:00pm – 4:00pm SUB Lobo A & B Latino Gradfellows 2:30pm – 5:30pm SUB Trail/ Spirit Camperinos Meetings 6:00pm – 7:30pm SUB Scholars Students for Miracles 7:00pm – 11:30pm SUB Lobo B

Theater & Films Dreamgirls 8:00pm Popejoy Hall 1960s singing girl group, and the triumphs and tribulations that come with fame and fortune.

Saturday Art & Music

Yjastros 7:30pm – 9:00pm Rodey Theater See flamenco in true repertory format.

Sports & Rec Softball hosts UNM Lobo Classic 9:00am vs Hampton University 11:15am vs Bradley Lobo Softball Field Baseball vs Oklahoma State

triumphs and tribulations that come with fame and fortune.

vs

Northern

Campus Events UNM World Affairs Conference 8:00am – 5:00pm SUB

Delegation

Student Groups & Gov ASUNM Budget Hearings 8:00am – 6:00pm SUB Trailblazer Upward Bound Organization 10:30am – 12:30pm SUB Santa Ana A & B

Sunday Campus Events BGLO Q&A/Frederick Douglas 6:30pm – 8:30pm African American Student Services

Sports & Rec Softball hosts UNM Lobo Classic 11:00am vs IPFW 1:00pm vs Central Michigan Lobo Softball Field Baseball vs Oklahoma State 1:00pm Isotope Park

Student

Women’s Tennis vs UTEP 2:00pm Lobo Tennis Club

Student Groups & Gov

Game Development Club 11:00am – 1:00pm SUB Scholars

ASUNM Budget Hearings 8:00am – 6:00pm SUB Cherry/Silver

Pokemon Club UNM 12:00pm – 2:00pm SUB Lobo B

Native Health Initiative 12:00pm – 5:00pm SUB Lobo A & B

Student Action Network 2:45pm – 4:45pm SUB Santa Ana A & B

International Medical DelegationDominican Republic 3:00pm – 4:30pm SUB Fiesta A & B

Anime Club Meetings 4:30pm – 8:30pm SUB Acoma A & B 3C Gamers- Cool Collectible Card Gamers 6:00pm – 11:00pm SUB Luminaria UNM Mind’s Eye Meeting 7:00pm – 11:30pm SUB Santa Ana A & B

Theater & Films Dreamgirls 2:00 & 8:00pm Popejoy Hall 1960s singing girl group, and the

MECHA Workshop 12:00pm – 3:00pm SUB Scholars & Thunderbird World Affairs Delegation Meeting 4:00pm – 5:30pm SUB Mirage- Thunderbird

Theater & Films Dreamgirls 2:00 & 7:30pm Popejoy Hall 1960s singing girl group, and the triumphs and tribulations that come with fame and fortune.


classifieds

LASSIFIEDs CCLASSIFIEDS Page 8 / Friday, February 15, 2013

DAILY LOBO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

new mexico

DAILY LOBO new mexico

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds

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

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

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

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

Announcements UNM IS RECRUITING women with asthma for research study. If interested, please contact study coordinator at 9256174 or e-mail tarchibeque@salud.unm. edu FREE BIRTH CONTROL for a year. Albuquerque Clinical Trials is studying a new type of low dose investigational birth control pill that uses hormones similar to those already in your body. If you’re sexually active woman between 18 and 50 and qualify for this study, you may receive at no cost. -Study birth control medication for a year. -Study related care. -Reimbursement for time and travel. For more information, contact Jessica at 505-224-7407 ext.222. CASTING CALL: STUDENT film project audition held tuesday Feb 19. Ceria Bldg Rm 361.505-507-7014. RedRock SunsetProject@gmail.com

Services STRESSED ABOUT JOB? School? Life? Call. 277-3013. Chat. www.agora cares.org MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. welbert53@aol.com, 401-8139. TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799. PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA.

Health and Wellness

NOB HIL AREA Location: Chiropractic adjustments. $49/mo for up to 4 adjustments per month. www.aspinalhealth. com 505-247-2373.

“Definitely the comics, I read them everyday.”

SILVER HAIRED GENT seeks attractive coed as companion for exotic vacation. Moscow/ Sochi? Bangkok? Rio? Let’s decide together. fsu_traveller@yahoo. com TRAVEL COMPANION WANTED - Silver haired gent seeks attractive coed as international, domestic, or local travel companion. Safety, discretion, guaranteed. Let’s meet and discuss the details. fsu_traveller@yahoo.com

Apartments 2BDRM, 1BA, 780 sqft. Off-street parking. $730/mo, includes utilities. $300dd. No smoking, no pets. 302-A Girard SE. 505-270-0891. QUIET, CLEAN, AFFORDABLE, 1BDRM, $575/mo, utilities included. 2 blocks to UNM, no pets. Move in Special. 262-0433. 2 BLOCKS FROM UNM. Remodeled 1BDRM apartment. $550/mo includes utilities. 505-670-5497. BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean, 1BDRM. $575/mo, includes utilities. No pets. Move in special! 255-2685. 1BDRM, 3 BLOCKS from UNM, Presbyterian. Hardwood floors, beamed wood ceiling, new windows. 114 Sycamore. $575/mo. +utilities, +dd, cats okay. NS. Available now. Call 505-550-1579. 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. ATTRACTIVE 2BA 1BA 2 blocks south of UNM. New carpet, vinyl appliances, DW. $765/mo includes utilities. $300 DD. No pets. Move in special. 268-0525. NOB HILL 1BDRM apartments. $490/mo +electricity, $250dd. No pets, free UNM parking. 505-850-9749. STUDIOS, 1 BLOCK UNM, $455-$475/ free utilities. Ask Lobo free month special! 246-2038. www.kachina-proper ties.com UNM/CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate consultant: 243-2229. ATTRACTIVE STUDIO, 1 block south UNM, full kitchen, 1BA, large main room, new/remodeled, appliances. $475/mo, $200dd includes utilities. No pets. Move in special. 268-0525. UNM NORTH CAMPUS - 1BDRM, starting at $495/mo. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets allowed. Move in special! 573-7839. 2 BEDROOMS, UTILITIES included 313 girard SE. $755/mo. www.kachina-prop erties.com. 246-2038.

T H E C E D A R S

5 minutes from campus! 1700 Indian Plaza Dr.

Features • Studios, 1 Bedrooms & 2 Bedrooms • Swimming Pool • Fireplace/Dishwashers • Walk-in closets • On-site laundry • Gas Heat

Newly Remodeled!

505-255-6208

“The coupons save me tons of money.”

UNM ID ADVANTAGE

CLASSIFIED PAYMENT INFORMATION

Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, • 30¢ per word per day for five or more Come to to Marron show Pre-payment by Visa or Master •• Come MarronHall, Hall,room room107, 131, show •• Phone: or American is required. consecutive days without changing or your IDID and receive FREE classifieds Card is required. CallExpress 277-5656. yourUNM UNM and receive a special rate MasterCard Call 277-5656 cancelling. inofYour 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.

LIVE IN NANNY. Background check required. Room and board plus stipend. Flexible schedule. Pet friendly. For more information, 505-891-1439.

ATHLETIC? NEED TO be more buff? buff.hanslinux.net

Travel

New Mexico Daily Lobo

2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride, convenient freeway access, quiet community w/ pool, covered parking & on-site laundry 6 Month lease: $700-$720

Jobs Off Campus CUSTOMER SERVICE JOBS $17-$25 and more per hour now hiring PT/FT. www.PaidReps.com

MOVE-IN SPECIALS

BE IN MOVIES. No experience needed. Up to $300/PT. No Reg fee.505-7966464 505-884-0557. www.A1StarCast ing.com WANTED CUSTOMER SERVICE representatives. Pay $8.50/hr FT and PT job. Work available immediately. Submit resume and hours available to work to prince_123@comcast.net / Call 505-260-2310.

ENTHUSIASTIC STAFF NEEDED to provide homework help and fun educational activities in before and after school programs in NE & NW ABQ. School term employment, $10.50-$13.00/hr. PT, Mon-Fri PM or AM/PM. Apply online at www.campfire abq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

ASSISTANT NEEDED - By St. Pius. A fun, outgoing, punctuational and friendly student needed to help UNM college grad. nm_specialist@yahoo. com

AVAILABLE!

268-8686 5700 Copper NE

sandiaproperties@gmail.com

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

www.sandiapropertymanagement.com 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. ON THE EDGE... of downtown 802 Gold Ave SW. 1BDRM with ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. Across from Silver Ave. Flying Star and Robinson Park. Gated, safe, courtyard, laundry off street parking. $625/mo with $150dd. Please call Greg at 305-975-0908 or on site Kimberly 505-203-5365.

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551. CHRISTIAN CDC LOOKING for PT & FT teachers. Info at http://children spromisecenters.org/about-us/join our-staff

Rooms For Rent

AMUSEMENT PARK SUMMER job. Several positions available. Will be on campus February 19, 1-3PM recruiting. Will be accepting applications and interviews available SUB Plaza level. 881-9373 ext.138.

LOBO VILLAGE FOR female student Aug 2013 to Aug 2014. Contact 520-227-7394.

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

LESS THAN 1 BLOCK FROM UNM! 2 females in house on Stanford. Seeking clean, quiet, studious female student $350/mo. Call/text Chloe: 505-917-7123. ROOM IN CASAS Del Rio available. Call Sam at 505-916-7064 as soon as possible for information and if you are interested. ROOMMATE WANTED. SPACIOUS 3BDRM/2BA. $475/mo, includes utilities and internet. 7 blocks from campus. Call 505-469-9416. FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north campus. $420/mo +1/4 utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated community. Access I-40 & I-25. tkuni@unm. edu

For Sale 3 PIECES BROYHILL furniture. Solid wood, 40 y/o, original 1960’s style. Includes two large dresser mirrors, very heavy. $150 for all. If interested e-mail interestbearing@aol.com BREAD MAKING MACHINE Panosonic. Make yummy hot bread instead of tortillas. Put in the mix and out comes the gourmet style bread. $50. Email inter estbearing@aol.com ICLICKER MAKE OFFER lightly used 359-1546 sky1@unm.edu “MARIYN” BY NORMAN Mailer. Rare book, pictorial biography, hard cover, excellent condition. $75.00. 505-917-9528. VERY NICE, PROFESSIONALLY, handstretched canvases for painting. They have gesso. Variety of sizes. Reasonable prices. Downtown area, 505-917-9528. MUSIC GEAR 4 sale; amplifiers Roland electronic drum set, Washburn acoustic electric guitar, Zildian symbols, brass Piccolo snare and stands. 505-359-1546.

Vehicles For Sale 1992 4X4 TOYOTA Truck. 35K on engine and transmission. Too many new parts to list. 4 cylinder 22RE engine. $8,900 OBO. 505-359-1546. TURBO DIESEL JEEP Liberty. 4WD 4 cylinder 26mpg. Bronze, 1 owner, all service records. 108k. Replaced timing belt warranted. $11K OBO. 505-395-1546.

Child Care $10/HR. M-F, 3:15-5:15PM in Old Town. Seeking a thoughtful aftercare provider to transport two delightful children (4th and 7th grader) home, oversee snack and chores. If interested, contact Beth Landon at beth.landon@live.com

“The Haps section helps me decide which concerts I’m going to.”

“Soduko and crossword are my cure for boredom.”

“... I made a hat”

95% of UNM students read the Daily Lobo. DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS MARKET.

DAILY LOBO new mexico

ADVERTISING

277-5656


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.