NM Daily Lobo 022813

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

Blame game see Page 4

thursday February 28, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

‘One of the most unique people’ Chick-fil-A will

keep SUB spot

UNM student hit by car after crashing her own by John Tyczkowski

Board votes 8-3 to keep controversial restaurant

news@dailylobo.com

A 20-year-old UNM art and psychology double major died early Saturday morning on I-40 in a hitand-run. According to an article published in Wednesday’s Albuquerque Journal, Jennifer Bobrick was driving to a friend’s house when she crashed her SUV into a boulder by a frontage road. In the Journal article, Bernalillo County Sheriff ’s Office spokesman Aaron Williamson said Bobrick left her car after crashing and made her way onto the highway in a disoriented manner, where an unidentified driver struck and killed her. Williamson said the unidentified driver’s vehicle would have general front-end damage as well as a broken amber headlight. The Daily Lobo could not reach Bobrick’s parents or brother for comment. They created a web page dedicated to her memory, forevermissed.com/jenniferbobrick, which features photos, stories and poems about Bobrick, courtesy of her family and friends. Ryan Mulcahy, a high school

by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com

Photo courtesy of forevermissed.com/jenniferbobrick UNM student Jennifer Bobrick is remembered by family and friends as a fun-loving and enthusiastic person who “lived her life with passion and adventure” and wanted to pursue a career in art therapy. classmate of Bobrick’s, said on the website, “Jen was one of the most unique people I have ever met, even throughout all of my world travels. She was always happy and never had a bad thing to say about anyone.” Lauren Mui and Brooke Czoski, two high school classmates of Bobrick’s, said on the website, “If you knew Jennifer you could always be sure to remember her by her incomparable creativity in everything she did. … Her many stories

that somehow never ended … her way of always remaining positive no matter what the situation was.” According to the website, funeral services for Bobrick will be held at the McGee Memorial Chapel in Santa Fe today at 10 a.m. Bobrick’s friends will be hosting a candlelight vigil Friday at 4:30 p.m. at the Rose Garden Park in Santa Fe. People are asked to call (505) 798-7000 if they have any information on the unidentified driver.

MEN’S BASKETBALL

UNM whomps SDSU 70-60 By J.R. Oppenheim

assistantsports@dailylobo.com @JROppenheim The No. 14 New Mexico men fared much better the second time around against San Diego State than during their previous matchup, capturing a 70-60 victory over the Aztecs Wednesday night at The Pit. When the teams battled Jan. 26, SDSU thrashed UNM 55-34 and held it to a 25 percent field goal mark, one of the lowest in the team’s recorded history. The Lobos responded Saturday by hitting 47.7 percent from the field. They made 12 shots in 20 attempts in the second half, a 60 percent mark. UNM improved to 24-4 overall this season and 11-2 in Mountain West Conference play. “When you get pressured, you have to be able to drive the ball. If you can’t drive it, you get chewed up. That’s what happened to us in Game 1,” UNM head coach Steve Alford said. “(On Wednesday) we did a much better job driving it, and that opened things up offensively.” UNM sophomore center Alex Kirk scored a season-high 25 points and pulled down seven rebounds. Junior forward Cameron Bairstow added 16 points and junior guard Tony Snell had 10. Coming off his 46-point effort against Colorado State last Saturday, junior Kendall Williams scored only eight points but provided eight assists. No other player on either team made more than three assists Wednesday night.

Inside the

Daily Lobo volume 117

issue 111

Aaron Sweet / Daily Lobo Junior forward Cameron Bairstow fights to put up a shot against San Diego State forward DeShawn Stephens. Bairstow contributed 16 points to the 70-60 UNM victory on Wednesday at The Pit. UNM and SDSU battled tight throughout the first half as the Lobos held a 28-26 lead. New Mexico opened the game up with a 15-3 run, building a 48-33 lead. SDSU got no closer than

six points through the remainder of the game. Junior guard Jamaal Franklin was SDSU’s only double-digit scorer with 16 points.

Agro Argo

Reaching for nothing

see Page 5

see Page 8

After postponing its vote last semester, the SUB Board decided Wednesday to let Chick-fil-A retain its spot in the SUB. Eight board members voted to keep the controversial restaurant while three voted to replace Chick-fil-A with another restaurant. Rebecca Vanucci, a GPSA representative to the SUB Board and its president, said the board was supposed to vote on the issue in October, but postponed it until this semester to better assess student reaction to Chick-fil-A. She said she was overwhelmed by the amount of student participation in the survey. “In my four years on the SUB Board, this has never happened,” she said. “We’re talking about an issue, and we’re getting taped, and we’re getting a lot of audience.” In June and July of last year, Chick-fil-A CEO Dan Cathy made several public comments against same-sex marriage, saying that those who “have the audacity to define what marriage is about” were “inviting God’s judgment on our nation.” Several media outlets reported that the restaurant, with branches in 38 states in the U.S., has donated millions to anti-gay marriage groups such as the Family Research Council. On July 31, 2012, Chick-fil-A issued a statement saying it was leaving the debate over same-sex marriage to politicians. On Wednesday, the ASUNM Senate voted 15-3 in favor of a resolution that urged the University to replace Chick-fil-A. The student government passed the resolution after conducting a survey last month. The results showed that 85 percent of those surveyed were in favor of keeping Chick-fil-A on campus, while 15 percent were in favor of kicking it out. The SUB Board did a similar survey in cooperation with ASUNM and GPSA that ran from Jan. 28 to Feb. 11. According to a presentation by the SUB Board, 3,755 respondents composed of undergraduates, graduates and faculty members participated in the survey. Results indicated that 44 percent of respondents said Chick-fil-A’s principles are positive overall, while 41 percent said they are negative overall. Vanucci, who voted to kick out Chick-fil-A, said she was disappointed about the results of the vote. She said that because students who complained to the board about the restaurant

during recent months, the issue surrounding Chick-fil-A is a safety and a moral issue. “My main concern as SUB Board president is to keep the SUB as safe and accessible for everyone,” she said. “No matter how many people say, ‘just don’t buy the chicken,’ if someone told me that they feel unsafe … I should respect that feeling.” SUB Board members Debbie Morris and Priscila Poliana voted alongside Vanucci to remove Chick-fil-A from the SUB. Associate Vice President for Student Life Walter Miller, who voted to keep Chick-fil-A, said the issue about Chick-fil-A is not an issue of campus safety, although the resolution released by ASUNM last week frames it otherwise. He said that if the University recognizes a safety problem with Chick-fil-A, it will address it immediately.

“Nobody is in imminent danger in this campus because of chicken.” ~Steven Ybarra UNM student “Since the resolution came out, we really tried to validate some of the ideas,” he said. “If safety issues have ever been the case, then that should be dealt with by the administration ASAP. We pride ourselves on being able to have people voice their opinions and to work in the same environment, and so we want that challenge to be addressed.” Miller said that although the results of a University survey conducted by the SUB Board were broad, the results are still representative of the University community. According to the presentation, 14 percent of the SUB’s restaurant revenues come from Chick-fil-A, which is the fourth largest revenue among all SUB restaurants. Also according to the presentation, replacing Chick-fil-A would have cost the SUB at least $175,000. Miller said funds would have come from student fees and SUB revenues, as the SUB cannot ask for funding from the Legislature or from UNM’s repair fund. UNM student Steven Ybarra said the board made the right decision to keep Chick-fil-A. He said the restaurant does not threaten the safety of LGBTQ students. He said that because 85 percent of students want to keep Chick-fil-A on campus, according to a recent ASUNM survey, the decision was

see Chick-fil-A PAGE 3

TODAY

50 | 28


How Show PageTwo Thursday, February 28, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Me

to fight spring allergies

Sneezing, watery eyes and runny nose … sound familiar? Yes, allergy season is here. Allergies can ruin a beautiful day and sometimes seriously affect your life. They won’t always lead to asthma or be dangerous, but they can still be frustrating. Every year, nearly 40 million Americans suffer from seasonal allergies and related conditions. As the weather warms up and the trees begin budding, pollen starts filling the air and you might find yourself with red, itchy eyes, stuffed nose and even some breathing difficulties. Here are some tips from webmd.com that can help you survive this seasonal nuisance:

tip 1 tip 2 tip 3

Start treating allergies early. Pollen starts filling the air as soon as the weather gets warmer, which means you should start taking medications to control seasonal allergies around mid-February, because most allergens start filling the air in March. Avoid the outdoors and open windows, especially on dry, breezy days. Pollen is spread very easily with the wind. Rainy days are a relief, as the water washes away the allergens. Thus, if you find yourself spending time outdoors, always remember to take a shower afterward to get rid of the pollen.

tip 4 tip 5 tip 6 tip 7

If your runny nose is bothering you too much, try using a neti pot. It might not be the most comfortable or convenient solution, but warm water with a pinch of salt can be more effective than you think. When “natural” options fail, try using over-the-counter medications that reduce allergy symptoms. Other available medications include antihistamines, topical nasal sprays and decongestants, the last of which should be taken on a short-term basis only. You can also ask your doctor for a prescription nasal spray and antihistamine eye drops which might bring some relief. Another helpful tip is to consume a lot of vegetables that combat allergens, such as broccoli, citrus fruits, collard greens, onions, garlic, parsley and elderberries. Clean your air filters often and don’t forget about getting rid of dust on your bookshelves, vents and other places where pollen can collect.

Drink a lot of water. It will definitely help in cleansing and hydrating your body.

volume 117

issue 111

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

~Zuzanna Kajzer Design Director Connor Coleman Design Assistants Erica Aragon Josh Dolin 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.

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NEWS

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

Sonic to leave SUB during summer by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com

Sonic won’t be in the SUB after the end of the semester. In the SUB Board meeting Wednesday afternoon, Associate Vice President for Student Life Walter Miller said the board has already received confirmation from the owner of the restaurant. “We did receive notice this past week that Sonic is going to be leaving the institution this summer,” he said. “So that is another responsibility that we will come back to deciding.” Miller said the board plans to replace Sonic with another restaurant by the fall. He said that by summer, the board will identify how much the replacement process will cost. Miller said the SUB expects to begin construction as soon as

Chick-Fil-A

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2013/ PAGE 3

Correction In Tuesday’s paper, Felipe Acosta was incorrectly referred to as the vice chair of International Business Students Global. Acosta is the president of IBSG. The error was made in editing.

specific costs are identified. He said he expects Sonic’s spot in the SUB to be closed all summer. “We’re trying to stretch it out at least through the academic year, and then we’ll get to construction soon after we get everything done,” he said. According to the board’s presentation at the meeting, a SUB Board survey identified Sonic as the third-most popular restaurant in the SUB, following Saggio’s and Satellite. On Wednesday afternoon, the SUB posted a poll to its Facebook page asking students which restaurant they prefer to replace Sonic. As of Wednesday evening, Blake’s Lotaburger is leading in the poll, followed by Chipotle and Dion’s. Miller said the board will discuss prospective replacements for Sonic at its next meeting next month.

from PAGE 1

good for the majority of the University community. “If they feel unsafe, it’s because … they created a symbol of oppression that they feel they need to protect themselves from,” he said. “Nobody is in imminent danger in this campus because of chicken. The majority of students do want to keep Chick-fil-A here on campus.” Undergraduate student Tamekia Sanford said she agrees with the board’s decision. She said Chick-fil-A should have freedom of speech and that students should have the right to choose the food that they want on campus. She said students who don’t support Chick-fil-A MARCH 16, 2011should simply not buy food from the restaurant. “If you’re against Chick-fil-A why would you buy the food?” she said. “It’s like saying I’m for Victoria Secret, but Victoria Secret does not have anything for big girls in there. So when I’m in the mall, I pass Victoria Secret.” But UNM Social Justice League head Amy Vesper said she was disappointed with the vote. She said the board seemed to be against Chick-fil-A when her organization met with board members before

the vote, and that the members voted that way because the vote was done in public. “The SUB committee felt like their job could be on the line if they voted for Chick-fil-A to get kicked out of campus because it’s such a touchy issue,” she said. “Before this vote, the board seemed to be in favor of following through the University’s business policy regarding sexual orientation.” Vesper said Chick-fil-A poses a huge threat to student safety on campus, as students who want to get Chick-fil-A out of UNM have received threats from the opposing side. “There’s an employee in the LGBT Resource Center who has received a threat on their desk regarding Chick-fil-A being removed off of campus,” she said. “Also, the senator who sponsored this resolution has been receiving threats. One of the threats told her to not walk alone.” Vanucci said because of the vote, there will be no changes to Chick-fil-A’s contract with Chartwells and UNM. She said the board is set to discuss the results of the vote in their next meeting next month.

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LoboOpinion

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4

Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg

opinion@dailylobo.com

Letters

GOP obstructionism is a ploy to smear Dems Editor, I think it’s funny to see time and time again Republicans trying to shift the blame for their failures to Democrats. The Democratic Senate hasn’t passed a budget? Ha. It’s been the GOP-run House that has refused to compromise on anything the Senate or the president has put forward. It’s been the goal of the GOP, especially the incredibly stupid and corrupt Tea Party, to not let anything good happen for this country while Obama is in office. They want to convince the stupid and ignorant people of the country that Democrats are bad, and to blindly vote for Republicans, regardless of whether their policies will only make the rich richer and the poor even worse off. It’s the scare tactic they’ve been pulling since the 1950s, only repackaged. It’s no longer “Vote Republican, ‘cause if you vote Democrat, the commies will take over.” Now it’s “Vote Republican, ‘cause if you vote Democrat, they’ll steal all your money.” Typical GOP fearmongering. Caedmon Holland UNM student

Homophobes are the new Jews, apparently Editor’s note: This is in response to the article “ASUNM votes to evict mor chikin,” published in Friday’s Daily Lobo. The article was about ASUNM’s vote to recommend kicking Chick-fil-A out of the SUB. ASUNM conducted a student survey about the restaurant, and 85 percent of students surveyed said they wanted Chick-fil-A to stay. On Wednesday, the SUB Board voted 8-3 to keep the restaurant in the SUB. Editor, The Student Senate voted to ban “Chickfil-A” from the SUB because it wants to make the campus more friendly for gays? In April of 1933, anti-Semitic Nazi Germany began a boycott of Jewish businesses, which eventually led to the “Final Solution.” What’s next? Banning all religious groups, so that the atheists can feel comfortable? Where is the diversity in learning to live together? Ron Nelson Daily Lobo reader

Letter submission policy

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

Editorial Board Elizabeth Cleary Editor-in-chief

Alexandra Swanberg Managing editor Opinion editor

John Tyczkowski News editor

Column

Catholic clergy shelter evil, sow misery Church’s crimes range from exploitation to molestation by Peter Kindilien

Daily Lobo columnist opinion@dailylobo.com This subject isn’t exactly popular, but when children are endangered and adults are to blame, the abusive adults should be brought to justice for what they have done. If a cult in your neighborhood abducted your kids and did bad things to them, we’d want to disband the cult, lock their leaders up and throw away the key. Sinéad O’Connor, an Irish pop and folk musician, appeared on Saturday Night Live in 1992 and tore up a picture of the pope, whom she called “the real enemy.” Her young, promising career was pretty much sunk from that point on because the U.S. press and public crucified her, so to speak. Now she’s revealed that when she was 15, she was tossed in prison for petty theft and forced to work as a slave laborer for several years, until her father was finally able to procure her release. For most of the last century, the Roman Catholic Church ran laundries and sweatshops where women were used as a free workforce, and where abuse and mistreatment were rampant. Single mothers, many of them victims of domestic, prison or workplace assault, had their babies taken from them and sent to orphanages or the church adoption agency — for a healthy handling fee, of course. The church ordained that out-ofwedlock pregnancy was always the woman’s fault and, in complicity with the state, operated a lucrative human-trafficking ring that stretched around the world. Birth certificates were routinely forged or destroyed, and mothers and children who have tried to contact each other through the church have been stonewalled with a steady and consistent dose of refusal and obfuscation. Curiously,

most of the records regarding these events were conveniently destroyed in separate fires all around Ireland. This, of course, defines the modus operandi of the Roman Catholic Church whenever it is covered in shame and blame. A monsignor from a Connecticut diocese has just been indicted on charges slightly less repulsive than child abuse, but a bit shocking nonetheless: He was reportedly running a crystal meth business out of his church. So here we go again with the same old lies from the Vatican. The parishioners will have to pay if they’re to keep the law at bay. We see it in the news every week — child molesters harbored by the church, moved around in the cloistered secrecy of a shell game to hide the guilty and absolve the church of responsibility in these most lurid of affairs, allowing them to victimize new communities. A conspiracy of stealth and perversity.

I was one of those born in a prison of despair run by evil that didn’t care... Condoms, AIDS, birth control — the church insists on its role in dictating morality to society. But it seems to be losing that part by turning denial into art. The church’s opposition to abortion is rather out of proportion when we consider that it deems exploitation of the weakest members of communities perfectly acceptable. A cult with a smaller membership would not be permitted to protect so many pedophiles among its leaders. We should see through the church’s Dark-Age mentality and condemn the sexually perverted clergy, who have long plagued humanity. We should condemn this institution which drips in hypocrisy as it uses every lie to defend itself. Counting the thousands of families and people the church single-handedly destroyed and crushed, it is mind-boggling that it has the gall to

preach to us about social harmony and justice. There’s a movie called “The Shoes of the Fisherman” about a pontiff who sold off all the church’s wealth to buy food for starving peasants and hence prevent global war. The setup for a similar situation can be seen in current events involving North Korea’s litany of threats against the U.S. and other nations as it obsessively expands its nuclear arsenal — all while its economy collapses. But don’t expect to see the land and gold that was reaped from the sweat of parishioners’ backs being relinquished any time soon. So child abusers are protected, and if there’s one sure way to stifle hope, it’s with misery decreed by the pope. When you read about the latest cover-up coming out, don’t be misled by the church’s lies — just look deep into the clergy’s eyes. You may wonder what I know. Well, I’ll tell you. I was one of those born in a prison of despair run by evil that didn’t care and sent off to people who didn’t even know me. I’ve had enough experience with their kind to know that when authority speaks of love but then steals and assaults children, there’s a name for it: evil. It is up to us to condemn the church’s inappropriate behavior, its disregard for the meek and its legacy of hate and sleaze. People are going to have faith in whatever they come to choose, but when churches run the state, everyone will always lose. I tell you that it’s a curse, this knocking people to their knees and pushing them down into the dirt. It was pure insanity, their obsession with my profanity, while I was being slapped and beaten across my back, just for all the luck I lacked. No, it’s not much fun to live with violence when you’re young, forced to suffer in silence and always told to hold your tongue. It makes us cross-eyed and numb, withdrawn in shock, used to keeping feelings under lock. But the ghosts that haunt us and the psychic scars from being told no one wants us are always there, waiting to pounce down upon us in the darkness of our solitude.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Thursday, February 28, 2013/ Page 5

Iranians polarized by ‘Argo’ by Nasser Karimi

The Associated Press

TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian officials on Monday dismissed the Oscarwinning film “Argo� as pro-CIA, anti-Iran propaganda, but some young, moderate Iranians welcomed it as a fresh view of recent history. The movie, based on the escape of six American hostages from the besieged U.S. Embassy in Tehran in 1979, has not been screened in any Iranian theaters. But many Iranians have seen it nevertheless. In downtown Tehran, bootleg DVDs of “Argo� sell for about 30,000 rials, or less than $1. The movie has set off a spirited debate that exposed a generational divide. Iranians who took part in the 1979 Islamic Revolution picked apart the portrayals of Tehran at the time. But those too young to recall the events had a different view. “I want to know what the other side is saying,� said Shieda, a 21-yearold University of Tehran student, who gave only her first name for fear of a possible backlash for speaking with foreign media. Tehran City Council member Masoomeh Ebtekar — who was one of the students who occupied the U.S.

HAPS Listings Thursday Imbibe COLLEGE NIGHT $1 Pabst & $1 Fish Tacos ASUNM Southwest Film Center Renee 6:30pm and 8:30pm Dirty Bourbon Nathan Dean Cover $5 Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30 The Library Bar & Grill Thursday Ladies Night 8pm-2am Feat. the Infamous booty shake Ca$h Prizes $2.50 Corona and Landshark $3 Jose Cuervo Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, andFoosball Never a Cover Maloney’s Happy Hour 3-7: $1 off drinks (except bottled beer and features) Bar Olympics: Beer Pong, Quarters, and more with $3 Coors Light Bottles, $3 Pints & $5 Liters. Patio Party 9pm to close: $5 Pucker Vodka Shots and $6 Bombers. Outpost Performance Space Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Gamak 7:30 pm Groundbreaking Jazz-Indian Fusion

Embassy and acted as the spokeswoman for the captors — says the film exaggerates the violence among crowds that stormed the compound in November 1979. Fifty-two Americans were held hostage for 444 days, but a handful of embassy staff were sheltered by the Canadian ambassador. Their escape, using a fake movie as a cover story, is recounted in “Argo.� Ebtekar insists the hostagetakers were mostly students. But other accounts suggest militants and members of the country’s powerful Revolutionary Guard were involved. Iranian Culture Minister Mohammad Hosseini criticized the film. “The movie is an anti-Iran film. It is not a valuable film from the artistic point of view. It won the prize by resorting to extended advertisement and investment,� he said, according to the official IRNA news agency. He said Hollywood has “distorted history� as part of what Iranian officials call a “soft war.� Iran’s state TV called the movie “an advertisement for the CIA.� The semiofficial Mehr news agency called the Oscar “politically motivated� because first lady Michelle Obama at the White House joined Jack Nicholson via video link to Los

Angeles to help present the best picture prize. In contrast, retired teacher Reza Abbasi who saw the Revolution first hand, said the film was realistic. “I know Hollywood usually changes reality to make it attractive for movie lovers, but more or less it was close to the realities then.� Others said “Argo� shows the need for Iranian filmmakers to deal more with issues from the Revolution. The moderate Hamshahri newspaper said the movie “targeted the culture and civilization of Iran,� but it is worthwhile for Iranians to see a different perspective of the events that led to the collapse of relations between the U.S. and Iran. “Iranian audiences are seeing a new version of the events for the first time,� said a commentary in the newspaper. “This has been a weak point for our TV and cinema industry, which has not produced anything about the (U.S. Embassy takeover) after more than three decades.� Behnam Farahani, 28, a student in Tehran Art University, said he thought competing films “Django� and “Lincoln� were better than “Argo� in terms of structure and theme. “They deserved more attention. Argo was just a political movie, it was

Friday

Outpost Performance Space Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Gamak 7:30 pm Groundbreaking Jazz-Indian Fusion

Imbibe Happy Hour till 7pm DJ Malick 10pm ArtFacts Faculty Dance Concert Presented by UNM Theatre and Dance 7:30PM Rodey Theatre ASUNM Southwest Film Center Renee 6:00pm and 8:30pm

Fired Up Fridays Improve the healthcare of underprivileged communities 6-10:30pm at Pasion Latin Fusion Project Greenway Recycled goods fashion show 12-1pm in the Sub Atrium

Vahid Salemi / AP photo In this Feb. 14 photo, Tehran City Council member Masoomeh Ebtekar, who was one of the students who took 52 Americans hostage in the U.S. Embassy in 1979 and acted as the Iranian students’ spokeswoman, speaks in an interview with The Associated Press, in Tehran, Iran. Iran’s state TV dismissed the Oscar-winning film “Argo,� which is set during the hostage crisis, as an “advertisement for the CIA. a narration of a political event.� Mohammad Amin Sharifi, a movie fan in Tehran, was less harsh. “In my opinion, it’s a nice movie from technical aspects, and it was on the scale of Hollywood movies. But I don’t think it was worth a nomination for Oscar and other awards,� he said. Iran’s state-run film industry boycotted this year’s Oscars in the wake of an Internet video clip made in the U.S. denigrating the Prophet Muhammad that set off protests across

the Muslim world. The affair was not related to “Argo.� Last year, Iranian director Asghar Farhadi won the Oscar for best foreign film for “A Separation,� Iran’s first Oscar. A month before it won, Iranian authorities ordered the closure of the House of Cinema, an independent film group that operated for 20 years and counted Iran’s top filmmakers, including Farhadi, among its members.

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NOW CASTING FOR 2013 SHOW! Reserve your spot on the runway by Thursday, Feb. 28 @ 5:00PM! TCE@UNM.EDU

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Anaris with The Greylist-[AU] and Immodium Cover $7 Show @ 7pm March 2

HEALING PAINS BREAKING THE CHAINS!

Benefit show for local youth crisis! An OZZ Production, Please come help those who don’t have the power yet to help themselves!

SATURDAY

New Mexico Daily Lobo Blackwater Music HEALING PAINS BREAKING THE CHAINS! Benefit show for local youth in crisis! An OZZ Production, Please come help those who don’t have the power yet to help themselves! Cover $8 Show @ 7pm

Maloney’s Happy Hour 3-7: $1 off drinks (except bottled beer and features) Patio Party 9pm to close: $5 Pucker Vodka Shots $6 Bombers. Spotlight Specials: $4 off Smirnoff Flavors 10pm-Close

Saturday

Aux Dog Tick Tick Boom! 8pm March 9: Second Saturday Stand Up at 10.30pm

Imbibe Happy Hour till 7pm DJ Rotation10pm

ASUNM Southwest Film Center Renee 6:00pm and 8:30pm

Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-10

Cover $8 Show @ 7pm March 2

WEDNESDAY

World Language Expo 9am- 1pm Ortega Hall $2 admission Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball Never a Cover Anime Club’s Nostalgia Day 4:30-8:30pm Lobo A&B & Fiesta A&B Celebrate the Anime we all grew up with! Dirty Bourbon Nathan Dean opening for Josh Thompson Cover $10

TROPICAL GIRLS & SAZORAM, HEY TIGER AND MORE TBA! Cover $8 Show @ 7pm March 6

ArtFacts Faculty Dance Concert Presented by UNM Theatre and Dance 7:30PM Rodey Theatre

Non Alcoholic Drink Specials All The Time Pina Coladas • Mojitos • Margaritas LIKE US ON

Sunshine Theater *Sense & Change* *The Wailers* Doors /Starts @ 7:00 pm $22

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Sunday Imbibe Happy Hour ALL NIGHT Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 4-9 ASUNM Southwest Film Center Renee 1:00pm and 3:30pm Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball Never a Cover The Library Bar & Grill Now open at 11am DJ Official spinning 9pm-close!


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Monday Imbibe Happy Hour ALL NIGHT! Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30 Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball Never a Cover The Library Bar & Grill Happy Hour 4pm-7pm $3.50 U-Call-Its Half Priced Appetizers $2 Tacos DJ Official spinning 10pm-2am

Imbibe College Night with $1 Pabst & $1 Fish Tacos DJ Twisted Audio 9pm

Dirty Bourbon West Coast Swing! Two Dance Lessons Offered First class at 6:30pm $4-$8

Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30

The Library Bar & Grill Salsa Night with DJ Quico - 9pm The Best Salsa Night in Town! Free Salsa Lessons

Dirty Bourbon Bill Babnick $2 Cover Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball Never a Cover The Library Bar & Grill Drink Specials all Night

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Wednesday

Blackwater Music TROPICAL GIRLS & SAZORAM, HEY TIGER AND MORE TBA! Cover $8 Show @ 7pm

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Outpost Performance Space Ron Miles Trio featuring Bill Frisell and Brian Blade. Trumpeter-composer with renowned guitar innovator and master drummer. Two shows: 7 & 9 pm

Tuesday

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Thursday, February 28, 2013/ Page 7


Lobo Culture Culture editor / Nicole Perez / @NicolePerezM

hil Safier had been floating for two hours in about 800 pounds of Epsom salt and a foot of water in a soundproof, lightproof deprivation tank when he suddenly remembered he had to make a bank payment. “It was close to 5 o’clock, so I jumped out of the tank and jumped into my car. I was driving down Central to go to Wells Fargo, and all of a sudden I realized I was not fast enough to be driving a car,” Safier said. “I had to go, ‘Whoa, dude, you’re not a good driver right now.’ I dropped out of one completely quiet, slow environment into this fast-paced world that we live in and it was shocking.” Safier now does weekly floating sessions at Enlighten Others in Nob Hill, a spa-style business created by 27-year-old Kenneth Pintor. Floating is a physically relaxing and meditative activity in which subjects lie naked in a room-temperature

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mixture of Epsom salt and water inside a deprivation tank. The tank, which is soundproof and lightproof, is meant to block out all sensory experience. Pintor said that because the water, air and the person’s skin are all the same temperature, the floating person will often feel like he or she is dissolving. “It almost tricks your body into not knowing where your skin begins, where the water begins and where the air begins. It all feels like one,” Pintor said. “It feels like you’re suspended up in the air with just nothing around you; it feels like you’re floating in pure nothingness.” Pintor said a variety of people use the deprivation tank, from college students to retired professionals to people with chronic pain. Pintor said he floats every three or four days and the most common use of floating is stress relief. “When you’re stressed out —

you’re thinking about your midterms, you’re thinking about your job — your mind is constantly pulled away from you. You’re almost giving yourself to this piece of stress,” Pintor said. “So when you get into this tank and everything’s cut off, the only place you have to go is inside. When you get out, you’re able to pull all of yourself back to you.” Pintor said he started experimenting with his consciousness when he was in the Army and stationed in Albuquerque. “It took me a while to find myself,” Pintor said. “The reason I joined the military in the first place was to help people, but I realized when I was there that I wasn’t really helping people and it just wasn’t where I wanted to be. It was all part of the path, though.” He went to Santa Fe to try a deprivation tank for the first time in his early 20s, and he said he’s been hooked ever since. Pintor

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said deprivation tanks helped him change himself, so he wanted to help others by offering them access to a tank. “I feel that if everybody was floating, the world would be a much happier place, and we’re changing lives with every single person who steps into this tank,” Pintor said. “I truly believe that. The progress I would see in clients, how they evolved and changed as people overall, was amazing.” Deprivation tanks were created in 1954 by neuroscientist and philosopher John Lilly, who experimented with psychedelics and sensory deprivation. Safier said psychedelics and sensory deprivation can work together even though the separate experiences are very different. “With psychedelics, then, you actually have a lot of activity. In a way, psychedelics is the opposite of sensory deprivation — you’re experiencing things on an internal level

and you’re almost overwhelmed by the novelty of it,” Safier said. “In a way, they’re related but they’re totally different, and there’s ways that you can use them both together. The tank is about going inside, and psychedelics are like that but in a different way.” Enlighten Others intern Alan Moreno has been experimenting with various sound frequencies inside the deprivation tank. He hooked up underwater speakers inside the tank. “This is the creativity setting; this is the one I float with. It stimulates the mind,” Moreno said, as he played a single, vibrating tone in the tank. “There’s a lot of experimentation going down with sound, but we always test it on ourselves before letting anyone else do it.” Whether a client is seeking pain relief, relaxation or spiritual awakening, Pintor said the tank can do it all — just make sure beforehand you don’t have any bank payments to make.

STORY BY Nicole Perez

Enlighten Others Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 127 Bryn Mawr Drive S.E. (505) 270-6876 EnlightenOthers.com $45 for one hour, $55 for one and a half hours, $60 for two hours

PHOTOS BY Sergio Jiménez

ABOVE Kenneth Pintor floats inside the deprivation tank at his business, Enlighten Others, on Wednesday. The flotation tank is Albuquerque’s first meditation chamber designed specifically for sensory deprivation. FAR LEFT Floating in a deprivation tank, the body begins to lose the sensation of touch. The water inside the tank is heated to 95 degrees Fahrenheit, a temperature similar to the human body. “It almost tricks your body into not knowing where your skin begins, where the water begins and where the air begins. It all feels like one,” said Kenneth Pintor. LEFT Candles are placed in every room at Enlighten Others to try to give the clients a meditative and relaxing ambience. Enlighten Others is a full-service spa in Nob Hill that offers services such as hot yoga, massage and inversion therapy, allowing its clients to temporarily escape from the sights and sounds of society.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

FOR YOUR EARS

Thursday, February 28, 2013/ Page 9

You know you’re right.

a monthly music preview by Antonio Sanchez

The Wailers, Sense & Change Sunshine Theater Saturday, March 2 at 7 p.m. All ages $22

The Wailers is composed primarily of members of the original Bob Marley and the Wailers. The Wailers formed after Bob Marley’s death in 1981. While the band hasn’t released a new album since 2000, this legendary reggae group still stands strong after 30 years of touring. For Your Consideration: “Steppin’ Razor” is a catchy, laid-back tune, which steps away for a moment from the song’s chorus for a lax saxophone solo.

The Story So Far, The American Scene, Sweet Weapons, Summerfield Place The Gasworks Tuesday, March 5 at 7 p.m. All ages $12

Riding atop the recent wave of tough-guy pop-punk bands is The Story So Far. These California natives manage to bring something fresh to the tried and true genre, thanks in part to lead singer Parker Cannon’s harsh vocal approach and tight guitar lines. For Your Consideration: “Right Here” is an up-tempo track off the band’s upcoming album “What You Don’t See.” It features a particularly energetic Cannon, his voice carrying the song from beginning to end.

The Hush Sound, The Last Royals, Sydney Wayser Launchpad Wednesday, March 13 at 7:30 p.m. 13+ $12

The Hush Sound had the unfortunate luck of being a new pop band in the mid-2000s, a crowded time when the genre was dominated by floppyhair acts such as Panic! at the Disco and Fall Out Boy. The band recently reunited, and its knack for catchy piano-driven tunes is a joy to be heard. For Your Consideration: Lead singers Bob Morris and Greta Salpeter swoon together in “Where We Went Wrong,” a light acoustic duet marked by bits of banjo here and piano there.

Pierce the Veil, Memphis May Fire, letlive., Issues Sunshine Theater Friday, March 15 at 7 p.m. 13+ $17.50

California hardcore-act letlive. is one of the few bands in the genre that absolutely needs to be seen live. Lead singer Jason Butler owns the stage during live performances, often jumping along with the audience one moment, rolling and screaming on the floor the next. For Your Consideration: “Homeless Jazz” is a hardcore song with a swagger in its step, as Butler often swaps his shouting for a more pop-driven set of chops.

West Water Outlaws, The Breaktone, Snake Oil Spill Low Spirits Wednesday, March 20 at 9 p.m. 21+ $7

Listening to West Water Outlaws’ take on American rock ‘n’ roll is akin to drinking a tall, cold glass of Coca-Cola while watching fireworks explode after a baseball game. The band’s drums and guitars go down smooth, as lead singer Blake Rooker’s voice goes easy on the ears. For Your Consideration: The blues-y guitar lead-in to “Come On” and the accompanying array of cymbals and tambourines demand to be listened to while waving an American flag and releasing a handful of eagles into the sky.

Dinner and a Suit, The Limbs, Sam & Nate, Faze Fate, Slite Detour Blackwater Music Wednesday, March 27 at 8 p.m. All ages $12 presale tickets, $15 at the door

The Limbs is a local two-man blues-rock band akin to other two-man acts such as The Black Keys and Japandroids. The Limbs shares the stage with its sonic opposite, Dinner and a Suit, which is a Christian soft-rock band with tunes that hit as hard as a collision between a chinchilla and a bag of marshmallows. For Your Consideration: “Downtown Blues” by The Limbs is a simmering blues track in which guitarist Gage Andrews channels his inner Stevie Ray Vaughan with a towering guitar solo.

The Littlest Viking, Anaris, Martial Law

Blackwater Music Friday, March 29 at 7:30 p.m. All ages Ticket price at the door Fans of math rock and all things that feature twinkling guitar lines will love the instrumental rock group The Littlest Viking. The band’s playing is so precise, you might think it swapped surgical knives for guitar picks. Don’t mistake the band’s technicality for being too serious. With song titles such as “Theme from Magnum P.I.” and “The McRib is Back!?!,” this band is anything but serious. For Your Consideration: The tight guitar lines and quick drumming of “Dr. Patch Adams, You Saved My Life!” is reminiscent of the local math guitar gods of Kidcrash.

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CULTURE

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Prototype games draw testers by Justin Brough

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Lenten Mission March 4 through March 7, 2013 with Msgr. Douglas A. Raun

“How to be a Christian”

• Confessions 6:00pm to 7:00pm • Mass with Mission Homily at 7pm • Devotional Service following Mass

Even in a world of Angry Birds, Words with Friends and Temple Run, some people still make games from cardboard and plastic. Once a week, tabletop-game designers join gamers at Active Imagination, a Northeast Heights hobby shop, to “playtest” their latest board game creations. “Sure, you can buy a game that’s already made … but to come in on the ground floor? That’s awesome,” Ben Klein, Active Imagination store manager, said. “You get to give feedback, bounce ideas around … It’s really invigorated the community.” The weekly meet-up began when local game designer Brad Talton sought local playtesters to sample his first game. Since then, the meet-up has grown to accommodate multiple game developers and their fans. Talton began his career as a contractual app developer after graduating from the University of North Carolina in 2009. After being laid off

Photo courtesy of AlFamilyAndArena Game pieces arranged at Active Imagination for the store’s weekly board game playtesting session. Gamers get to play and give feedback to local board game developers every Tuesday. during the recession, he started his own company, Level 99 Games. The company’s first product, an iPhone app for Dungeons & Dragons players, was successful enough to allow Talton to focus on developing games. He began testing his game designs at Active Imagination with the help of other gamers and game developers. UNM student Matthew Locklin has playtested games at Active Imagination for two years, and he said he is inspired by Talton’s success. “He’s kind of … living the dream,” Locklin said. “I’ve always wanted to make a game and have it take off, and Brad found a way to do that.” Experimental versions of some of Talton’s games — Battle Connection: Devastation of Indines, or just BattleCON 2, for short; Pixel Tactics 2; and Disc Duelers — were available to play at Active Imagination on Tuesday. The three games all take place in the same universe, but that’s where the similarities end. BattleCON 2 is a twoplayer dueling card game in the style of an arcade fighting game, while Disc Duelers is a multiplayer free-for-all in which players take turns flicking their milk-cap-sized character tokens at their enemies. Pixel Tactics 2 plays similarly to BattleCON 2, in which two opposing players battle with their own deck of cards. In addition to board game designers, Tuesday night playtesting has drawn in video game developers. One

of the developers is Andrew Yang, self-proclaimed “tyrannical leader” and CEO of Rapscallion Inc. “We’re a bunch of pirates and misfits,” Yang said with a chuckle. Yang’s company is made up of many of his friends from high school and college, and is developing a scifi strategy game for Android devices. Yang said the development process for digital games takes more time than that of a board game because it entails programming and coding. “With board games, you can design it on paper and have a prototype much more easily,” Yang said. “It’s what kills a lot of small video game developers starting out.” The game development community at Active Imagination, however, shows no sign of shutting down. In fact, it is always welcoming new developers and playtesters. “It’s an open forum,” Talton said. “Anyone can bring a game and have it played … or if you like to try new games, come out and you’ll have fun, too. It works both ways.”

Playtesting

at Active Imagination Tuesdays starting at 5 p.m. 11200 Montgomery Blvd. N.E., Suites 8 and 9 Pre-order copies of BattleCON 2 from lvl99games.com

March 2nd 2:00 PM - 6:00 PM in SUB Ballroom-A A cultural event will be performed by Bangladeshi and other International students to celebrate “International Mother Language Day” to promote linguistic, cultural diversity and multilingualism. Organized by: Bangladeshi Student Association at University of New Mexico (BSAUNM) • www.bsaunm.org

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,F 28, 2013/ P lobo features Los Angeles Times DailyT Crossword Puzzle

New Mexico Daily Lobo

FOR RELEASE FEBRUARY 28, 2013

hursday

Year Zero

dailysudoku

age 11

ebruary

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis dailycrossword

Level 1 2 3 4

Solution to yesterday’s problem.

ACROSS 1 Send with an email 7 With 22-, 37- or 48-Across, familiar line 14 It has its charms 15 Password accompaniment 17 Mail for King Arthur 18 “Pull it together” 19 Fed. management and support agency 21 Fabric 22 See 7-Across 29 Ken and Lena of Hollywood 30 Tell-all account 31 Mosquito-borne fever 33 Islet 34 Preschool downtime 37 See 7-Across 41 Disapproving sound 42 Ballpark fig. 43 Two-__ 44 Shrill laugh 47 Bookkeeper’s deduction 48 See 7-Across 50 Literature Nobelist __ Bashevis Singer 52 __ Lanka 53 Words often said with a fist pump 57 Easy pill to swallow 62 Where a shopping list may be jotted down 63 Word of exasperation 64 Probable response to 7-/22-, 7-/37- or 7-/48-Across 65 Saved DOWN 1 Gardner of “The Killers” 2 NYY opponent, on scoreboards 3 Cat on the prowl 4 Excitement 5 Forks over reluctantly

FOLLOW US ON

2/28/13

By Steven J. St. John

6 __ trade 7 An O may symbolize one 8 Odessa-to-Austin dir. 9 To this point 10 Leaflike parts 11 “Life of Pi” director 12 Unseen “Red” character in “Peanuts” 13 Give off 16 N.T. book 20 “All bets __ off” 22 Buffalo Bill and the Wyoming city named for him 23 Kitchen spreads 24 Frigid forecast word 25 Tech sch. grad 26 “Bingo!” 27 Andy’s TV son 28 Pics 32 To-be, in politics 34 Capone associate 35 Words after crack or fry 36 1996 role for Madonna or Jonathan Pryce 38 Sets a price of

Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

39 Adjust, as to a new situation 40 Prey for a Hauskatze 44 Alpine dwelling 45 Battery not included, perhaps 46 Aurora, to the Greeks 48 Refrain from claiming 49 Prods

2/28/13

50 Like Vivaldi’s “Spring” 51 Joined the choir 54 Scooby-__ 55 Tape speed unit: Abbr. 56 Hanoi holiday 58 John of London 59 Nasty mutt 60 Birthday candle number 61 Prof’s deg.

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Houses For Rent

UNIVERSITY/ EASTERN, REMODELED 3BDRM, 2BA, storage, dishwasher,W/D, $750/mo, $700dd, gated community. 298-7353.

3BDRM 2BA FIREPLACE, big closet, living room, W/D, refridgerator and stove. Fenced yard. 2 /2 blocks to UNM. $1200/mo + $400 deposit. 505-881-3540 or 505-720-1934.

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.

2BDRM, 1BA, 780 sqft. Off-street parking. $730/mo, includes utilities. $300dd. No smoking, no pets. 302-A Girard SE. 505-270-0891.

Arts & Music Latin American Concert and Speaker Series 6:30pm – 7:30pm Keller Hall Carmina Escobar, voice. Contemporary music for voice, electronics and video. $10/8/6. Crystal Boyack, Violin 8:00pm – 9:00pm Keller Hall Senior Student Degree Recital.

Campus Events A.L.O.T. of Words 12:00pm – 2:00pm In front of Mesa Vista Hall Present the speeches, thoughts, poetry, and words of significant Black people to your community, Harlem Renaissance style. Lobo Day 12:00pm – 1:00pm SUB UNM’s 124th birthday! Free birthday cake! Big birthday SUB Photo! Get in the photo that hangs in the SUB, you must wear red. Sponsored by ASUNM Lobo Spirit Committee and SSE. To Write Love on Her Arms 7:00pm – 8:30pm SUB Ballrooms Conversation: pain, hope, questions and community. Speaking by Jamie Tworkowski. Music by Jarrod Gorbel.

Housing Wanted

Features

BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean, 2BDRM, gated. No pets. $830/mo, includes utilities. 255-2685 or 503-0795.

LOBO LIFE

New Mexico Daily Lobo Audio/Video INDEPENDENT SHORT FILM seeking crew for pre-production and production. Positions available on volunteer basis. Applicants should be passionate, creative, boundless and open. Inquiries can be sent to: themotelfilm@gmail. com

share a house with a man or woman. I need a bedroom with a bath. 505-836-1265.

Rooms For Rent 3BDRM HOUSE, TWO minutes to UNM. Share with two Students. No pets. No smoking. $495/mo. 730-9977. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to take over Lobo Village lease. $519/mo, utilities included except electric. Willing to pay -half of first month’s rent and app fee. If interested, please text/call 1-505-631-3915. SEEKING UNM FEMALE student to share a 3BDRM shared bath. Rent is $520/mo, utilities included. If interested please call 1-505-310-1529. FEMALE WANTED FOR Lobo Village lease take over. March’s rent paid for in full. Contact cheriseriver@gmail.com if interested. ROOM IN CASAS Del Rio available. Call Sam at 505-916-7064 as soon as possible for information and if you are interested. LIBERAL OPEN-MINDED roommate wanted. 3BDRM 2BA home near UNM. Small room, own BA. $500/mo. utilities included. Preferred serious, quiet student. Available March 1. 435-5973. N.E. HOME, quiet Carlisle area, parks, bike trails, N/S, female only, graduate student preferred. $350/mo. +1/2 utilities. 805-963-4174. QUIET STUDENT. NEAR UNM. Small furnished room. Utilities included. Mini fridge and microwave only. Private parking included. $300/mo. 505-242-2671. TWO STUDENT WANTED to share 3BDRM and 2.5BA home. 10 mins from campus. $450/mo. includes utilities. Call 505-399-9020. 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 WANTED ROOMMATE TO share Broadstone apt. female, serious student, n/s, clean, mature, friendly. $350/mo. Text 208-993-7141. SEEKING UNM 1BDRM 1BA on May. $300/mo + included. No 505-717-9909.

STUDENT to share Columbia,until end of $300 deposit. Utilities pet, No smoking.

Vehicles For Sale 2000 DODGE DAKOTA 90000 miles 4cylinder 2.5 liter 5speed. $2750. 255-3365.

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 interestbearing@aol.com ROLLING ROCK NEON light sign, in good condition. Neon light needs fixed. Comes with stand. Call 505-310-9213. WE BUY HOTWHEELS, model cars, and R/C hobby stuff!! Cash Today, 298-1023.

Vehicles For Sale 2000 DODGE DAKOTA 90000 miles 4cylinder 2.5 liter 5speed. $2750. 255-3365.

Child Care LOOKING FOR SITTER to work some evenings and a few weekends per month. Must be responsible and have experience with school age kids. My two active kids are 8 and 6 years old. Love of board games and Barbies a plus. Please have two excellent references, two years paid babysitting experience and your own transportation to my house. No smokers please! Will pay $8-$9/ hour depends on experience. If interested, call 453-1329. TWO EXTRA HANDS needed to assist a busy, fun loving family. Duties include helping mother/father M-F with breakfast, getting kids ready for school and or summer functions. Mornings from 5:30AM until 9:30AM (hours flexible and extendible) pay based on experience. Please e-mail jjhebert41@hotmail.com AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAM staff needed to assist children with homework/ reading and fun educational activities. $10.50 hr. PT. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

Jobs Off Campus EARN $10.50 HR. and assist school age children with homework and reading. Reliable transportation required. Must be available 1:45-6:00 pm, Mon-Fri. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE. EXPERIENCED TUTOR NEEDED, all subjects. ACT/SAT A+. Pay DOE. Send resume/CL to emily@apluscoaching. com

DANCERS WANTED AS entertainers for parties. Nights, weekends. Same day pay. 505-489-8066. Privatedancersn m@gmail.com VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551. THE POMPEO GROUP has an immediate opening with our team in a professional, fast-paced, yet casual environment in a very pleasant, convenient location in the NE Heights! We are looking for a positive, flexible and team-oriented part-time office assistant to join our team in our conveniently located office in NE Albuquerque! Primary responsibility is data entry, but also filing, some phone work and occasional errands. Strong computer/ typing skills, organizational and time management and excellent written/ verbal communication skills required. Flexible hours. Visit us today at www.pompeo.com and please like The Pompeo Group on Facebook! E-mail your resume to deanna@pom peo.com !!!BARTENDING!!! $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520 ext.100. PT RECEPTIONIST FOR law office. $10/hr to start. Work hours 8am-12pm M-F. Email resume or letter of interest to ktm@morrisseylewis.com THE QUIKRETE COMPANIES is seeking a seasonal merchandiser in New Mexico. Responsibilities include: maintain and install merchandising concepts and planograms in retail locations, cross-merchandising, assist in coordination and implementing product training and promotional events. Employment effective: April 2013 thru Sept. 2013. Requirements: 1-2 years of college education preferred. Individual must possess strong social and organizational skills. Ability to participate in trade events during various weekends. Flexible hours, a confident attitude, the ability to lift up to 80-pounds, and reliable transportation is a must. Must have a clean driving record. Minimum 18 years of age. Compensation: Hourly rate, mileage reimbursement. Please send resume to: thovda@quikrete.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.

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277-5656

Campus Calendar of Events

Lectures & Readings

Entre el Dicho y el Hecho: Xican@ Studies in 50 Years 4:00pm – 5:00pm Ortega Hall Reading Room 335 Presented by Reynaldo Macias, chair of the Department of Applied Linguistics at the University of California, Los Angeles. Biomedical Informatics Seminar Series 9:00am – 10:00am North Campus “VA Informatics Update” presented by Glen Murata, MD. End of Month Discussion 12:00pm – 1:00pm African American Student Services Meeting of the Minds: Art Conversations 12:30pm – 1:30pm Art Museum, Lobby “Martin Stupich: Remnants of the First World” led by Curator, Michelle Penhall, UNM Art Museum. Public lecture 2:00pm – 3:30pm Honors Forum Public lecture Presented by Matthew Batt, Humanities/Scribendi candidate. CQuIC Seminars 3:30pm – 4:30pm Room 190, Physics & Astronomy “Topological quantum error correcting codes” presented by David Poulin, Sherbrooke University.

Department of Biology seminars 3:30pm – 4:30pm Castetter Hall 100 “Biological Soil Crusts as a Model System in Community, Ecosystem, and Landscape Ecology” presented by Matthew Bowker. Water & Energy in NM: Conversations on Our Common Future 5:15pm – 6:30pm Garcia Honda Auditorium “Oil and gas industry’s perspective on the need for water and energyrelated regulations” presented by Randal Hicks. Of Zombies and Brains: The Life of a Neuroscientist 5:30pm – 8:30pm Centennial Engineering Auditorium Presented by Dr. Timothy Verstynen (‘01 BA). Pre-talk reception in Hodgin Hall, 5:30. Talk in Centennial Engineering Auditorium, ~6:30.

Meetings AISB RA Info Session 2:30pm – 3:30pm Ethnic Centers’ Conf Rm 1157 Mesa Vista Hall Join the American Indian Summer Bridge (AISB) team in helping prepare incoming American Indian freshmen for success! School-Age Summer Camp Family Meeting 6:00pm – 7:00pm UNM Children’s Campus Hosted by UNM Children’s Campus.

Sports & Rec Jitterbugs Anonymous 8:30pm – 10:30pm Johnson Center RM B555 Two lessons offered. No partner or experience required.

Student Groups & Gov. Transition UNM Weekly Meeting 5:00pm – 6:00pm SUB Scholars Wellness Committee Meeting 8:30am – 9:30am SUB Alumni Secular Student Alliance Meeting 12:00pm – 1:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B Student Coalition for Diversity 12:30pm – 2:00pm SUB Acoma A & B Student Dharma Meditation Meeting 5:15pm – 6:30pm SUB Spirit Campus Crusade for Christ 6:00pm – 10:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B Voice of Inspiration 6:00pm – 9:00pm SUB Sandia American Red Cross Meeting 7:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Mirage- Thunderbird

Theater & Films This is 40 3:30pm SUB Theater Mid Week Movies Renee 6:00pm & 8:30pm SUB Theater ASUNM Southwest Film Center The Revenge of the Space Pandas 7:30pm – 9:00pm Experimental Theatre A dramatic comedy about a small group of friends evading capture when they leap free of Earth’s boundaries. $12/$10/$8.

Workshops Grant Writing Discussion Focusing on Subsections of Proposals 2:00pm – 3:00pm Centennial Science & Engineering Library, LL2 room 255 Graduate students are offered 50 distinct educational sessions at no cost to students. ADHD Coping Skills: Workshop Series 3:30pm – 5:00pm SHAC Learn strategies to study effectively and maintain focus. ADHD diagnosis is NOT required. No charge to UNM students.

Email events to:

calendar@dailylobo.com

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com


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