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Lottery Scholarship bill up for debate
Thursday, Februar y 14, 2019 | Vo l u m e 1 2 3 | I s s u e 4 4
UNM faculty push for unionization By Kyle Land @kyleoftheland
Courtesy Photo
Photo courtesy of the UNM Newsroom.
By Danielle Prokop @ProkopDani The Lottery Scholarship mandate is up for debate in the Roundhouse — again. New Mexico Senate Bill 283 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday, encountering only a single dissenting vote, and now heads to the Senate floor. This bill is sponsored by Democratic State Senators Jacob Candelaria and John Arthur Smith, who also serves as Senate Finance Committee Chairman. SB 283 would eliminate the 30 percent minimum of monthly gross revenue of the New Mexico Lottery that goes to the lottery tuition fund, and the Senate Education Committee amendment added payment goals. Here’s the breakdown of what the bill would do: • The bill changes the amount of money and the pay schedule. No longer will it be monthly deposits that go into the lottery fund (run by the State Treasurer). The amount will change from “gross” to “net” (the difference between the total amount verses what’s left over). • Guarantee a transfer $40 million from revenues in fiscal year 2020. Increase to $40.5 million in FY 2021, and $41 million for “fiscal year 2022 and subsequent fiscal years.” • However, if the lottery does not meet the $41 million goal: the next year will revert back to the previous pay schedule of “not less than 30 percent of gross revenue.” • The final paragraph of the bill trims management, overhead and contracting costs by one percentage point a year. Overhead
cannot exceed 17 percent of revenue in 2020, 16 percent in 2021 and cap at 15 percent from 2022 onward. Currently, of gross sales, the New Mexico Lottery sets aside 30 percent of yearly net revenue. This averages about $1,721.17 per student, per semester — since 2007, the average has been $42 million. This system means that if ticket sales are high, the Lottery Scholarship sees an increase (this also depends on a combination of tuition fees and enrollment numbers), but if sales drop, so does the fund. The fund covered 100 percent of tuition until state legislators approved a decrease to 90 percent for the 2015-16 school year. In 2017, another decrease limited coverage to only 60 percent of tuition. Debate first addressed SB 283’s name: “limiting the amount of revenue the New Mexico Lottery may expend for operational expenses,” which has been called “as deceptive as any I’ve seen” in an op-ed by Milan Simonich in the Santa Fe New Mexican. Candelaria justified the bill’s title. “The reality is the drafters picked the titles, we didn’t,” Candelaria said. “There was no intent to defraud or mislead anybody.” Candelaria, joined by the New Mexico Lottery’s CEO David Barden, said the lottery is being hampered by the required donation because they have to make their prizes smaller. “There’s no guarantee that the kids are going to win out, period,” Candelaria said. “We can stick with the 30 percent and the results it gives us or we can try something else and try growth and if it doesn’t work, we’ll go back to 30 percent.” Candelaria said if the measure does not work, the system will revert to the 30 percent requirement. Sen. John White (R-Albuquerque) was the only dissenting vote on the finance committee. He said the bill is nearly identical to a 2018 measure, he feels it’s harder
to understand this round. “The problem is, it’s still going $41 million dollars in the lottery fund and there’s no guarantee that’ll grow,” White said. White said he wants a commitment that the scholarship fund will see increases if sales increase. “If you’re going to be able to grow your gross sales, you oughta be able to grow the Lottery fund also, in the same proportion,” White said. “I understand you want to have more money for prizes, but it looks to me it comes at the expense of the scholarships.” The Associated Students of New Mexico State University Director of Governmental Affairs William Bradford, endorsed the bill. The Daily Lobo previously reported that Associated Students of UNM Governmental Affairs Director, Libertie Green, said her agency’s top priorities include opposing bills that would reduce or eliminate funding for the Lottery Scholarship. ASUNM was not present at the committee hearing today, but Green said ASUNM President Becka Myers advocated for the implementation of the floor. Green said the jump from 90 percent tuition covered to only 60 percent was harmful to students, and the bill now provides a range with the floor at $41 million. “After 2007 there was a lot of inconsistency, one year we only got $37 million,” Green said. “With the 30 percent (requirement) you’re always taking the chance that although you can get about $41 million, you can get significantly less.” A nearly-identical measure was tabled on the Senate floor after passing committees and a floor vote on the House side. Danielle Prokop is a senior reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted by email news@dailylobo. com or on Twitter @ProkopDani.
Over 1,600 faculty members at the University of New Mexico’s five campuses declared their desire to start a union for full-time and parttime faculty members. The collective bargaining unit will go under the name of United Academics of the University of New Mexico (UA-UNM). The 1,600 faculty members are comprised of more than one half of all faculty at UNM. The union must prove that 30 percent of employees want a union in order to organize. According to the UA-UNM website, members will be required to pay dues, which will average around one to two percent of an employee’s base salary. The union is also working in conjunction with the American Federation of Teachers and the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). “Faculty are the backbone of our institution, yet we have seen over and over how decisions are made at every
level that impact us, our students and staff, with only cursory input from University stakeholders,” said Julia Scherba de Valenzuela, associate professor of special education at UNM. The first step of the process is for the University to review the petition. If they recognize the union, then the union automatically has collective bargaining power. If a dispute arises, it will be handled by the UNM Labor Management Relations Board. Afterward, an election will be held, and if the union wins the support of the majority of voters, then the body will have the authority to collectively bargain. Representatives of UA-UNM met with University President Garnett Stokes during her traveling office hours on Wednesday to present the petition to her. “I am committed to listening, fostering collaboration and developing relationships within our campus community, and in that spirit, am looking forward to learning more about this proposal,”
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MENS BASKETBALL
Lobos outpace SJSU in 32-point win
By Cameron Goeldner /@goeldfinger /Daily Lobo
Drue Drinnon looks to pass during the second half of Wednesday’s game at Dreamstyle Arena - The Pit. The Lobos won 92-60.
By Robert Maler @Robert_Maler San Jose State stood toe-to-toe with the University of New Mexico men's basketball team for a while, but the Lobos eventually wore the Spartans down and cruised to a 32-point blowout on Wednesday evening. New Mexico (11-13, 5-7 MW) registered the first points of the game after sophomore point guard
Keith McGee drilled a 3-pointer to open the scoring. But Noah Baumann answered right back to tie things up, one of eight first-half ties along the way. The Spartans tied things up at 9-9 just a tick over four minutes into the game and even took a couple of brief leads in the early going. UNM head coach Paul Weir said San Jose State made things tough
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Incoming Student Regent hopes to build relationships By Tom Hanlon
@TomHanlonNM Editor’s Note: The is the first in a series of Daily Lobo profiles on the newly nominated members of the Board of Regents. The University of New Mexico Board of Regents’ primary responsibility is making critical decisions for the University that affect it financially, and greatly impact its management and goals. While six of the seven regents are established members of the community, one of them brings a unique perspective to the table — the student regent. Melissa Henry, a Ph.D. candidate at UNM working on her doctorate in counselor education and supervision, was appointed on Feb. 9 by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham as the student regent for a two-year term. Henry said she did not originally expect to be appointed to the position. “I didn’t anticipate ever being selected as the student regent and the reasoning behind that is because I’m not a New Mexico native,” Henry said. “I’m not really a true representation of the student body. I’m a Ph.D. student. Most of the students here are undergrads.” Henry is originally from California where she earned her bachelor’s
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regent are centered around improving communication. “I’m thinking about communication in teams and leadership, and really that’s one of my first goals going into this position, is building a relationship with this team I’m going to have to work with,” Henry said. After building a relationship with the other regents, Henry said she wants to focus on how to connect with the student body in order to advocate for and support students. Henry said she believes the student voice has been lost in the Board of Regents but the recent athletic department controversy has helped bring student and community voices to the table. “I had never seen that many students or community members ever show up to a meeting,” Henry said. “For once, the community and students were interested in what was going on. And they weren’t just interested, they were advocating, they were actively speaking up, holding signs, it was so exciting to see that much sense of community.” In August of last year, the Board of Regents upheld their July decision to cut Athletic Department spending and some varsity sports. That meeting drew a large number of concerned community members.
Henry said she believes the Board of Regents can use the community’s current interest in University affairs to build a more positive relationship with the community. “I think it’s important that there is input coming in from the University — from the community about what’s happening — what’s affecting the students and the community,” Henry said. “So I think that’s my overarching goal... having a relationship with
the community of students at UNM and the greater community of Albuquerque and New Mexico.”
It helped that UNM was sizzling from behind the 3-point line, shooting nearly 52 percent as a team for the game on the way to hitting 14 long-range shots, but New Mexico held a 14-2 point edge in points of turnovers and dominated pace of play with a 35-2 advantage in fast break points. UNM junior transfer Corey Manigault had a solid game on both ends of the floor, turning in a 17-point performance that included six rebounds, a couple of assists, a steal and a block to round out his stat line. "(Manigault) has had a long year in a lot of different ways," Weir said. "I'm really glad that he broke
through a little bit because he has really committed himself in practice here of late." Weir said the team has a rule that, if a player has to ask for a substitute because he's been playing so hard, that player can go back in whenever they are ready. He said tonight was the first time this season Manigault has put his hand up to ask for a break. "To me that's a sign of growth from thinking mostly about yourself to thinking about the greater good of the team and it was a big step," the head coach said. Prior to the first four minutes of the second half ticking away, New Mexico had pushed its lead to 23 points, moving ahead 57-34 on the
scoreboard on a Manigault layup. McGee and Manigualt combined to shoot 75 percent from the field and got plenty of support from their teammates as San Jose continued to struggle. Senior guard Anthony Mathis got loose and drilled some 3-pointers, chipping in 16 points on the night to the cause, while sophomore Makauch Maluach called 14. The Lobos limited the Spartans to just 35 percent shooting on the night and increased its lead to as many as 33 points, taking a 90-57 lead in the waning moments of the contest. New Mexico's 92-60 victory over San Jose State probably isn't all that impressive as the Spartans have
lost several lopsided matchups during their 14-game losing streak, but Weir said the result could be the start to something good. The Lobos will take on Fresno State on Saturday, Feb. 16 when UNM hosts the Bulldogs at 5 p.m. in Dreamstyle Arena — aka The Pit.
seat at the table,” Fontenla said. Fontenla is also a member of the Faculty Senate, and said the two bodies will work hand-in-hand on issues facing faculty. Since faculty members are public employees, they are legally not allowed to strike, although many public bodies have done so in the past. However, the UNM Labor Management Relations Resolution
requires the University to bargain collectively “in good faith” with a union representative. The University is also not allowed to refuse to comply with any labor agreement. Fontenla said the faculty unionizing will have a direct benefit on students, adding “if faculty are heard and faculty are content, this will have a direct effect on the quality of education at UNM.”
Numerous other universities and colleges have faculty unions, including Rutgers, Michigan State University and Central New Mexico Community College. Last month, the faculty of Wright State University, a public university in Dayton, Ohio, went on strike for a total of 20 days, with health care being the primary issue.
Kyle Land is the editor-inchief for the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted by email at editorinchief@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @kyleoftheland.
By Anthony Jackson/ @TonyAnjackson/ Daily Lobo
Portrait of Student Regent Nominee Melissa Henry.
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Robert Maler is the sports editor for the Daily Lobo. He primarily covers basketball and baseball and contributes content for various other sports as well. He can be contacted at sports@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Robert_Maler.
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Stokes said in a written statement. Matias Fontenla, associate professor of economics, was one of the representatives who met with Stokes and said the union seeks to address a number of issues facing UNM faculty, including academic freedom, diversity in the workplace and compensation — specifically the cost-of-living adjustment. “By forming a union, we get a
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and took away some things he and his team wanted to do early, but the Lobos were able to keep pace and a second McGee 3-pointer brought things to a dead heat, 19-19, with 9:24 remaining in the half. The Lobos seemed to turn the corner when Vance Jackson nailed back-to-back triples to put New Mexico up 33-30. UNM never trailed again and continued to began to build a sizable lead thanks to applying some pressure that seemed to wear down the Spartans and resulted in a 42-32 lead at the break. Weir credited the Lobos' secondhalf defensive effort, saying the first four minutes after halftime really set the tone for the rest of the game.
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degree in psychology and master’s degree in counseling from California State University, Fresno. Henry is a certified mental health counselor and works for a private practice in Albuquerque. Her work is primarily counseling couples but also serving individuals with trauma histories. During the Summer 2018 and Fall 2018 semesters, Henry served as the chief of staff of the Graduate and Professional Student Association (GPSA). Prior to holding that position, Henry said she didn’t know what the Board of Regents was. “I don’t think a lot of students know what it is,” Henry said. “Unless you’re directly involved with some initiative on campus, or in student government, it’s not something that’s really on your mind.” As GPSA’s chief of staff, Henry attended Board of Regents meetings and became familiar with the board’s responsibilities. “I think that’s one of the biggest things that’s prepared me (is) having a relationship with students on campus from different associations, ASUNM, GPSA and kind of seeing the back door — the backside of how administration works at UNM and what are some of the things that are really important to us,” Henry said. Henry said some of those important issues she wants to bring to the table as the student
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019 / PAGE 3
LOBO OPINION
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The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
Thursday, February 14, 2019
Opinion Editor / opinion@dailylobo.com
LETTERS
We should be more honest with each other in politics Editor, It is my hope to see the day when both conservative-Republicans and liberal/progressive Democrats will become more politically honest and truthful with the American people. There is tremendous room for improvement by both sides. For example, I just had the displeasure of reading a letter to the editor in which someone claims
that all liberal/progressive Democrats are "dangerous" because they want to deny freedom of speech to all conservative-Republicans. Can we please stop this kind of over-generalizing and over-exaggerating that is done by both sides? The one constant mantra, myth and "greatest hit" that comes from the conservativeRepublican side is the false belief that most of the "mainstream media" is heavily pro-liberal/ progressive Democrat. This is "an oldie but a goodie" from
the right-wingers amongst us. If there is some way to do this, I would love to provide your readers with research evidence that proves that the opposite is true. I have read it. One objective study found that more Americans read pro-conservative-Republican daily newspaper editorials than the opposite. If anyone looks up "conservative think-tanks" and "liberal think-tanks" online, they will see and prove to themselves how many times there are more conservative ones than liberal ones. Look it up. It is overwhelming.
I can also direct readers to the recent empirical research done by "The Brookings Institute" which concluded that conservative-Republicans in the news media and conservative-Republican politicians and political candidates all insult liberal/progressive Democrats more than the reverse. Also, a well-known conservative author has admitted that the "mainstream media" is now more conservative-Republican than the opposite. She states that many conservatives know that
this is true, but pretend that it is not true because they love to play the "underdog" and to act like they are "victims" and are "outnumbered" because it gets them a lot of votes and a lot of financial donations. I could go on and on because I have more research evidence and studies that I can share with your readers. Stewart B. Epstein
PhD
Volume 123 Issue 44 Editor-in-Chief Kyle Land
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019 / PAGE 5
The best songs to send to your valentine By Sophia Sambrano @sambsoph Valentine’s Day is upon us. Whether you are anti-Valentine’s Day, a die-hard fan or somewhere in between, you can’t deny the power of a good love song to uplift your mood, and if you have a crush, all the more reason to celebrate. If you’re still struggling to find a way to show your loved ones you care, never go wrong with sending your loved ones a playlist. Here is a playlist of upbeat, lovey favorites to get you started. "Lo Que Siento" by Cuco Translating to “How I Feel,” “Lo Que Siento” is instant classic with all the fixtures of a good love song, plus verses in spanish and a trumpet break down. The song features sing-song verses and a beat that is reminiscent of old-school Chicano rap. A bilingual anthem for all of the lovers fluent in Spanglish, this is a cute lo-fi tune to send to your cariño. Lovey Lyric: “You came to my life and now I feel alright.” "Who Hurt You?" by Daniel Caesar Daniel Caesar is rightfully known for his soulful love ballads. “Who Hurt You?” details his missed encounter with an Atlanta dancer. With the song, Caesar ran a missed connections advertisement online to try and get the dancer’s
Thursday Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8pm 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
attention. Doing what he does best, Caesar delivers a sexy, feel-good song that’s perfect to send to that one special person you’re willing to publicly thirst after. Lovey Lyric: “Changed my approach, no more loving these h*es” "My Favorite Part" by Mac Miller feat. Ariana Grande A song from a simpler time, “My Favorite Part” is everyone’s go-to for an R&B love song. Mac Miller and Ariana Grande’s chemistry is undeniable in this iconic song where they express their love for one another in classic forms. Now a tear-jerker, send this song to your ultimate star-crossed lover to let them know your love transcends worlds. Lovey Lyric: “It’ll be alright babe, see, me, I got you covered/ I’m gon’ be your lover, you might be the one” "You're the One" by Kaytranada and Syd This song by Kaytranada featuring the Internet’s Syd delivers Syd’s vocals at their most powerful and exuberant. The song features Kaytranada’s signature jazzy electronic production in a joyful and catchy song. The lyrics showcase Syd professing her love in a big way, and will maybe inspire you to do the same. Even if you don’t have a crush to spill your love to, “You’re the One” is the type of song you can’t help to bop along to. Lovey Lyric: “You know I want you baby, you know I do. I give you
my heart and the rest is up to you.” "Only You" by Father The notoriously vulgar Father shows his soft side on “Only You” off of last year’s Awful Swim, and the Atlanta rapper does not disappoint. Although only slightly differing in Father’s usual topics of partying and having fun, “Only You” shows Father’s faithful love despite constant partying. This song is perfect to send to your lover to let them know they have your full attention despite any other distractions. Lovey Lyric: “Baby you a goddess/Like Athena. My sweet baby angel nasty like Trina.” "Enter Galactic (Love Connection, Part I)" by Kid Cudi One of Kid Cudi’s classic tunes from A Man on the Moon Volume I, “Enter Galactic” perfectly captures the feeling of adventure and excitement with a new lover. Cudi details excitement over new experiences with a lover and that wholesome feeling of wanting to share everything them. An upbeat, feel-good song about psychedelics, Cudi is doing what he’s become known for on “Enter Galactic.” Discovery and curiosity with that special someone are the main themes here, making it perfect to send to your trippy Valentine’s Day crush. Lovey Lyric: “Tell me your secrets, the things that make you tick.” "Suede" by NxWorries This soul-influenced song is by NxWorries, Anderson .Paak and
Anthony Jackson/ Daily Lobo / @TonyAnjackson
From top left, Daniel Caesar, Cuco, Kid Cudi and NxWorries.
Knxledge’s side project. Originally released on Valentine’s Day 2015, the song is a joyous declaration of intense love. As the title suggests, “Suede” is a smooth song where .Paak playfully goes off about his love interest. “Suede” is the type of song you can scream along to with your lover or with your friends. Lovey Lyric: “Now most of ya'll can't do sh*t/But all my chicks
cook grits/And roll a spl*ff, at the same d*mn time/You ain't live long enough, to have a b*tch this fine.” Sophia Sambrano is a freelance reporter for the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted by email at culture@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @sambsoph.
HAPS
Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com Alibi Valentine’s Singles Dance Twist Night Club, 109 Fourth Street, NW 8pm-1am $10 tickets at the door Ages 21+
Friday Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8:30pm 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
Saturday Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8pm 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
Sunday Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8pm, 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
The Entertainment Guide Tuesday
Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com
Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8pm, 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
Monday
Taqueria El Cotorro 11am-8pm, 111 Carlisle Blvd NE (505) 503-6202
Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com
Wednesday
Hotel Luna Mystica Lodging for skiers, by skiers $20 off lift tickets for Taos Ski Valley Prices as low as $25 a night! 25 ABC Mesa Rd. El Prado, NM 505-350-6594 www.hotellunamystica.com
PAGE 6 / THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019
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ASUNM president shares her five favorite books By Justin Garcia @Just516garc From tragic to uplifting and cheerful to sobering, Associated Students of the University of New Mexico President Becka Myers’s five favorite books cover a wide range of time and genre. “It has to be good but it also has to have impact,” Myers said describing why she chose these five books. “All of these books have had some sort of larger contextual things behind why they are my favorite books.” “Wuthering Heights” by Emily Bronte Myers said she first came across this mid-nineteenth century english classic on her mother’s desk. She said she was in the fourth grade then. “(My parents) did shield me from very adult themes, but when it came to conversations like those that happen in Wuthering Heights,” Myers said referring to themes of
abuse and obsession in the book, “I was very much an equal when it came to those things.” “I didn’t really understand it when I first read it to an extant, but I had seen the masterpiece classic film version of it and so I did kinda get the underlying story,” she said. “Three Cups of Tea” by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin Myers said she read this one in middle school. The book chronicles Mortenson’s desire to climb K2, one of the world’s tallest mountains, which sits on the border between China and Pakistan. When Mortenson comes down on the Pakistani side, he comes across a village without a school. Years after the book’s publication, it was revealed that the book exaggerated Mortenson’s success in building schools and fabricated a story of his abduction by the Taliban. “I didn’t really dive to much into that when I was in middle school,” Myers said. Instead, Myers said the message
of the book still rang true. She said she hadn’t read it cover to cover since middle school, but did go back to read certain stories. “The message of it, the proportion of peace, is still a beautiful one that drilled home,” Myers said. “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration In The Age of Colorblindness” by Michelle Alexander “The book for me showed how systematically (the U.S.) operates as...a system for racial control.” The book’s author looks at the history of racism and segregation in the U.S. and argues that segregation can and does exist without the overt legal mechanisms of the Jim Crow era. “People can say we as a society have progressed … but when we look at it there is still room to go,” she said. “The Little Prince” by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry Written by a French Aristocrat in midst of World War Two, “Le Prince Petit,” as it was originally called in French, follows the little prince as ventures across worlds.
He visits places and meets people analogous to real world. Myers said she her first time reading this one came at French camp. “When I first read it I thought it was beautiful. I had just been learning how to read french and so I didn’t really understand. It was in a tense I didn’t really get.” She said she was proud of herself for finishing it. “I hadn’t really experienced a significant loss,” she said referring to one of the major themes of the book. “As I was at that camp, I had gotten the phone call that my mom had passed away.” Myers was 16 at the time. “At this camp any other type of literature that was in English was considered contraband. And so I flew home and the only book I had was this book. I read it again, I felt differently toward it after that.” “The message from the fox about loss, ‘it is time you have lost for your rose that makes your rose so important,’ I think really stuck to me and will always stick to me.”
Now, Myers said she looks back on that scene as something beautiful and painful. “That’s the beauty in art,” she said. “You can kinda pick what things mean to you.” “Where The Sidewalk Ends” by Shel Silverstein “This is actually my mother’s favorite book. Well, it was one of them. I remember she was read it to me as a kid and she would say Shel Silverstein was her favorite. “I think (the poems) are funny. I think they are beautiful. I think they do address some adult themes in a lot of ways. I think they’re humorous,” Myers said. “ When I first read them as a kid I was like ‘what is this?’” Published in 1974, this collection of children’s poetry made the fifth and final spot on Myers’ list. Justin Garcia is a staff reporter for the Daily Lobo. He primarily covers student government. He can be contacted at news@dailylobo. com or on Twitter @Just516garc.
Michael Sam speaks on being gay in the NFL By Kyle Land @kyleoftheland Students were filled with both tears and cheers when Michael Sam, the first openly gay athlete drafted by a major American sports league, spoke at the University of New Mexico on Tuesday night. The public speaking event was held in the Student Union Building ballrooms, where hundreds of students and community members gathered to hear Sam tell his life story. “I have an amazing opportunity to share my story and going around the nation to do that,” Sam said in an exclusive interview with the Daily Lobo. Sam began his speech by addressing the struggles he faced as a child. Three of his siblings died or disappeared, his father left his family and he was abused by his other
brother as well. He described the vivid detail the dangerous environment he grew up in. “Our house was pretty much a crackhouse,” Sam said. During high school, Sam turned to football as a tool to get him into college and escape his hometown in Hitchcock, Texas. He eventually went on to play football at the University of Missouri. It was in Columbia where he began his journey coming out. “I didn’t have the opportunity in Hitchcock to explore my sexuality,” Sam said. Sam explained that he didn’t plan on coming out until after college, but that changed when he began dating Vito Cammisano, another student at Mizzou. In one instance, Sam describes running into one of his coaches when he and Vito were eating at a restaurant. “I knew that he knew,” Sam said. Eventually, Sam came out to the
rest of his teammates before his senior year, during which he earned SEC Defensive Player of the Year, and then came out to the world just before the NFL Draft. He said he expected to be drafted in the late second round — he ended up being drafted in the seventh round, one of the last picks that year. After Sam had been drafted, he kissed Cammisano, which ended up being covered and talked about more than him being the first gay athlete drafted by a major sports league. “Who the hell was I supposed to kiss?” Sam said. He would later be cut by the Rams and the Dallas Cowboys. After a brief stint with the Montreal Alouettes in the Canadian Football League, he retired from football. He said he became depressed as a result of the experience. Coinciding with his talk’s overall theme of resilience, Sam said that learning to forgive those who
wronged him, such as his family and the NFL, and becoming a more spiritual person helped him through this difficult period. He told the Daily Lobo he considers his speaking management company, Keppler Speakers, to be his greatest mentor because they were able to help him tell his story to the world. Perhaps the most emotional part of the meeting came during the Q&A section after Sam finished speaking. One student, Nadia Mata, asked Sam how he knew he had finally accepted his sexuality, adding that she still struggled with the shame and regret that LGBTQ people often feel when they come out. Sam cited his relationship with Cammisano as a primary factor. “That’s all we’re here to do, is to give love and feel love,” Sam said. He then hugged Mata, which was followed by a roaring applause from the audience. “It almost felt like acceptance,” Mata said of the hug. “It’s some-
thing a lot of LGBT kids don’t get a lot of.” The event was sponsored by Student Special Events, Residence Hall Association, the UNM Feminist Research Institute, UNM Fraternity and Sorority Life, the LGBTQ Resource Center, Division for Equity and Inclusion and the Women’s Resource Center. The Daily Lobo was unable to access the contract between the Student Activities Center and Michael Sam prior to publication. However, the Keppler Speakers website says the fee for a speaking engagement with Sam can range from $10,000 to $20,000. Kyle Land is the editor-in-chief for the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted by email at editorinchief@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @kyleoftheland.
LOBO LIFE Thursday-Sunday, Campus February Calendar of Events 14-17, 2019
Current Exhibits Toh-mez & Tohmz = Tomes 8:00am-6:00pm, Monday-Friday Zimmerman Library Frank Waters Room 105 This exhibition brings together and offers up for consumption facsimiles of ancient Mesoamerican codices and Mexican arts books with student work and community-sourced descriptions. Nicola López: Parasites, Prosthetics, Parallels and Partner 9:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Friday Tamarind Institute Nicola López: Parasites, Prosthetics, Parallels and Partners is an exhibition of eight, large scale, monoprint collages Nicola López created in the spring of 2017 when she returned to Tamarind. Intertwined: The Mexican Wolf, and the People and the Land 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Friday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology Wolves have been of interest to humans as long as the two have kept company together on this planet, with the importance of this relationship being woven into the cultural fabric of many peoples around the world. People of the Southwest 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Friday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology The exhibition celebrates the cultural history of the Southwest,
especially the close relationship southwestern people have had with the land around them. Ancestors 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Friday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology This exhibit introduces our ancestors and close relatives. These ancient relatives will take you through the story in which all of our ancestors had a role. Please Enjoy and Return: Bruce Conner Films from the Sixties 10:00am-4:00pm UNM Art Museum Constant change and a wideroving, obsessive curiosity are perhaps two constants in Conner’s work, which ranges from assemblage to drawing, painting and sculpture to conceptual art and experimental film. Adjacent Possible: Artwork by Isadora Stowe 2:00-5:30pm, Monday-Friday Inpost Artspace The Inpost Artspace is pleased to announce Adjacent Possible, a selection of monotypes created by Isadora Stowe.
THURSDAY Campus Events
Valentine’s Day Bake Sale and Gift Basket Auction
8:00-11:00am 229-Cancer Research Facility (CRF) Lobby The New Mexico Tumor Registry is having a bake sale and silent gift basket auction on Valentine’s Day. All proceeds will benefit cancer patients and their families. 2019 UNM Career EXPO 9:00am-2:00pm SUB Ballrooms A, B & C The UNM Career EXPO 2019 is a great opportunity for students and employers to connect and engage about upcoming jobs and internships in all majors or interest fields. Free for students and job seekers. KINDNESS CORNER with the Office of Equal Opportunity 10:30am-1:30pm 609 Buena Vista Dr. NE Free treats, write kindness notes to a friend or stranger, be kind to yourself with a little meditative coloring, drawings and more. 2019 Anthropology Job Fair 12:00-4:00pm Hibben Center The event is designed to reach out to undergraduate and graduate students and provide information on various job opportunities available for those studying or holding an Anthropology degree.
Lectures & Readings CQuIC Seminars 3:30-4:30pm Physics & Astronomy, Room 190
To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com
Johannes Bausch, University of Cambridge, presents, “Undecidability of the Spectral Gap in One Dimension.”
Art & Music Be Our Valentine: Love in the Archives 11:00am-2:00pm Zimmerman Library, Frank Waters Room 105 The archivists are bringing out their personal archival crushes and sharing stories for this open house. Among the culturally diverse and controversial pieces are love letters, wedding photos, postcards, songs and sheet music, theater and movie memorabilia, and expressions of LBGT banned love and outlaw love.
Theater & Film Ralph Breaks the Internet - Mid Week Movie Series 3:30-5:30pm SUB Theater Six years after the events of “WreckIt Ralph,” Ralph and Vanellope, now friends, discover a wi-fi router in their arcade, leading them into a new adventure. $2/$2.50/$3. Cash and LoboCash only.
Student Groups & Gov. Cafecitos con Rosa 9:30-11:00am
El Centro De La Raza Conference Room UNM SHRM Chapter Meeting 11:00am-12:00pm Zimmerman Library, INLP Room Korean Club Meeting 5:00-6:00pm SUB Acoma A Students for Life 5:30-9:00pm SUB Lumniaria UNM College Democrats 5:30-6:30pm SUB Spirit Campus Crusade 6:00-9:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B Graduate Christian Fellowship 6:00-9:00pm SUB Scholars LoboTHON Weekly Meeting 6:30-9:00pm SUB Trailblazer Delight Ministries Weekly Meeting 6:30-8:30pm SUB Mirage/Thunderbird Music Production Club Meeting 6:30-7:30pm SUB Amigo Intervarsity Christian Fellowship 7:00-10:00pm SUB Acoma A & B
Campus Calendar continued on pg 7
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ACROSS 1 Yukon supplier 4 __ pants 9 Scorned lover of Jason 14 Aptly, it rhymes with “spa” 15 CNN correspondent Hill 16 Big period 17 TV trailblazer 18 Boxing academy? 20 Loud noises 22 “There, there,” e.g. 23 One at the top of the order 26 Whirling 30 Optimist’s hopeful list? 33 “Othello” role 34 Pamphlet ending 35 Have __ for 36 Colorful bird 37 Literal and figurative hint to four puzzle answers 41 Field supervisor 43 Sword-andsandal feature, e.g. 44 Turkish title 47 Award using spelled-out initials 48 Wild party in Dallas? 51 Wednesday, to be exact 53 Souvenirs 54 Plays ball 57 Musical collaboration instruction 58 Literary alliance? 63 A, in Aachen 64 Senate staffers 65 Coke or Pepsi 66 Young Darth’s nickname 67 Bright 68 Hindu mystics 69 Ballet composer Delibes DOWN 1 Refuse 2 Poe genre 3 Title servant in a 1946 Paulette Goddard film 4 Mag mogul
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
By Andy Morrison
5 Home of the 2001 World Series champs, on scoreboards 6 Eighteenwheelers 7 Call back? 8 Only deaf performer to win an Oscar 9 Waikiki, to surfers 10 Recipient of a New Testament epistle attributed to Saint Paul 11 __-wop 12 Prefix with conscious 13 Calder Cup org. 19 Without 21 Vast expanse 24 Tuck away 25 1974 CIA spoof 27 Discounted combo 28 Supermarket chain 29 “__ is the winter of our discontent”: Shak. 31 Luau ring 32 Architect’s addition 36 Start to manage?
2/14/19 2/8/19 February 11th issue puzzle solved Thursday’s Puzzle Solved
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
38 Summer refresher 39 College admissions fig. 40 Document with bullets 41 Cousin of org 42 Band of Tokyo? 45 Sincere 46 Hall of fame 48 Puerto Rico, e.g.: Abbr. 49 Barely makes it
2/14/19 2/8/19
50 Handle preceder 52 Discharge 55 Iberian river 56 Metallic waste 58 Lived 59 Basket border 60 Early civil rights activist __ B. Wells 61 Covert maritime gp. 62 Cred. union offerings
LOBO LIFE Thursday-Sunday, Campus February Calendar of Events 14-17, 2019 Campus Calendar continued from pg 6 SMAC Rehearsal 7:00-9:00pm SUB Sandia Sprechtisch 7:30-10:00pm Joe’s, 108 Vassar Dr SE Jitterbugs Anonymous! 8:30-10:30pm Johnson Gym, Aerobics Room B553 Learn how to swing dance.
Meetings CL Neuroradiology Conference 2:00-3:00pm Family Medicine Center, Room 420 Caregivers Journaling Group 4:00-5:30pm UNM Comprehensive Center, Room 1604
Support Cancer
FRIDAY
Lectures & Readings Dermatology Grand Rounds-Case Session 8:00-9:00am UNM Dermatology Library Grand rounds are gatherings of doctors, residents and medical students who meet to discuss a medical case. Dissertation Presentation 9:00-10:00am 1650 University Blvd., Room 3900 Krista Scorsone, College of Nursing, presents “Exploring Individual Experiences Obtaining Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder in Rural New Mexico.” Dissertation Presentation 10:30-11:30am Logan Hall, Room 281
Elizabeth Stein, Psychology, presents “Patient-Provider Communication in Community Mental Health: How Perceptions of Engagement in Decision-Making Influences Patient-Perceptions of Well-Being.” LAII Lecture Series 11:00am-12:30pm LAII Institute Esmeralda Ribeiro, Quilombhoje Literatura, presents, “Afro-Brazilian Activism, Poetry, and Journalism: 40 Years of Cadernos Negros and Quilombhoje Literatura.” GEO Lost in Translation Series 12:00-1:30pm UNM Ortega Hall, Room 335 The Global Education Office presents “Building Trust in CrossCultural Relationships.” Workshop: Transformative Learning 12:00-1:00pm SUB Trail/Spirit An event sponsored by the Project for New Mexico Graduates of Color. Dissertation Presentation 3:30-4:30pm Physics and Astronomy Building, Room 190 Matthew Curry, Physics Astronomy, presents “Improving the Readout of Semiconducting Qubits.” Physics and Astronomy Colloquium 3:30-4:30pm Room 125, Dane Smith Hall Dr. Julian Borrill, LBNL, presents “Big Bang, Big Data, Big Iron.” Department of Chemistry & Chemical Biology 4:00-5:00pm SMLC, Room 102 Dr. Ryan O’Donnell - US Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, MD Development of Reverse Saturable Absorber (RSA) Materials at the Army Research Laboratory Academic Writing Workshop: APA Format of References to Book Chapters 4:30-6:00pm TEC 140
Improve your academic and professional writing skills. All UNM students are welcome.
Art & Music Lillian Ridout, Voice Junior Recital 6:00-7:30pm Keller Hall Free to attend.
Theater & Film Mid90s - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater Follow Stevie, a thirteen-year-old in 1990s-era Los Angeles who spends his summer navigating between his troubled home life and a group of new friends that he meets at a Motor Avenue skate shop. Cash & Lobo Cash only! RENT 20th Anniversary Tour 7:30-9:30pm Popejoy Hall An original rock musical by a littleknown composer opened on Broadway… and forever changed the landscape of American theatre. Jonathan Larson’s RENT continues to speak loudly and defiantly to audiences across generations and all over the world. Mid90s - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 8:30-10:30pm SUB Theater Follow Stevie, a thirteen-year-old in 1990s-era Los Angeles who spends his summer navigating between his troubled home life and a group of new friends that he meets at a Motor Avenue skate shop. Cash & Lobo Cash only!
Student Groups & Gov. Lobo Food Pantry Service 10:00am-12:00pm UNM South Lot
To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com
Community
ADVANCE at UNM 11:30am-2:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B Student Action Network Workshop 12:00-1:00pm SUB Trail/Spirit Lobo Life Meeting 2:00-4:00pm SUB Fiesta A & B Japanese Language and Culture Club Meeting 3:00-5:00pm SUB Acoma A Esports Club (UNM) Meeting 3:00-5:00pm SUB MIrage-Thunderbird Chinese Christian Campus Fellowship 4:00-9:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B, Spirit International Business Global 4:00-6:15pm SUB Cherry/Silver
Students
Environment UNM 4:00-5:00pm SUB Sandia PAWS Weekly Meeting 4:00-5:00pm SUB Scholars Anthropology Society Meeting 5:30-7:30pm SUB Acoma B African Student Association 5:30-7:00pm SUB Lobo A & B
Meetings UNM Foundation Board Meeting 8:00am-3:30pm SUB Lobo A & B Rhodes/Marshall Scholarship Info Session (Kiyoko) 2:00-3:00pm HC Forum
SATURDAY Art & Music
Ashley Hedlund, Trumpet Graduate Recital 6:00-7:30pm Keller Hall Free to attend. Nathan Secrest, Piano Graduate Recital 8:00-9:30pm Keller Hall Free to attend.
Theater & Film RENT 20th Anniversary Tour 2:00-4:00pm Popejoy Hall An original rock musical by a littleknown composer opened on Broadway… and forever changed the landscape of American theatre. Jonathan Larson’s RENT continues to speak loudly and defiantly to audiences across generations and all over the world. Mid90s - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater Follow Stevie, a thirteen-year-old in 1990s-era Los Angeles who spends his summer navigating between his troubled home life and a group of new friends that he meets at a Motor Avenue skate shop. Cash & Lobo Cash only. RENT 20th Anniversary Tour 8:00-10:00pm Popejoy Hall An original rock musical by a littleknown composer opened on Broadway… and forever changed the landscape of American theatre. Jonathan Larson’s RENT continues to speak loudly and defiantly to audiences across generations and all over the world.
Campus Calendar continued on pg 8
Preview events on the Daily Lobo Mobile app or www.dailylobo.com
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CLASSIFIED INDEX Announcements Announcements Auditions Fun, Food, Music Garage Sales Health & Wellness Legal Notices Looking for You Lost and Found Services Travel Want to Buy Your Space
STUDIOS W/ FREE utilities, 1 block UNM. Call 505‑246‑2038. www. kachina‑properties.com. 1515 Cop‑ per NE. $485‑500/mo. Ask move‑in special. WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, courtyards, fenced yards. Houses, cot‑ tages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 505‑843‑9642. Open 6 days/week. FREE UNM PARKING, large, clean. 1BDRM. $550/mo. No pets. Nob Hill. 505‑850‑9749.
Rooms For Rent
Housing Apartments Condos Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Office Space Rooms for Rent Sublets
ON CAMPUS, $390/MO. 505‑400‑4852. SE HEIGHTS ROOM for rent with private bath $475 call 702‑800‑9933 ROMANCE IN SANTA Fe! Valentine Spe‑ cial rates for UNM students and staff. Walking distance to Plaza. www.casa pacificasantafe.com, 505‑982‑2078.
Computer Stuff
For Sale
Audio & Video Bikes & Cycles Computer Stuff Pets For Sale Furniture Textbooks Vehicles for Sale
Employment
CUSTOM SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT! We can create or modify software for you! C++, Python, Java, or web soft‑ ware running on Php, Drupal or Word‑ press. 505‑750‑1169.
For Sale inside Winning Coffee. 10-4, Mondays and Wednesdays. bookanimal@ yahoo.com
Looking for You
Jobs Off Campus
Photo DAVIDMARTINEZPHOTOGRAPHY.COM
$$$ FOR OPINIONS, Earn $30 for two
Services MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. 505‑ 401‑8139, welbert53@aol.com PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254‑9615. Voice Only. MasterCard/ VISA. WritingandEditingABQ.com MATHEMATICS TUTORING, 505‑400‑ 4852.
Health & Wellness #JOINTHEMOVEMENT, CBD505.com $50 DROP IN Group Therapy, M‑THU, 5‑
7PM. www.innernavigation.com
Apartments 4419 4TH ST NW. North Fourth Apart‑
ments. Brand‑new studios, 1BDRM & 2BDRM. Close, quiet, clean, no smok‑ ing, key pad access, gated parking, all electric, efficient stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, W/D hookups, elevator, inside mail boxes. Call 505‑342‑2787. 1 BLOCK UNM 1BDRM duplex hard‑
wood floors, skylights, driveway parking $575 includes utilities 505‑506‑ 5814. BLOCK TO UNM, move in special.
Clean, quiet studio ($550/mo), 1BDRM ($630/mo), 2BDRM ($840/mo). Utilities included. No pets. Columbia SE. 255‑2685. 503‑0795. UNM/CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS,
3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius III, Real Estate Consultant: www.corneliusmgmt.com 243‑2229.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Part Time Bus Driver for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Bus Driver will provide a safe, positive and supportive environment for Head Start children that ride the bus. Assists in maintain equipment and Tribal vehi‑ cles for the Isleta Early Head Start, Head Start & Child Care Centers. Assist the Facilities Coordinator to de‑ velop, implement, and monitor trans‑ portation routes. For a complete posi‑ tion description log on to www.isleta‑ pueblo.com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application /resume with names/ phone numbers of three professional and three per‑ sonal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of education, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Hu‑ man Resources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment@isleta‑ pueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free workplace and requires back‑ ground checks.
HALF OFF ALL books. Bradley’s Books
Child Care Jobs Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Internships Jobs Wanted Volunteers Work Study Jobs
hours, your time & opinions in a focus group. Saturday, Feb. 23 from 10AM‑ 12PM in Albuquerque. Must have own transportation, be a U.S. citizen, NM resident for at least 1 year, be regis‑ tered to vote, 18 or older, and speak English. For details, call 505‑293‑2000 Mon‑Fri 8am‑5pm. Space is limited, so call as soon as possible.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Special Education Teacher for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Special Education Teacher will assist the Classroom Teacher in a supportive role by carrying out developmentally appropriate activities and promotes the health, nutrition, and education of the children while attending to their safety and welfare. Will observe and record behavior of children to assist the Teacher in the identification of each child’s strengths and areas to grow. For a complete position de‑ scription log on to www.isletapueblo.‑ com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application /re‑ sume with names/ phone numbers of three professional and three personal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of education, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Human Re‑ sources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment@isletapueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free work‑ place and requires background checks.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Mentor Teacher for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Mentor Teacher supports teaching staff by working directly in the classroom to model, observe, consult and provide guidance and resources to the class‑ room staff in effectively planning, developing and implementing positive behav‑ ioral support techniques, classroom and playground environment, curricu‑ lum, lesson plans, classroom manage‑ ment and educational experiences. For a complete position description log on to www.isletapueblo.com, Ca‑ reer’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application /resume with names/ phone numbers of three profes‑ sional and three personal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that con‑ fer the highest level of education, certi‑ fication and licenses. Submit your application to Human Resources De‑ partment, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment @isletapueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free workplace and re‑ quires background checks.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Head Start Teacher or Head Start Teacher Assistant for POI,Head Start and Child Care Center. The Head Start Teacher will provide, coordinate daily earlychildhood development services, and provide a successful, safe and su‑ pervised educational setting for chil‑ dren ages three through five years of age. The Head Start Teacher Assis‑ tant will assist teachers bycarrying out developmentally appropriate activi‑ ties and promote the health, nutrition, and education of the children while at‑ tending to their safety and welfare. For complete position descriptions log on to www.isletapueblo.com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application/resume with names/ phone numbers of three professional and three personal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of education, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Human Resources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment@isleta‑ pueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free workplace and requires back‑ ground checks.
UWC‑USA SUMMER Camp Staff Vacancies! Are you or someone you know passionate about teaching or youth de‑ velopment? Communicate well and love the outdoors? Wants to learn about or connect with the UWC Move‑ ment? The UWC‑USA Global Leader‑ ship Forum summer program wants YOU to apply to be on the staff team! Our vision is to have our international youth be empowered through expe‑ riential education to foster social justice at local and global levels. Go here for more information: https://www.uwc‑usa.org/glf
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Business Manager for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Business Manager is responsible for all finance and accounting activities as required bystandardized accounting proce‑ dures and according to Generally Ac‑ cepted Accounting Principles.Will be responsible for the accurate prepara‑ tion and monitoring of financial books, records and financial reports to the Pueblo of Isleta and any grantor agen‑ cies or as requested by the Executive Director. For a complete position de‑ scription log on to www.isletapueblo.‑ com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application/re‑ sume with names/phone numbers of three professional and three personal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of education, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Human Re‑ sources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment@isletapueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free work‑ place and requires background checks.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Health Coordinator for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Health Co‑ ordinator is responsible for organizing, administering and coordinating com‑ prehensive health services for Head Start/Early Head Start and Child Care children, families and staff. Links families with an ongoing system of health care, assist parents in the selection of health providers, refers families with child or family health problems, and promotes familyinvolvement in all as‑ pects of the health program. For a complete position description log on to www.isletapueblo.com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application /resume with names/ phone numbers of three professional and three personal references. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of education, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Human Resources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment@isleta‑ pueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free workplace and requires back‑ ground checks. LOOKING FOR A little extra cash? Sports & Activity Leaders NEEDED. Wednesday afternoons at 12:30 pm. Must be at least 18 yrs. old w/ a mini‑ mum HS Diploma or equivalent. $11/hr after PAID training! Apply online at www.campfireabq.org OR in person at 1613 University NE between 8AM‑ 4PM. PROVIDENCE SUPPORT SERVICES is hiring caregivers to work with adults who have disabilities. Paid training, benefits, $500 sign-on bonus at 90 days. See full job REQ/details and ap‑ ply online: https://providencesupport services.com/now‑hiring LOOKING FOR FUN and energetic peo‑ ple to join our team! Activity/Sports Leader positions available. M‑F 7‑9AM & 2‑6PM. WED 12:30PM. Must be 18+ yrs. old w/ a minimum HS Diploma or equivalent. $11/hr after PAID training. Apply online at www. campfireabq.org OR in person at 1613 University NE between 8AM‑ 4PM. VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTION‑ IST/ Kennel help. Pre‑veterinary stu‑ dent preferred. Interviews by appoint‑ ment only. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881‑8990/ 881‑8551. DO YOU HAVE some morning availabil‑ ity? We’re looking for fun and energetic staff that can work from 7-9AM. Must be 18+ yrs. old w/ a minimum of HS Diploma. $11/hr after PAID train‑ ing. Apply online at www.campfire abq.org OR in person at 1613 Univer‑ sity NE between 8AM‑4PM.
THE PUEBLO OF Isleta is seeking a Nu‑ tritionist Coordinator for POI, Head Start and Child Care Center. The Nutri‑ tionist Coordinator is responsible for or‑ ganizing, administering and coordinat‑ ing health and nutrition services for Early/Head Start and Child Care chil‑ dren, families and staff. Provides necessary education and nutritional coun‑ seling for parents, develops and imple‑ ments a plan and system of mon‑ itoring and evaluating nutrition activi‑ ties. For a complete position descrip‑ tion log on to www.isletapueblo.com, Career’s Section of the home page. Submit a POI Application /resume with names/ phone numbers of three professional and three personal refer‑ ences. Please be specific regarding qualifications, and include documents that confer the highest level of educa‑ tion, certification and licenses. Submit your application to Human Re‑ sources Department, Pueblo of Isleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022. Fax: 869‑7579, or email to: poiemployment @isletapueblo.com. Closing date: February 25, 2019. The Pueblo of Isleta is a drug‑free workplace and re‑ quires background checks. SEEKING BATHROOM ATTENDANT CONTRACTOR. 505‑331‑2022.
TALIN MARKET IS hiring PT and FT cashiers, stockers, meat and seafood clerks, and receptionists. Flexible hours. Apply online at www.talin market.com PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT / NURSE PRACTITIONER – Join our admis‑ sions team! The PA/NP performs eval‑ uation, medical management, and pre‑ scribing services rendered on‑site at Santa Fe Recovery Center facilities. On‑call is required under the direction of medical and executive manage‑ ment. Immediate openings for part‑ time and full‑time positions available, internships welcomed. Please send a letter of interest and resume to: Hu‑ man Resources asalas@sfrecovery .org or stop by our office and pick up a job application. All positions require drug screening and criminal back‑ ground checks including state, fed‑ eral, and local through the NM Depart‑ ment of Health and Children Youth & Families Department.
BEFORE CLASS
CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE
Register for the course prior to first day of class. Class is $50.00. Download American Red Cross Lifeguard Manual. Purchase rescue mask for $15.00. Go to www.redcross.org for class materials.
2019 CLASSES 1ST DAY
Nevada Conservation Corps is Hiring Leadership positions running conservation crews for the following focus areas: Recreational Trail Construction & Maintenance-Forest Fuels Reduction - Noxious Weed Abatement Position includes training in the following areas: Wilderness First Aid, USFS Chainsaw Certification, Pesticide Applicator License, Off-Road Driving, and Leave No Trace.
Apply today by visiting: www.thegreatbasininstitute.org
Bring swimsuit & towel. Swim 300 yards continuously. Free & Breast stoke only. Perform 10lb brick retrieval in under 1:40 secs. 2 minute water tread. Legs only.
SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION
WWW.CABQ.GOV/AQUATICS
2019 LIFEGUARD CLASS SCHEDULE West Mesa | 836-8718 Blended Learning Feb 18-28 Mon-Thur, 4pm-8pm
UPON COMPLETION
You will receive an American Red Cross Universal Certificate for Lifeguarding/First Aid/CPR/AED valid for 2 years
SIGNING UP
Highland | 256-2096
Feb 25-Mar 7 Mon, Wed, Thur, 4pm-8pm
Valley | 761-4086 Blended Learning Feb 16-18 Sat-Mon, 8am-4pm Sun, 11:30am-8pm
Be punctual and attend ALL class dates Pass all in-water lifeguard skills and activities. Demonstrate competency in First Aid, CPR, Lifeguard skills. Pass both written tests with an 80% or higher.
Please sign up at the pool where the class will be held or sign up online at play.cabq.gov. If we don’t have enough participants before the first day of class, the class may be cancelled. So sign up early!
BLENDED LEARNING COURSES
Some of these are blended learning courses, which means you must sign up early and complete an online training before the first day of class. The online portion takes approximately 7 hours to complete and includes 1 test that must be passed! You will receive the link to the course when you sign up with the cashier.
LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events Thursday-Sunday, Thursday-Sunday, February 14-17, 2019
Campus CampusCalendar Calendarcontinued continued from from pg pg77
Dreamstyle DreamstyleArena Arena -- The The Pit Pit Tickets Tickets starting starting at at $25, $25, free free with with Lobo LoboI.D. I.D.
evening evening filled with Persian music and and poetry harmonized with screen screen display of Persian paintings.
Mid90s Mid90s -- ASUNM ASUNM Southwest Southwest Film Film Center Center 8:30-10:30pm 8:30-10:30pm SUB SUBTheater Theater Follow FollowStevie, Stevie,aathirteen-year-old thirteen-year-oldinin 1990s-era 1990s-eraLos LosAngeles Angeleswho whospends spends his his summer summer navigating navigating between between his histroubled troubledhome homelife lifeand andaagroup group ofofnew newfriends friendsthat thathe hemeets meets at at aa Motor MotorAvenue Avenueskate skateshop. shop.Cash Cash && Lobo LoboCash Cashonly. only.
Student StudentGroups Groups & & Gov. Gov.
Theater & Film
Sports Sports&&Recreation Recreation UNM UNM Men’s Men’s Basketball Basketball vs vs Fresno Fresno State State 5:00-7:00pm 5:00-7:00pm
ASUNM ASUNMBudget Budget Hearings Hearings 8:00am-5:00pm 8:00am-5:00pm SUB SUBCherry/Silver Cherry/Silver
SUNDAY Art Art& & Music Music
Microtone Microtone 7:00-9:00pm 7:00-9:00pm Keller KellerHall Hall The The Iranian Iranian Student Student Association Association will will be be hosting hosting “Microtone” “Microtone” for for an an
Mid90s Mid90s - ASUNM Southwest Film Center Center 1:00-3:00pm 1:00-3:00pm SUB SUB Theater Theater Follow Follow Stevie, a thirteen-year-old in 1990s-era 1990s-era Los Angeles who spends his his summer summer navigating between his his troubled troubled home life and a group of of new new friends that he meets at a Motor Motor Avenue skate shop. Cash & Lobo Lobo cash cash only. RENT RENT 20th 20th Anniversary Tour 1:00-3:00pm 1:00-3:00pm Popejoy Popejoy Hall An An original original rock musical by a little-
To Tosubmit submitaacalendar calendar listing, listing, email email calendar@dailylobo.com calendar@dailylobo.com
known composer composer opened opened on on Broadway… Broadway… and and forever forever changed changed the landscape landscape of of American American theatre. Jonathan Jonathan Larson’s Larson’s RENT RENT continues continues to to speak speak loudly loudly and and defiantly to to audiences audiences across across generations generations and and all all over over the the world. world. Mid90s - ASUNM ASUNM Southwest Southwest Film Film Center 3:30-5:30pm 3:30-5:30pm SUB Theater Theater Follow Stevie, Stevie, a a thirteen-year-old thirteen-year-old in in 1990s-era Los Los Angeles Angeles who who spends spends his summer summer navigating navigating between between his troubled troubled home home life life and and a a group group of new friends friends that that he he meets meets at at aa Motor Avenue Avenue skate skate shop. shop. Cash Cash & & Lobo cash cash only. only.
Student StudentGroups Groups&&Gov. Gov. ASUNM ASUNMBudget BudgetHearings Hearings 8:00am-5:00pm 8:00am-5:00pm SUB SUBCherry/Silver Cherry/Silver LoboTHON LoboTHONMeeting Meeting 12:00-2:00pm 12:00-2:00pm SUB SUBLobo LoboAA&&BB World World Affairs Affairs Delegation Delegation Weekly Weekly Meeting Meeting 3:00-6:00pm 3:00-6:00pm SUB SUBMirage-Thunderbird Mirage-Thunderbird SMAC SMACRehearsal Rehearsal 7:00-9:00pm 7:00-9:00pm SUB SUBSandia Sandia
Preview events on the Daily Lobo Lobo Mobile Mobile app app or or www.dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com