NM Daily Lobo 031913

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tuesday March 19, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Nominee: let’s work more with the labs

PIG PROBLEMS

Candidate says partnership would benefit research by John Tyczkowski news@dailylobo.com

Richard Nowitz / U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services This undated photo provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services shows a family of pigs invading the Palmetto State Park’s camp grounds in Abbeyville, La. The agency has teamed up with the state of New Mexico and others as part of a $1 million pilot project to eradicate the pigs from New Mexico.

NM aims to thwart clever, feral pigs by Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

Using the cover of darkness, feral pigs have learned to outsmart even the most seasoned hunters as they set about on their nightly terrors, rooting up crops and suburban gardens, harassing native wildlife and turning watering holes into pigsties. The invasive porkers have made themselves at home across more than three quarters of the U.S. and are responsible for an estimated $1.5 billion in damages each year. Most worrisome is their ability to learn from each encounter with a frustrated human. Ask anyone who has had a run-in with feral pigs. The conversation always circles back to intelligence. “They’re much brighter than I am,” said Ray Powell, a veterinarian and New Mexico’s land commissioner. “If they had the dexterity, they’d be driving vehicles around. I mean these guys are really smart.” Feral pigs have already taken over Texas and are expanding their numbers in other states, but federal and state land managers think they have a chance to tip the balance in New Mexico. They’re willing to bet $1 million in federal funds on a yearlong pilot project aimed at eradicating the pigs and using what they learn here to keep them from gaining a foothold elsewhere.

It marks the first time the U.S. Department of Agriculture has teamed up with a state to develop a comprehensive plan for getting rid of the pigs. A small army of state and federal employees has been trained to stalk, trap and kill New Mexico’s feral pigs. Various techniques have been used by wildlife managers and landowners for decades in the fight against feral swine, but the New Mexico team is focusing on determining what combination works best in which circumstances and how effectively helicopters can be to track the pigs across vast landscapes.

Avalos. Hitting the pigs quickly will prevent them from becoming more educated, he said. Pigs have been known to scope out traps for days before sending in the group’s lowest ranking members to test for danger. And if a trap isn’t built just right, the pigs will find a way out, either by climbing over each other or squeezing under the fencing. The plan calls for building special traps in strategic locations along with stalking the pigs at night. The team will also be looking to the “Judas pig” for help. After trapping a family of pigs, all but one —

Their intelligence, in combination with their ability to mate year-round, is what has enabled wild pigs to evade capture and take over prairies, mountain valleys and rugged deserts from Canada to Mexico. “We’re trying to get ahead of the curve with this so we can prevent a lot of the damage that we know will be coming if we don’t do anything about it,” said USDA Wildlife Services state director Alan May. “Sport hunting pressure alone won’t be enough to stop a population from spreading.” Timing is a big part of the project, said UDSA undersecretary Edward

usually an adult female — are shot and killed. The Judas pig is then fitted with a radio collar or microchip so it can be tracked as it looks for another group of pigs to hang out with. This is important since feral pigs are quite elusive. Rarely seen during the day, they have learned to avoid being taken down by rifles or suckered into traps. Their intelligence, in combination

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Wild and...

Invasion from the ‘70s

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with their ability to mate year-round, is what has enabled wild pigs to evade capture and take over prairies, mountain valleys and rugged deserts from Canada to Mexico. The wild pig population in the U.S. has ballooned to more than 5 million. In one year alone, federal managers trapped and killed more than 32,000 pigs from 28 states and collected thousands of samples to check for the nearly three dozen diseases feral pigs are capable of carrying and passing on to humans, livestock and other wildlife. Introduced by Spanish explorers centuries ago, pigs began to expand their range. Hunters complicated matters by importing Eurasian boars to the U.S. for sport. Generations in the wild, the pigs have evolved into “survivors,” willing to eat just about anything and capable of traversing some of the most rugged territory. New Mexico is embarking on its third straight year of drought, water supplies have dipped to record lows, farmers and ranchers are struggling, and there are now signs of feral swine in 22 of the state’s 33 counties. “Here, it’s a new problem,” said Quay County farmer Donnie Bidegain, who has seen pig numbers in his area grow from zero to nearly 300 over the last two years. “You research, read stuff on the Internet and watch

see Pigs PAGE 2

UNM’s administration is looking for a higher-up to bring major changes in the research environment at the University. The first candidate in the search for UNM’s new vice president for research and economic development spoke Monday in an open forum in the SUB Ballroom A at 2 p.m. Vishwanath Prasad is the first of four candidates; the other three will each speak at a similar forum in the coming weeks. UNM has been without a permanent vice president for research and economic development since June when then-Vice President Julia Fulghum stepped down. An interim vice president, John T. McGraw, has served while the search for a permanent replacement continues. The search has been underway since Oct. 31 according to the Office of Research & Economic Development’s web site, and the four finalists were selected after a nationwide search. Prasad is a professor of mechanical and energy engineering at the University of North Texas. He served as that university’s vice president for research and development from 2007 to 2012. He has worked as professor at Columbia University, the associate dean of engineering at SUNY-Stony Brook and the dean of engineering and executive dean of engineering and computing at Florida International University. Regarding research, Prasad said UNM should capitalize on its strengths, such as its ties to Sandia National Laboratories and Los Alamos National Laboratory, and revamp its approach to collaboration to expand its efforts to other institutions around the region. Prasad said this entails UNM offering to share its facilities in exchange for using collaborators’ facilities, even without a specific research project in mind. “(The University) will be successful only if you take an integrated approach and address all of their needs as well as yours regarding collaboration,” he said. Prasad also emphasized how

see Prasad PAGE 3

TODAY

64 | 38


PageTwo Tuesday, M arch 19, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Study abroad broadens student horizons Students return confident, eager for involvement by Thiéres Rabelo

news@dailylobo.com A record 200 students applied to study abroad programs for the fall 2013 semester, compared to a semesterly average of 120 students. UNM’s Global Education Office upped the advertising it has done for the program during the past few months, which included public fairs and in-class presentations, said Jason Jones, student adviser and recruitment coordinator for GEO’s study abroad program. The University is trying to raise its study abroad student numbers, Jones said. “We have more students that want to come to UNM from other countries than those who we are sending abroad,” Jones said. “So, what (GEO) is doing is trying to get more UNM students to consider taking their education abroad. In general we get around

volume 117

150 percent more students than we send out.” Jones said students become more independent and develop academically when studying abroad. Senior Lizzie Scripsick, a biology major, studied abroad for one semester in Granada, Spain, during 2011. She said she felt the program helped her grow personally. “For the first time in my life my parents couldn’t be there in two hours if I needed them. I was on my own, so I had to grow up,” she said. “You’ve got to figure out a way to talk to people, how to work your way through the system. You have to be confident or else you’re not going to do it.” Scripsick also enjoyed academic improvement after studying abroad. “I used to be an A or B student before I went, but I made straight As after I came back,” she said. “I think part of the reason for that was the confidence that I could do anything when I came back, I

issue 119

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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

was sure I could get As.” Jones also said that going to developing countries instead of developed ones can be beneficial because of the difference in daily life. “I think the more undeveloped of a country you go to, the more it hits you,” Jones said. “So, if you’re going to India or certain parts of Africa, you come back and you want to participate more in your community, do volunteer work and see how you can make a difference. That’s what we find in the students who come back.” Senior Natalie Peña, a business major, was in Bangalore, India from 2011 to 2012. She said she had planned to stay there for half a semester, but decided to stay for a year. “At first it was difficult. In the first three weeks, I didn’t even know if I was going to last the whole thing, because I was staying in Bangalore. Right outside (the city) there’s the biggest slum in India, so you get to see things that you never see here,” Peña 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

said. “Everything is in your face, there’s a lot of poverty. But we are humans and we can change and get used to something. And I knew wonderful people and I decided to stay.” Upon her return, she started a student organization called Women Empowerment Developing Global Leadership. Peña said her organization has so far hosted the End It Movement campaign against human trafficking, which included a vigil and an all-day symposium in the SUB. The organization also offers workshops on other social justice topics determined by the organization’s members. She said that going to India expanded her perspective of her community. “It’s very different when you’ve actually lived there, then you’re able to add value to your community when you come back because you’ve actually experienced it,” Peña said. “And after I came back, I started my own student organization, so I do think you come back willing to participate more.”

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

Pigs

from page 1

videos of how other guys are trying to do it. It’s almost like you have to stalk them for two months before you figure out how they operate.” Bidegain has to watch for big potholes left behind by the pigs to keep from damaging his tractor. Nearby, Quay County rancher Bill Humphries said the pigs were responsible for leaving “bomb craters everywhere” along a quartermile stretch of road on his family ranch. On other ranches, pigs have learned to break the floats in stock tanks to keep water flowing for their mud baths. In Mississippi, peanut farmers often wake to find uprooted plants. In Texas, where there are an estimated 2.6 million pigs, the animals have moved from destroying pastures and crops to tearing up suburban gardens. USDA officials couldn’t say how long it might take to push the pigs out of New Mexico, but Avalos said he is confident it’s possible. If not, Powell warned New Mexico’s agriculture and natural resources will be in trouble. “It could have enormous costs,” he said.

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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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Prasad

Tuesday, March 19, 2013/ Page 3

from page 1

important faculty is to the research mission of the University and that they should be adequately compensated and rewarded for their achievements. “(The University) could do that with awards, raises, early promotions, those types of incentives,” he said. UNM’s faculty salaries lag behind those of its peer institutions for full professors, associate professors and assistant professors. On average, faculty salaries at UNM are $7,000-$21,000 less than those of comparable public research universities. After Prasad’s speech, he responded to questions from faculty and staff. Richard Wood, a professor in the sociology department, was concerned the University and its students’ reputation may suffer if UNM increases ties with institutions known to have a national security agenda, such as the national laboratories. For example, it could hurt anthropology or history students seeking to intern or study abroad, as their majors require cultural openness, he said. Prasad said that such ties would help students in such majors which normally lack “handson” internships and fellowships. “These connections would

allow students to get an internship or a fellowship, which they could build off of for deeper connections and other opportunities,” he said.

“(The University) will be successful only if you take an integrated approach and address all of their needs” ~Dr. Vishwanath Prasad professor, University of North Texas Prasad said he had several ideas in mind to foster international research and collaboration between international institutions. For instance, encouraging study abroad opportunities for undergraduates, fellowships abroad for graduate students, joint advising for students studying or interning aboard and joint academic proposals and research between faculty in different countries.

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“You may not have what they have, they may not have what you have, whether regarding people, equipment or ideas,” Prasad said. “Such comprehensive exchanges can really help both institutions greatly.” The next three candidates will have open forums to be held over the next three weeks. Faculty, staff and students are all invited to attend.

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LoboOpinion

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4

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg

opinion@dailylobo.com

Letter Human trafficking in NM needs more press Editor’s note: This is in response to the article “Raising awareness of human trafficking,” published in the Daily Lobo on March 7. The article was about a candlelight vigil held by Women Empowerment Developing Global Leadership on March 6. Editor, Thank you for putting the article “Raising awareness of human trafficking” on the front page. Since reading it at lunch during my busy day at the hospital, I have not been able to stop thinking about human trafficking in all forms in the state of New Mexico. In fact, I’ve never written a letter to the editor. This article has moved me. For some time, I’ve been concerned with the United Nation’s list of fundamental human rights and social justice. I’ve been a student of nonviolent communication and work very hard not to allow prejudice into my nursing practice. Yet, in the middle of a seemingly ordinary day, I’m encouraged by the work of Women Empowerment Developing Global Leadership. Human trafficking is a big problem in New Mexico, and the Polaris Project is working on combating this horrendous injustice. Human trafficking is more than sexual slavery, and it remains the greatest portion of human rights violations. I encourage all readers of the Daily Lobo to be aware that human trafficking is real and exists in our community. My life is moving in the direction of being an agent of social justice, and I urge all readers to take a step with me. My final comment or request is to have more coverage of this tragedy so the silent cries of our brothers and sisters will be heard. Damond Vigil 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

Breaking wage law flouts will of voters by Jason Darensburg Daily Lobo columnist opinion@dailylobo.com

When I was growing up, I was taught the rule of law is necessary in a democratic society. Our teachers explained that the laws by which we choose to be governed are simply a set of rules agreed upon by the majority of our fellow citizens. We learned that if we ever thought a law was bad or a new law was needed, we could write to our congressional representative, or whomever, to have it fixed. You’ve heard the spiel before. All laws start out as bills. A bill is introduced in either the House of Representatives or the Senate, it goes to committee, and then on the floor it is debated and voted on. If one house of Congress approves the bill, it is sent to the other house for alterations and a vote. Once both houses approve versions of the bill, they must reconcile their versions so that they match. Finally the bill goes to the president to sign. Of course, if the president doesn’t like the bill, he can veto it. The House and the Senate can overturn the veto with a two-thirds vote. The process is essentially the same in state and local politics, except that the governor or other local representative signs the bill. The federal government only gets involved if the law is determined to be unconstitutional. The point is if you don’t like a law, as a citizen in a democracy there are legal means available to you to change it — if enough people agree with you. The system is set up that way. A democratic society cannot exist if citizens pick and choose which laws they intend to obey. Under those conditions, the concept of democracy is irrelevant. That scenario is more akin to anarchy. Good community members can’t simply ignore the laws they don’t agree with. Case in point: I can foresee many difficulties if I suddenly decided that I didn’t like all of those stop signs in my neighborhood. A new minimum wage law was recently passed by 66 percent of voters in the city of Albuquerque. The law took effect in January. Controversy erupted last month when a whistle-blower came forward and publicly accused local business owner Eric Szeman of forcing the whistle-blower and his fellow coworkers to sign agreements stating they would continue to work for the old minimum wage, in violation of the new city ordinance.

Kevin O’Leary, former employee at Eric Szeman’s Route 66 Malt Shop, made the allegations in February, after he complained to his bosses and saw his work hours cut. Eric Szeman admitted to reporters that he was still paying his wait staff the old tipped minimum wage of $2.13 an hour instead of the legally mandated $3.83. At first, Eric Szeman and his son Andrew were defiant. They derided O’Leary and tried to characterize him as nothing more than a disgruntled employee. They made a variety of excuses to justify the illegal actions to the local media, first saying it was the workers’ idea to take the pay cut, then blaming the economy and finally claiming it was because of Lent. Eric Szeman admitted the malt shop would go bankrupt if it was forced to comply with the new city ordinance. A protest was quickly organized by community activists, and when picketers showed up in front of the malt shop, the Szemans confronted them. Andrew Szeman dismissed the protesters as “anti-business.” He told the Daily Lobo, “When they saw the workers are not getting paid what they deserve, they just rallied their Marxist ideology.” The real trouble began when Andrew Szeman allegedly showed up later at O’Leary’s house, waving around a machete and a baseball bat, demanding to know why O’Leary wanted to destroy his family’s business. Finally the city got involved. When the story first broke, it appeared that Mayor Richard Berry and the city attorney’s office were unwilling to uphold the city’s own laws. Officials originally claimed they didn’t have the resources to enforce the ordinance. After a week of increasingly bad press and a looming public relations nightmare, City Hall relented and reversed its position on the matter. City attorney David Tourek explained that he and Berry had dragged their feet for so long because they assumed a private attorney would pick up O’Leary’s case. To the ultimate shame of Albuquerque’s legal community, no one did. Eventually, Tourek stepped in to represent O’Leary against Eric Szeman and his business associates. He filed a damning, 13page complaint in state District Court at the end of February, seeking unpaid wages and accusing the restaurant of retaliation. The suit includes a laundry list of charges detailing

the toxic work environment at the malt shop. It claims the owners verbally threatened employees and forced them to sign illegal contracts to work for less than minimum wage. It also accuses the Szemans of engaging in a “pattern of illegal and wrongful actions” toward O’Leary. This month the city served the lawsuit at the Route 66 Malt Shop in Nob Hill. When Eric Szeman realized the city was not going to allow him to continue breaking the law, he quickly backed down. Josephine Martinez de Nuñez, spokeswoman for the malt shop, said the restaurant now fully intends to comply with Albuquerque’s new minimum wage ordinance. In a classic case of too little, too late, she said the malt shop has offered to pay O’Leary triple his back wages in order to settle the dispute. She also claimed that all along her client simply didn’t understand the new wage ordinance. The malt shop’s attorney Charles Lakins says he plans to challenge the ordinance’s validity. I may not be an economics major, but it seems to me that if you need to break the law in order to stay in business, you probably shouldn’t be in business. If you can’t afford to pay the legal wage to your employees, then it’s time to shut your doors, simple as that. Laissez-faire capitalism at work. What’s the problem? As the city’s lawsuit claims, a higher minimum wage benefits the entire community. In my experience, when you put more money into the hands of working people, they spend it locally on items such as food and clothes. When you give more money to the wealthy, they send it offshore to private bank accounts. They don’t even pay any taxes on it. I would like to know where they teach business owners that it’s better to treat your workers like crap instead of simply paying them a decent wage. Independent research has conclusively shown that happy, well-paid workers are far more productive than those who are exploited. No wonder the economy is in such terrible shape. It doesn’t take a genius to figure this stuff out. It seems Eric Szeman could afford to pay his employees the legal wage all along, but he just refused to do it, for ideological reasons. It’s a perfect example of everything that is wrong with American business today.


CULTURE

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 2013/ PAGE 5

Beat legacy lives on at museum San Francisco was a center of Beat culture in the ‘50s by Nicole Perez

culture@dailylobo.com When I shook former Playboy columnist Herbert Gold’s hand at the intersection of Columbus Avenue and Broadway Street in San Francisco, I couldn’t even say hello. All I could think was that the hand I was shaking had touched Jack Kerouac’s hand, and the mouth talking to me had read aloud to Allen Ginsberg and Kerouac. Their feet had stood next to each other. I was in the presence of greatness. My obsession with the beat generation began in high school when I read Kerouac’s “The Dharma Bums,� and I immediately decided I would spend my life road-tripping, wining and dining, talking to everyone I could and maybe writing once in a while — it hasn’t quite worked out like that, but maybe someday. An epic road trip through New Mexico, Arizona and California in a ’77 Datsun named Marigold eventually led me to the Beat Museum on Columbus and Broadway in San Francisco. The museum, surrounded by strip clubs such as Garden of Eden and the Condor Club, is home to everything from naked pictures of Ginsberg to

the typewriter on which Kerouac he tells them the same thing. wrote “On the Roadâ€? in three weeks “I don’t say it’s good or bad. on one huge piece of paper. I just tell them to keep doing it,â€? I randomly ran into beatnik he said. Herbert Gold during the last Cimino has met most of the two minutes the museum was beats, hung out with many of open. Gold went to Columbia them and finally decided to open a University with Ginsberg and museum. In the spirit of traveling, Kerouac in their formative years, he and his dear friend John — and according to Beat Museum the son of beatnik activist Neal founder Jerry Cimino, Gold hated Cassady — took the museum on Kerouac’s guts. the road, displaying it wherever “They were going after all the somebody would put them up. He same girls, and you know how that finally chose its current location, is,â€? Cimino said. across from City Lights Booksellers When Kerouac’s famous book & Publishers and amid the strip “On the Roadâ€? was first published, clubs, because of its surroundings. Gold wrote a scathing review on “People said it was a bad area. what would become the most fa- ‘Why would you want the museum mous beatnik piece of literature. next to strip clubs?’â€? Cimino said. “Ginsberg and Kerouac are “But I studied the neighborhood frantic,â€? Gold wrote in the review. at night for six nights in a row and “They care too much, and they it’s nothing. The clubs were the old care aloud. I’m hungry, I’m starv- jazz clubs where they hung out, so ing, let’s eat right now! That they it makes sense.â€? care mostly for themselves is a I visited City Lights, sat in sign of adolescence‌â€? Caffe Trieste where Francis Ford “On the Roadâ€? is one of my fa- Coppola wrote the screenplay for vorite books of all time, but the fact “The Godfather,â€? and got a drink in that Gold didn’t like it made no dif- Vesuvio, where the poets would get ference to me. smashed. But nothing compared to Gold admits he “sure got that the stories of Gold and Cimino. UNIVERSITY OF NEWarea MEXICO " one wrong,â€? according to Cimino. The surrounding was as In his 20s, Cimino sent his unbeatlike as it can get — drunk poetry to Ginsberg for review. yuppies with no shirts on boasting Ginsberg read the poems and about going to strip clubs — but I simply wrote at the top of the page had found what I was looking for. “keep writing.â€? When aspiring beat poets send their poetry to Cimino, The University of New Mexico ÂŽ UNM™ New Mexico Lobos™ New Mexico™ Lobos ÂŽ The Pit ÂŽ Lobo Country™ Lobo Nation™

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The Weekly Free Spring break sucks money out of bank accounts like a bro doing a keg stand. If you spent too much on alcohol, buses and plane tickets last week, then check out this week’s freebies.

SOLAR SEMINAR SATURDAY

SINGALONG TODAY A group of woman musicians gather to teach the traditional songs and stories of New Mexico to participants, who will learn lyrics and melodies as well as background information on the songs. The event runs from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the National Hispanic Cultural Center, so bring your singing voice. The center is at 1701 Fourth St. S.W.

If you’re trying to install solar panels on your roof in the student ghetto, or just want to know more about why solar power could be a viable energy source, then check out this seminar. It runs from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at Affordable Solar at 4840 Pan American Freeway N.E. Call (505) 944-4220 to make reservations.

KUNG FU SELF DEFENSE SATURDAY

VERY HUNGRY CATERPILLAR WEDNESDAY Very hungry humans can join an interactive reading of “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” and fill themselves with free fruit in the process. La Montañita Co-op provides the reading outside the UNM Bookstore from 10-11 a.m. They will also have crafts and activity sheets, so you can tap into those childhood memories of the starving insect.

Women concerned about the safety of Albuquerque’s streets can learn how to break bones and fight attackers using martial arts techniques. Highlevel san soo practitioners will be present for you to test out your techniques — safely, of course. The workshop runs from 2-4 p.m. at Kung Fu San Soo of Albuquerque at 2100 Juan Tabo Blvd. N.E.

PRAYERS FOR PEACE SUNDAY

DEF POETRY WORKSHOP WEDNESDAY Calling all poets: Bruce George, the founder of Russell Simmons’ Def Poetry Jam, spits some verse and lectures about poetry in the SUB, before opening the floor to students for a poetry slam. The event starts at 7 p.m. in the SUB ballrooms.

Published every Tuesday To Advertise: 277-5656

This teaching session offers participants practical advice on how to incorporate Buddhism into their daily lives. The ideas are accessible to everyone, according to the event listing, and it starts at 10 a.m. at the Shakyamuni Buddhist Center at 8701 Comanche Road N.E. The center asks for donations, but the Buddha wouldn’t deny anyone access to his wisdom because of money, or lack thereof. ~Nicole Perez

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Advertising Sales 101 Stand out from the crowd with on-the-job training! It’s a competitive world out there. When you graduate, if you have real experience with sales, deadlines, marketing campaigns and customer relations, you will have the competitive edge over applicants with just a degree. The Daily Lobo Advertising Sales Team offers real world experience, flexible scheduling, paid training, and the potential to earn fantastic pay—all while working from campus.

Join the Daily Lobo Advertising Sales Team and get the competitive edge you need! Contact Daven at 277-5656 or send your resume to advertising@dailylobo.com You may also apply online at unmjobs.edu


T , M 19, 2013/ P lobo featuresLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle FOR RELEASE JANUARY 15, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

uesday

age 7

arch

dailycrossword

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

Year Zero

Level 1 2 3 4

dailysudoku

Solution to yesterday’s problem.

SPONSOR THE DAILY LOBO SUDOKU

ACROSS 1 Gun barrel cleaners 8 Be audibly sad 11 Poetic planet 14 Steel foundry input 15 Grounded flier since 2001 16 British lav 17 *Wanted poster picture, usually 18 Traces of gunpowder, e.g. 20 Big bird 21 *Well-positioned driver at Indy 23 Crib part 26 Volleyball divider 27 Biol. or geol. 28 Five-term sen., say 30 Coolers in windows, briefly 32 Med. care providers 35 *Sailboat built for speed 40 Before, in poems 41 Uriah was one 42 Female political refugee 44 Cycle starter 45 *Board meeting VIP 47 Rowdy bunch 49 Trains above the road 50 Fr. holy woman 51 Jug handle 53 Addams family cousin 55 Indian tourist destination 58 With 65-Across, a cappella group, and what the starts of the answers to starred clues comprise 62 Hosp. areas 64 Behind the eightball 65 See 58-Across 68 Chocolate shape 69 Kimono closer 70 Set free 71 Barnyard enclosure 72 1/60 of a min. 73 Tweezer target

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Gareth Bain

DOWN 1 “The __ of the Ancient Mariner” 2 South African lilies 3 Powerful person 4 BP takers, often 5 “Look at that!” 6 Let fall 7 Determined to have 8 Emergency gear 9 Has obligations 10 On a need-toknow __ 11 Whippersnappers’ opposites 12 Lecherous sort 13 Dutch South African 19 Calamine target 22 Pastoral places 24 Meeting with an atty. 25 Something to talk about 29 River in Hades 31 Dimwits 33 Popular dunker 34 Caught in the act 35 Train engine sound

1/15/13 Monday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

36 Filmmaker Wertmüller 37 Planned travel route 38 Down-to-earth 39 Michelangelo statue 43 Golfer Norman 46 Connecting strip of land: Abbr. 48 Yaks and yaks

FOLLOW US ON

1/15/13

52 Bank takebacks, for short 54 Chef’s headgear 56 Chopper blade 57 “Am not!” rejoinder 58 Tops of overalls 59 Vet sch. course 60 Kimono cousin 61 Unimposing 63 Crock-Pot dinner 66 Brewpub brew 67 Burgle


classifieds

LASSIFIEDs CCLASSIFIEDS Page 8 / Tuesday, March 19, 2013

DAILY LOBO

DAILY LOBO

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds

WIN AN IPAD3!! And support the students of EMS. Raffle ticket for sale in the SUB Wednesday and Friday from 10AM-4PM!

Auditions

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

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

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

STUDIOS, 1 BLOCK UNM, $455-$475/ free utilities. Ask Lobo free month special! 246-2038. www.kachina-proper ties.com

Services PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA. MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. welbert53@aol.com / 401-8139. TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799. FEEL BETTER AT Agora. Call: 277-3013. Chat: www.agoracares.org

Health and Wellness

Announcements EROTIC ROMANCE @ UNM. She likes it Irish by local author Sophia Ryan. AMAZON.COM WANTED: STATISTICS TUTOR. Graduate level. (March 25 to May 1st). 2 or 3 times per week. Salary is reasonable. Call Joe at 505-450-1949.

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

ATTRACTIVE STUDIO, 1 block south UNM, full kitchen, 1BA, large main room, new/remodeled, appliances. $475/mo, $200dd includes utilities. No pets. Move in special. 268-0525.

Lost and Found

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

Apartments

QUIET, CLEAN, AFFORDABLE, 1BDRM, $575/mo, utilities included. 2 blocks to UNM, no pets. Move in Special. 262-0433.

UNM NORTH CAMPUS - 1BDRM, starting at $585/mo, includes utilities. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets allowed. Move in special! 573-7839.

FOUND ENVELOPE. WHAT kind of envelope, what was on the envelope, what was in the envelope, what area of campus was it lost, around what time and what day. The more detail the better. pheinste@unm.edu

AVAILABLE!

268-8686 5700 Copper NE

Claudio Tolousse, Guitar 8:00pm – 9:00pm Keller Hall Senior Student Recital

Rooms For Rent SEEKING FEMALE ROOMMATE. Small house blocks from campus. 2 rooms available: $500 or $375 /mo. all utilities incl uded. WiFi, cable, dishwasher, washer/dryer. Email cwalker@unm. edu for pics/info.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, courtyards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

ROOM IN CASAS Del Rio available. Call Sam at 505-916-7064 as soon as possible for information and if you are interested.

2BDRMS, UTILITIES INCLUDED 313 Girard SE. $735/mo. www.kachina-proper ties.com. 246-2038.

ROOMMATE WANTED;SERIOUS clean student, shared w/2 females. 3BDRM/2BA house 2.7 mi from UNM. $405/mo + utilities. Call/Text Meagan 505-803-4994 or Samantha 505-553-3632.

UNM/CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate consultant: 243-2229.

SEEKING FEMALE ROOMMATE. Small house blocks from campus. 2 rooms available: $500 or $375 /mo. all utilities included. WiFi, cable, dishwasher, washer/dryer. Email cwalker@unm. edu for pics/info.

ON THE EDGE... of downtown 802 Gold Ave SW. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. 1BDRM. Across from Silver Ave. Flying Star and Robinson Park. Gated, safe, courtyard, laundry, off street parking. $605/mo with $200dd. Please call Greg at 305-975-0908.

ROOM FOR RENT, student preferred. 2 blocks from UNM. Mid-May through July and/or next year @ $400/mo +utilities.Call/Text 979-229-1107.

NICE ONE BDRM appartment. 504 Columbia SE rear. Lookin windows. 266-3059.

War” presented by Professor Gilbert Joseph, Farnham Professor of History and International Studies, Yale.

Softball vs NMSU 4:00pm Lobo Softball Complex

Nuclear, Particle, Astroparticle and Cosmology (NUPAC) Seminars 2:00pm – 3:00pm Room 190, Physics & Astronomy “First Lights for the HAWC Observatory” presented by Robert Lauer (UNM).

Bootcamp 5:30pm – 6:30pm Johnson Center Free! March Madness event

Student Groups & Gov.

Can Women Have It all? Why not! 8:00am – 10:00am Anderson School Of Management Breakfast panel discussion. SOLAS Brown Bag Lecture Series 12:00pm – 1:00pm Latin American and Iberian Institute Presented by Ambassador Steven Maloney, United States Foreign Service.

Why Good Men are Silent: How men can be the solution to ending all forms of violence against women 7:00pm – 8:00pm Science and Math Learning Center (SMLC) Auditorium 102 Presented by Ted Bunch.

Baseball vs Missouri State 3:00pm & 7:00pm Isotopes Park

!!BARTENDING!!! $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520 ext.100. VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

TENTH GRADE CHEMISTRY tutor wanted. Twice a week. Please call or email for more information. Turnerk@unm.edu CAREGIVERS TO WORK with adults with developmental disabilities: $9.00/hr + DOE. FT positions only. All positions require flexible schedules, being able to work weekends or awake-overnights and holidays. Exp. a plus but not necessary. Apply in person: Tue - Fri, 9am4pm, Providence Support Services, 2225 4th St. NW/ 898-9435. We require a valid NMDL, clean driving record, a reliable vehicle + current vehicle insurance, passing a drug test + background check, and be 21 or older. FEMALE MODEL WANTED for North Valley artist. $12/hr. Need someone who is available a couple of mornings per week. Please call 897-0327 if you are interested. Dan.

3-TEMPORARY RANCH WORKERS. 2J Donnell Livestock, Fowlerton, TX. From 4/15/13 to 2/15/14. Employer guarantees ¾ of total work hours for contract period. $1200/mo. Feeding, grazing, caring for livestock, On-call 24/7 days/week and holidays. Break, train, shoe horses. Maintain fences, barns, water lines, windmills, roads for operation, maintain equipment. Must be able to ride and handle horses, work cattle from horseback. Worktools, supplies, equipment, provided at no cost to workers. Housing provided at no cost to workers, including US workers who cannot reasonably return to their permanent residence at end of work day. Transportation to worksite provided by employer. Apply at your State’s nearest Workforce office or 501 Mountain Rd NE, Albuquerque, NM 87103. (505) 8431900 using job order # TX2689144.

For Sale NEED INEXPENSIVE RELIABLE transportation? Buy red 150cc Kymco scooter. Perfect condition, plus two helmets: $1200. No parking hassle, 75/mpg. Prof’s “car” for 8 years. dwaldman@thesystemmd.com 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

for

Christians on UNM 12:00pm – 1:30pm SUB Scholars National Student Speech-Language Hearing Associati 1:30pm – 3:00pm SUB Acoma A & B Muslim Student Association 2:00pm – 3:00pm SUB Sandia Colleges Against Cancer 3:30pm – 5:00pm SUB Luminaria

Amnesty International 7:00pm – 9:00pm SUB Spirit Disciples of Jesus 8:00pm – 9:00pm SUB Acoma A & B

Student Coalition for Diversity 4:00pm – 6:00pm SUB Acoma A & B

Secular Student Alliance 11:00am – 12:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B

Sports & Rec

ARE YOU PASSIONATE about running? We are seeking one authentic and experienced sales specialist for our run department. We offer a fun place to work and a chance to learn and grow in the outdoor sports retail industry. Must be willing to work weekends. Please apply in person at Sport Systems, 6915 Montgomery Blvd. N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87109 or submit your resume to jerry@nmsportsytems.com

Japanese Language Club Weekly Meeting 4:00pm – 7:00pm SUB Fiesta A & B

Centennial Engineering Building, Auditorium Presented by Dr. Barry Hughes Director of the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures.

Guest Lecture 2:00pm – 3:30pm History Department Commons Room, 1104 Mesa Vista Hall “In from the Cold: Latin America’s New Encounter with the Long Cold

Jobs Off Campus

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.

Campus Calendar of Events

International Institute Leadership 9:00am – 1:00pm SUB Alumni

Lectures & Readings

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

USED CAR LOT and collision center looking for part time help. Good phone skills and great personality needed. Can work with school schedule in most cases. Looking for 3 times a week for 4 hours a day. Apply in person 1200 Lomas Blvd NE.

Alternative Futures for Energy Production and Consumption in the US and the World 7:00pm – 8:00pm

Coffee & Tea Time 9:30am – 11:00am LGBTQ Resource Center

Duplexes NEAR NOB HILL. Large 1BDRM; hardwood floors, updated kitchen and bathroom, W/D, yard, off-street parking. $575/mo. 271-9686 home, 934-4331 mobile.

SOCCER COACH NEEDED. Great PT pay, 3-5 hours, Saturdays. Youth ages: 4-12. 898-9999.

OSE - CQuIC Seminars 3:30pm – 4:30pm Room 125, Dane Smith Hall “Quantum “Optical” Engineering” presented by Joseph Kerckhoff, JILA.

Coming Out of The Shadows 11:00am – 1:00pm SUB Plaza Atrium

2BDRM, 1BA, 780 sqft. Off-street parking. $700/mo, includes utilities. $300dd. No smoking, no pets. 302-A Girard SE. 505-270-0891.

HIRING LIFEGUARDS AND Pool Managers for the Bernalillo County Swimming Pools. Lifeguard classes begin March 19 at the Rio Grande Indoor Pool. 505-314-0169.

CASA Co-op & Lobo Gardens Group meeting 9:00am – 11:00am Winnings Coffee, Harvard Discuss weekly events and new ideas for Lobo Gardens and CASA co-op.

Campus Events

Condos

sandiaproperties@gmail.com

FREE BIRTH CONTROL for a year. Albuquerque Clinical Trials is studying a new type of low dose investigational birth control pill that uses hormones similar to those already in your body. If you’re sexually active woman between 18 and 50 and qualify for this study, you may receive at no cost. -Study birth control medication for a year. -Study related care. -Reimbursement for time and travel. For more information, contact Jessica at 505-224-7407 ext.222.

Kyle Headstream, Trumpet 6:00pm – 7:00pm Keller Hall Senior Student Recital

CARLISLE QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD, parks, bike trails, N/S, female only, graduate student preferred. $300/mo. +1/2 utilities. 805-963-4174.

www.sandiapropertymanagement.com

BRAVHART1.ZEALFORLIFE.COM

Arts & Music

N.E. HOME, quiet Carlisle area, parks, bike trails, N/S, female only, graduate student preferred. $350/mo. +1/2 utilities. 805-963-4174.

MOVE-IN SPECIALS

BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean, 1BDRM. $575/mo, includes utilities. No pets. Move in special! 255-2685.

LOBO LIFE

CLASSIFIED PAYMENT INFORMATION

Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, • 30¢ per word per day for five or more Come to to Marron show Pre-payment by Visa or Master •• Come MarronHall, Hall,room room107, 131, show •• Phone: or American is required. consecutive days without changing or your IDID and receive FREE classifieds Card is required. CallExpress 277-5656. yourUNM UNM and receive a special rate MasterCard Call 277-5656 cancelling. inofYour Space, Rooms for Rent, or any For 10¢ per word in Personals, Rooms • Fax or E-mail: Pre-payment by Visa or • Fax or Email: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, • 40¢ per word per day for four days or Sale Category. for Rent, or any For Sale category. Master Card is required. Fax ad text, MasterCard or American Express is required. less or non-consecutive days. dates and dates category to 277-7531, or ad text, and catergory to 277-7530 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Fax • Special effects are charged addtionally: e-mail classads@unm.edu. or email to to classifi eds@dailylobo.com DEADLINE logos, bold, italics, centering, blank lines, person:Pre-payment Pre-pay bybycash, •• In In person: cash, check, money larger font, etc. check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or • 1 p. m. business day before publication. order, money order, Visa or MasterCard. American Express. Come by room 107 Come by room 131 in Marron Hallinfrom CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB Marron Hall from 8:00am to 5:00pm. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. UNM Student Publications www.dailylobo.com Mail:: Pre-pay money order, in-state check, Pre-paybyby money order, in-state •• Mail MSC03 2230 Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American check, Visa, MasterCard. Mail payment, 1 University of New Mexico • All rates include both print and online Express. Mail payment, ad text, dates and ad text, dates and category. Albuquerque, NM 87131 editions of the Daily Lobo. catergory.

DANCE TEACHERS WANTED: Arthur Murray School of Dance is looking for fun, outgoing and self-motivated people to start training for full time employment. No experience necessary. You will learn salsa, country, ballroom and much more. Call 505-296-6112 to schedule an interview.

FOUND NEAR UNM campus, a camera. Let me know the brand and color and it is yours. 264-0612.

UNM ID ADVANTAGE

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Theater & Films

Emerging Lobo Leaders Weekly Meeting 4:30pm – 8:30pm SUB Lobo A & B Student Dharma Meeting 5:15pm – 6:30pm SUB Spirit

Les Miserables 8:00pm SUB Theater Mid Week Movies.

Meditation

Workshops How to Present at a Conference 12:00pm – 1:00pm Travelstead Hall Room 125 Presented by Francisco Salazar & Daniel Shattuck, Graduate Consultants at the Graduate Resource Center.

Spiritual Seekers Club 6:30pm – 8:00pm SUB Thunderbird Catholic Apologetics 6:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Mirage- Thunderbird DINE of UNM 6:00pm – 7:00pm SUB Cherry/ Silver College Democrats 6:30pm – 7:30pm SUB Acoma A & B

Interview & Resume Workshop 3:00pm – 4:00pm African American Student Services

1. Go t 2. Clic near th 3. Cli Listing” page 4. Type and su

Email events to: calendar@dailylobo.com

International Medical DelegationEl Salvador 7:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Cherry/ Silver

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com

LULAC(League of United American Citizens) 7:00pm – 8:30pm SUB Trailblazer

Preview events at

Wa

Email events to: calendar@dailylob Current exhibit details can be found at www.dailylobo.com UNM group, organization or *

Events must be sponsored by a


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