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monday March 25, 2013
GPSA presidential hopefuls square off Candidates talk campus safety, communication by John Tyczkowski and Antonio Sanchez news@dailylobo.com
GPSA presidential candidates Sharif Gias and Priscila Poliana debated for the final time this weekend before the April 1-4 elections. Both candidates retreaded old ground regarding campus safety and student/administration relations, but also discussed new approaches to UNM campus relations and diversity. Campus relations Friday’s debate, held at the Domenici Auditorium on north campus, began with both candidates discussing the relationship between the north and main campuses. Poliana focused her concerns on the Student Health & Counseling Center (SHAC), and said she wanted to hear input from medical students about possible new directions for SHAC. “I need the help because the nursing students, the pharmacy students, the medical students, they are the ones that know what’s going on better than I do because I don’t have the skills that they do, so I need
their input,” she said. Gias said that if elected, he would push for a community project between different departments throughout the University. He said students from north and main campuses have skills that can complement one another. “We need to create a community project. Don’t forget, we graduate students have the best ideas. It’s not time for us to sit and think about what GPSA will do — we are graduate students, I need your ideas,” he said. Campus safety Both candidates agreed Friday that the University’s safety was a primary concern. Gias said that as president of GPSA, he would work alongside the University to create a website and forum where students could voice their safety worries. Gias proposed having a shuttle that runs past 10 p.m., which is when all shuttle buses currently stop running. He said this would help bolster security for students studying on campus late at night. Gias said this idea came to him after one late-night study session on campus. “I was walking and I was concerned someone was following me — sometimes I don’t feel safe when I walk at night so had there been one shuttle, it would help,” he said. Poliana said she is focused on
safety options students already have, specifically the campus security escort service. “I know there is a demand for the escort service, I want to make sure this works,” she said. “We need to make sure if we’re offering this, we need to make sure UNM cops are getting there timely.” She then said she was not implying UNMPD is late, but she was
saying if we have this program, we have to make sure it is working well and proficiently at all times. Students and administrators During Saturday’s debate, both candidates agreed the lines of communication between students and administrators need to be clearer so both groups’ needs can be heard and acted upon. “I feel frustration when I talk to
students regarding the changes they want to see,” Poliana said. Poliana said she had met with Graduate Resource Center Executive Director Lawrence Roybal to discuss how the GRC can better serve students. Additionally, she said she would talk to administration and faculty to learn how to effectively
involved after witnessing a domestic violence dispute. Most of the men responded that they would “mind their own business.” But if it appeared the woman did not have a direct relation to that man, only then did the men in the video say they would step in. Bunch said this illustrated how men in society view a woman as an object belonging to a man if they are in a relationship. Factors such as these contribute to at least three women a day being murdered by
their partners, mostly during or after separation, he said. One boy at the lecture disagreed with most of the men in the film, and said he would step in whether or not the woman was involved with the man assaulting her. “I would definitely not say (mind my own business), I would get involved,” 15-year-old Bastin Avila said. Avila said he has been influenced by the women in his family almost all his life to be a femi-
nist and thought by going to the event it would help him be part of that voice. “It helps me understand how men are influenced to treat women and see men’s perspective of women,” he said to the Daily Lobo after the talk. Women in the room were asked to raise their hand if they do anything during their day to make themselves feel less at risk of being sexually assaulted. As hands around the room came up, Bunch
asked the men to look around. “Every 12 seconds a man physically abuses a woman in this country and every nine seconds a man rapes or sexually assaults a woman,” he said. Some women explained what they do to protect themselves against such occurrences, such as parking under lights, avoiding eye contact, carrying their keys in a jabbing, outward position and
Sergio Jiménez / Daily Lobo GPSA presidential candidates Priscila Poliana, left, and Sharif Gias listen to a question from a GPSA Council member at their third debate Friday afternoon. GPSA elections are April 1 through 4.
see Debate PAGE 3
Lecturer: Men can end violence against women by Tanya Prather
news@dailylobo.com
Men and women united Tuesday night for a lecture on how men and boys can be the solution to ending violence against women and girls. “Why Good Men Are Silent” was given by Ted Bunch, co-founder of A Call to Men. This national prevention organization is part of UNiTE, a UN initiative committed to ending violence against women around the world. Bunch’s lecture, given in the Science and Math Learning Center, touched on key points such how men and boys are socialized as well as what society has come to perceive as the “man-box.” Bunch said the “man-box” is a social construction that includes all the clichés a boy hears growing up such as “be tough, don’t cry and don’t ask for help.” Bunch said that by telling our boys and men to “quit crying/acting like a girl,” we are teaching them that girls are weak and that we do not value them, which leads to disrespecting women. “Men don’t listen to the voices of women because men do not respect the voices of women,” Bunch said. “If men would listen to the voices of women, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.” He showed a video of men being asked if they would get
Inside the
Daily Lobo volume 117
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see Violence PAGE 3
Rachel Toraño-Mark / Daily Lobo Audience members attending the presentation on ending violence against women react to a speech given by Ted Bunch. Bunch’s talk focused on how men and boys are socialized to disrespect women and how they can break through that conditioning.
Pigs in a blanket
New home, new advantage
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PAGETWO M O N D AY , M A RC H 25, 2013
NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO
New Yorkers flout law, keep pigs Owning pet pigs illegal under NYC health code by Jake Pearson
The Associated Press NEW YORK — Pigs have long gotten a bad rap. The four-legged ungulates are considered so messy and stinky that they’re synonymous with slovenliness: Eat too much and you’re pigging out. Forget to clean up and your house is a pig pen. And when is a pig happiest? That stigma is perhaps no greater than in New York City, where high-rises and apartments are hardly hospitable to pigs. The city’s health code forbids keeping them as pets, forcing pig owners to operate in secret — or boldly take the risk an unhappy neighbor might squeal. “People think it’s weird and a novelty but they’re really sweet and really smart animals,” says Timm Chiusano, who keeps two potbellied pigs on the ground floor of his three-story brownstone in Brooklyn. “They can be fantastic pets.” Chiusano, 35, moved to his current home after raising his pets from piglets in a condo high-rise, where a neighbor once raised a stink about them piddling in the lobby. Now his difficulties are largely logistical. Though billed as “mini pigs” when he got them, five-yearold Cholula and Runtly now weigh in at 200 and 70 pounds, respectively. He renovated his home with
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the pigs in mind, putting their beds and food on the first floor (their legs are too stubby to climb stairs) and installing special flooring that holds up to hooves. He’s also constantly resodding his tiny backyard because the grass is essentially a salad bar for swine. Queens resident Danielle Forgione is scrambling to sell her second-floor apartment after a neighbor complained about 1-yearold Petey the pig to the co-op board. In November and December she was issued city animal violations and in January was told by both the city and her management office that she needed to get rid of the pig.
“This is our pet. He’s not harming anybody.” ~Danielle Forgione pig owner “He’s part of our family,” says Forgione, whose short and stocky pet weighs in at nearly 40 pounds, stands 15 inches tall and measures 21 inches long, snout to tail. “This is our pet. He’s not harming anybody. He goes to the vet every six months, he gets his hooves clipped, he gets de-wormed, he gets his shots.” Forgione, 33, purchased Petey as a therapeutic animal after losing her brother in a motorcycle accident last year. Also, one of her six children is allergic to dog hair,
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so Petey’s coarse, human-like hair is ideal. “He sleeps in the same bed as my youngest,” she says, adding that Petey wears medium sized clothes she buys from online dog-clothing stores. “And he’s not aggressive either.” But the city put its foot down and earlier this month denied her petition to amend the city’s health code to create an exception for “domesticated mini pigs.” She’s exhausted her appeals and has until later this summer to remove Petey or authorities will do it for her. City officials say pigs are a public health risk because they cannot be vaccinated for rabies and can become aggressive, especially during their first few years. Since 2008, there have been 89 illegal animal violations — but the violations database doesn’t differentiate animals by type so there’s no way to know how many of those violations were for pigs. “Pigs are hard to police,” says Salvatore Pernice, a Staten Island veterinarian who recently flouted the health code to purchase his 9-month-old mini-pig Albert from a breeder in Texas for $950. He picked him up at the Newark Airport and brought him back to his home where he’s able to enjoy a backyard and gets along fine with Pernice’s other pets, a cat and two dogs. “I do think it’s probably better to live in a place where they are able to root, graze and be a pig,” says Pernice, 50, who lives in a detached 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
Bebeto Matthews / AP Photo house with a large yard. Exactly how many people own pigs in the city is unclear. But many connect online, creating Facebook pages for their pigs and swapping photos. One Brooklyn pig named Franklin is dressed up in Mets baseball gear and has more than 1,000 likes on his Facebook page.
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Danielle Forgione, left, and her daughter Olivia, 3, play with Petey, the family’s pet pig, on Thursday in the Queens borough of New York. Forgione is scrambling to sell her second-floor apartment after a neighbor complained about 1-year-old Petey the pig to the co-op board.
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.
The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board is now accepting applications for
UNM’s Student Art and Literature Magazine Conceptions Southwest 2013-2014 Editor Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or download an application at: pubboard.unm.edu/ conception-southwest/ Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 5, 2013 Term of Office: Mid-May 2013 through Mid-May 2014 Requirements: To be selected editor of Conceptions Southwest you must: Have completed at least 18 hours of credit at UNM or have been enrolled as a full time student at UNM the preceding semester and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student throughout the term of office and be a UNM student for the full term. Some publication experience preferable. For more information call 277-5656.
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Debate
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petition for student concerns. Gias said students and administrators “exist on different planes” and that each must understand the needs of the other and be willing to compromise and make exceptions to get things done. “When do you make an exception? When you are convinced by the logic,” Gias said. Gias said he would encourage faculty and administrators to become actively involved with GPSA and graduate student events to encourage familiarity between the groups and break down barriers. “Without knowing the person sitting on the other side of the table, we cannot do anything,” Gias said.
Violence
Diversity classes core-curriculum requirement Both candidates felt differently about the proposed requirement that undergraduates take a threecredit diversity course as part of the core curriculum. Such a class could consist of learning about non-Western cultures and would draw from pre-existing course offerings. The requirement has not yet been approved by the Board of Regents, and the date at which it will be up for consideration is undetermined. The UNM Curriculum Committee and Provost Diversity Council created the plan last November. ASUNM simultaneously passed a resolution in support of it.
“I think that changing the core curriculum is a revolutionary act that needs to happen,” Poliana said. Poliana said that if elected, she would begin to work with ASUNM to advocate to the UNM administration for this change. Gias said he would like to see whether the student body thinks there is a lack of diversity in the undergraduate core curriculum before making the course a requirement. To this end, he said he would like to conduct a student survey to collect data on their sentiments. “Proposing a change isn’t good enough, you need to get the students involved,” Gias said. “I’m a numbers guy, and the numbers don’t lie.”
boy doesn’t say “mad, angry or sad,” but that it would “destroy him.” Bunch explained this as a continued socialization, teaching our children that women have less value, causing us to maintain a culture of discrimination, he said. He showed a photo of his own son wearing pink socks. He had asked his father to help dye them after seeing NFL players wearing pink for Breast Cancer Awareness month. Bunch describes his son as a man’s man who was influenced by his idols, not even knowing the reason behind the pink. His son’s
friends began asking where they could get their pair soon after. Bunch said he believes change is possible and that it starts with the men influencing one another.
from page 1
always relying on someone to drop them off and pick them up in front of their destination. Summer Little, interim director of the Women’s Resource Center, said, “When I lived alone, I would check every window in the house and lock every door when I got home.” To help explain his message, Bunch used hypothetical examples. One involved a story of a boy who is asked how he would feel if his coach told him he played like a girl. Bunch emphasized that the
To find out more or get involved with the fight to end domestic violence, contact Summer Little at UNM Women’s Crisis Center at (505) 277-3716, or go to ACallToMen.com. To join a UNiTE initiative, go to EndViolence.UN.org.
Monday, March 25, 2013/ Page 3
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Monday, March 25, 2013
The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg
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LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS: On March 13, Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected as Pope Francis of the Catholic Church. What do you think about this? I am excited because he does not indulge in the luxuries that come with 42% his position in the Catholic Church. The most important thing to me is that he is the first Latin American 4% pope. I have a problem with the fact that during the Dirty War (1976-1983), he was not a strong advocate against 19% the dictatorship in Argentina, his home country. I don’t care because I’m not Catholic. 30% I’m Catholic, but that doesn’t mean I 6% care about who the new pope is. Out of 53 responses
THIS WEEK’S POLL: On Wednesday, the University and Lobo men’s basketball head coach Steve Alford agreed on a $240,000 raise and a 10-year contract. The money from his raise will come from basketball revenue and not from student fees or state funds, according to Athletics VP Paul Krebs. What do you think about this? I’d be disturbed if the money came from anywhere but basketball revenue. Regardless of where the money came from, it’s disturbing that faculty haven’t seen a raise in four years while the Athletics Department continues to prosper. I’m not so sure the University should have rewarded him so handsomely, considering the Lobos’ loss to No. 14 Harvard on Thursday. Good for Alford, he totally deserves it.
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COLUMN
Want looney? Tune in to Fox News by Jason Stafford
Daily Lobo guest columnist opinion@dailylobo.com
In a nation with multiple networks devoted to cartoons 24 hours a day, seven days a week, you may have heard this one before: Back in my day we didn’t have 24-hour cartoon channels. And it’s true, there was no Cartoon Network, no Nicktoons, Nick Jr. or Disney Channel for kids to watch animated mayhem and violence at any moment of the day. Cartoons were on the three big networks and that was it, Monday through Friday 7-9 a.m. and 3-5 p.m. and Saturday mornings 8-11 a.m. Aside from that, programming was devoted to things people who were kids don’t remember because they weren’t cartoons. I remember those times and I wonder if kids these days understand the rich times in which they are living. Even the commercials on these networks are mostly cartoons. Entire networks are devoted to make-believe and fantasy which allows kids to escape the reality of the world. They get to spend time in a safe haven and move away from the real world and its true issues. I think about these children and wonder how hard it would be on them if they were to lose all of these networks — if they woke up tomorrow and 24/7 cartoon networks were gone. What place in television would allow them the escape from facts and reality inherent to the world? Where could they go to watch make-believe and mistakes made without consequence? Where would these poor kids turn? Fox News, of course! Indeed, this 24/7 network dedicated to American-style news would be a perfect refuge for children starved for fiction in a world full of facts. A network filled with characters that absolutely lack character, who have become caricatures of what newspeople should be. These are not David Brinkleys, reporting unbiased facts with no slant or opinion. These are not people looking to be fair and balanced, reporting pure fact. They are as anthropomorphic as any cartoon in their attempt to have human characteristics such as compassion and sympathy while not really being human. Sure, they can express compassion or sympathy for a person or cause, but it usually involves a Droopy the Dog ‘I’m-so-happy’ quality about it. Usually it’s to sympathize with Person A because Entity B caused some tragic consequence in Person A’s life. The sympathy is usually less
about concern for Person A and more concern with lambasting Entity B. They seem about as far removed from reality as any cartoon character is, and in fact seem more similar to cartoon characters than human beings. Fox’s anchors have all the myopia of a Mr. Magoo coupled with a stone-age thinking modality that would jibe with the Flintstones. They make a wonderful Lucy to the Charlie Brown of their followers, always holding some football down to jerk away. Their arguments and talking points resonate with the redundancy of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck debating duck season versus rabbit season, except thankfully Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny refrained from littering their talking points with ad hominem attacks and slippery slope fallacies. Much like the Smurfs, they show that being small invites the invention of words to drive their own narrative in a world that frightens them. Where else but in cartoons can you invent words so readily accepted into the national lexicon? You would think by now Fox News should have smurfed a solution to the problems smurfing America today. It’s been apparent in the recent gun control conversations that Fox presents its arguments with all the rootin’, tootin’est, gun shootin’est Yosemite Sam bluster it can muster. There’s no look at facts and statistics about America’s gross amounts of gun violence, even when it’s aimed at our greatest national resource: children. Even the future of America, the lives of its children, is not a compelling point they’ll see when compared to the past of this nation. A past where rich, god-fearing slave owners had the right to marginalize and disenfranchise everyone and own limitless amounts of guns. Fortunately, slavery, marginalization and disenfranchisement have made their way out of the American dialogue. It would be nice to see gun control become a part of the American dialogue. Instead we get more metaphorical six-guns shooting in the air with no attention paid to where the bullets land as long as they drive the debate off the stage. Fox News and its anchors have a Dudley DoRight sense of moral expectations that do not fit with the real world today. While noble in their ideas, a puritanical policy of avoidance of social problems will not alleviate them. Holding fast to the notion of Polly Pureheart and the nuclear family dream will not end teen pregnancy, drug use, abortion or other social aspects of America today. Doses of reality might help fix these problems, but this is a cartoon network and
reality is not their business. Fox News would have you believe it has all the answers, much like Felix the Cat. It doesn’t offer solutions when it comes to problems and issues in this nation. Its anchors only proffer opinions on those problems and issues. Perhaps they expect their viewers to keep believing they will soon reach into their bag of tricks and pull out a solution — because certainly the bag of ideology tricks has fixed countless problems in the history of the world, hasn’t it? Or maybe there is the expectation that, like Bugs Bunny, they will reach into nonexistent pockets in their fur to pull out 500-pound hammers to belabor the problems into being fixed. The problem is they’ve made the issues into cartoons themselves. From the parties and peoples with opposing views becoming the godless commie Boris Badenov, to Speedy Gonzales being their archetype of immigration. They exist as cartoons and therefore see the world unrealistically. Fox News is playing no small part in the downward spiral of American politics and public life. Sadly, if the nation runs obliviously off a cliff and hovers in the air for a moment, legs running in place before hurtling into the ground below, the nation won’t just crawl out of some silhouette-shaped crater and carry on. If a gigantic anvil comes crashing down from the sky onto the head of the U.S., we won’t just slither out in some honking, accordion-like manner to re-inflate ourselves by blowing into our thumbs. Fox News is helping to cultivate a climate and mood in politics in this country that is of no good use to anyone, including its own fan base. Even children understand when Wile E. Coyote falls off that cliff or eats that anvil, it’s not real. Sadly, Fox News and its followers can’t grasp the difference between cartoon and reality. And if Fox news is going to perpetuate a cartoonish state of affairs in broadcasting, it should back a guy like Wile E. Coyote. He always tries in new and creative ways. He has never succeeded and still believes he can’t fail. He is persistent, confident, competitive and oblivious to his own danger in trying to make things better for himself. These are qualities that Fox News could certainly use in even the smallest of measure, except these are human qualities and it’s doubtful Fox News could develop them. Or Fox News can carry on as it is until the final grinding end with that Looney Tunes calliope music playing while it stutters, “that’s all folks.”
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Colleges seek out almost-graduates Colleges seek out former students to boost grad rates by Alan Scher Zagier The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Carmen Ricotta knows being a college graduate could mean higher pay and better job opportunities, and it’s not like St. Louis Community College hasn’t been practically begging her to wrap up her two-year degree. The school has been calling and emailing the 28-year-old electrician’s apprentice to get her to return and complete her final assignment: an exit exam. But life has gotten in the way and Ricotta has been too busy to make the 30-minute trip from her suburban home near Fenton to the downtown St. Louis campus. St. Louis Community College is among 60-plus schools in six states taking what seems like an obvious but little-used step to boost college graduation rates: scouring campus databases to track down former students who unknowingly qualify for degrees. That effort, known as Project Win-Win, has helped community colleges and four-year schools in Florida, Louisiana, Missouri, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Virginia and Wisconsin find hundreds of ex-students who have either earned enough credits to receive associate degrees or are just a few classes shy of getting them. Backed by financial support from the Indianapolis-based Lumina Foundation for Education, the
pilot project began several years ago with 35 colleges in six states. As it winds down, some participating schools plan to continue the effort on their own. Ricotta said at this point, she’s not sure if getting her two-year degree is all that necessary. “It’s a pain,� she said. “I don’t feel like going down to the college to take a test I don’t need. Yeah, I don’t have the degree, but I still took all the classes.� Her seeming indifference to retroactively obtaining her degree points to just one of the challenges facing two-year schools in particular as they strive to fulfill President Barack Obama’s challenge of raising college completion rates to 60 percent by 2020: convincing not just the public, but even some of their students, of the value of an associate’s degree. At central Missouri’s Columbia College, the hunt for students on the verge of graduating worked so well that the school plans to broaden its efforts to find bachelor’s degree candidates who are just one class shy of donning the cap and gown. The private liberal arts college has already awarded nearly 300 retroactive degrees, including one given posthumously to the mother of a deceased former student. Another two dozen students returned to campus to finish up after hearing from the school. “If this was being done nationwide, it could make a difference,� said Tery Donelson, Columbia College’s assistant vice president for enrollment management.
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Like his counterparts in St. Louis, Donelson and his team of transcript detectives also encountered skepticism, if not outright disbelief, from some of the prospective degree awardees. “If you received a letter saying, ‘Congratulations, you’ve earned a degree,’ what would you be thinking?” he said. “That this is a scam. We had to get beyond them. We told them they earned a degree, and all they had to do was acknowledge it,” Donelson continued. “We didn’t want to send a degree to anybody who didn’t want it.” Participating schools pared down their initial lists by eliminating students who received degrees elsewhere or were currently enrolled. Expired addresses or disconnected phone numbers eliminated many more. The Institute for Higher Education Policy, which oversaw the project, initially estimated a potential increase of 25,000 new degrees if its efforts took hold nationwide. But most schools found the exercise more difficult than expected, said Cliff Adelman, a senior associate with the Washington-based policy group. “It ain’t as easy as you think,” he said. “You can’t use a magic wand and have this kind of thing happen.” In Oregon, a review of more
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Four-year schools could follow the lead of the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, which used the program to connect with dropouts who might still be interested in a two-year diploma. Or they could link up with neighboring community colleges in what are known as “reverse
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transfer” agreements. Those agreements allow students to receive their associate’s degrees if they earned enough credits toward them but didn’t actually obtain them before heading to a four-year school. The two-year schools, in turn, can boost their completion rates — a critical measure for accrediting agencies and lawmakers looking for results. One student happy to hear about what amounts to a free degree is Corey Manuel, 34, an Air Force veteran who expects to receive a bachelor’s degree in management information systems from Columbia College. He took his classes at a Denver-area branch campus. Manuel said his educational journey includes nearly 200 credits from five different schools, including a one-year stint straight out of high school playing basketball at Missouri Valley College in Marshall, Mo., and a pair of stops at Louisiana State University’s community college in Eunice. Now an information technology manager at defense contractor Raytheon, Manuel nonetheless still craves the credential he was too busy to pick up along the way. “I wanted to make sure I had that box checked,” he said.
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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is designating five new national monuments, using executive authority to protect historic or ecologically significant sites — including one in Delaware sought by Vice President Joe Biden. The White House said Obama would make the designations Monday, using the century-old Antiquities Act to protect unique natural and historic landmarks. The sites are Rio Grande del Norte National Monument in New Mexico; First State National Monument in Delaware; Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Monument in Maryland; Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument in Ohio; and San Juan Islands National Monument in Washington state. The Delaware monument, commemorating the state’s history and preserving about 1,100 acres near Wilmington, is the first step toward creating a national park in Delaware, the only state not included in the national park system. The project is a longtime priority for Biden, a former senator from Delaware. “This national monument will tell the story of the essential role my state played in the history of the United States,” Biden said in a statement. “I couldn’t be more proud to call Delaware home.” The largest site is Rio Grande del Norte in New Mexico, where Obama will designate nearly 240,000 acres for protection. The site includes wildlife habitat valued by hunters and anglers; rafting, camping, and other recreation, and is prized by the region’s Hispanic and tribal groups. Advocates say the new monument in New Mexico, to be run by the U.S Bureau of Land Management, will contribute an estimated $15 million a year in economic benefits to the area. Supporters called the monument designations especially important at a time of partisan gridlock over wilderness issues. No new wilderness areas were approved in the last Congress, the first time lawmakers have failed to create new wilderness since the 1960s. “Understanding that Congress is broken, The Wilderness Society is very pleased to see President Obama taking important steps toward putting conservation on equal ground with energy development,” said Jamie Williams, president of The Wilderness Society. “Protecting our lands and
Greg Sorber / Albuquerque Journal This undated photo shows the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge within the proposed El Rio Grande Del Norte National Conservation Area near Taos, N.M. The White House says President Obama will designate the Rio Grande del Norte National Monument in New Mexico as a national monument Monday. waters can’t wait.” The New Mexico project in particular is crucial, Williams and other environmentalists said, because it includes some of the most ecologically significant lands in the state, most notably Ute Mountain, which towers over the region and provides habitat for the elk, bald eagle, peregrine falcon, great horned owl and other species. The San Juan Islands monument off Washington’s northwest coast includes roughly 1,000 acres of public land already managed by the BLM. Supporters say the designation will protect important cultural and historical areas and safeguard natural areas used for recreation and other purposes. The Arlington, Va.-based Conservation Fund donated property on Maryland’s Eastern
Shore to the National Park Service to help tell the story of Tubman and the Underground Railroad. Tubman escaped slavery at age 27 but returned to Maryland’s Dorchester and Caroline counties to help slaves escape to the North. The Charles Young monument near Xenia, Ohio, recognizes and celebrates Col. Charles Young, a West Point graduate who was the first black national park superintendent. Young was the highest-ranking black officer in the U.S. Army until his death in 1922. The new monuments would be the first designated by Obama in his second term. Obama created four national monuments in his first term: The Cesar E. Chavez and Fort Ord national monuments in California; Fort Monroe National Monument in Virginia; and Chimney Rock in Colorado.
The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board is now accepting applications for
UNM’s Student Art and Literature Magazine Conceptions Southwest 2013-2014 Editor This position requires approximately 10 hours per week and entails supervision of a volunteer staff.
Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or download an application at: pubboard.unm.edu/conception-southwest/ Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 5, 2013 Term of Office: Mid-May 2013 through Mid-May 2014 Requirements: To be selected editor of Conceptions Southwest you must: Have completed at least 18 hours of credit at UNM or have been enrolled as a full time student at UNM the preceding semester and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student throughout the term of office and be a UNM student for the full term. Some publication experience preferable.
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Tape inflames horse-meat debate CAMPAIGN JOBS! Clip shows man shooting own horse in the head By Jeri Clausing
The Associated Press An Internet video that shows a meat company employee swearing at animal activists before shooting a horse in the head highlights the increasing emotional intensity of the national debate over whether a New Mexico plant should be allowed to resume domestic horse slaughter. Animal rights groups this week uncovered a video posted by a former employee of Valley Meat Co., which has been fighting the United States Department of Agriculture for more than a year for approval to convert its former cattle slaughter operation into a horse slaughterhouse. Valley Meat Co. owner Rick De Los Santos said the employee, who was let go this week, was reacting to harassment by animal rights activists who have targeted the plant since its plans were made public about a year ago. The harassment has worsened since the video, made a year ago, was uncovered this week, he said. “We are getting lots of threats: that we better watch our back, watch who is around us, that they hope our kids and families get killed, ugly stuff,” De Los Santos said Friday. The video shows Tim Sappington of Dexter leading a seemingly healthy horse by a rope to a spot in a dirt road. He strokes his nose and neck, says, “All you animal activists, (expletive) you,” then shoots it in the head. Chaves County Sheriff Rob Coon said the department is bracing for things to get worse as the company nears a final inspection by federal regulators with the hope of opening horse slaughter operations next month. The video, he said, “didn’t help anything,” noting the issue is “very emotional.” De Los Santos said he has hired a security firm to guard his
company and its workers. The New Mexico Livestock Board has launched an inquiry into the shooting as a possible case of animal abuse. But the sheriff noted that it’s not illegal for a horse owner to kill the animal and eat it, saying it’s no different than a farmer who slaughters his pig and consumes the meat. That’s because horses are considered livestock and no different under the law than cattle or pigs. “Everybody is up in arms,” Coon said. “The sad part is — or maybe it’s good for him — there is not a law that says you can’t slaughter your livestock for consumption. And he is a horse eater.”
“The sad part is — or maybe it’s good for him — there is not a law that says you can’t slaughter your livestock for consumption. And he is a horse eater.” ~Rob Coon Chaves County sheriff No one answered a telephone listing for Sappington in Dexter on Friday. De Los Santos said Sappington actually filmed the entire process for preparing the horse for consumption. But he only posted part of the video. Carolyn Schnurr, federal legislative manager of government relations for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, called the video “emotionally disturbing.” But she said the group does not condone violence, and reminded others opposed to horse slaughter to “stay focused on
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what needs to be done to help American horses ... to end the slaughter of American horses.” Horse slaughter opponents are pushing legislation in Congress to ban domestic slaughter, as well as the export of horses to other countries for slaughter. The debate is raging amid a recent uproar in Europe over horse meat being found in products labeled as beef. De Los Santos has said the meat from his plant would be processed for human consumption in Russia, eastern Europe and Asia. It will also be used for pet foods. Last year, De Los Santos sued the USDA to resume the inspections necessary to open what would be the nation’s first horse slaughterhouse in more than five years. The USDA earlier this month said it has no choice legally but to move forward with the application of Valley Meat and several other companies since Congress lifted a ban on the practice. The company’s attorney, A. Blair Dunn, said earlier this week that a final inspection of the plant by USDA officials is expected in early April. Many animal humane groups and public officials are outraged at the idea of resuming domestic slaughter, including New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, who points to the iconic animal’s role as a loyal companion in the West. But others — including some horse rescuers, livestock associations and the American Quarter Horse Association — support the plans. They point to a 2011 report from the federal Government Accountability Office that shows horse abuse and abandonment have been increasing since Congress effectively banned horse slaughter by cutting funding for federal inspection programs in 2006. They say the ban on domestic slaughter has led to tens of thousands of horses being shipped to inhumane slaughterhouses in Mexico.
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Weekly Horoscopes by Alexandra Swanberg aswanny@unm.edu
As dreamers do Capricorn—The full moon is Wednesday, and energies everywhere are running high. Your competitive spirit is particularly vivacious, so be careful that you aren’t stepping on too many toes while climbing the proverbial ladder. That being said, you stand to get off on the right foot with important people. Make sure you take time to breathe and reflect, which is more difficult with the strong Aries influence, but still necessary if you want to make the right decisions. Aquarius—Pay attention to what your gut tells you this week, as you may be otherwise overlooking some important details in your life. Your world has whirled more furiously since Aries took over the astrological scene last week. Though you love the way this momentum propels you in all the right directions, it won’t do much good if you’re losing track of what’s already on your plate. Take care of all business right away so you’re free to indulge every whim. Pisces—Your confidence is growing, dragging you out of the murky waters of the spiritual world in which you’ve been dwelling the past month. Take advantage of this energy by indulging your wild side, though don’t get too crazy. The full moon is Wednesday, which makes you more prone to emotional highs and lows. The latter half of the week is ideally spent in pursuing personal goals and generally taking care of business. Aries—While Pisces was ruling the cosmic scene most of this month and February, you felt like you were carrying a heavy load that would not let up. This week, Aries is back in the game, adding rocket propulsion to that load. You’re fired up and on a mission to deal with your baggage for good. Don’t get too caught up in your own journey and forget about the people who helped you through tough times recently. Taurus—You’ve got much
more energy than usual, which you may not know exactly what to do with. The result is a restlessness that drives your focus all over the place. Your best bet is to amp up your exercise routine. Run until you’ve got nothing left, which leaves your mind ready to work. You’re particularly sharp this week, and if you can properly focus your energies you may find the open doors you’ve been looking so hard for. Gemini—This week is all about the pursuit of knowledge, especially in conjunction with social situations. A few things have been bothering you for much of this month, and now it’s time to finally iron them out. The best approach is to just talk it out, and spare no details. Get it out of your system — with the load out of your mind, you can approach it more objectively, giving you the best chance of successfully dealing with whatever it is. Cancer—Interactions with family members are more heated these days, and you may feel close to taking the last straw. It’s best for you to address this directly after the full moon, when your emotions aren’t so wild that you can’t think clearly about them. You are more apt to do and say things you’ll regret, so hold off as much as you can. Just remember anything you do and say may be held against you in the future, so be mindful of how you approach issues. Leo—Prepare for a surge of creativity over the next few weeks. Have writing implements on hand at all times, particularly in the bathroom to capture shower inspiration and other passing thoughts. You won’t act on all of these, but it’s important you recognize the awesomeness that flows through you. If you encourage this river of creative expression to flow freely, you’ll enjoy some especially juicy fruits in the coming weeks. Virgo—You’re very much in
demand these days, and your energy levels are finally rising to the occasion. Be sure not to let this all go to your head, as reality will make itself clear eventually. For now, it’s easy to get carried away in fantasy, which is a nice respite for your head. However, it’s not exactly beneficial at this time when you could be getting more done if you weren’t so distracted. Just be mindful of where your mind is. Libra—Midweek is going to be a rather intense time for you, as you’ll be feeling caught between what you’re compelled to do and what you feel you should do. You may be better off just going with the flow and seeing what happens, rather than overthinking your decisions. This influence comes to a head on Wednesday, when there is a particularly potent full moon. However you act, you will benefit from developing a sense for your independent side. Scorpio—Lately you’ve been unable to escape the feeling that others are forgetting about you, that you’re not getting the help or attention you deserve. Keep in mind you have plenty of people on your side, and if you’re feeling lonely it will help you to be direct about your concerns with the people they involve. Just remember, being direct isn’t necessarily harsh. Avoid letting resentment give you a negative tone, as they aren’t to blame for not just knowing what you need. Sagittarius—Now that the heavy, introspective Pisces influence has lightened up, you’re feeling sunnier and outgoing, like your usual self. However, the full moon on Wednesday urges you to take some time for yourself, to reflect on what you’ve been going through. If you make the time, this could be an eye-opening experience. For the rest of the week things settle down and you can enjoy some lovely conversations, especially in more intimate settings.
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bike trails, N/S, female only, graduate student preferred. $350/mo. +1/2 utilities. 805-963-4174.
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Must have prior experience working with children ages 8-13. Pay is $350. Please send resume and references by April 15 to Eva Thaddeus at evathad@nmia.com
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John Donald Robb Composers’ Symposium 8:00am – 4:00pm Keller Hall Celebrating the centenary of Stravinsky’s famous Rite of Spring with a symposium exploring the intersection of music and movement.
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LoboSports Sports editor / Thomas Romero-Salas / @ThomasRomeroS
Page
12 Monday, March 25, 2013
The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
sports@dailylobo.com
BASEBALL
SOFTBALL
Split doubleheader vs. Nev. riles coach Birmingham
Siena 13-5, 5-2
‘There’s no entitlement here’ Lobos defeat Weekend splits 2-2 after losses to Oklahoma State
by Thomas Romero-Salas sports@dailylobo.com @ThomasRomeroS
The New Mexico baseball team bounced back after another mind-numbing loss at Lobo Field on Sunday. In a doubleheader versus Nevada, UNM dropped the first game 3-2 but came back to win the second game 7-5. The first contest saw two mental errors that have been characteristic of the Lobos all season. In the top of the ninth, UNM had a 2-1 advantage with two on and two out, but left fielder Luke Campbell lost a routine fly ball in the sun and the Wolf Pack scored the go-ahead run to take a 3-2 lead. After third baseman Alex Allbritton singled and shortstop Jared Holley got hit by a pitch, Ryan Padilla hit a double down the right field line. Padilla’s hit would have scored Allbritton, but Allbritton was picked off at second base. Nevada pitcher Michael Fain then struck out outfielder John Pustay and intentionally walked third baseman DJ Peterson. With the bases loaded and two outs, Campbell came up to bat for a chance to atone for his error. Instead he struck out to end the game, giving the Wolf Pack a 3-2 win. Allbritton, who went 3-for-4 with an RBI, said there have been several factors in why the team has blown numerous games this season. “That’s tough to say; there are a lot of guys that would be playing really well at one point and then just take a pitch off or a play off,” he said. “It’s not just one person, it’s everybody.” In the second game the Lobos had an early 4-0 advantage after three innings, but the Wolf Pack quickly tied it up at four thanks to two runs in the top of the fourth and fifth. UNM swiftly retook the lead when Padilla singled through the right side of the infield to plate catcher Mitch Garver for a 5-4 lead. The Lobos added one insurance run in both the bottom of the seventh and the eighth for a 7-4 lead heading into the top of the ninth. Wolf Pack outfielder Scott Kaplan hit into a fielder’s choice for an RBI to cut the deficit to two. With runners on second and third with two outs, outfielder Jamison Rowe popped up to end the inning
by J.R. Oppenheim
assistantsports@dailylobo.com @JROppenheim
Aaron Sweet / Daily Lobo Infielder John Haggerty tries to complete a double play against Nevada on Sunday at Lobo Field. UNM lost the first game 3-2 but took the second game 7-5. for a 7-5 victory for UNM. “It was a big relief,” said UNM relief pitcher Jonathan Cuellar. “Every game has been a nail-biter — I’m not going to lie about that. It’s good to finally be at the good end of one of these games.” “We have to keep fighting and eventually it’ll turn around for us,” he said. Altogether, the Lobos used four pitchers between the two games. In Game 1, Sam Wolff threw six innings, allowed five hits, one earned run and six walks with one strikeout. Relief pitcher Gabe Aguilar tossed three innings, giving up one hit, two unearned runs with four punch-outs. Game 2 starting pitcher Alex Estrella pitched four innings, letting two runs score, along with three hits and three strike outs. Cuellar worked five innings, permitting three earned runs, and four hits with a walk. Sunday’s games marked the
first time UNM played a game at Lobo Field since the 2010 season. Lobo Field has been under construction for the past three years and still isn’t completely finished. “It was a little bit strange; a lot of guys were talking about how it wasn’t right the first time around,” Allbritton said. Head coach Ray Birmingham lit up on his team after the Lobos’ 7-5 victory over the Wolf Pack. He said he wouldn’t say how he would fix the squad’s attitude. “It’s the upperclassmen that are making me furious the way that they’re disrespecting the game,” he said. “Seniors, juniors, and it’s not all of them but it’s some of them and it ain’t good. It ain’t good at all. … There’s no entitlement here. What you did last year and the year before doesn’t mean nothing, don’t count anymore. Now counts, today counts, each pitch counts. I’m just extremely, extremely, extremely upset.”
Sports briefs Track & Field
The UNM men’s and women’s track teams accumulated 25 top-10 finishes at the UTEP Springtime Invitational on Saturday. The women had two third-place finishes with senior Amber Menke in pole vault and senior Marin Schweigert in the high jump. For the men, junior Michael Ellis earned first in the javelin with a mark of 185.5 meters while freshman Marcus Simon took third with a toss of 176.2 meters. Junior Django Lovett took third place in the high jump with height of 6 feet 9 3/4 inches.
Men’s tennis
The UNM men’s tennis team escaped with a 4-3 victory over Pacific University on Saturday. In the number five singles, Andrew Van Der Vyver beat Ben Mirkin 6-3, 4-6, 6-4 to clinch the victory for the Lobos. Sophomore Samir Iftikhar previously gave UNM a 3-2 lead after winning the number-one singles 6-3, 6-1. The Tigers then tied it at 3 with a 6-4, 6-4 decision over junior Mads Hegelund in the number four singles. ~compiled by Thomas Romero-Salas
During both ends of Sunday’s doubleheader, the New Mexico softball team needed to overcome deficits to defeat Siena College. It won both games by different methods. Left-handed Lobo freshman pitcher Lauren Soles dealt 14 strikeouts to limit the Saints to two fourth-inning runs in UNM’s second victory, which ended 5-2. That effort followed Game 1, in which the Lobos used an eightrun second inning to surge past Siena 13-5. The two-game sweep Sunday salvaged a two-win, two-loss weekend for UNM. The Lobos lost a pair to Oklahoma State on Friday by scores of 11-0 and 6-1. “I was just excited to come play today,” Soles said after UNM improved to 16-20 on the season. “We start conference next weekend, and I think a good performance these past two days needed to show San Diego State we’re ready to play.” Soles pitched a no-hitter through three innings of Game 2 as the Lobos held a 1-0 lead. Left fielder Courtney Geith scored the first run off freshman catcher Naomi Tellez’s two-out first-inning single. In the fourth, Siena (5-11) took the lead with two runs scored by second baseman Stephanie Viggiano and shortstop Shannon Jones. Viggiano’s single was Siena’s first hit on Soles. After the runs, Soles and the Lobos settled down and stranded three base runners at the inning’s end. UNM regained the lead with two sixth-inning runs. Second baseman Mia Hignojos doubled, which brought designated player Karissa Haleman home. Hignojos crossed home plate on the next at-bat with shortstop Jordyn Bledsoe’s single to right field. The Lobos added two more insurance runs by Geith and first baseman Kaity Ingram in the seventh inning. Soles went a complete seven innings. She had no earned runs off four hits and two walks. Geith led UNM at the plate with a 2-for-2 effort and two runs scored. Hignojos was 2-for-3 with a run scored and an RBI, while right fielder Cassandra Kalapsa provided two RBIs. Siena starter Antonia Edwards
also pitched a complete game in the losing effort. She earned all five UNM runs off nine hits and three walks, striking out five Lobos. Designated player Jessika-Jo Sandrini was 2-for-3 offensively and Viggiano was 2-for-4 with an RBI. “It was a well-pitched game,” Siena coach Bill Lajeunesse said. “When you’re getting a wellpitched game on both sides of the ball, I think teams play better defense and everything runs much smoother.” In Game 1 Siena built an early 5-0 lead over two innings before UNM took control in the bottom half of the second. The Lobos blasted eight runs in that inning on seven hits. Tellez scored twice as UNM hit around the order and seven Lobos crossed the plate for an 8-5 advantage. UNM added two more runs in the third, one in the fourth and two more in the fifth to end the game in five innings via the eightrun mercy rule. “It was up and down,” UNM coach Erica Beach said. “We started off a little rough offensively, a little rough with our pitching, but it was nice to pick it up and get it together (Sunday). It was a lot more fun to put it all together.” UNM’s Kaela DeBroeck (4-6) picked up the pitching win in relief. In 3 and 2/3 innings, DeBroek surrendered just one hit and one walk, throwing four strikeouts. Starting pitcher Lisa Rodrigues threw 1 and 1/3 innings, giving up five runs, four earned, on three hits and two walks. She had one strikeout. First baseman Jordan Sjostrand went 4-for-4 from the plate with three runs scored and two RBIs for UNM. Tellez was 3-for-4 with two runs scored and four RBIs, while right fielder Cassandra Kalapsa hit 2-for-2 with two runs and two RBIs. Seven Lobos had at least one hit. “After they got five in the first, we didn’t know what we would do,” Sjostrand said. “We were hoping to come back, and we just came back better than I expected. It was so nice to string everything together, and everyone contributed.” Shortstop Shannon Jones was Siena’s only player with multiple base hits, going 2-for-3 with two runs and two RBIs. Siena starter Sandrini (2-3) took the loss in three innings of work, giving up 10 runs, all earned, on 10 hits. She had five strikeouts and three walks. In 1 and 1/3 innings of relief, Alyssa Lancaster had three runs, all earned, on four hits and three walks.
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