DAILY LOBO new mexico
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The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
thursday April 25, 2013
New UNM group to schmooze NM film Film association aims to beef up students’ credentials by Katherine Luce
news@dailylobo.com Film students reeling in the face of an uncertain economy have a new resource to help hone their talent and tap into the local industry. Students in the UNM cinematic arts program formed the UNM Film Association earlier this semester, the first club of its kind at the University. Its goal is to inform students about basic film industry mechanics, such as acting, modeling, directing, producing, editing, music, photography, and writing. The association would also help them find jobs in the industry. “Most film groups tend to focus on the film appreciation and critique side only, but we recognize that we are in ‘show business,’ so we want to broaden our focus to getting students work experience in this field in hopes they graduate with a career,” said Terrence Au, co-founder of the association. Megan Pham, the other cofounder, said the association is different in that it is a business- and career-driven association as well as a film criticism association. She said they hope to connect with studio executives to offer internships, meet interested students and acquire apprenticeships.
“We recognize the importance of film criticism and theory, but film at a basic level is a business of connections, and we are focused more on what happens before a film is completed,” Pham said. Au said the association hopes to work with the local film industry to create projects for hiring resident students, in light of the new state tax incentives that give studios tax breaks when they hire New Mexico citizens. These incentives are part of the “Breaking Bad” bill signed into law by Gov. Susana Martinez which aims to attract more film and TV productions to the state. He said the association hopes to continue the growth of the New Mexico film industry by providing opportunities for students to work in the industry. The association will achieve this by providing the real world experience students need to develop skills desired by employers in the industry, he said. “The film association is working with the city and state film offices, and will be the direct link between movie studios shooting in-state interested in recruiting students,” Au said. “There has never been a link this strong until now.” Pham said filmmaking is a process that involves many talents, so the association hopes to bring together students of all majors to network, giving the
Sergio Jiménez / Daily Lobo Bystanders gaze up at the art installation on the wall of George Pearl Hall on Monday night. The new UNM Film Association has used the outside space as a projection screen every night this week to showcase student videos and photographs from the Interdisciplinary Film and Digital Media Program, the cinematic arts department and art studio classes. The projections run every night from 8:40 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. until Tuesday. members more opportunities to find jobs and projects. Pham also said the association plans to invite industry leaders to speak about how to establish contacts, and to give students an understanding of what it takes to make a career out of their major. “These guest speakers will be people of different film roles who will talk from a more raw, personal experience,” Pham said. Both co-founders said the
association also has other goals, such as planning a semesterly UNM film festival in the SUB theater to showcase studentmade productions. Attendees would have a chance to talk to the filmmakers to ask questions and exchange ideas. The association also plans to showcase student films during lunch hours for students to experience the films throughout the year.
To become involved: email unmfilm@gmail.com.
No fees or requirements to join. UNM students, CNM students, Southwest University of Visual Arts students and APS students can join. “Like” Facebook.com/UNMFilm to receive updates about speakers, jobs, meetings, and the UNM Film Association.
NM plant for horse slaughter gets OK
MOTHER ERDA
by Jeri Clausing
The Associated Press
Mark Grace / Daily Lobo Amanda Rich, administrator for Erda Gardens, inspects two freshly picked beets at the garden’s main location Wednesday afternoon. The farm participates in biodynamic farming practices, which entails a holistic approach to farming and tending to certain plants according to an astrological calendar. See full story on Page 8.
Inside the
Daily Lobo volume 117
issue 146
ww w.g ath erin gof nat ion s.co m
ROSWELL, N.M. — About 5 miles from this southeastern New Mexico town’s famed UFO museum, tucked between dairy farms, is a nondescript metal building that could be home to any number of small agricultural businesses. But Valley Meat Co. is no longer just another agricultural business. It’s a former cattle slaughterhouse whose kill floor has been redesigned for horses to be slaughtered and processed into meat for shipment overseas. It’s also ground zero for an emotional, national debate over a return to domestic horse slaughter that has divided horse rescue and animal humane groups, ranchers, politicians and Indian tribes. And Tuesday, it moved one step closer to becoming the first plant in
see Horses PAGE 3
TODAY
76 | 48
How Show PageTwo T hursday, A pril 25, 2013
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Me
to bike across the country
Pack light
Kindra Aschenbrenner, a junior and sociology major, intends to bike across the United States this summer, fulfilling her lifelong dream. Aschenbrenner, along with her sister, leave mid-May on a 10-week bike trip along the northern U.S., beginning in Portland, Ore., through Ontario, Canada, and ending in New York City. Aschenbrenner, who has been planning this trip for almost two years, shared insights on how students can plan their own cross-country bike trip.
“We are trying to be as minimalist as possible,� Aschenbrenner said. She plans to bring a couple of pannier bags, which are bicycle side-bags, and fill them with hygiene items; a couple of T-shirts and pairs of bike shorts; a sleeping bag; a camp stove; and a tent. Other items she will keep on hand are small snacks, a lot of water, a journal, her passport, and money.
websites, such as AdventureCycling.org, outline plans and Have a plan Several resources for bicyclists interested in cross-country trips. These re-
Be safe
sources include lists of rest areas and camping sites as well as blogs from bicyclists who have actually taken these trips. The site also includes group trips in which bicyclists can take part, and guided tours for families. It is important to have an established plan and stick to it for safety (and sanity) purposes. said it took her a couple of years to save for the Have a budget Aschenbrenner trip. Your trip can be cheap or expensive, depending on your route. If the plan is to bike through several large cities and stay at hostels or motels, you’ll need money to pay for rooms. Aschenbrenner, who will bike primarily through rural areas, is budgeting $80 per week for food, including groceries and eating out. Decide what the biking plan calls for financially, and plan how much money you will be spent each week.
As is the case with any expedition into unexplored territory, safety should be a priority. Aschenbrenner plans to bring pepper spray, and will call her family to update them regularly. Traveling in a group or with another person is also a means of protection. Think about safety in the early steps of the planning process.
Dive in
The final piece of advice Aschenbrenner offered was, “If you want to do something, don’t just think about it. One of my favorite quotes is ‘What is life but to dream and do.’ The first step was deciding to go.�
~Rebecca Gonzales
volume 117
issue 146
Telephone: (505) 277-7527 Fax: (505) 277-7530 news@dailylobo.com advertising@dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com
Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Cleary Managing Editor Alexandra Swanberg News Editor John Tyczkowski Assistant News Editor Ardee Napolitano Photo Editor Juan Labreche Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse
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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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Thursday, April 25, 2013/ Page 3
NM GOP bigwig suspended by Jeri Clausing
The Associated Press ALBUQUERQUE — The executive director of the Bernalillo County GOP was suspended Wednesday for making inappropriate social media comments about women testifying for a minimum wage hike. During a Tuesday night Bernalillo County commission meeting, a Twitter comment from the account of Bernalillo County Republican Party Executive Director Steve Kush referred to a volunteer who was testifying on behalf of Working America as a “radical bitch.” Then, as that same group’s director, Chelsey Evans, waited to testify, there was a comment from Kush’s Facebook account that said, “Uh oh another Working America chick … nice boots.” Bob Cornelius, the county party’s former executive director, replied, “Maybe she used those shoes to walk Central,” a reference to a street in Albuquerque known for prostitution. A follow-up post from Kush’s account said the woman was “hot enough to almost make me register democrat.”
Horses
A statement from Bernalillo County GOP Chair Frank Ruvolo on Wednesday afternoon said Kush had been suspended without pay indefinitely for his “insensitive remarks.” Kush then issued a formal apology, saying the remarks on his personal Facebook page “were both insensitive and inappropriate. I regret my now obvious ill-fated attempt at humor.” Cornelius apologized on Facebook and to the woman personally. Cornelius said he was not at the meeting and did not know Evans, but that he had reached out to her first thing Wednesday morning and apologized for what he called inappropriate, unfair and degrading comments. “I’ve been thinking about my comment last night. I did make that comment in jest & I do apologize to this lady for this off color comment,” the updated post reads. “It’s not fair to her, and it was inappropriate for me to makes comments like that.” The exchanges were circulated Wednesday morning by the liberalleaning ProgressNow, which criticized the GOP for attacking hardworking women. “If the Republican Party wants
to know why they have such a hard time connecting with young women, they should start by examining the very public way their leaders feel about young working women,” Pat Davis, executive director of ProgressNow New Mexico, said in a press release. “Mr. Kush, Mr. Cornelius and the Republican Party owe these particular women an apology as public as the forum where they chose to attack them.” State GOP Chairman John Billingsley issued an apology to the women individually, and “to the women of New Mexico.” Evans said she was disappointed by the attacks. “Comments like those have no place in public discourse,” she said in an email. “Despite these degrading comments,” she wrote, “we are focused on celebrating a victory in Bernalillo County for all of working families, and we applaud all the hard work by our members, organizers and activists, and we will continue to push this effort statewide.” The commission voted 3-2 to raise the minimum wage in the county’s unincorporated areas to $8.50 an hour, matching the wage approved by Albuquerque voters in November.
that De Los Santos says can process 50 to 100 horses a day. “It’s complicated, this industry of feeding the world,” Sarah De Los Santos says matter-of-factly. The meat would be processed for human consumption and exported to countries in eastern Europe and Asia. Attorney Blair Dunn says agriculture officials found no issues at Valley Meat Co. during Tuesday’s inspection and told the owners they are recommending a grant of inspection be issued immediately.
“Everyone is talking about this as a humane issue,” De Los Santos said. “This is not a humane issue. It’s politics.” Humane groups and politicians including Gov. Susana Martinez and New Mexico Attorney General Gary King strongly oppose the plant. They argue that horses are iconic animals in the West, and that other solutions and more funding for horse rescue and birth control programs should be explored over slaughter. Fueling opposition is a recent uproar in Europe over horse meat being found in products labeled as beef. Still others are pushing for a return to domestic slaughter. Proponents include several Native American tribes, the American Quarter Horse Association, some livestock associations and even a few horse rescue groups that believe domestic slaughter would be more humane than shipping the animals elsewhere. They point to a 2011 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office that found horse abuse and abandonment increasing since Congress effectively banned horse slaughter by cutting funding for federal inspection programs in 2006. Because rescue groups can’t take care of all of the horses in need, tens of thousands have been shipped to slaughterhouses in Mexico. In this mostly agricultural town, touted on its welcome sign as the Dairy Capital of the Southwest, there is surprisingly little uproar over the plant. “I was against it,” said Larry Connolly, a retiree having coffee at Starbucks last week. “Then I started talking to some ranchers. They said they were for it. So I’m neutral.” Local horse trader and former rancher Dave McIntosh said opening the plant would be the “best thing for the welfare of horses.” But Sheriff Rob Coon said he believes most people in town oppose the plant. His office was inundated with calls and emails from irate people after the horse-killing video was discovered online last month. The former Valley Meat worker posted the video more than a year ago in response to animal activists opposed to horse slaughter. “A lot of the ranchers are for it, simply because they want a place to take a horse rather than starve it out,” he said. “But it’s not our society. We don’t eat horses.”
from page 1
the country in more than six years to slaughter horses, with a successful inspection by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. At issue is whether horses are livestock or pets, and whether it is more humane to slaughter them domestically than to ship tens of thousands of neglected, unwanted and wild horses thousands of miles to be slaughtered in Mexico or Canada. Front and center in the debate is Rick De Los Santos, who, along with his wife, Sarah, has for more than two decades worked this small slaughterhouse, taking in mostly cows that were too old or sick to travel with larger herds to the bigger slaughterhouses for production. Now, with cattle herds shrinking amid an ongoing drought, De Los Santos says he and his wife are just trying to transform their business and make enough money to retire. They’re seeking to slaughter domestically some of the thousands of horses that De Los Santos says travel through the state every month on their way to what are oftentimes less humane and less regulated plants south of the border. “They are being slaughtered anyway. We thought, well, we will slaughter them here and provide jobs for the economy,” De Los Santos said. Instead, Valley Meat has been ensnarled in a yearlong political drama that has left the plant idle and its owners the target of vandalism and death threats — warnings that increased after humane groups found a video a former plant worker posted of himself cursing at animal activists, then shooting one of his own horses to eat. “People are saying, ‘We will slit your throat in your sleep. We hope you die. We hope your kids die,’” De Los Santos said. “Sometimes it’s scary. … And it’s all for a horse.” Indeed, voicemails left on the company’s answering machine spew hate and wishes for violence upon the family. “I hope you burn in hell,” said one irate woman who called repeatedly, saying, “You better pack your (expletive) bags (expletive) and get out of there because that place is finished.” The couple have hired security and turned over phone records to federal authorities. They are, nevertheless, surprisingly candid about their plans, offering media access to the 7,200square-foot slaughterhouse with one kill floor and two processing rooms
“They are being slaughtered anyway. We thought, well, we will slaughter them here and provide jobs for the economy.” ~Rick De Los Santos owner of Valley Meat Co. The plant passed a similar inspection last year but then was told it couldn’t begin operations until the USDA developed an acceptable test to measure the horse meat for drug residue. It wasn’t until the plant sued the USDA for blocking its application that the agency earlier this year agreed to move forward with the inspections necessary to allow Valley Meat Co. and about a half-dozen other plants around the country to slaughter horses. But the Obama administration wants to prohibit such slaughters. The administration’s 2014 budget request excludes money for inspectors for horse slaughter plants, which would effectively keep them from operating. The USDA did not respond to an email from The Associated Press asking about the inspection process and whether a drug test has been developed. But Dunn said Department of Justice lawyers repeatedly have assured him that there are no impediments to the plant opening. Dunn says he expects final approval for the plant to come in a matter of days.
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LoboOpinion
Page
4
Thursday, April 25, 2013
The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
Opinion Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg
opinion@dailylobo.com
column
Forging our future feels like sealing our fate
Editor’s note: The author is a high school senior working as an intern at the Daily Lobo.
by Shelby Perea
Daily Lobo guest columnist opinion@dailylobo.com “What do you want to be when you grow up?” This is the question we young people are asked all throughout our lives. It is a daunting question that evolves in seriousness as you grow older. The high school class of 2013 is now being asked that question. However, this time, “princess” and “cowboy” just won’t do anymore. We are being forced to make life-altering decisions. Which school? Which major? And with what money?
Our decisions used to be blissfully insignificant, and now, all of a sudden, they actually matter and will matter for the rest of our lives. As the school year comes to a close, most of the seniors have unsure answers to all of those terrible and ominous questions. God forbid we use the dreaded term “undecided” and have our peers and elders turn their noses up at us. My practiced and polished response is “double major in communications and journalism and psychology at UNM.” But how am I supposed to know if that won’t change in the fall? Our decisions used to be blissfully insignificant, and now, all of a sudden, they actually matter and will matter for the rest of our lives. The entire process of going to college is a sick game. We are forced to take a test that will alter our future. It begins with the herding of hopeful high school seniors and juniors into a room for several hours where they begin the monotony of test taking. The irony is that the testing administrators take 30 minutes of your testing time to explain to you how to fill in a circle accurately. So they expect you to write a five-paragraph essay that’s properly formatted in 30 minutes, but they don’t expect you to know how to fill in a circle? This isn’t just some form of cruel and unusual punishment. This is the antagonist of the high school senior, the ACT. This test can decide where you go to school and how much money you can get from that school. No pressure, right? Then, when the results come in, they are never satisfactory. But I suppose they will have to do. Next, the mass exodus of applications begins. Some are answered with a letter of acceptance. With that acceptance comes the realization of the new debt you will learn to be accustomed to. Some return with the dreadful letter that lets you know that your hard work and cumulative 4.7 GPA just weren’t what they were looking for. It is a maddening process that seems to only get worse. Let’s say you actually decide where to go. Now you have to decide where to live, on or off campus, and how to pay for it. The massive amount of pressure that high school seniors and incoming freshmen face is outrageous. The biggest feat in all of this is keeping your sanity. If you can just get to graduation day and accept that diploma with all of your sanity intact, I think the rest just has to fall into place.
Column
Slant supplants fact in today’s media by Alexandra Swanberg Daily Lobo opinion editor opinion@dailylobo.com
Journalism: the best option for creative writing majors who can’t seem to finish their first novel. Not convinced? I know it may seem to be a daunting transition, but apparently investigating and reporting the straight facts is more difficult than churning out a mass work of fiction. I am not talking about every journalist out there. Some of them really try to get to the bottom of things. But those endeavors tend to take up too much time, and for news outlets trying to crank out news round the clock, it’s a hassle they’re less willing to put up with. It’s not as if the public will ever stop watching or reading the news, so what is the harm in dressing a dry turkey in cranberry sauce to make it more appealing? The people who participate in or condone this kind of journalism don’t care a lick about media consumers. They care about our money. Hence, the heinous coverage of the two explosions at the Boston Marathon. First, it was the “Saudi national” described over and over as a “person of interest.” What’s his ethnicity got to do with anything? Why was he considered a POI? A “civilian” saw the man running from the explosion, ran after him and tackled him. Police followed the man to the hospital and questioned him. I think I might run away from an explosion, too. Wouldn’t anybody? Finally, the media clarified he was being treated as a witness, but it was too late to take back that kind of damage. Salah Eddin Barhoum was featured on the front page of the New York Post with
his friend Yassine Zaime. The headline: “Bag men: Feds seek these two pictured at Boston Marathon.” Barhoum told The Associated Press he has been afraid to go outside ever since for fear of being blamed for the attack.
It’s not as if they are literally fabricating news, but they are masters at taking bits of juicy material and making do. The Tsarnaev brothers of Chechnya were soon the target of slanted media coverage. The evidence is piled up pretty high; it would be hard to argue that they probably aren’t the culprits. But news coverage insisted on the Islamic-extremist angle. These are a few of my most hated things: Mother Jones, self-described source of “smart, fearless journalism,” published “What These Tweets Tell Us About Boston Bombing Suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.” In the lead to the story, the magazine editorializes, telling the reader the selected tweets are odd, mundane and chilling. This tweet is included in the introduction: “The value of human life ain’t shit nowadays.” But near the end of the piece, you see what the tweet actually said: “The value of human life ain’t shit nowadays that’s #tragic.” Slate.com published “Meet the Muslims Quoted, Cited, and Favorited by the Boston Bombing Suspects.” TheDailyBeast.com published “The Sheikh Who May Have Influenced Boston’s Tsarnaev Brothers.” Bloomberg.com published “Chechen
Conflict Spawned Terrorism With Separatist Jihad.” Here is the problem with these headlines and the pathetic attempts at journalism that follow: They make this crime about more than the suspects. The stories attempt to establish a connection between the suspects and Islam. Ever since 9/11, there has been a limited subset of the Muslim community represented in our media. We see bodies, gun fire and explosions. We also saw just a slice of life there, which is all that the media portrays. Clearly, the media can’t be trusted to give us all we need in the way of information. It’s not as if they are literally fabricating news, but they are masters at taking bits of juicy material and making do. Here are some of the news values that determine what is worthy of broadcast: timeliness, the bizarre, human interest, danger, relevance. This means there is a handful of people making decisions about what they think everyone wants to see. So we are saturated with media that is dominated by just a few perspectives. There are endless perspectives; nobody sees eye to eye on everything, and we never will. But we put ourselves in a dangerous position when we limit ourselves to the few viewpoints available in the mainstream media. There is no objectivity. We have our perspective. It is informed by our biological tendencies — DNA and such — and everything we experience from birth until death. The mainstream media is such a ubiquitous part of our lives now that it is essential we view it through a critical lens. Everything you see may be there in reality, but that doesn’t mean it is an accurate portrayal. It is one of many possible ways of seeing, none of which is wrong, just different. See what’s out there, and make up your own mind about what you believe.
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Page 6 / Thursday, April 25, 2013
DRUG & ALCOHOL FREE EVENT
58th ANNUAL
NIZHONI DAYS POW-WOW
“Honoring our Alumni” APRIL 28, 2013 UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO JOHNSON FIELD HEAD STAFF Masters of Ceremony
10am-12pm: Gourd Dance 1pm: Grand Entry
AARON FRY
Cherokee/Chickasaw Arena Director
KC CHURCH
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GERALD CHAVEZ Pueblo of Cochiti
Head Man Dancer
TYSON CASTILLO Navajo
Head Woman Dancer
TARA ABEITA
•All Dancers and Drums Welcome! • Drum Contest Specials: Women’s Fancy Men’s Grass Dance Women’s Southern Cloth
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New Mexico Daily Lobo Gathering Of Nations Lets Pow Wow! Friday and Saturday at the Pit! Authentic Indain Cusine and Miss Indian World Pagent!
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Kelly Liquor FREE Isotopes tickets with purchase of $20 or more 2270 Wyoming NE Hours: 9am-10pm; 505-293-3270
Outpost Performance Space Storyspace; 7:30pm Albuquerque Storyteller’s Showcase featuring Ramona King and more
Blackwater Music Venue Djs on the patio, dancers, bands, comedians, artist and soooo much more! Doors @ 8 pm, Cover $6 pre sale, $8 day of show or 2 for $10
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New Mexico Daily Lobo Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball; Never a Cover The Library Bar & Grill Now open at 11am DJ Official spinning 9pm-close!
Monday Imbibe Happy Hour ALL NIGHT!! $2 Draft, $3 Well, $4 Wine & $5 Martinis Kelly Liquor FREE Isotopes tickets with purchase of $20 or more 2270 Wyoming NE Hours: 9am-10pm; 505-293-3270 Sunshine Theater *Alkaline Trio* *Bayside* *Off With Their Heads Doors @ 7pm; Starts @ 7:30pm $18.50 Quarters 4516 Wyoming NE Burger Special 11am-4pm $5.99 HAPPY HOUR 4-7pm $2 pints on selected beers & more KIDS EAT FREE with purchase of adult meal (10and under) Hours: 11am-9pm; 505-293-1753 Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sake Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30 Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball; Never a Cover The Library Bar & Grill Happy Hour 4pm-7pm $3.50 U-Call-Its Half Priced Appetizers $2 Tacos DJ Official spinning 10pm-2am Maloney’s Happy Hour 3-7pm: $1 off drinks (except bottled beer and features)
Tuesday Kelly Liquor FREE Isotopes tickets with purchase of $20 or more 2270 Wyoming NE Hours: 9am-10pm; 505-293-3270 Quarters 4516 Wyoming NE Burger Special 11am-4pm $5.99 HAPPY HOUR 4-7pm $2 pints on selected beers & more KIDS EAT FREE with purchase of adult meal (10and under) Hours: 11am-9pm; 505-293-1753
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Wednesday Imbibe Happy Hour All Night!! $2 Draft, $3 Well, $4 Wine & $5 Martinis Korean BBQ/ Sushi Sake Open 11:30-2:30, 5-9:30 Dirty Bourbon Prophets & Outlaws; $2 The Library Bar & Grill Salsa Night with DJ Quico - 9pm The Best Salsa Night in Town! Free Salsa Lessons Maloney’s Happy Hour 3-1pm: $1 off drinks (except bottled beer and features) DJ Kamo on the Patio 9:30pm-Close Kareokee: 9:30pm-1:30am with $1 off Absolute & Absolute Flavors Downtown Distillery Free Games - All the Time! 4 PS3s, 10 Pool tables, Ping Pong, and Foosball; Never a Cover Blackwater Music Venue MIGHTY HIGH TOUR: With Locals, Nocturnal Company CD Release, Saugwa and Skoll! 7p Doors, $7 Kelly Liquor FREE Isotopes tickets with purchase of $20 or more 2270 Wyoming NE Hours: 9am-10pm; 505-293-3270 Quarters 4516 Wyoming NE Burger Special 11am-4pm $5.99 HAPPY HOUR 4-7pm $2 pints on selected beers & more Hours: 11am-9pm; 505-293-1753
Thursday, April 25, 2013/ Page 7
Lobo Culture Culture editor / Nicole Perez / @NicolePerezM
Growing
Page
8
Thursday, April 25, 2013
The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
culture@dailylobo.com
C ommunity
E
Story by Antonio Sanchez
Photos by Aaron Sweet
rda Gardens administrator Amanda Rich ran her soil-caked hands through a bed of plants Wednesday afternoon, her fingertips searching for a ready plant to pluck. Rich’s hands have seen several years at the garden, and as she rinsed off two bright purple beets, she said the act of tending a garden has become therapeutic for her. “We go through cycles of growth and fruition and dieback in our lives, and to watch that happen in the natural world, to watch things spring out of the earth out of nothing out of the winter, to go and produce 20 whole pounds of tomatoes and then fall back in the winter and die off, and to watch that, the human psyche, we relate to it, we connect to it and it resonates with us,” she said.
“There’s a spiritual component to it, raising the plants with a consciousness or a kindness.” ~Amanda Rich
Erda Gardens administrator Erda Gardens was founded in 1996 by Franciscan nun and peace activist Marie Nord as a project to promote peace and harmony on the planet, Rich said. “Erda” is the Old High German word for “Earth,” and Erda Gardens uses biodynamic practices. As such, the garden is raised through three principles. First, gardening is approached holistically: What can be recycled or reused for the garden will be. Second, the garden is prepared with a healing homeopathic tea that’s sprayed over the growing beds. Finally, seeds are planted and plants taken care of according to an as-
trological calendar. The phase of the moon and the positions of the planets determine which leaf and root plants will be tended. “There’s a spiritual component to it, raising the plants with a consciousness or a kindness,” Rich said. The community-supported agriculture program has several locations in the South Valley of Albuquerque and allows people to help fund the garden with money or volunteered labor. The program has 60 families funding the farm. Erda Gardens also offers classes throughout the year, including a kids summer farm camp and a course about the basics of chicken coops. The main garden has several rows of beds, each of which is lined with growing greens such as cilantro and rainbow chard. Past the growing vegetables is a small chicken coop, a pen for baby goats and a small greenhouse of garlic seedlings. On one side of the garden are two beehives, and on the other is a large pile of manure. Rich has worked at the community’s main garden in the South Valley for the past six years. Rich said she grew up in southern Idaho, digging up potatoes for her grandfather and picking flowers in her mother’s garden as a young child. Rich began work at the farm in 2007 as a volunteer, balancing her work at Erda Gardens with her job as a social worker. “It was a real stressful job. You’re dealing with people who have really hard lives, hard times, tough things going on, and to come to the garden felt really peaceful, really grounding — a way to shed some of the residual stress,” she said. Over time, Rich said, she shifted her focus to the farm. By 2011, Rich’s involvement with the farm became full-time. “It takes a lot of trust to say these 60 people will come up with my payroll every year,” she said. “Just leaving your steady job with insurance and benefits to work for really low wages, really hard work
see Erda
Gardens PAGE 9
Top left Amanda Rich reflects on her seven years working at Erda Gardens. Before she made the transition from volunteer to full-time employee, Rich was a social worker. Gardening has proved to be a source of stress relief, she said. Bottom left Farm intern and UNM alumnus Steven Emmons drops a pile of hay into a wheelbarrow Wednesday afternoon at Erda Gardens. Before he became an intern, he worked in the admissions office of an art school in Maine. This is his time to enhance the spiritual quality of his life, he said. Above Emmons hammers a hook into the soil of a newly plotted bed at Erda Gardens. Franciscan nun and peace activist Marie Nord started the gardens in 1996 as a project to promote peace and harmony on the planet.
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New Mexico Daily Lobo
Erda Gardens
Thursday, April 25, 2013/ Page 9
May
from page 8
every day … a lot of people would say, ‘You’re crazy,’ but I feel so happy.” Treasurer Kevin Hawk began working with Erda Gardens four years ago. Since then, Hawk has donated money and a truck to the farm. Community gardens and farms like Erda Gardens help empower people, Hawk said. “It’s a philosophy. I think it’s important that people move away from corporate food, make their own decisions, empower themselves to grow their food and make decisions about how they eat,” Hawk said. UNM alumnus Steven Emmons placed hooks in the soil Wednesday afternoon before rolling a white tarp over a newly laid bed. Emmons, an intern, began working for Erda Gardens last week. He had previously worked in the admissions
office of an art school in Portland, Maine. Emmons said he came back to New Mexico to work outside the confines of an office. “I needed a little bit more spirituality in my life, and I think one of the ways that I wanted to connect to that is through farming and working outside and observing plants, watching food grow, working with animals,” Emmons said. Emmons said that although he’s only worked a week at the farm, he’s been impressed with what grows in the area. “You look at this ground and it looks like it’s just dirt and sand and crap,” he said. “It’s really kind of amazing that here — in the arid Southwest and in what seems to be kind of like an area you wouldn’t expect to grow anything — there’s really a lot prospering here.”
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Erda Gardens follows the principles of biodynamic farming, which means different seeds are planted according to the moon cycles. This is the biodynamic sowing and planting calendar for May. The white bars indicate a time when those crops will flourish. When the white bar is paired with the gray bar it is the ideal day to plant that crop.
Left A volunteer worker at Erda Gardens unrolls a screen over the plants to protect them from the environment. The communitysupported agriculture program has several locations in the South Valley of Albuquerque and allows people to help fund the garden with money or volunteered labor. The program has 60 families funding and working at the farm.
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news
New Mexico Daily Lobo
Hands-on learning culminates in dance showcase by Justin Brough
culture@dailylobo.com A man and woman embrace on a dark stage, pulling each other close in a loving dance. In the space of a few minutes, they are both on their backs. The man appears to be dead, but the woman stands and slinks back to the shadows. “Inside Look” is the semiannual student choreography showcase put on by the Department of Theatre and Dance. It represents the culmination of a semesterlong process wherein student choreographers work with faculty mentors, dancers and lighting technicians to produce a compilation of dance performances. “It’s a student showcase, but it’s similar to what you would see in the professional world in terms of the quality of choreography and of the quality of the dancers,” student director Emily Bryan said. Bryan is a second-year graduate student who is directing “Traces,” one of the featured performances. Since she began developing it last fall, she said her piece has changed quite a bit. The event’s hands-on approach to learning for student choreographers is what makes the showcase exciting to develop for, she said. “What’s exciting about student choreographers is that they’re developing their artistic voice through this process,” Bryan said. “Every semester’s showcase is completely different and new.” “Inside Look” features nine performances developed by nine choreographers: “(in) Flux” and “Down to the Wire” by Peter Bennett; “Aureola” by Esteban E. Garza; “Sin Compas” by Ysabela Trujillo; “Farruca” by Dolores Garcia; “Duet por Alegrias” by Lydia Johnson Gallegos and Yarrow Perea; “Solo” by Radi Shafie; “/peculiar” by Lisa Nevada; and “Traces” by Emily Bryan. Topics explored in the showcase include dreams, romance and procrastination. The performances will incorporate a blend of many different styles, such as modern dance and traditional flamenco.
Aaron Sweet / Daily Lobo Two UNM students in the Department of Theatre and Dance rehearse a duet for the semiannual student choreography showcase. This semester’s show “Inside Look” features dances that explore myriad human experiences from procrastination to dreams. It opens Friday in Carlisle Gym and runs through May 5. Dancer Dalton Valerio will be performing in three of the nine pieces. Valerio, a biology major, said work on this semester’s showcase tested him both physically and emotionally. “The choreographers really challenge the dancers to find a meaning behind what we’re doing,” Valerio said. “They’ll give us a general meaning of what the piece is about … and they’ll tell us to take that meaning and really run with it.” Bryan said that although choreographers
assign meaning to each piece, audience members should not have to understand a piece to enjoy it. “The best thing to do when you’re watching a dance concert and you don’t know anything about dance is to be very openminded and not necessarily try to figure out the meaning behind each piece,” Bryan said. “As long as you open yourself up to the experience and enjoy it, you’ll get something out of it.”
“Inside Look” Opens Friday
April 26, 27 and May 3, 4 at 7:30 p.m. April 28 and May 5 at 2 p.m. Carlisle South Arena Performance Space in Carlisle Gym $12 general admission, $10 UNM faculty and senior citizens, $8 staff and students
T , A 25, 2013/ P lobo featuresLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle FOR RELEASE APRIL 25, 2013
New Mexico Daily Lobo
hursday
age 11
pril
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
dailycrossword
Year Zero
dailysudoku
Level 1 2 3 4
Solution to yesterday’s problem.
ACROSS 1 Dot-__ printer 7 Hash house sign 11 Org. that financed many public murals 14 Brand with a Justice For Potatoes League 15 Inside information? 16 Ancient pillager 17 Pop 20 Air France-__: European flier 21 Cathedral areas 22 Place in a 1969 Western 23 Tech staff member 24 Camel hair colors 26 Pop 32 Bat mitzvah locale 33 Bands from Japan 34 Gp. concerned with dropout prevention 35 Run smoothly 36 Condor’s booster 39 Ruckus 40 “__ you sure?” 41 Charcutier offering 42 2010 Angelina Jolie spy film 43 Pop 48 “Sooey!” reply 49 “Goodness gracious!” 50 Kitty’s sunny sleeping spot 52 TV and radio 53 Toulouse : oeil :: Toledo : __ 56 Pop 60 An official lang. of Kenya 61 The “a” in “a = lw” 62 First word of Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s Ride” 63 Technique 64 Chews the fat 65 First step toward nirvana DOWN 1 Poke fun at 2 Shrinking sea 3 Duration 4 Poke fun at
FOLLOW US ON
5 Defensive denial 6 Second word of Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan” 7 Outdoor security options 8 Battling god 9 Itty bit 10 Pink Floyd’s Barrett 11 Pentecost 12 Flat-bottomed boat 13 “Put Your Head on My Shoulder” singer 18 Claim with conviction 19 Truckee River city 23 II into D 24 “Yay, the weekend!” 25 Short right hand? 26 “Balderdash!” 27 Chekov bridgemate 28 Quantitative “science”? 29 Bulls’ org. 30 “Jurassic Park” co-star 31 Father of modern Italian, per linguists 36 Very soon after
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“APP’D ” T A H T
(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
37 President between Tyler and Taylor 38 No and Who: Abbr. 42 Messy room 44 Excalibur part 45 Change the colors of, say 46 Wavy lines, in music 47 Justice who’s the son of an Italian immigrant
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MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for Lobo Village. Mid-May to August 2nd. Normally $519/mo. Offering $400/mo. Will pay the $200 lease changeover fee. Aaron 702-809-9451.
UNM IS RECRUITING women with asthma for research study. If interested, please contact study coordinator at 925-6174 or e-mail tarchibeque@salud. unm.edu
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FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED ASAP: friendly student, shared with 2 females. 3BDRM/2BA house 2.7 miles from UNM. $405/mo +1/3utilities. Call/Text Meagan 505-803-4994, Samantha 505-553-3632.
266-2095
AFFORDABLE SELF STORAGE Student Deal ground floor: 6’X6’=$95/4mo; 10’X10’=$210/4mo; upstairs 6’X10’=$95/4mo; 10’X12’=$125/4mo. Quoted amounts covers May 1 through August 31, including padlock. Call 345-6479 ask for Lobos Special. BREAD MAKING MACHINE Panosonic. Make yummy hot bread instead of tortillas. Put in the mix and out comes the gourmet style bread. $50. Email interestbearing@aol.com
Jobs Off Campus PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202. TEACH MIDDLE SCHOOLERS in Santa Fe, serve through AmeriCorps! 2 year commitment, full time, bachelors required. $1900/month stipend, generous benefits package, professional development. No license required. www.citi zenschools.org/fellowship
ANIMAL PROTECTION OF New Mexico (APNM) summer internships. Want to help make a difference in the lives of animals? Statewide nonprofit needs selfmotivated individuals to help out in the following areas: Companion Animal Rescue Effort (helping animals of domestic violence victims), Animal Protection Campaign research, database management and media and records archiving. Unpaid but rewarding, flexible hours, downtown ABQ, go to www. apnm.org or call 505-265-2322, ext. 32 to apply. PROJECT ENGINEER NEEDED:Construction Management or Engineer graduate needed for FT position with local company. Travel is required. Please email resume to info@victorcorpnm. com or download application at www. victorcorpnm.com. Call Mark with any questions, 505-771-4900. VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEPTIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551. !!!BARTENDING!!! $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520 ext.100. FALL 2013 ENGLISH Program In Korea (EPIK). $1,600-2,500/month + housing, airfare, medical insurance, paid vacation. Must have BA degree. Deadline: Sometime in May **this date is tentative and could change depending on circumstances**. Please visit the website www.epik.go.kr NW ALBUQUERQUE & Rio Rancho: Blake’s Lotaburger team interview Day! Stop by the Blake’s Lotaburger at 6550 Paradise Blvd NW Albuquerque between 11AM-4PM on May 6 to submit an application and be interviewed for available positions in NW Albuquerque and Rio Rancho including crew member, shift manager, assistant manager, and general manager. PERSONAL ASSISTANT NEEDED; Help organize our household! Coordinate contractors, run errands, etc. 5-10 hrs/week, potential for more based on performance. $12/hr. E-mail: vanes saruby@yahoo.com PT ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, 1520 hrs/week. Small firm in NE ABQ seeking a well organized, computer proficient administrative assistant. Excellent English language skills and flexibility to work a few hours on Saturdays for copy-editing required. Send resume, available hours, and hourly rate required to drcsolutions@gmail.com PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202.
PT PROGRAMMER, 20-25 hrs/week. Small consulting firm in NE ABQ. Applicant must have background in computer science or related field and will develop commodity and stock market price analysis and modeling software. Solid foundation in object oriented coding preferably with C++ and/or C#. Send resume, available hours, and hourly rate required to drcsolutions@g mail.com SUMMER SALES AND Leadership Internship. 157 year old exchange program for students of all major and classifications. Average UNM student makes $8,600 per summer. Call Patrick 575-644-6462. PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202. RESEARCH TECH - For Pharmaceutical Research Company. Competitive Pay, Full-time preferred, Part-Time available. Background in healthcare or pharmaceuticals a plus. Great opportunity to advance knowledge in these fields or learn new industry. Benefits include vacation, full healthcare and dental, 401K and profit sharing for FTE. Salary DOE. Please email resumes to jobs@abqct.com TALIN MARKET IS now hiring all positions: cashier, customer service, wait staff, kitchen assistant, stocker. Please pickup an application @ 88 Louisiana Blvd SE. PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202. UPWARD BOUND SEEKS summer parttime instructors in Math, Biology, and Public Speaking. More information call 366-2521.
Child Care CAREGIVERS AND ASSISTANTS for top-quality after-school and summer child care program. Play sports, take field trips, make crafts, be goofy, have fun and be a good role model. Learn, play, and get paid for doing both! $9/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 2962880 or visit www.childrens-choice. org ; UNM Work-study encouraged to apply.
College is expensive. Daily Lobo classified ads are not.
Campus Calendar of Events
bring a resume and professional attire is recommended. National Arbor Day Celebration 10:00am – 2:00pm UNM Child Care Center & Domenici Center Planting an Emerald Sunshine Elm at the UNM Child Care, hosted by the UNM Young Alumni Chapter at 10am and planting a Texas Red Oak at the Domenici Center at 1pm.
Lectures & Readings
CQuIC Seminars 3:30pm – 4:30pm Room 190, Physics & Astronomy “Matterwave interferometry: indistinguishable faces in a crowd” presented by Grant Biedermann, Sandia National Labs.
Secular Student Alliance Meeting 12:00pm – 1:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B
Julie Eizenberg Lecture 5:30pm – 6:30pm Garcia Honda Auditorium Julie Eizenberg, Principal, Koning Eizenberg Architecture is the Marjorie Mead Hooker Memorial Visiting Professor of 2013.
Students For Life 6:30pm – 8:00pm SUB Trail/ Spirit
Blast off to finals 9:00am – 4:00am SUB
Biomedical Informatics Seminar 9:00am – 10:00am Health Sciences Library and Informatics Center, Room 228 “IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL)” presented by Owen Ellard, MALS, MA.
Repatriation as Re-Animation 4:00pm – 5:00pm Hibben Hall - Room 105 Presented by Aaron A. Fox, Columbia University.
Lobopalooza and Color Craze 12:00pm – 4:00pm SUB Mall & Johnson Field Northeast corner Bungee basketball, jousting, cotton candy and more! All of this will be free!
Thesis and Dissertation Defenses 10:00am – 11:00am CHTM room 148 “Optical and Optomechanical Resonators and their Applications in Communication and Sensing” presented by Fenfei Liu.
Jitterbugs Anonymous 8:30pm – 10:30pm Johnson Center RM B555 Two lessons offered- One for beginners, one for Intermediate Dancers.
7th Annual Native American Career Fair 10:00am – 2:00pm Anderson School of Management, Jackson Student Center The career fair is open to all people regardless of race or ethnicity. Participants are encouraged to
Biology Seminar 3:30pm – 4:30pm Castetter Hall 100 “Molecular Strategies for Enhanced Biomass and Biofuel Production from Microalgae” presented by Richard Sayre.
Sports & Rec
Student Groups & Gov. 2013 USFS Middle Leader Program 7:30am – 5:00pm SUB Lobo A & B Student Coalition for Diversity 12:00pm – 2:00pm SUB Acoma A & B
HIV Awareness 4:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Plaza Atrium
Soka Gakkai International Buddhist Association 12:30pm – 1:30pm SUB Amigo Lobo Toastmasters 3:30pm – 5:00pm Anderson School of Management Build you competence in communication so they can gain the confidence to lead others. Transition UNM Weekly Meeting 5:00pm – 6:00pm SUB Scholars Campus Crusade for Christ 6:00pm – 10:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B Chess Club Weekly Meeting 7:00pm – 9:30pm SUB Isleta Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship 6:00pm – 10:00pm SUB Acoma A & B
American Red Cross Meeting 7:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Mirage- Thunderbird
Theater & Films Movie 43 3:30pm SUB Theater Mid Week Movies Resevoir Dogs 6:00pm SUB Theater ASUNM Southwest Film Center Blithe Spirit by Noël Coward 7:30pm – 8:30pm Rodey Theatre
Email events to: calendar@dailylobo.com
Want an Event in Lobo Life? 1. Go to www.dailylobo.com 2. Click on the “Events” link near the top of the page. 3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page 4. Type in the event information and submit!