NM Daily Lobo 042913

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

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April 29, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Forum on bullying: Don’t just put up with it by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com

Uliana Sisombath, a master’s student at Albuquerque’s Webster University, said bullying has always been a problem in schools. She said she was bullied growing up in the 1960s. “My first language was not English; it was German. At that time, people thought that if you were German, you must be a Nazi,” Sisombath said. “There was this abrasive attitude that they would call you that, and it was very bad.” Sisombath said although bullying hurt her as a young child, she learned how to fend for herself. “I guess I had enough sense to realize that I’ve had enough of being bullied,” she said. “So by the time that I was in eighth grade, I chose to stand up for myself against the bullies.” Sisombath, who has volunteered with UNM’s Agora Crisis Center, was one of the participants in the Bullying Prevention Symposium held at the SUB Friday. About 100 people attended the event. At the symposium, anti-bullying advocates from all over the state conducted workshops on how to prevent bullying in schools effectively with educators and students in the state. The symposium was organized by Albuquerque Public Schools and UNM’s LGBTQ Resource Center. APS Program Manager May Sagbakken said that with support from the Bernalillo County government, APS and UNM have been cooperating to prevent bullying in schools for three years. She said the event was the state’s first antibullying symposium. “This is becoming more and more identified and it’s an ongoing issue,” Sagbakken said. “It’s not only about now. It’s about now and continuing

Aaron Sweet / Daily Lobo John Linney, left, shakes the hand of New Mexico state Rep. Rick Miera after Miera introduced Linney as the keynote speaker for the state’s first Bullying Prevention Symposium held in the SUB Friday. Educators and students participated in the symposium, which was organized by Albuquerque Public Schools and UNM’s LGBTQ Center, to talk about the causes of bullying and to discuss ways to end bullying in schools around the state. doing it to prevent bullying and make sure kids can go to school and go home safely.” Sagbakken said that according to a survey conducted by APS, 46 percent of middle school and 19 percent of high school students in Bernalillo County experience bullying in

school. The survey polled 39 middle and high schools around New Mexico, totaling 5,875 students. She said about 160,000 students nationwide are scared to go to school because they are being bullied. “It’s tragic that we live in a world where bullying is so prevalent.

DE COLORES

Personally, I think we all need to figure out how we can take a stand, whether it’s to support children and schools or go to trainings like this,” she said. Sagbakken said APS has begun initiatives to prevent bullying in schools, such as the Safe Schools

Ambassadors program. She said the program has hired an anti-bullying coordinator and has trained staff in bullying prevention. She said APS contacted UNM’s LGBTQ Resource Center in order to

by Rosario Marroquin-Flores

Winning Coffee, said she supports the increase and has already been paying her employees $8.50 an hour. She said paying her employees more than the minimum makes it easier for her business to run smoothly. “I think about this place more as kind of a community so I’ve always paid my employees above minimum wage, plus they get tips, plus they get to eat for free, plus they get free coffee,” she said. “The plus side for me, as the owner, is that I have very little turnover. I have people who have worked here seven to eight years. Hardly anybody quits.” Timmerman said she advocates for workers’ rights, and that business owners should deal with inflation in a way that does not hurt employees. “Inflation is inflation and if you try to deal with inflation by not paying your employees, you’re not really dealing with it,” she said. “If people want to deal with it, then they should deal with inflation and not take it out on the backs of the workers.”

County raises minimum wage news@dailylobo.com

UNM alumnus Japji Hundal, center, along with others, celebrates Holi on Johnson Field Saturday afternoon. Also known as the Festival of Colors, the Hindu event is primarily observed in India and Nepal. While the entire spring festival season lasts up to sixteen days, the main day is celebrated by people throwing colored powder and colored water at each other.

Local business owners have released a flurry of mixed reactions regarding the Bernalillo County commissioners’ narrow decision to increase the county’s minimum wage. On Tuesday night, county commissioners voted to approve a countywide minimum wage increase from $7.50 to $8.50 per hour. The ordinance passed 3-2 by a strict party-line vote, with Democrats in favor of and Republicans against the wage increase. The increase will take place in two installments, rising to $8 on July 1 and rising to $8.50 on January 1, 2014. The ordinance also says that any future minimum wage increases need to be tied in to inflation figures. The county states that it cannot get legally involved in lawsuits unless employers comply. The minimum wage of tipped workers will not increase, staying at $2.13 an hour plus tips. Sandy Timmerman, owner of

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Daily Lobo volume 117

issue 148

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TODAY

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An error was made in the caption for the photograph for the article “New UNM group to schmooze NM ďŹ lm,â€? published in Thursday’s Daily Lobo. The caption said the images projected upon the wall of George Pearl Hall last week, showcasing student videos and photographs from the Interdisciplinary Film and Digital Media Program, were run by the UNM Film Association. Rather, the projections were part of Arts Unexpected, an event run by the College of Fine Arts. The error was made in reporting.

volume 117

issue 148

Telephone: (505) 277-7527 Fax: (505) 277-7530 news@dailylobo.com advertising@dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com

Editor-in-Chief Antonio Sanchez Managing Editor John Tyczkowski News Editor Ardee Napolitano Photo Editor Juan Labreche Assistant Photo Editor Aaron Sweet Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse

Culture Editor Nicole Perez Sports Editor Thomas Romero-Salas Assistant Sports Editor J. R. Oppenheim Opinion Editor John Tyczkowski Social Media Editor J.R. Oppenheim Multi Media Editor Zachary Zahorik

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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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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Bullying

from page 1

reach out to younger anti-bullying advocates about the issue. LGBTQ Resource Center Director Alma Rosa Silva-Banuelos said her organization decided to participate in the event because LGBTQ students are one of the communities that are affected by bullying. “Bullying does happen in schools,” Silva-Banuelos said. “We’re really trying to shift it because it’s a power dynamic … so we can really shift our culture. If the most affected community is at the forefront of what you’re organizing, then everybody would be taken care of.” Silva-Banuelos said preventing bullying in schools will improve the state’s educational system. “If you’re being bullied in school, you’re not going to want to go to school,” she said. “We have so many smart young people in the state, and we want school environments to be comfortable so students could go to school and graduate.” But Silva-Banuelos said the

Minimum wage

symposium does not aim to merely decry bullies as menaces in schools. She said that in addition to encouraging students who are getting bullied to take a stand, the symposium also aims to emotionally help those who bully. “If someone is perceived to be a bully or an aggressor, they also may be dealing with something outside of school,” she said. “They may be getting aggressive behavior at home or somewhere else, and that is acting out in school.” Silva-Banuelos said she is optimistic that the symposium will help prevent bullying in the state. She said she expects it to be an annual event. Sisombath said she encourages students who experience bullying to send a message to their aggressors that they will not tolerate bullying anymore. “Don’t just put up with it,” she said. “You’re not going to be a better person if you just suck it up and take all the abuse. If you start standing up for yourself, people wouldn’t touch you.”

from page 1

But Andrew Szeman, the son of Eric Szeman, owner of the Route 66 Malt Shop, said he opposes the hike. He said businesses would have to raise their prices to pay employees the new minimum wage, and this in turn would result in a higher cost of living in the city. “I think it negatively affects business,” he said. “When you raise minimum wage, it affects the inflation rate. Inflation rate goes up, cost of living goes up and then people have less money to spend.” In February, Eric’s business sparked controversy after KRQE reported that the malt shop’s employees were being paid below minimum wage in violation of Albuquerque’s minimum wage increase which took effect January 1. But Eric said his employees signed a written agreement acknowledging they would be paid lower than the new minimum wage. He said the restaurant would go bankrupt if they raised wages abruptly. Andrew said the wage increase will encourage people to stop striving to better themselves. “Minimum wage was never designed to be a wage that you could live off of,” Andrew said. “If you keep increasing minimum wage, what’s the point of working hard, applying yourself, going to school, to get better than

minimum wage? If minimum wage is this wage that you can support a family off of, what’s the point?” Bernalillo County Commissioner Art De La Cruz, who sponsored the ordinance to raise the minimum wage, said the hike would help people who are currently trying to live on low wages. “Fifty-seven percent of the population on minimum wage are adults,” he said. “Opposition argues that it’s just kids and students, but it’s not. The hope is that this will ease the burden a little bit.” De La Cruz also said the minimum wage increase will help make the job market easier for seekers to break into. “There is this argument that the workers must improve themselves to make themselves more marketable,” he said. “But business needs to do the same thing.” De La Cruz said the increase would improve the lives of the workers in Bernalillo County. “I live in the South Valley and I am proud to say that I live in the heart of the barrio,” he said. “The neighbors who surround me are working people. It’s painful to see these people struggling to survive. This is something that is personal to me.”

Take a tour of a high-tech medical simulation lab! Monday, April 29th 3:15pm to 4:45pm UNM North Campus FREE of charge

• We will be learning about suturing and intubation. • We will also be working with their simulation dummies. RSVP to bamd@unm.edu Sponsored by the BA/MD Organization

Monday, April 29, 2013/ Page 3


LoboOpinion

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4

Monday, April 29, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ John Tyczkowski/ @JCTyczkowski

opinion@dailylobo.com

From the web

Online readers responded to the letter “Despite support, Senate bungles gun measures,” published in the Daily Lobo April 22. The letter was in response to the April 17 defeat in the Senate of a bill that would have expanded background checks for gun purchasers and banned certain semi-automatic weapons modeled after military assault weapons. Author Robert Gardiner said this showed the broken nature of the American political system. by “CodyA” “90% of the public saying they are for background checks is much different than 90% of the public supporting the bill as drafted by the Senate. As a senator, that is one huge factor you need to look at before voting for a bill. Hell, I’m for background checks, especially when you put that word “universal” behind it to give it more bite, but not the way the Senate drafted it. You take this statistic and hold it as a holy scripture that supposedly proves the majority of the people were for this particular bill, which is simply not the case!” by “FlameCCT” “I almost feel pity for people like Robert. He would be screaming if the Senate had passed a law requiring everyone to get a government permit before being able to write letters for the Daily Lobo, or if the Senate had passed a law requiring him to provide documentation in order to choose membership in a religious organization — or none at all. We are not a direct democracy. I would suggest a few courses in US government; however I’m not sure if they still teach that the USA is a representative republic under the Constitution.” by “Jed” “Well said. Not only do significant numbers of people not know that this is a representative republic, and not a direct democracy, they don’t even know the difference between the two. That’s scary. I’ll bet that Robert doesn’t know how the Senate was originally comprised prior to the 17th Amendment. He obviously doesn’t understand that the Senate was never intended to represent a majority of the People but rather the interests of the States, and he certainly doesn’t understand that the Bill of Rights is not subject to popular opinion polls.” by “mb” “Please remember that without the 2nd Amendment, none of the others matter. Please remember that once your rights have been given away by you, or taken away by the act of another, you never can get them back.” To join the conversation, go to DailyLobo.com

Letter submission policy

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

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Column

Don’t dismiss ‘conspiracy’ offhand By Jason Darensburg Daily Lobo columnist opinion@dailylobo.com

Sometimes, left-wing ideology can be just as inflexible as right-wing ideology. That’s the important lesson I learned from my previous column about the Bilderberg Group. I find it tragic that so many people who claim to be politically progressive seem to lose all critical thinking abilities when the words “conspiracy theory” enter the conversation. Call me crazy, but I believe that a truly progressive, open-minded person would take the time to investigate controversial subjects on their own rather than simply parroting the sanitized, mainstream version of what constitutes a “conspiracy theory” and what does not. With some folks, the instant you utter those terrible words their brains explode and they automatically assume you’re some kind of lunatic for even bringing it up. It’s a knee-jerk reaction. No amount of evidence will convince them otherwise. That doesn’t sound like a very progressive approach to me. That seems pretty dogmatic. How can somebody have a valid opinion on a subject they know nothing about? Predictably, in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon tragedy, talk of conspiracy theories and government “false-flag” operations has proliferated in the media. Professor Stephan Lewandowsky, a cognitive scientist at the University of Western Australia, recently published a paper in the scholarly journal Psychological Science titled, “NASA faked the moon landing — Therefore (Climate) Science is a Hoax: An Anatomy of the Motivated Rejection of Science.” The paper has received acclaim for its examination of the psychology behind

conspiracy theories which reject science, particularly among the so-called “climate change deniers.” Lewandowsky’s theory is that people who embrace conspiracies need to have what he calls a “mechanism against dread.” Psychologically, it’s different from evidence-based thinking: It gives people a sense of control. “A conspiracy theory is immune to evidence, and that can pretty well serve as the definition of one,” he recently told Salon. “If you reject evidence, or reinterpret the evidence to be confirmation of your theory, or you ignore mountains of evidence to focus on just one thing, you’re probably a conspiracy theorist. We call that a self-sealing nature of reasoning.” Just for the record, I do not believe that NASA faked the moon landings. I watched every one of them live on television. However, I know for a fact that conspiracies do indeed exist. I don’t need to look any further than the US criminal justice system for the answer: When more than one person is charged with homicide, what do they call it? Conspiracy to commit murder! There you go. Does that mean I’m crazy for believing there was a conspiracy in the Boston Marathon bombing? More than one person was involved, after all. I think we need to clarify our terms here. Liberals and conservatives alike disparage conspiracy theorists for being unhinged or even dangerous outliers — when it serves their purposes. The debate over climate change is a perfect example. So is what happened in Boston. Unfortunately, many intelligent people rush to make judgments based on their emotions, even though they believe they’re thinking critically. Few of them actually do the research on any of those “wacky” conspiracy theories for themselves. Either

they don’t care enough to bother, or they have a mental block without realizing that they already believe in plenty of conspiracies. That’s hypocrisy. I’ve done sufficient research to understand that when it comes to truth and accuracy, no government on earth is trustworthy; certainly not the United States. Without exception, every government lies to its own citizens at some point. Am I some kind of conspiracy theorist for believing that? Documented proof isn’t enough for some people, I guess. Surely, everyone’s heard of WikiLeaks by now. Does anybody remember Watergate, IranContra, or the Pentagon Papers? The late George Carlin once said, “The term ‘conspiracy theorist’ is a label used by the establishment to dismiss the idea that powerful people might get together and actually plan anything…” It’s time to dispense with all this empty rhetoric about “thinking outside the box” and actually start doing it. We can begin by using our critical thinking skills, instead of just taking someone else’s word for “what really happened.” Let’s go beyond thinking outside the box: Let’s try to envision thinking outside the room the box is in. Embracing alternative opinions is a good place to start. As Alexandra Swanberg wrote in her Daily Lobo opinion column last week, “See what’s out there, and make up your own mind about what you believe.” I couldn’t agree more. We’ll never be able to bring about any sort of real change if we can’t even recognize what is right before our eyes. Democrats or Republicans, liberals or conservatives; they really are two sides of the same coin. The true rulers of our planet are openly mocking us as we muddle around, pointing fingers at each other.


news

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Monday, April 29, 2013/ Page 5

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EDGEWOOD, N.M. — Residents in a New Mexico town have filed a lawsuit aimed at halting a shooting range in town. KOAT-TV reports that a group of residents in Edgewood are going to court against the Founder’s Ranch and the Single Action Shooting Range. Mary Ann Ende says some residents are tired the noise from constant gunfire. She says the lawsuit is aimed at getting a “permanent injunction against the modern weapons.” Single Action Shooting Society field operations director Brad Myers says the group is doing nothing wrong and millions of dollars have been invested on the property that houses the range. The Single Action Shooting Society has been active in the area for years and often holds western and pre-1900 war reenactments.

Healthy orangutan born at ABQ zoo ALBUQUERQUE — Officials at the Albuquerque BioPark say a baby orangutan that was born at the zoo this week is alert, has been nursing and has a strong grip. The zoo says Sarah the Sumatran orangutan gave birth to the healthy baby sometime late Thursday or early Friday. Zookeepers have yet to determine the baby’s gender. They say Sarah and her baby are behind the scenes but will soon rejoin the rest of the orangutans. The zoo’s primate supervisor, Debbie Wiese, says the first few days after birth are the most critical

and the mother and baby will be closely monitored to make sure development progresses normally. Sarah’s pregnancy surprised zookeepers last November, making it difficult to determine a due date. This is the first orangutan birth at the zoo since 2008.

NMSU cornerback drafted by Jaguars JACKSONVILLE — The Jacksonville Jaguars continued to shore up their depleted secondary by selecting New Mexico State cornerback Jeremy Harris in the seventh round of the NFL draft. The Jaguars used the second pick of the seventh round (No. 208 overall) to get Harris, who played college ball for current Jaguars secondary coach DeWayne Walker. The 6-foot-2 Harris is the fourth defensive back selected by the Jaguars in the three-day draft, joining second-round safety Johnathan Cyprien, third-round cornerback Dwayne Gratz and sixth-round cornerback Josh Evans. Jacksonville is trying to replace most of its secondary from last season. The team parted ways with its top four cornerbacks — Derek Cox, Rashean Mathis, Aaron Ross and Will Middleton — as well as strong safety Dawan Landry. The only returning starter is Dwight Lowery.

“Carmen” returns to Santa Fe Opera in 2014 SANTA FE — The Santa Fe Opera in northern New Mexico will feature six operas during its 2014 summer season, starting with a performance of Bizet’s “Carmen.”

Opera General Director Charles MacKay announced next season’s productions and casts on Wednesday. The company will for the first time perform Beethoven’s “Fidelio,” Mozart’s “The Impresario” and “Dr. Sun Yat-Sen” by Huang Ruo, a Chineseborn composer whose opera is making its American premiere. There also will be new productions of Donizetti’s “Don Pasquale,” which was performed by the Santa Fe Opera in 1983, and Stravinsky’s “Le Rossignol,” which was last done in 1973. The work by Stravinsky will be part of a double bill with Mozart’s comic opera. The opera’s current season opens June 28 with Offenbach’s “The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein.”

Santa Fe resolution backs gay marriage SANTA FE — The Santa Fe City Council has passed a controversial resolution recognizing gay marriage as legal in New Mexico. Wednesday night’s vote for the largely symbolic measure was 5-1 with two abstentions. Santa Fe Mayor David Coss was a sponsor of the measure. Council members who abstained or voted “no” say the city has no authority to make law on same-sex marriage and claim the issue has divided or polarized residents. City Attorney Geno Zamora recently provided the council with an opinion saying state law doesn’t define marriage as between a man and a woman and that same-sex unions are legal. New Mexico Attorney General Gary King is in the process of coming up with an opinion on the subject, which hasn’t been adjudicated with finality in the state’s court system.

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LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events Arts & Music Saxophone Fiesta I 6:00pm – 7:00pm Keller Hall Students of Eric Lau. Saxophone Fiesta II 8:00pm – 9:00pm Keller Hall Students of Eric Lau

Campus Events Tour of a Medical Simulation Lab 3:15pm – 4:45pm UNM North Campus Free! Learn about suturing, intubation and work with simulation dummies!

Lectures & Readings Signing and Discussion 2:00pm – 3:00pm UNM Bookstore Author David Correia speaking about his book “Properties of Violence: Law and Land Grant Struggle in Northern New Mexico.”

Student Groups & Gov. Division for Equity and Inclusion 7:30am – 2:00pm SUB Ballroom C Students for Miracles Meeting 3:00pm – 4:30pm SUB Acoma A & B University Students Studying Russian 4:00pm – 6:00pm SUB Mirage Thunderbird

Bound 5:00pm – 7:00pm SUB Alumni

Dream Team Meeting 5:00pm – 7:30pm SUB Luminaria UNM Wesley Grief Support 7:30pm – 9:30pm

Workshops SUB Luminaria Anger Management Workshop 4:00pm – 6:00pm SHAC Identify triggers and develop alternative responses to problematic situations/events.

See more events on the Daily Lobo Mobile app!


Page 6 / Monday, April 29, 2013

news

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Old land grant stirs up Taos

Russell Contreras / AP photo In this March 26 photo, a for-sale sign advertises a property on the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant, the historical northern New Mexico Spanish land grant. Heirs and homeowners currently are locked in a dispute after a land grant board filed a warranty deed in an attempt to reclaim 20,000 acres of private land originally granted by Spain’s colonial government to Arroyo Hondo’s founding families.

By Russell Contreras The Associated Press

ARROYO HONDO, N.M. — Fernando Martinez’s family has lived on the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant for more than two centuries, passing property from generation to generation in the popular area near Taos. For the past couple of years, though, it has become impossible for Martinez or hundreds of others with homes in the mountainous northern

New Mexico enclave to do much of anything with their properties. The 31-square-mile land grant, parceled out by the Spanish monarchy in the early 19th century to encourage settlement of the then-remote region, is at the heart of a bitter legal tug-of-war that has thwarted property owners’ efforts to sell or refinance their homes, or even buy insurance policies, while pitting frustrated neighbors against each other. Martinez is among those who

finds himself in the legal quagmire after a group of descendants of the original landowners claimed they are the rightful heirs to the land. “It’s a mess,” said Martinez, 66, a retired miner who couldn’t obtain a title to house he wanted to purchase. “We can’t do anything. It’s like we’re stuck in time.” The dispute began in 2010 after the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant Board

see Land

grant page 7


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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Land grant

Monday, April 29, 2013/ Page 7

from page 6

the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant Board filed a warranty deed with the Taos County Assessor’s office in an attempt to reclaim 20,000 acres of private land originally granted to Arroyo Hondo’s founding families. In the deed, the five-member board claimed that the Spanish land grant belonged to board members and heirs with blood ties to the originally Hispanic settlers, some of whom later became victims of white land speculators who were allowed to roam free after the U.S.Mexican War. “What you’re dealing with is colonial history and land grabs as a result of conquest,” said Santiago Juarez, the board’s attorney. “It’s not easily resolved.” That may be true, some homeowners say, but they believe the deed filed in the county assessor’s office is bogus and didn’t have the approval of most heirs. In fact, Martinez said the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant Board is controlled by one family that has often clashed with other heirs. No phone number was listed for Lawrence Ortiz and Leandro Ortiz, two brothers and board members behind the deed filing. No one answered the door to an address listed for Lawrence Ortiz. Pennie Herrera Wardlow, an Arroyo Hondo heir and a real estate agent in Taos learned of the dispute after she sought to lower her interest rateandreducehermonthlypayments from $1,200 a month to $700. But she couldn’t do the refinancing because underwriters are too leery given the uncertainty over the dispute. “They are hurting the very people that they say they want to help,” said Wardlow. “I haven’t been able to do anything for two years now.” The uncertainly also has hurt real estate in trendy Taos just as the area was just starting to recover from the economic downturn, said Paul A.

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Romero, a broker. He said around 3,000 properties within the land grant boundaries have been affected. “This comes at a bad time,” Romero said. “We’re up 30 percent overall but people can’t buy or sell in Arroyo Hondo.” Unique to Spanish colonial territories in the American Southwest, land grants were awarded to settlers by the Spanish government to encourage settlement in the empire’s northern territories, which were difficult to control because they were far from Mexico City. The area was also populated by American Indians, some of whom were hostile to European, and later Mexican, settlers.

“They are hurting the very people that they say they want to help.” ~Penny Herrera Wardlow Arroyo Hondo heir The Arroyo Hondo Land Grant fight is just the latest in a string of similar battles that began in the 1960s when former preacher Reies Lopez Tijerina organized heirs to various land grants in New Mexico after years of the issue being ignored. He contended that the U.S. government stole millions of acres from Hispanos following the signing of the treaty that ended the Mexican War in 1848. The United States pledged in the treaty to respect private land holdings, including land grants made under the Spanish and Mexican governments. In 1967, Tijerina and followers raided the courthouse in Tierra Amarilla, to attempt a citizen’s arrest

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of the district attorney at the time after eight members of Tijerina’s group had been arrested over land grant protests. During the raid, the group shot and wounded a state police officer and jailer, beat a deputy and took the sheriff and a reporter hostage before escaping to the Kit Carson National Forest. The raid sparked excitement among Mexican-American college students who identified with Tijerina’s message of Latinos getting displaced and led to years of court battles around land grant claims. Since the Tierra Amarilla courthouse raid, the land grant movement has become more widely accepted, and even gets its own day from New Mexico state lawmakers during legislative sessions. That’s probably why courts closely examine all land grant claims “no matter how ridiculous they may be,” said David Correia, author of “Properties of Violence: Law and Land Grant Struggle in Northern New Mexico.” “Someone making unsubstantiated claims can really disrupt titles in New Mexico,” Correia said. “It shows the conflicts of property ownership that still exist in northern New Mexico.” Typically, land grant claims lose in court, he said. Meanwhile, Arroyo Hondo heirs say they are bracing for months, if not years, of more court fights. In February, a district judge ruled that the deed filed by the Arroyo Hondo Land Grant Board had no legal basis since it did not create nor transfer any interest in real property. The judge ordered an attorney representing heirs who filed a lawsuit against the board and three title companies to draft the order. Juarez disagreed with the order and the other attorney asked for another hearing, saying it’s “far from over.”

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Page 8 / Monday, April 29, 2013

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Gray wolves may lose protection Interior department says wolves recovered enough

by John Flesher and Matthew Brown The Associated Press

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BILLINGS, Mont. — Federal wildlife officials have drafted plans to lift protections for gray wolves across the Lower 48 states, a move that could end a decades-long recovery effort that has restored the animals but only in parts of their historic range. The draft U.S. Department of Interior rule obtained by The Associated Press contends the roughly 6,000 wolves now living in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes are enough to prevent the species’ extinction. The agency says having gray wolves elsewhere — such as the West Coast, parts of New England and elsewhere in the Rockies — is unnecessary for their long-term survival. A small population of Mexican wolves in the Southwest would continue to receive federal protections, as a distinct subspecies of the gray wolf. The loss of federal protections would be welcomed by ranchers and others in the agriculture industry, whose stock at times become prey for hungry wolf packs. Yet wildlife advocates say the proposal threatens to cut short the gray wolf ’s dramatic recovery from widespread extermination. The proposal was first reported by the Los Angeles Times. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Friday the rule was under review and would be published in the Federal Register and opened to public comment before a final decision is made.

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welcome to ranchers who have lost cattle, sheep and other animals to wolves or fear they might if the predators enlarge their territory. “There’s a lot of anxiety when a listed species attacks your livestock and you have no way of protecting them,” he said. The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association said the government also should remove protections for wolves in the Southwest, where agencies have struggled to re-establish wolves in parts of New Mexico and Arizona. That population is believed to number only about 75 animals. “Repeated failed attempts to achieve unnaturally high population levels in that region have put undue strain on livestock producers” and government resources, spokesman Chase Adams said. Some biologists have argued wolves will continue spreading regardless of their legal status. The animals are prolific breeders, known to journey hundreds of miles in search of new territory. They were wiped out across most of the U.S. early last century following a government sponsored poisoning and trapping campaign. In an emailed statement, the Fish and Wildlife Service pointed to “robust” populations of the animals in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes as evidence that gray wolf recovery “is one of the world’s great conservation successes.” Wolves in those two areas lost protections under the Endangered Species Act over

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If the rule is enacted, it would transfer control of wolves to state wildlife agencies by removing them from the federal list of endangered species. The government has been considering such a move since at least 2011, but previously held off given concerns among scientists and wildlife advocates who warn it could effectively halt the species’ expansion. John Vucetich, a wolf specialist and biologist at Michigan Tech University, said suitable habitat remains in large sections of the Rockies, the nation’s midsection and the Northeast. Wolves presently occupy only about 15 percent of their historical range, but that could be greatly expanded if humans allow it, he said. “It ends up being a political question more than a biological one,” Vucetich said. “It’s very unlikely the wolves will make it to places like the Dakotas and the Northeast unless the federal government provides some kind of leadership.” Meanwhile, increasing wolf numbers in parts of the country have stirred a backlash from agricultural and hunting groups upset by the predator’s attacks on livestock and big game herds such as elk. Their complaints spurred Western lawmakers two years ago to remove wolves from the endangered list in five states by force, after the issue got bogged down by environmentalists’ lawsuits. Paul Schlegel with the American Farm Bureau Federation said any step toward dropping wolves from the endangered list would be

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PAGE 10 / MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2013

NEWS Wolves

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

from PAGE 8

John Grap / Battle Creek Enquirer This undated photo provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows a gray wolf. Federal wildlife officials have drafted plans to lift protections for gray wolves across the Lower 48 states, which would end a decades-long effort that has restored the animals but only in parts of their historic range. the last two years. Advocacy to wolf attacks on livestock and groups have filed federal suits big game herds. The U.S. Fish challenging decisions to lift and Wildlife Service recently reprotected status from wolves in leased data showing wolf numWyoming, Michigan, Minnesota bers dropped 7 percent last year and Wisconsin. in the face of newly-expanded “The U.S. Fish and Wildlife hunting and trapping seasons in Service is evaluating the appro- Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. priate management status of the That’s the most significant degray wolf under the Endangered crease since they were reintroSpecies Act outside of these re- duced in the mid-1990s. covered population areas,” the “There’s a race to the bottom agency said in its Friday stateto see who can be more antiMARCH 16, 2011 ment. “This is a matter still under wolf,” said Don Barry, a former internal review and discussion.” Interior Department assistant In some states where wolves secretary under President Bill have recovered, regulated hunt- Clinton and now a vice president ing and trapping already has at Defenders of Wildlife. “They’re been used to drive down their basically giving up on wolf recovpopulations, largely in response ery before the job is done.”

Federal officials have said they are monitoring the states’ actions, but see no immediate threat to the gray wolf ’s survival. In Oregon and Washington, which have small but rapidly growing wolf populations, the animals remained protected under state laws even after federal protections were lifted in portions of the two states. Between 1991 and 2011, the federal government spent $102 million on gray wolf recovery programs and state agencies chipped in $15.6 million. Federal spending likely would drop if the proposal to lift protections goes through, while state spending would increase.

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Monday, April 29, 2013/ Page 11

Miami Heat sweeps Bucks by Nancy Armour The Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — LeBron James can cross another item off his to-do list. James scored 30 points, Ray Allen had another big game against his old team and the Miami Heat got their first playoff sweep in the Big Three era, advancing to the Eastern Conference semifinals with an 88-77 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday. “It was our next big step as far as our growth,” James said. “It’s so hard to win on the road in the playoffs, in someone’s building — especially when someone is playing for their last life. It’s a big step for us.” And now the Heat have some much-needed time to rest. Dwyane Wade sat out Sunday’s game, only the second postseason game he’s missed in his career, because of his aching right knee. But with Miami not playing until next Saturday at the earliest, he’ll have plenty of time to treat the three bone bruises that caused him to miss six games near the end of the regular season. Miami plays the winner of the Brooklyn-Chicago series. The Bulls lead that series 3-1, with Game 5 on Monday night in New York. “It’s big,” Wade said of the time off. “Obviously, we’re one of the oldest teams in the league, maybe the oldest team in terms of rotation players. Guys have some bumps and bruises coming out of this series, so it’s going to be great to get some rest. But also we have to take this time to continue to stay sharp, to continue to stay in shape as well.” Judging by the clinical way in which the Heat dissected the Bucks in this series, that isn’t likely to be a problem. The defending NBA champions won each game by double digits, getting contributions from their stars and subs alike. Allen finished with 16 points, the third time in the series he scored in double figures, and was 4 of 7 from 3-point range. Udonis Haslem added 13 points and five rebounds, and Mario Chalmers kicked in eight rebounds and six assists for Miami, which never trailed Sunday. “They had the whole package,” Bucks coach Jim Boylan said. “When you can afford to sit a guy like Dwyane Wade and perform at the level they performed at, that’s a championshipcaliber team.” Monta Ellis led the Bucks with 21 points, and Larry Sanders had 11

Al Diaz / The Miami Herald Milwaukee Bucks’ John Henson fouls Miami Heat’s Norris Cole, left, during the second quarter of Game 4 in their first-round NBA basketball playoff series on Sunday in Milwaukee. rebounds to go with seven points. But Milwaukee got almost nothing again from Brandon Jennings, who didn’t even play in the fourth quarter. Jennings, who had guaranteed the Bucks would win the series in six games, finished with three points on 1-of-7 shooting. After scoring 26 points in Game 1, Jennings had 27 total in the final three. “[I am] frustrated, a little down because I came into this season with so much confidence,” he said. “I thought we had a chance to steal a game in Game 1, Game 2. We let that slip away from us. Game 3, we came back home. Had a 10-point lead, lost that. I mean, it’s frustration all around.” The Heat had chances to sweep their first-round series in each of the last two seasons, taking 3-0 leads on Philadelphia (2011) and New York (2012). But they couldn’t close it out, losing Game 4 each year. That wasn’t going to happen against the Bucks. Even with Wade reduced to a spectator. Wade got treatment “around the

clock” the last two days in hopes of playing Sunday, and he tested his knee before the game. But he and the Heat decided it wasn’t worth risking aggravating the injury further, and he spent the entire game on the bench in his warmups. “He gave me the nod saying he wasn’t going to go,” James said. “I knew had to pick it up a little more and try to bring us home, bring this win home for us.” That he did, adding eight rebounds, seven assists and three steals to his 30 points. “We just space the floor and see if they can stop him; if not, he knows where we are,” Allen said. “We just give him that room to operate.” The Heat led by as many as 11 in the first half, only to see the Bucks steadily chip away at the lead. When Mike Dunleavy drained a 3 and Ellis scored on a floater, it cut Miami’s lead to 69-67 with 9:34 to play. Ellis was fouled by Allen on the play, but he missed the free throw

see Heat page 13

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sports

Page 12 / Monday, April 29, 2013

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UNM captured 10 top-three finishes during the Brutus Hamilton Invitational Friday and Saturday in Berkeley, Calif. Ty Kirk won the open-section long jump with a 22foot, 10-inch leap, while Kendall Spencer’s 24-9 1/4 long jump mark earned him second place in the invitational section. Kirk also placed third in the invitational section triple jump with a 49-8 1/4 mark. Pole vaulter Amber Menke continued her strong season with a first-place leap of 13 feet, 1/2 inch, while teammate Margo Tucker took third with a 12-6 1/4 vault. Lexi Ross placed second in the javelin throw with a 140-8 toss. Alex Herring clocked 1:50.15 for second place in the men’s 800-meter run, and Robert Warensjo took second in the pole vault with a 15-7 1/4 leap. UNM had two third-place finishes from Django Lovett in the high jump (6-11) and Shirley Pitts in the 400 (55.59). Some Lobo distance runners competed at the Payton Jordan Invitational in California Sunday, but those results were not complete by press time.

Men’s soccer

New Mexico won its final exhibition match of the spring Saturday in Denver with a 7-1 victory over Creighton, a Final Four team last season. James Rogers and Josh Goss each scored two goals in the win, and the Lobos had single goals from Nick Miele, Christopher Wehan and Joe Harris. This spring UNM scored 21 goals and captured exhibition wins over Creighton, Air Force, UC Riverside, Grand Canyon and Fort Louis. Rogers finished the spring with six goals and Michael Calderon had five. Lobo goalies Michael Lisch and Patrick Poblete gave up only four goals throughout the exhibition season.

~compiled by J.R. Oppenheim

women’s golf

Golfer wins gold by the clock by J.R. Oppenheim

assistantsports@dailylobo.com @JROppenheim Junior Manon De Roey became New Mexico’s first Mountain West Conference medalist in three years after she won the women’s golf championship Saturday at the Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Carding a 7-over-par 223 over three days, De Roey sank a 20-foot birdie putt in an 18th-hole playoff and beat UNLV’s Demi Mak for the title. De Roey had her best round Saturday with a 1-over 73 after hitting consecutive 75s in the first two rounds. UNM had not taken a medal since Jodi Ewart in 2010. “It feels really good,” De Roey said in a release. “I was a little down for three tournaments before Fresno (April 15-16), but I played well there and that helped this week.” The conference win is De Roey’s second of the year. She also claimed the fall season-opening Colonel Bill

Wollenberg Ptarmigan Ram Classic last September. She joins Caroline Keggi, Kristi Arrington and Ewart as the fourth Lobo to win at least two tournaments in an academic year. De Roey, a Belgium native, and Mak entered Saturday’s final round in a third-place tie two strokes off the lead. De Roey carded a 34 on the front nine and a 39 on the back. Mak settled for a 73 after a bogey on the 18th hole set up the playoff. De Roey completed her round 90 minutes before Mak finished hers. Mak missed her birdie attempt in the playoff, securing De Roey’s victory. “It was a good way to finish,” UNM head coach Jill Trujillo said in the release, referring to De Roey. San Diego State’s Christine Wong took third behind De Roey and Mak with an 8-over 224. Nevada’s Nikki Prichard and UNLV’s Mayko Chwen Wang tied for fourth at 9-over, while SDSU’s Paige Spiranac placed sixth at 10-over. UNM finished sixth in the eight-

team tournament with a total 949 over 54 holes. UNLV took the top team prize with a 904, followed by Boise State (916), Fresno State (918), Nevada (922) and San Diego State (926). Colorado State (950) and Wyoming (969) rounded out the field behind the Lobos. Junior Sammi Stevens and senior Beth Buchner fired their best scores in the final round, each carding a 75. Stevens shot three strokes better Saturday after posting 78s in the opening rounds, placing 12th in the individual standings with a 231. Buchner improved her second-round 85 by 10 strokes, taking 35th with a 246. Also at the tournament, UNM’s Sofia Hoglund tied for 36th place at 249 and Ira Knopf tied for 39th at 266. As a team, UNM scored a 306 Saturday, 14 strokes better than Friday’s second round. De Roey and Stevens earned firstteam All-Mountain West honors for their performances, and Stevens made all-conference for the second straight year.

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Diamondbacks break Rockies by Jonathan Dalton The Associated Press

PHOENIX — Gerardo Parra tripled and scored twice, and Josh Wilson had a run-scoring double to help lead the Arizona Diamondbacks to a 4-2 win over the Colorado Rockies on Sunday. Rockies All-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki was lifted in the bottom of the third inning because of a strained left shoulder. Patrick Corbin threw five scoreless innings before tiring in his final inning-plus. Corbin (3-0) allowed two runs on nine hits over 6 2-3 innings and struck out five for his first win in four starts against the Rockies. J.J. Putz pitched the ninth for his fifth save for the Diamondbacks, who took three of four from the Rockies and have won five of their past six, none by more than two runs. Top Colorado prospect Nolan Arenado was called up from Triple-A Colorado Springs and went 0 for 3 with a walk while starting at third base. The 22-year-old Arenado hit .364 with 11 doubles, three homers and 21 RBIs in 18 games for the Sky Sox. Arizona broke through against Colorado starter Jon Garland (2-2) in the third, scoring twice. Cliff Pennington singled to right, went to second on a sacrifice and moved to third on a single to left by Gerardo Parra. After Cody Ross grounded out to advance Parra to second, Pennington scored on a passed ball charged to Wilin Rosario. Three pitches later, Garland threw a wild pitch to score Parra for a 2-0 lead.

Heat

Ross D. Franklin / AP photo Arizona Diamondbacks’ Gerardo Parra, left, avoids the tag of Colorado Rockies’ Wilin Rosario, right, and Rockies pitcher Jon Garland to score a run during the third inning of a baseball game, Sunday, April 28, 2013, in Phoenix. Paul Goldschmidt extended the lead 3-0 in the fourth when he singled and scored on Josh Wilson’s double off the left-center field wall and Parra tripled to lead off the fifth and scored on a Ross single to make it 4-0. The Rockies cut the lead in half in the sixth. Eric Young Jr. doubled for the third time in three at-bats and scored on a single to left by Dexter Fowler. Fowler later scored on a one-out wild pitch to pull Colorado to 4-2. Colorado chased Corbin after putting runners on first and second with two outs in the seventh. But Matt Reynolds retired Young on a short popup in front of the dirt cut around home plate on the third base side to end the threat. Garland allowed four runs — three earned — on eight hits with two walks,

from page 11

James grabbed the rebound. He fed Allen, who knocked down — what else, a 3. J.J. Redick missed a long 3 and James found an open Chalmers for another 3 that gave the Heat a 75-67 lead with 8:27 left. The 3 was Chalmers’ 80th in the postseason, tying Tim Hardaway’s franchise record. After Luc Mbah a Moute made the second of two free throws, James scored on a layup. Redick made a jumper, but Shane Batti-

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er and Allen closed out the Bucks with a pair of 3s. James then converted a three-point play and added a layup to complete the 19-5 run — a spurt in which he had a hand in every single Miami score. “At some point during that stretch right there, he decided he was going to put his imprint on the game and he did. In a big way,” Boylan said. “Tat’s what superstar players do.”

one intentional. The right-hander, who entered the game 3-3 with a 4.60 ERA against his former team, struck out two.

Monday, April 29, 2013/ Page 13


New Mexico Daily Lobo

Weekly Horoscopes by Alexandra Swanberg aswanny@unm.edu

Like a bolt out of the blue

Capricorn—You enter the more detailed planning stages of a recent endeavor this week. As Mercury moves into stable, material-minded Taurus on Wednesday, you can no longer escape the pressing matters that need to be worked out. Take the next couple of weeks to account for all the loose ends and tie them tight. You might consider enlisting the help of a friend or group of friends to help you figure out certain stubborn problem areas. Aquarius—You’ve been trying to escape or ignore a problem that cropped up in the past few months, and up until now you’ve been mildly successful at doing so. Now, the issue is pestering you like a strong spring wind, and you’ve got a battle on your hands. Take all your energy and focus it on resolving the problem. You’ve got quite a bit of progress to make here, and about two weeks to make headway. It will be taken care of, just keep yourself on task. Pisces—Practical matters and housekeeping business have your attention this week; you may be frustrated at the seemingly endless round of responsibilities being loaded on your plate. Try not to think about how much you have left to accomplish, as this may sap your energy and become a discouraging factor. You can swiftly boost your efficiency by conjuring positive mental images and returning to that happy place whenever you’re feeling down. Aries—Reality recently smacked you in the face, and probably hit you hardest where finances are concerned. Perhaps you lost some important property, or came to owe quite a bit of money. Regardless of what’s tugging at your purse strings, it’s time to practice frugality. Use your competitive streak to your advantage by seeing how far you can stretch a dollar. Make it a point of pride to be wise about

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your resources. Taurus—A reconnection with certain family members or the renewal of a weakening relationship is very likely this week. Just know, you’ll have to be the one to take the first step, even if you’re not at fault. Keep in mind this is not about assigning blame — it’s about showing people how much you care about them regardless of any recent tension or disagreements. You’ll feel better once you let go of what’s done, and do your best to forgive and forget. Gemini—You might want to think twice about a major decision you’ve been contemplating recently. Midweek, your head will calm down a bit as Mercury moves into Taurus. You’ll be more patient, and less inclined to take drastic action to improve current frustrations. Hold off on anything major until then, or better yet for a couple of weeks. This week and next are best spent in serious personal reflection. Cancer—Last week’s full moon just about knocked you flat, and this is your week to recover. Rather than letting your worn out senses leave you, your respite entails something more mentally active. To stoke your inspiration, try a free write or a free-form drawing. Don’t worry about being perfect, editing, or trying to make it into anything in particular. It’s all about relaxing that inner critic so you can make some real personal progress. Leo—The recent spotlight on your life is dimming a bit this week, and it’s time to turn your attention back to self-discipline. It’s difficult not to get complacent this week, and it’s especially tempting to take the path of least resistance after the wave of recognition and personal growth that accompanied the full moon last week. Now, keep your eye on the future and dream up your next endeavor. Formulate as detailed and serious a plan as possible this week and next.

Virgo—With Taurus dominating the zodiac this week, you may want to turn your attention to domestic matters. It’s time for a deep, spring clean in your home, or perhaps to freshen up your wardrobe and sell items you no longer cherish. Get back to basics, and make sure everything in your environment is something you care for or need. The less you have, the freer you’ll be. If you’re feeling weighed down, material wealth is the most likely suspect. Libra—Have you been dreaming of your great escape? Now is the time to make plans in that direction, as between now and the end of the year you’ll come upon the opportunity to embark on your fantasy adventure. You just want to make sure you’re prepared as you can be for the plan by the time it comes to fruition. In addition to having a solid financial supply, be sure you maintain important social ties. You never know when you’ll have to call in a favor. Scorpio—It’s time to pamper yourself this week. Don’t be afraid to ask for exactly what you want, though avoid inconveniencing other people. The goal for you in the next couple of weeks is to take it easy and restore the energy you lost during last week’s intense full moon. You’ll need creative energy especially in a couple of weeks, and to make this flow forth freely you need to be free of all tension. Sagittarius—You’ll get a lot of pleasure out of helping out a friend or colleague this week, though you can expect the opportunity won’t come at the most opportune moment. Make sure you’re taking care of your own needs while taking care of those of others, or you can expect a tone a resentment to arise in your interactions. It won’t help anyone when you overextend yourself, so strive for a balance.

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LoboSports Sports editor / Thomas Romero-Salas/ @ThomasRomeroS

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Page

16 Monday, April 29, 2013

sports@dailylobo.com

BASEBALL

Coach: ‘We shouldn’t have won this game’ by Thomas Romero-Salas sports@dailylobo.com @ThomasRomeroS

Comeback victories are starting to become the norm for the New Mexico baseball team. No. 24 UNM rallied for its tenth straight victory with a 14-13 extrainnings decision over UNLV on Sunday at Lobo Field. The Lobos lead the Mountain West Conference by five games over San Diego State. “We shouldn’t have won this game,” head coach Ray Birmingham said. “We’ve done this all year long and they (UNLV) know it, everybody knows it.” The Lobos headed into the bottom of the ninth down 13-7 after the Rebels scored three runs in the top of the inning. UNM center fielder Josh Melendez started the inning off with a walk, left fielder Luke Campbell followed up with a single, then third baseman Alex Allbritton popped out to second base. Outfielder John Pustay, pinch-hitting for third baseman Jered Meek, ignited the rally with a two-run double to center field. After pinch hitter Ryan Padilla grounded out, second baseman Sam Haggerty walked and first baseman DJ Peterson was hit by a pitch, catcher Mitch Garver came up to bat. He managed a two-run single to cut the Rebels lead to two. “I’ve been kind of used to the pinch hitting role the last couple of weeks,” Pustay said. “I’ve become way more comfortable with it and look for something that I could drive.” Designated hitter Alex Real came up with two on and two out and lined a two-run double right off the top of the right field wall to tie the game at 13, sending the game into extra innings. The ball stopped right at the top of the fence and bounced back into play. The Rebels were unable to answer in the top of the tenth. After Allbritton

Aaron Sweet / Daily Lobo UNM baseball players celebrate their walk-off victory versus UNLV on Sunday at Lobo Field. The Lobos won 14-13 in extra innings thanks to second baseman Sam Haggerty’s sacrifice fly in the tenth inning. flied out to begin the bottom of the tenth Pustay came up to bat once again. He hit a triple to right center to give the Lobos a runner in scoring position. UNLV decided to intentionally walk Padilla; Haggerty then hit a walk-off sacrifice fly to right field to give UNM a 14-13 victory. Birmingham said Pustay has thrived as a pinch hitter. “Pustay has worked really hard,” Birmingham said. “When he came

back from his leg injury he lost his swing. His pinch hit time was giving him confidence; and not only was it giving him confidence, it helped us win a ball game.” The Lobos’ bullpen struggled, allowing 13 runs, all earned, on 14 hits with eight walks in 5 2/3 innings. UNM (27-16, 17-4 MWC) used six relief pitchers and Josh Walker earned his sixth victory of the season. “They stunk … I don’t know why

they get so emotional about the thing,” Birmingham said. “Strike at the knees is all I ask for. It’s got to be an emotional deal and there’s no pressure on them.” UNLV starter Kenny Oakley left after one inning of work, surrendering three runs on five hits with one strikeout. In the second inning, Oakley fell right to his back after giving up a leadoff single to Jared Holley. Oakley left with an apparent leg injury.

The Rebels (27-16, 11-10) bullpen also had a difficult time by giving up 11 runs, all earned, walking six with five strikeouts. UNM shortstop Jared Holley was hit in the back of the head by a pop fly in the top of the third after he lost the ball in the sun. He laid on the ground and was helped off the field. Holley tweeted that he went to the emergency room, but Birmingham said Holley is going to be fine.

FOOTBALL

Spring practice ends with high expectations by Thomas Romero-Salas sports@dailylobo.com @ThomasRomeroS

Last year’s New Mexico football was hampered by a defense prone to giving up big plays, one of the worst passing attacks in

Running back coach Apollo Wright’s son practices alongside the team during its last spring practice. Head coach Bob Davie said the Lobos have made significant strides since last season’s spring practice. Rachel Toraño-Mark Daily Lobo

QB Gautsche more comfortable with passing; Davie looks forward to building defense the nation and a losing tradition. On Saturday, the Lobos concluded their 15th and final spring practice, and head coach Bob Davie said he’s seen marked improvement from last season’s spring session. “You can only compare it to

how your offense is doing against your defense, and so on and so forth,” he said. “There’s no question right now that it’s a whole different thing, a whole different mindset. … All I can do is judge it on what I see on a daily basis, and it’s better than it was a year ago.”

Davie said the defense is still a work in progress. Last year the Lobos were 119th in passing defense and 73rd in rushing defense out of 120 Division I football teams. “I expected our offense to be ahead of the defense, but I think we’ve made some strides just on what the expectations are,” he said. “We now have a foundation, I think, on which to start building the defense.” The defense has just two returning starters from last season’s 4-9 squad. Defensive coordinator Jeff Mills said he’s seen the competition among the group grow. “They’re coming along as a group and as a whole, especially over the past week,” he said. “They brought more of an intensity this past week, and I was pleased by the way we finished.” Incumbent starting quarterback Cole Gautsche threw tight spirals on primarily short routes at Saturday’s practice. Davie said that Gautsche has been looking much more confident in the position through the spring. “He throws the ball a lot better against us than he did a year ago at this time,” Davie said. “How that compares to how he throws in the fall, none of us knows. That’s what

we’re anxious to see. But we leave here, I think, feeling encouraged.” Junior transfer quarterback Clayton Mitchem was pushing Guatsche earlier in the spring. However, Mitchem suffered a thigh injury and was unable to participate in the last four practices of the spring. “He (Mitchem) desperately needed the work. He took a step backwards by not getting in there,” offensive coordinator Bob DeBesse said. “He showed some promise running and throwing, but mentally he’s not where he needs to be as far as the system is concerned.” Hard Hats awarded The 2013 “Hard Hat Program Champion” was awarded to senior tight end Andrew Aho for his work within Coach Ben Hilgart’s strengthand-conditioning program. Hard Hat awards were handed out to 34 Lobos. Former Lobos receive NFL contracts Tight end Lucas Reed, wide receiver Lamaar Thomas and cornerback Freddy Young inked free-agent deals with NFL teams on Saturday night. Reed and Thomas both signed with the Denver Broncos and Young went to the Oakland Raiders.


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