NM Daily Lobo 043013

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

tuesday

Bee agressive see Page 5

April 30, 2013

Alumni to give students job advice

NIZHONI DAYS

Online service offers students alumni mentors by Tanya Prather

news@dailylobo.com

Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo Members of the Jemez Pueblo perform the closing song of the 2013 Nizhoni Days Pow-Wow at Johnson Field on Sunday afternoon. American Indians from as far as Alaska and New England came to Albuquerque to participate in the free powwow, hosted by the UNM Kiva Club. See full story Page 8.

TRACK & FIELD

Distance runner: ‘I’m feeling confident’ UK transfer doing very well in ABQ’s high altitude By J.R. Oppenheim

assistantsports@dailylobo.com @JROppenheim Coming to New Mexico from the United Kingdom last fall, distance runner Luke Caldwell thought it would take some time to find his stride competing at the NCAA level. It took less time than he expected. Caldwell, a junior transfer student from Oxford, already developed into one of UNM’s top distance runners during last fall’s cross country season — his first sampling of American collegiate athletics — and this past indoor track season. Caldwell won Mountain West Conference titles during both seasons, competed at the NCAA championships and earned AllAmerican honors. Now that his outdoor campaign is underway, he said he wants to go for a trifecta and make NCAAs on the outdoor track. “I was expecting it to be a bit of a struggle and spend the first year just trying to catch up, really,” Caldwell, a native of Betchworth, England, said Thursday. “Particularly in indoor track, just being able to go to nationals and go AllAmerican my first year, I wasn’t

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expecting that all. It was really pleasing to do that in my first few months.” Coming off a strong indoor season, Caldwell made the 2013 outdoor debut April 19 at the Bryan Clay Invitational hosted by Azusa Pacific University in California. He clocked a secondplace time of 3 minutes, 44.19 seconds in the 1,500 meters, setting a new outdoor personal best mark at that distance. Late Sunday night, Caldwell set a new 5K school record at the Payton Jordan Invitational in Stanford, Calif., with a 13:29.94 time. He broke the previous record of 13:31.56 set by Lee Emanuel in 2010, and Caldwell beat his personal best by more than 10 seconds. Caldwell’s other personal best times on an outdoor track are 1:55.23 in the 800, 4:19.87 in the mile, and 8:25.93 in the 3,000. His personal bests on an indoor track or in cross country were not available on UNM’s athletics website. During last fall’s cross country season, Caldwell won the MWC title after running the 10K course in 24:45.698, beating runner-up Barak Watson of Boise State by 10 seconds and leading UNM to a first-place team finish. He ran a 29:52.9 at the NCAA meet, placed 27th and was named All-American by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association for a top-40 finish. That success continued into

the indoor track season. Caldwell captured MWC titles in the 3K and 5K, clocking an 8:14.66 and 14:30.30 at those respective distances. UNM also took the team title, its first conference indoor ever and its first conference team title of any kind since 1967 when the Lobos competed in the Western Athletic Conference. Caldwell became an All-American for the second time when he took eighth in the 5,000 at the March 8 NCAA indoor meet with a 13:46.44 time. It was only the fifth time he had run that distance competitively. “To say that (Caldwell’s success) was predictable would not be right,” said Joe Franklin, who serves as head coach for both cross country and track and field. “He just kept improving and improving. We saw it probably toward the end of the cross country season, we started seeing these big breakthroughs.” With his NCAA indoor meet appearance, Caldwell started his outdoor season later than other UNM athletes. He had five weeks of uninterrupted training as a result. “I’m feeling confident,” Caldwell said. “Indoors went dramatically better than I thought was possible, so right now I’m excited to see what I can do outdoors. I’m really looking forward to all the races and seeing what I can do.” Caldwell said the bulk of his

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Courtesy Photo Luke Caldwell training in the indoor season focused on endurance and strength to establish a solid base for outdoors. Now that his outdoor campaign is underway, he said he will begin focusing on more speed work. Coming to New Mexico took some adjustment, Caldwell said, primarily because of the change in altitude. On average, Albuquerque sits at 5,312 above sea level while England is located right near sea level. Higher elevations generally make it harder for athletes since the atmosphere is less dense. “I expected it,” he said. “You have to embrace it really rather than be worried about it. It probably took three weeks for it

see Runner PAGE 7

An online mentorship program developed by UNM’s Alumni Association aims to guide students in their career paths after college. Alumni Association Senior Program Manager Sue MacEachen said the online mentorship program, called Simplicity, which went online in August, aims to help UNM students and graduates. The program will also be available upon request to graduates who have been out of school for longer periods of time. The program allows students to connect with alumni in their academic area in order to learn about associated job opportunities. “This is a way for alumni to be able to give back if they don’t have a lot of time or money,” MacEachen said. “The program is not, however, intended for students to get a job, but a way for them to get advice on how to get the job they want.” MacEachen said UNM had a different online mentorship program in the past but had to switch over to the new program last semester because it was not compatible with UNM’s new online platform. She said the Alumni Association has been managing the development of Simplicity for four years. Anderson School of Management Senior Alumni Relations Officer Roberta Ricci said students who sign up for the mentorship program will find the process more convenient than mentorship programs in the past. “The great thing about this mentorship program is it’s all online so you don’t have to worry about fitting it in with your school schedule or your work schedule,” Ricci said. Ricci said students can sign up for mentorship programs online through the Alumni Career Center page on the UNM website by clicking on the “Alumni Career Mentor Program” link in the upper right corner. She said that once students have signed up, they will be able to choose from a variety of mentors. Students can then contact their selected mentors by email or by phone, Ricci said. “You can look for a title, you can look for a field, you can look for a degree program, or for an (alum),” she said.

see Mentors PAGE 7

TODAY

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PageTwo Tu e s d a y , A p r i l 30, 2013

Antonio Sanchez

‘Excited’ new Lobo editor hopes to improve investigative reporting A bottle of cherry Coke stood on Antonio Sanchez’s new desk after he arrived from a final exam Monday night. He sat intently in front of a computer in the office that he officially earned Sunday. Besides the scraps of paper scattered everywhere and a gray wall clock, the office is still pretty empty. “I plan to put a photo of Gianna and I here,” he said. “And maybe some vinyl records.” In his regular shirt-and-shorts outfit, Sanchez, 21, has taken over as the new editor-in-chief of the Daily Lobo, and will captain the newspaper’s ship until he graduates next spring. Sanchez, a junior, has worked for the Lobo since his first semester at UNM and said he has mixed emotions about his new job. “Naturally, I’m excited for this job, but I’m a little nervous,” he said. “But I believe that if you weren’t a little nervous, I don’t think this job is right for you. You should approach this job with some sort of precaution.” Sanchez said he has been working for the Lobo since fall 2010. He said he served as a freelance reporter for the culture desk until the summer of 2012, when he became the assistant culture editor. He said he has written for all sections of the Lobo except for the opinion section.

As part of being a versatile journalist, Sanchez said he has a knack for strange subjects. “In the fall, I covered a weirdly elusive group of students who would dress up as Jedi and they would fight with lightsabers,” he said. “As I got more ingrained in the story, I found that the leader of the group met his future wife … because they both liked Star Wars. I thought that was just amazing.” Sanchez said in the future, he plans to put out more hard-hitting investigative stories in the paper. He also said he plans to focus on tighter communication with other University bodies, such as the communication and journalism department, ASUNM and GPSA, during his term. “We provide a voice for students here, as well as for faculty,” he said. “And if we don’t provide clear communication with them, what does that say about our voice?” Sanchez said that although he didn’t expect that he would get the position, he is confident about his leadership for the coming year. “I was surprised,” he said. “It was a close race, and each of the other candidates who ran was just as qualified as I am. I wouldn’t have run if I didn’t think I could do this job.” ~Ardee Napolitano

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Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo Antonio Sanchez, right, the Daily Lobo’s new editor-in-chief, works late to finish an assignment on deadline. Sanchez, 21, took over as the newsroom’s chief on Sunday and will serve until the end of next spring.

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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No deaths in West Side stabbing by Russell Contreras The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Lawrence Capener was shaking hands with his fellow churchgoers at Sunday Mass, exchanging the traditional peace offerings when some people next to him noticed something strange — his hands were quite sweaty and clammy. Then, as the choir began singing a hymn to wrap up Mass, the man bolted from his pew, ran to the choir area and started stabbing the choir leader and others. Parishioners screamed and ran for cover and others, including the church flutist, tried to subdue him. Police said the assailant thought the choir members were members of a secret society. The episode caused panic among church members such as 12-yearold Jordan Schalow and his mother, Valerie, who had just heard the pastor read a Gospel message about the importance of loving everyone and had the recent bombing in Boston on their mind. Jordan had told his mom, “Thank God. I’m in church and nothing bad is going to happen here.” Valerie Schalow said her husband, Gerald, sat next to Capener during services at St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church and had noticed him acting nervously. When he shook Capener’s hand, she said her husband found them to be very sweaty. “My husband even had to go wash his hands after that,” Schalow said. The random and violent attack by the knife-wielding Capener, 24, sparked confusion and fear in the Albuquerque Westside church as the choir started singing “Take My Hand, Precious Lord.” According to a criminal complaint

released Monday, Capener vaulted over pews and lashed out at choir director Adam Alvarez, who had his back toward him. “I saw what was happening and I yelled at my husband,” said Schalow, who ran out of the church with her three children. “The guy had been acting strange during Mass.” The complaint said church flutist Gerald Madrid saw Alvarez being attacked and attempted to “bear hug” Capener to try and stop him. Madrid was then stabbed five times in his back by Capener, authorities said. “I instinctively just dropped my flute and I rushed the guy,” Madrid said. “I never saw a knife, but I just rushed him.” At least two others were injured in the attack, police said. Capener later told police that he was “99 percent sure Alvarez was a mason” and that he thought Alvarez was involved in a conspiracy. He told the investigator that Masons are a group involved “in a conspiracy that is far more reaching than I could or would believe.” Capener, whose mother is active in the church, said he stabbed the others who tried to subdue him because he thought they might be Masons, too. Among those to subdue Capener was off-duty Albuquerque Fire Department Lt. Greg Aragon, who then helped treat patients after the attack, authorities said. He was also stabbed in the attack and was later treated at a hospital and released. The affidavit said Capener apologized for stabbing the others after he was read his rights and agreed to speak to police. Masons are a fraternal group involved in charity and other community activities, but many of their rituals and symbols are secret.

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Capener was charged on three counts of aggravated battery and ordered held on $250,000 bail. St. Jude Thaddeus’ pastor, the Rev. John Daniel, said Capener’s mother was “very active” in the parish and serves as a Eucharistic minister there. Daniel said that Capener had just graduated from a community college and appeared to be doing well after getting a job. “I think he’s been struggling for a while, maybe with some (mental) health issues,” Daniel said. Both Alvarez and Madrid remained hospitalized Monday and their families said the men were recovering from wounds that were described as not life-threatening. Services at the 3,000-member church resumed Monday. Parishioners stopped to leave flowers, notes and candles outside the church and at the church’s shrine dedicated to St. Jude, the church’s namesake and the Catholic Patron Saint of “lost causes.” In Mass homilies throughout the day, Daniel said he compared St. Catherine of Siena, who worked for peace in 14th century Italy, with the power of forgiveness. Robynn Madrid, whose husband Gerald Madrid was recovering from the attack, said despite the pain Capener caused, she’s already forgiven him. “We’re praying for his family,” she said. Spanish choir member Richard Aragon said he, too, is trying to show compassion and forgiveness, even though he had trouble sleeping the night after the stabbing. Aragon was preparing for the upcoming Spanish services when the attack began. “There’s nothing you can do. There’s obviously something … he’s touched or something,” Aragon said. “It already happened. It’s too late.”

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LoboOpinion

Page

4

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ John Tyczkowski / @JCTyczkowski

opinion@dailylobo.com

Column

Learning is passion, not just passing our classes

Editor’s note: The author is a high school senior interning at the Daily Lobo.

by Shelby Perea

Daily Lobo guest columnist opinion@dailylobo.com Are students learning or are students just getting As? Today, success in school is measured by how high your GPA is, the higher the better. However, does this mean our students are actually learning? As a high school student, I sit in class for over seven hours a day and I am surrounded by students. I watch as some students get As, but I can see they do not have a clear understanding of what they were just tested on. School systems have brainwashed students so they stress over getting As on their tests, but these systems don’t actually stress the value of knowledge. We have been conditioned to feel that doing well in school means acing a test and getting good grades. I know there have been times when I didn’t know anything about the topic I was being tested on. Yet I still managed to get a B on the test, so I don’t feel that bad about it. This type of thinking is what is prohibiting students from reaching their full potential. The learning opportunities that are being missed are crucial. Teachers should not stress doing well on tests that will be forgotten. The concepts and the knowledge are what need to be stressed. The only way to achieve this is by reteaching our students about what learning is. Students need to find self-gratification in their own grasping of the subject, instead of just the grade. The entire mindset of students needs to be altered. This can begin at school with encouragement. However, it needs to occur in the minds of each individual. Students need to start taking some self-responsibility. They need to value their education and not the numbers in the grade book. The barriers of “pass” or “fail” need to be replaced with true understanding of a subject. Students need to stop memorizing answers and start synthesizing concepts. If students start having a longing and passion for knowledge and true learning, then school becomes a place to grow and strive. At the end of the day, we are going to school to learn and obtain knowledge, not just get a gold star on our tests. High school students expect their teachers to spoonfeed them information. They fail to recall that learning is their choice. The excuse of a “bad teacher” is the oldest excuse there is. Although there are very poor teachers who just cannot convey the points they need to, students need to take that responsibility to learn for themselves. They need to feel proud of what they produce and what they know. The attitude of most students today is apathy. This apathy is the hardest barrier to break when it comes to teaching. Even the best teacher cannot reach those who don’t care. Students need to strive for excellence and strive for knowledge. If they take this approach, they will create a powerful force of intelligence. This shifts the entire focus of the institution of school. The entire reason students go to class is now completely altered. Passion is becoming a rare resource students can tap at schools. But shouldn’t the place that equips us with skills that will change our lives be the epitome of passion?

War research does not belong at universities Editor, Recent events indicate UNM is a large institution out of control. The huge tuition increases and higher graduation requirements are far out of line with the needs of the population of the state and indicate a rapid rate of disintegration. “Can we save UNM?” is the task facing us now. Time and again we have seen policies at UNM that serve the elite and rich, while working students who take longer to graduate will have to pay more and will get less. So many things are upside down, like the pay scale with highly paid administrators and low-paid staff, adjunct and frontline faculty. For example, UNM’s regents keep dumping money into the athletic programs for coaches, legal problems and contract buyouts. Collegiate athletics is just another violence-oriented big business run by regents still living in some kind of post-high-school fantasy world of jock make-believe. Meanwhile, it costs us millions that could be better spent on basic higher education. I read in the Albuquerque Journal about the millions wasted on a Rio Rancho campus with no mission; a campus too far, it seems, into their fantasy world. And there is a whole medical and insurance industry-driven hospital complex hung onto what is supposed to be a higher education institution. We need good health care, but not when it’s tied to a basic educational institution. Things have gotten far out of hand here. However, UNM is not an isolated case. The whole higher education program in the state is full of duplicate campuses,

Letter colleges and programs: lots of wasted taxpayer money. One thing for sure, though, is that a lot of real estate people make money and a lot of administrators get big paychecks by juggling all these balls in the air. They buy the politicians who keep this going and re-appoint regents to keep it quiet. The whole thing is a mess and needs rational restructuring, but that will not happen either, due to the dysfunctional Legislature.

Magic bullets in the form of technological breakthroughs that are supposed to again solve our problems and provide massive employment at high-wage jobs. One thing concerned people need to remember is every time the regents talk of UNM as a research school, they need to grab their wallets and find places to send their kids for a real education. Over the years, large corporations and military research contractors found they could save lots of their money if they got the state governments to build the expensive labs and buildings and pay the high-wage researchers they needed, if it was done at tax-exempt public universities. They have saved a bundle, and in the meanwhile, our taxes and tuitions have gone up endlessly. All this was supposed to bring cheaper education and a marketplace utopia, but it has only gotten worse. It is a failed scheme.

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.

The magic smoke that sold this scam was jobs and economic development. Public officials who wanted to keep being elected without any hard work went for it. As a result, New Mexico taxpayers have built expensive research labs on campuses, and even separate campuses, such as the UNM Science and Technology Park. All it has produced is private-sector profits and public indebtedness. And now they are planning another expensive version at UNM called Innovation Square. To make this successful, they want tie it to the war research at Sandia National Laboratories. This is far out of line with what we need, which is not more of the same. All of this is just more chasing after illusions of magic bullets in the form of technological breakthroughs that are supposed to again solve our problems and provide massive employment at highwage jobs. Most of these attempts fail, and most obvious is that they have no social policy guiding them. Making profits off research whose end product is better ways to kill people is not sustainable and is morally corrupting. Besides, it just breeds more social and individual violence. Our higher education public schools like UNM and CNM should focus on the education needs of a diverse community of poor people who seek first social justice and sustainable lives, not war and profits. High-tech research and marketplace economic development should stay off campus in the private sector and at the war bases. We have too many outside agendas at play in higher education already. An education agenda and budget that serve the needs of a state like New Mexico is not rocket science. Robert Anderson UNM alumnus

Editorial Board Antonio Sanchez Editor-in-chief

John Tyczkowski Managing editor Opinion editor

Ardee Napolitano News editor


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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Tuesday, April 30, 2013/ Page 5

Win Gas for a Year!

Alastair Grant / AP photo British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood holds up a sign supporting beekeepers as she joins a demonstration outside the Place of Westminster in support of apiarists and their campaign to show public opinion ahead of the European Commission vote on the proposal to ban bee-harming neonicotinoid pesticides, in London on Friday.

Pesticide has London abuzz The Associated Press

LONDON — Scores of worried beekeepers, and a brace of fashionistas, have gathered outside Britain’s Parliament in a bid to convince the government to back a ban on pesticides that have been blamed for a worrying drop in bee populations. The demonstrators say they hope to influence Britain’s vote

next week on a proposed European Union ban on some pesticides. Some wore beekeepers’ protective costumes or bright beelike stripes to underscore their point. Researcher Robert Mitton said Friday there has been a “rapid decline� in bee population and diversity since the pesticides came into use in the 1990s.

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Fashion designers Vivienne Westwood and Katharine Hamnett delivered a petition supporting the ban to Prime Minister David Cameron’s residence. The British government has previously abstained from votes on the EU proposal.


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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Queen Beatrix abdicates by Toby Sterling

The Associated Press AMSTERDAM — The Netherlands’ Queen Beatrix thanked her people Monday and urged them to support her son, Crown Prince Willem-Alexander, in a final address before she abdicates and he takes over as king. Beatrix, 75, is to sign the papers enacting the once-in-a-generation change of royal titles this morning, the central moment in several days of festivities that are already underway. “Now that my oldest son is to take over this fine and responsible job tomorrow, it is my deep wish that the new royal couple will feel themselves supported by your loving trust,” the popular monarch said in a nationally televised address. Willem-Alexander’s Argentine-born wife Princess Maxima will be queen. “I am convinced that Willem-Alexander will apply himself with true devotion for everything a good king is obliged to do.” Beatrix hosted nobility from around Europe and beyond Monday evening for a dinner at the newly renovated national museum, the Rijksmuseum. Guests dined in front of Rembrandt van Rijn’s masterpiece, the Night Watch. Earlier in the day, the streets of Amsterdam began flooding with orange in honor of the ruling House of Oranje-Nassau, as government and noble guests prepared for the ceremonies, and the people of the country got ready for a huge party. In the historic city center, vendors hawked orange t-shirts, hats and feather boas. Trams flew orange flags, and Dutch flags, as did many of the boats motoring through the city’s ancient canals. Shopkeepers hung orange

Daniel Ochoa de Olza / AP photo Dutch Queen Beatrix and her son Dutch Crown Prince Willem-Alexander pose for photographers as they arrive for a banquet hosted by the Dutch Royal family at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, on Monday. streamers, set out orange flower displays and rolled in countless kegs of beer. Meanwhile, city workers finished cleaning the streets, removing unwanted bicycles and setting up temporary urinals, many of them made of bright orange plastic. Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte told foreign journalists from more than 60 countries Sunday evening that the week’s events involve an “unprecedented logistical and security operation” that was organized in just three months. Beatrix announced her intention to abdicate in January. More than a million people are expected in Amsterdam today, with 10,000 uniformed police, 3,000 plainclothes officers and an untold number of civil servants assisting in the logistics. The airspace above Amsterdam was closed Monday for three days.

Dutch police swept Dam square for bombs, with assistance from German agents with sniffer dogs. Royal guests from 18 countries arrived in the course of the day, and city traffic was frequently interrupted by limousines with tinted windows and police escorts. Among the many notables on hand are Britain’s Prince Charles and his wife Camilla, and the Japanese Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako. Charles was also in attendance when Beatrix was crowned in 1980. Masako’s father is a judge at the International Court of Justice in The Hague. It is her first official overseas trip since the couple’s 2002 visit to New Zealand and Australia. A poll released Monday by national broadcaster NOS showed that Willem-Alexander’s popularity

see Abdication page 3


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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Runner

from page 1

to stop feeling uncomfortable. It was still a challenge for a few months probably.” Because he’s had so much success already, Caldwell said he has to re-evaluate his performance-based goals. He said he wants to return to the NCAA championships for the outdoor season and try to become an All-American again. “I had goals for outdoors when I first got to Albuquerque, and I’ve almost achieved them already indoors,” he said. “It’s kind of an interesting time trying to find out what

Mentors

my new goals should be already.”

Other UNM athletes perform well in Stanford Caldwell wasn’t the only Lobo to post marks that rank among the school’s all-time bests at the Payton Jordan Invitational, which Franklin called one of the nation’s best meets. Josephine Moultie broke the UNM record in the 1,500 with a 4:14.44 time, winning her heat and taking ninth place overall. Imogen Ainsworth ran the 3K steeplechase

Tuesday, April 30, 2013/ Page 7

in 16:20.57 to set UNM’s secondbest mark, Charlotte Arter posted UNM’s sixth-best time in the 5K at 16:20.57, and Chloe Anderson’s 4:24.40 time in the 1,500 is ninthbest all-time. Also at Stanford, Kendra Schaaf ran the 5K in 17:13.76, Yeshemabet Turner had a 40-8 3/4 distance in the triple jump, Patrick Zacharias clocked 14:06.68 in the 5K and Elmar Enghold finished the 3K steeplechase in 9:09.98.

from page 1

UNM student Nathaniel Jarvis said he wasn’t aware of Simplicity in the past, but he said he would have used it sooner if he had known. “I’m in the process of changing majors now,” Jarvis said. “If I knew about this program sooner, I could have connected with someone in the field to get a lot of my questions answered. Then maybe I would have realized to change my major sooner.” MacEachen said the Alumni

Abdication

from page 6

has swelled in the run-up to his accession, mostly due to a relaxed and confident performance in an interview that was televised nationally earlier this month. He said he’s not a stickler for protocol, and he believes that “even the ultimate symbol of a ceremonial monarchy — cutting ribbons — can be very substantive.” He explained that he will be able to indicate by his selection of which events and openings to attend the things he believes are important for the Netherlands. He said he sees the function of the monarchy is to act as a living symbol of unity for the nation. Beatrix succeeded her mother, Juliana, as head of state, and she won widespread acclaim and admiration from the Dutch people. Most feel she has proved a supremely competent, if occasionally aloof, head of state over her 33-year reign. “My mother taught me that being queen is a position that you carry around with you day and night,” she said once. “You can never forget about it, not for a moment.” Perhaps most tellingly, since she took office in 1980 the House of Orange has been almost scandal-

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Association is having trouble with publicity for Simplicity because the organization does not have enough staff to devote to promoting it. But she said the Alumni Association has partnered with the Anderson School of Management and other University bodies to bring awareness of Simplicity to the campus. “We have the vehicle that’s got the mentorship program, so we’re trying to get passengers from all the different schools to participate and free, a stark contrast to many other European royal families. Observers believe Beatrix remained on the throne for so long in part because of unrest in Dutch society as the country struggled to assimilate more and more immigrants, mainly Muslims from North Africa, and shifted away from its traditional reputation as one of the world’s most tolerant nations. In recent years, speculation about when she might abdicate had grown, as she endured personal losses that both softened her image and increased her popularity further as the public sympathized. Her husband Prince Claus died in 2002; and last year she was devastated when her youngest son, Prince Friso, was hit by an avalanche while skiing in Austria and suffered severe brain damage. Friso remains in a near-comatose state. In the most emotional part of her farewell Monday, she praised Claus for teaching their children to be attuned to changes in society. “Prince Claus brought our House closer to this time,” she said. “Possibly history will show that the choice of this husband was my best decision.”

make it their own,” she said. “I’m working with career services and advisement, and we’re going to be going into classrooms, talking to faculty and handing out these flyers to get students to sign up.” MacEachen also said the Alumni Association has presented at new student orientations in the past about the now-defunct mentorship system, and plans to present about Simplicity in the future.

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Powwow focuses on community

Juan Labreche / @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo Pawnee and Cheyenne Native Irene Edwards shows off her handmade traditional Southern Cheyenne clothing at the 2013 Nizhoni Days Pow-Wow at UNM’s Johnson Field on Sunday afternoon. The powwow, unlike the traditional Gathering of the Nations at The Pit, is free, and views the dances as a celebration instead of a competition

by Justin Brough

culture@dailylobo.com Last Sunday, after the 30th annual Gathering of Nations had concluded at The Pit, a smaller and more intimate powwow with nearly twice as much history was held on UNM’s Johnson Field. UNM Kiva Club held its 58th annual Nizhoni Days Honoring Our Alumni Pow-Wow, which punctuated Nizhoni Days, a weeklong celebration of American-Indian culture held at UNM. Alexandra Rosetta, powwow coordinator for

Kiva Club, said that — aside from proximity — the Nizhoni Days powwow is unrelated to the Gathering of Nations. “We get a lot of people saying, ‘You guys are the oldest powwow, older than Gathering of Nations. Why don’t you have it in The Pit?’” Rosetta said. “But we’ve historically always had it in Johnson Gym or on Johnson Field. So it’s our signature.” The powwow brought together American Indians from as far as Alaska and New England in a celebration of Native dance and culture.

Exhibitors selling arts and crafts set up shop around the perimeter of a performance arena, where dancers dressed in traditional garb performed ceremonial dances. Kiva Club President Lane Bird Bear said one of the distinctions between the Nizhoni Day’s powwow and the larger Gathering of Nations is the focus on giving back to the community at the Nizhoni Days event. One of the Gathering’s big draws is its dance contests, which

see Kiva

Club page 10

3001 Central Ave. NE Albuquerque, NM 87106 www.laprovencenobhill.com

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

The Weekly Free

There’s no other way to say it: Finals are a b****. But the week before is usually worse, especially when teachers “do you a favor” and move your final to the week before finals week. You just can’t win. To take a break from those early finals, check out this week’s freebies.

IPAD TRAINING TUESDAY If you’re only using your iPad to play “Angry Birds” on a larger screen, you’re missing out. Join one of these iPad tutorial sessions to learn how you can use it for school, too. The hourlong workshops start at 10 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. in the Bookstore.

CONCEPTIONS SOUTHWEST THURSDAY This epic release of one of UNM’s literary magazines features music, food and speeches by authors and artists who were published in the 2013 magazine. Led by a volunteer staff, the magazine publishes badassery from all corners of UNM — from photography to creative nonfiction. Plus, see if you can find the puzzling surprise hidden within the pages of the magazine. The festivities run from 6 to 8 p.m. in the Honors Forum below the Student Health Center.

GAMES FOR CHANGE WEDNESDAY Some honors students spent their semester creating video games, which you can try out for yourself. Bring an iPod and download the ARIS software, or you can just use provided iPods. Then vote for your favorite game. The event, with refreshments, runs from 11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. in the Honors Forum below the Student Health Center.

RING CEREMONY WEDNESDAY If you’re wondering about all those emails telling you to buy a class ring, then check out the ring ceremony where all will be revealed. The history and significance of wearing your class ring is explained, and students who participate will dip their hands in red dye that stays there for a day. They can then get discounts at local businesses for showing their bloodylooking hand. It sounds a bit cultish to me, but I guess true Lobos dye hard or go home. The event runs from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in SUB Ballrooms B and C.

UNDIE RUN THURSDAY Who doesn’t want to hang out with a bunch of bros in their underwear on a Thursday night? If that doesn’t sound appealing, think of it this way: Who doesn’t want to raise awareness of homelessness on a Thursday night? Strip to your skivvies and be at Johnson Field by 8 p.m.

SPRING FREEDOM FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY The Spring Freedom Fest 2013 features an arts and crafts fair, a dance competition, a mad hatters tea party and a fashion show. The event, which seeks to raise awareness about human trafficking, runs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the New Mexico Veterans Memorial at 1100 Louisiana Blvd. S.E.

Saturday Appointments Available

~compiled by Nicole Perez

Tuesday, April 30, 2013/ Page 9

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Finding housing can feel as awkward as a bad date by Nicole Perez

culture@dailylobo.com The results of searching for temporary housing on Craigslist are an awkward conglomeration of connections, rejection and first-datestyle judgments. Plus there are some flat-out weirdos in the mix. I first put up a Craigslist ad looking for temporary housing in Hartford, Conn., one week ago, because nobody was answering my inquiries into their “beautiful, sunny one-bedroom.” The first reply I received was from 556ad731aad03f11b4e85dd01e2edbcf@reply.craigslist.org, and it simply read: “Are you gayfriendly?” Questions about sexual orientation are always my favorite type of icebreaker — especially when I’m approaching someone to live with. Of course I replied that I was very gay friendly and proceeded to talk to Jeff, a 40-year-old man considering renting out his guesthouse. But after I suggested we talk on the phone, he suddenly stopped emailing me, and it felt like firstdate rejection all over again. Was he wary of the fact that I like “playing music and hiking when I’m not working, which is rare”? Or did I suggest a phone call too soon in our budding relationship? It’s impossible to know, but luckily I received another reply from someone else: zs6r3-3755823174@hous. craigslist.org. This lady told me she had a great place in West Hartford that was normally $700 per month, but she would lower it to $400 per month if I helped her clean the house and edited things. Edited what,

Kiva Club

Taken from Craigslist.org you might ask? Well, that’s still unclear, but after some deduction on my part, it sounded like her letters to the editor weren’t getting published and she wanted me to help. Plus she has an agent and wants to switch jobs and become a nonfiction writer, or something. Her email wasn’t very coherent, and I was reluctant about chasing dust bunnies all summer — it sounded close to indentured servitude. So, following in Jeff’s footsteps, I simply stopped emailing her back. On Craigslist, the socially acceptable thing to do when you’re no longer interested in something is to simply not reply. This way you maximize damage to that person’s ego, don’t have to type awkward rejection apologies — like “sorry, it’s not you, it’s me” — and make it clear that person has nothing you could ever want in life. All in one fatal swoop. The last person to email me was 0740b952aade3794b02498c4c8a08c27@reply.craigslist.org. He worked at a local newspaper until he had six strokes, which left him

with severe brain damage. But he said he recuperated exceptionally well, and even though now he’s a different person, his friends think it’s for the better. This man lived in a 7,000 squarefoot mansion with a carpenter named Steve, a guy he found on Craigslist who was looking for a place after his wife cheated on him. It sounded like quite the homey and welcoming environment, so of course I replied. 0740b952aade3794b02498c4c8a08c27@reply.craigslist.org is the only person who consistently returned all my emails, so I will most likely be spending the summer with him. But the journey of finding a place using the Interwebs was perilous. If you plan on venturing into the realms of Craiglist anytime soon, all I can say is: “Be prepared for anything. You will get offers for everything under the sun, except for what you’re actually looking for.”

nity feed, where the group served dinner and drinks to all attendees. “At the end during the community feed, seeing everybody get together was just like … ‘Wow, whew, I’m done!’” Rosetta said. Because she’s graduating in December, Rosetta will be passing the office of powwow coordinator to another Kiva Club member in the fall. Bird Bear, who moved to Albuquerque from North Dakota, will also be graduating. He said Kiva Club has been an influential part of his undergraduate career, and he encourages anybody interested in the local indigenous community — not just students — to check it out. “As much of a highlight and success that the powwow was and is,

it’s only one of the things Kiva Club is involved with. It is so much more than that,” Bird Bear said. “We’re involved not only with the UNM community but with other communities within the area. We engage a lot with people that aren’t students but really want to see change within their communities, and we’re here offering our assistance in any way we can.”

from page 8

offer hundreds of thousands of dollars in prizes. But despite the commonality of having dance contests at contemporary powwows, UNM Kiva Club chooses not to frame its dances as competitions. “We met with one of the originators (of Nizhoni Days) last year, and he told us that having a contest would take away from the community and the fun feeling they get from dancing,” Rosetta said. The powwow, which was free to attend, began at 10 a.m. and continued on until sunset. Featured festivities included the gourd dance, which was set to the deep rhythm of a heavy drum, a men’s grass dance and a women’s fancy dance. After the ceremonies had concluded, Kiva Club hosted a commu-

We check 50 calanders, so you only have to check

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Join Amnesty International for our Security with Human Rights Workshop!

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T , A 30, 2013/ P lobo featuresLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle FOR RELEASE APRIL 30, 2013

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UNM University Chorus 7:30pm – 8:30pm Popejoy Hall $12/8/6.

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Jobs Off Campus

CALL TODAY TO VOLUNTEER! (505) 476-4749 or (800) 432-2080

PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202. 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 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.

College is expensive. Daily Lobo classified ads are not. Place your ad today!

277-5656

!!!BARTENDING!!! $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training provided. 1-800-965-6520 ext.100. PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job. Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202.

Campus Calendar of Events

“Farrapos’ politics in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil” presented by Luke Smith.

Pre Dental Society 6:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Acoma A

Disciples of Jesus 8:00pm – 9:00pm SUB Acoma A & B

Nuclear, Particle, Astroparticle and Cosmology (NUPAC) Seminars 2:00pm – 3:00pm Room 190, Physics & Astronomy Presented by Aaron Taylor (UNM).

Catholic Apologetics 6:00pm – 8:00pm SUB Fiesta A & B

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

DINE of UNM 6:00pm – 7:00pm SUB Cherry/ SIlver

Japanese Language Club Meeting 4:00pm – 7:00pm SUB MIrage- Thunderbird

Student Groups & Gov.

CLASSIFIED PAYMENT INFORMATION

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

BLACK MICROWAVE, ALMOST new. $30. Contact Taryn 951-850-2236.

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Christians on UNM 12:00pm – 1:30pm SUB Scholars

Emerging Lobo Leaders Meeting 5:30pm – 8:30pm SUB Lobo A & B

Muslim Student Association 2:00pm – 3:30pm SUB Sandia

Spiritual Seekers Club 6:30pm – 8:00pm SUB Thunderbird

Workshops

Nuts & Bolts of Publishing 12:00pm – 1:00pm Travelstead Hall Room 125 You will learn about: authors - case study, author agreements, ethics of authorship, authorship credit, peer review - experience, and much more!

Preview future events on the Daily Lobo Mobile app or ww.dailylobo.com

Apple Apps Workshop Email events to: 10:00am – 11:00am UNM Bookstore calendar@dailylobo.com How to Get the Most out of iPad. FREE Apple iOS app workshops for UNM Students, Faculty and Staff!


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