Daily lobo 3/5/20

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Thursday, March 5, 2020 | Vo l u m e 1 2 4 | I s s u e 4 8

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Grad students protest for better wages and work schedules

By Alyssa Martinez @amart4447 SMITH PLAZA — Nearly a dozen graduate employees convened on March 2 in solidarity with the 74 University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) graduate employees that were effectively terminated over the weekend after a months-long strike. UCSC teaching assistants refused to submit final grades as leverage for a cost of living pay adjustment. After denying the university’s ultimatum, the striking graduates were either fired or had contracts unrenewed for the spring leaving many undergraduate classes vacant, according to the Santa Cruz Sentinel. “It’s ridiculous to expect graduate workers in California to live off of $18,000 per year,” said Emma Mincks, a graduate student in the English department and employee at the University of New Mexico. “They just can’t live off of that in California when your rent is $1,800 to $3,000 a month.” For graduate students here in the high desert, the grievances of their coastal colleagues hit close to home. Axel Gonzalez, an Ameri-

UNM reps push census turnout By Lissa Knudsen & Alex McCausland @lissaknudsen @alexkmccausland

Alyssa Martinez / @amart4447 / Daily Lobo

UNM graduate school students singing “Solidarity Forever” in front of University House on March 2 to show support for University of California, Santa Cruz graduate workers.

can Studies department graduate student and UNM employee, spoke at the rally. Gonzalez said although the situation at UNM

isn’t identical, graduate students across the nation face a familiar work model — graduates teach and grade the bulk of classes for a

bare minimum stipend. Although some departments pay more, most graduate students are

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Differential tuition strains grad students By Justin Garcia @Just516garc SCHOLES HALL — While over half a dozen graduate programs at the University of New Mexico have adopted program-specific tuition increases, the masters of public health program in the College of Population Health won’t — at least for this semester. Graduate students Gabriel Gaarden and Alden Reviere made sure of it. The students said they were invited to meetings about the College of Population Health’s proposed $150 per credit hour tuition increase but said the administration failed to consider masters programs students’ concerns about the increase. “That information sharing has been too limited and has come too late,” Gaarden read from a prepared statement. Gaarden and Reviere spoke against the tuition increase during two Board of Regents committee meetings on Monday. During public comment in the first meeting, the two masters of public health graduate students killed differential tuition for their program. Their dean, Dr. Tracie Collins, withdrew the differential tuition proposal after Gaarden and Reviere’s opposition. But, for many other colleges and programs across campus, differential tuition is the new normal. Typically, a university will charge students the same tuition rates whether they are engineering or education students. Differential tuition, sometimes called tiered tuition, charges students different tuition rates based on their major or academic college — in some cases, both. Differential tuition has seen something of a domino effect at UNM. Over the last six years, nine programs and colleges used the controver-

Makayla Grijalva / @MakaylaEliboria / Daily Lobo

sial technique to boost dollars for themselves at a University in a budget crunch. One of the early adopters was the Anderson School of Management. Anderson embraced a differential rate in 2015. At first, the increase raised all Anderson students’ tuition by $10 per credit hour. Per UNM policy, a department seeking differential tuition is required to fill out a questionnaire and eventually get approval from UNM’s governing board. Some of the questions they have to answer include: Why they want the additional money, what they’ll do with the new cash, what similar schools do differential rates and what students think about the upcharge. Anderson’s Interim Dean Shawn Berman said

Inside this Edition BRITT:CFA thesis shows Guatemalan sociopolitical system through queer lens BUTLER: Panel discusses NM prison system issues

the expected $540,000 extra per semester from differential tuition would be used to hire more faculty. Berman said in the questionnaire students were told about the price hike through “the advisement process” and via a letter. Berman also said in the questionnaire students could learn about differential tuition on the Bursar’s website. The Regents approved Anderson’s differential request in 2015. In 2017, Anderson proposed another differential, this one levied exclusively on graduate students. It amounted to an additional $183.70 per credit hour. Anderson expected this fee to generate $1.73 million per semester. For context, there were 651 graduate students

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SMITH PLAZA — Beginning March 12, homes across the country will start receiving invitations to complete the 2020 census, and University representatives are working to ensure everyone in the state is counted. A small group of impassioned advocates, students, professors and government representatives gathered at Smith Plaza on March 4 for a press conference designed to encourage New Mexico residents to participate in the 2020 census. Cathryn McGill, appointed by Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller and the Bernalillo County Commission to chair the Albuquerque/ Bernalillo Complete Count Committee, spoke at the gathering and emphasized that the financial return on the individual time investment would be well worth it for the state. “Nine questions. Ten minutes to complete. Millions (of dollars) for your community — you do the math,” McGill said. “We want to be leaders in transportation infrastructure, in affordable housing, in early childhood education and food and wage security, and improving our response to the 2020 census is the best way to make New Mexico better.” According to census outreach group NM Counts 2020, “a mere 1% undercount of New Mexico’s population in 2020 would result in a $780 million loss of federal funds over a 10-year period.” Robert Rhatigan, interim director of the University of New Mexico Geospatial and Population Studies and the state’s demographer, also emphasized how critical getting everyone to participate in the census is for New Mexico. “Census responses are used to determine political representation in Congress, in the state legislature, in county commissions and in city councils,” Rhatigan said. He emphasized that no one should be afraid to participate. “I want to remind everyone how safe, important and easy the census is,” Rhatigan said. “There is no citizenship question on the census and ... every census response is protected under federal law and cannot be shared with ICE, with the FBI or the CIA.” Rhatigan appealed for students to engage with people in their communities who may need help completing the decennial population count.

see

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MCKEE: Annual fashion show pays homage to Black History Month GLEASON: Orwellian story brought to life by small cast


PAGE 2 / THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2020

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New Mexico, an average 40-hour workweek would amount to about $18,720 a year, according to a state minimum-wage database. “We kept a journal one semester of how much we’re actually doing, and we end up teaching anywhere between 40 and 60 hours a week because of high class sizes,” Puthoff said. “It’s writing-intensive, so it’s very labor-intensive — the (English) department requires us to teach three units a semester, so it’s a lot of work, a lot of grading, a lot of class prep.”

Puthoff said class prep typically occurs over breaks when graduate workers are unpaid. This work comes atop of their own class schedules, side jobs and research. “Grad school should be a challenge,” Puthoff said. “But it shouldn’t be a challenge to live.” After Mincks and Gonzalez spoke on the wages at both UCSC and UNM, the graduate workers marched from the plaza to University House as a symbolic show of the wealth inequities between top administrators and workers.

“We can’t make rent while the president gets her housing subsidized, and she doesn’t even live there,” Gonzalez said while stationed outside of University House. “Also, we make $14,000 a year. President Stokes makes $412,000 a year,” Mincks added. As the rally came to a close and workers had to return to classes, the power of the collective was expressed to the tune of the union anthem “Solidarity Forever.” In all, graduate students reiterated that the students they

teach ultimately suffer from their lack of compensation. “Our working conditions are undergraduate learning conditions,” Puthoff said. “When we struggle to make ends meet, the quality of our teaching, the quality of our service declines steeply, and admin ought to treat us like workers and stop treating us like we’re disposable.”

determined by the census, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. According to New Mexico Voices for Children, a nonprofit child well-being advocacy group, the Pell Grant is the second-largest source of financial aid for New Mexico college students, making up 25% of all aid received. PaulaMarie Herbert, a UNM public administration graduate student and co-chair for the Urban Native Complete Count Census Committee, said the census brings in federal funding for tribal communities and noted that Albuquerque has some of the largest concentrations of Native communities in the U.S. “A third of our state’s Native

Americans live in the city, and we have 400-plus tribes represented here in Albuquerque,” Herbert said. Herbert and the other census advocates have reason to be concerned. In 2010, New Mexico had the second lowest response rate in the country, according to an infographic by NM Counts 2020. The 2020 census will be the first ever to include an option to respond online, which may help boost the number of responses in “hard-to-count” states such as New Mexico. Though the questionnaire will ask for the address of where you expect to sleep on April 1, residents will be able to submit their

responses as early as March 12. You can fill out census information by going to my2020census.gov to complete the questions online. The website is scheduled to be open to the public through July 31. For UNM students, the census will be coming to them. On April 1, the UNM Complete Count Committee will be holding a “2020 Census Block Party” outside the Student Union Building. Computers will be provided, and committee representatives will be present to answer questions and help students complete the questionnaire. “It’s essential we mobilize our communities, that we mobilize everyone in our neighborhoods,

our family members, et cetera,

Out of the nine colleges and programs that adopted differential tuition, graduate students pay an average of over $11 for every $1 that undergraduates pay, according to numbers provided to the Office of the Provost. College of Population Health graduates won’t be paying these rates this year, but Gaarden thinks his student organization’s (Public Health Student Association) fight

against differential tuition has just begun. He said he’s sure the college will push for differential again next year. “I don’t know if the dean would have withdrawn her proposal if we weren’t present today in that meeting to make this public statement in front of those nine committee members,” Gaarden said. Collins, the College of Population Health dean, was

out of town and unavailable for comment, according to spokesperson Mark Rudi. While masters of public health graduate students won’t be paying differential this year, other colleges will. The School of Public Administration requested to increase their graduate differential tuition from $50 to $100. The new Global and National

Security Program requested to instate a graduate differential tuition of $150. Both differential tuition rates will be up for a vote by the Board of Regents on March 9 at the 2020 Budget Summit.

Alyssa Martinez is the news editor at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @amart4447

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“Spread the word to your friends, family and neighbors and offer assistance to anybody who needs it — whether that’s a foreign national who doesn’t realize that they’re supposed to complete the census, or it’s your grandparents who need assistance with the technology or anyone who might need assistance with language and accessibility,” Rhatigan said. UNM students have an added incentive to ensure everyone participates in the census, as the headcount in New Mexico directly affects the amount of federal aid for tuition. The Pell Grant is one of the top five federal programs with funding

Differential

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stuck with a $14,000 minimum yearly stipend, according to Gonzalez. “Universities function on the cheap labor of graduate employees,” Gonzalez said. “We produce a huge chunk of the credit hours at this University (and) across universities across the country.” David Puthoff, a Ph.D. candidate and teaching assistant in the English department, said although graduate workers teach around 20 hours a week on paper, most graduate students work nearly double that amount. In

Census

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because this data is extremely important,”

Brandale

Mills,

a

U.S. Census Bureau media specialist, said. “Representation matters.” Lissa Knudsen is a public health beat reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at news@daily lobo.com or on Twitter @lissaknudsen Alex McCausland is a freelance reporter at the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @alexkmccausland

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and 3,097 undergraduates students enrolled at Anderson in 2017, according to the UNM Office of Institutional Analytics. Berman didn’t respond to a request for comment before this story went to print. The differential tuition rates at Anderson are an extreme example of the disparity between graduates and undergraduates, but only by a few dollars.

Justin Garcia is the Editor-inChief of the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted at editorinchief@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Just516garc

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NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2020 / PAGE 3

Panel discusses NM prison system issues

By Spencer Butler

@SpencerButler48 ZIMMERMAN — A group of about 60 people gathered in the Willard Room in Zimmerman Library on March 2 for a panel discussion titled: “Who is Caught up in New Mexico’s Criminal Justice System? Considering Race, Ethnicity, Class, Gender.” Jeff Proctor, an investigative reporter for New Mexico In Depth, hosted the panel on the prison system in New Mexico and the flaws within it. New Mexico Senator Antoinette Sedillo Lopez, University of New Mexico law professor Sonia M. Gipson Rankin, director and co-founder of the Institute for the Study of “Race” & Social Justice Nancy López and deputy director of the New Mexico Sentencing Commission Douglas Carter sat on the panel. The initial talking point of the panel was a recently sponsored memorial by Sedillo Lopez which

aimed to start the necessary corrections the state must do in order to better combat the issues in its prison system. The memorial didn’t make it to the Senate floor. Sedillo Lopez, who opened up the discussion, said the aim of the memorial was to be the first step toward proper legislation, mainly for New Mexico to start collecting more accurate data about the race and ethnicity of incarcerated individuals. She also mentioned that during her investigative work on this issue, she found the state has no mechanism for self-reporting race and relies on the state and city police officers to determine the race of a given individual. The only time that inmates are asked about their race is during the decennial U.S. census. The census counts all the individuals currently residing in the United States and is responsible for allocating money to the state and determining the number of the state’s representatives in the U.S. House. The next census will take place later this year.

Sedillo Lopez is also a member of the Courts, Corrections and Justice Interim Committee in the state legislature, where she was able to tour the prisons around the state. She said she found it “was obvious, when you walk in there, that it doesn’t represent who actually lives in New Mexico” because of the overrepresentation of AfricanAmericans and Hispanics. Carter echoed the sentiments expressed by Sedillo Lopez and stated that although the memorial didn’t make it to the floor, they would adopt it anyway. He also said that while the Sentencing Commission is “a state commission that focuses on criminal justice reform and policy,” the main group that will handle these potential reforms is the Reform Committee, a subset of the commission. Currently, the state doesn’t collect the data of the prison population due to the data “not being great,” according to Carter. This is mainly due to the aforementioned issues.

custody or by crossing the border. Wannam said he wanted to play with the narrative of living the American dream, showing that it can be complex and dangerous for some who have to trek long distances in difficult conditions to reach that dream. “A lot of people, including myself, we try to migrate to different places because there’s no opportunities or source of understanding that we can do better,” Wannam said. “It’s kind of ironic — like this is the American dream, but people are being killed by the system of the state.” Wannam also showed a video of himself doing a street performance piece in front of the Guatemalan National Palace with the Guatemalan national anthem playing in the background. During the video, someone comes to Wannam and carves the word Hueco, a pejorative Spanish term for homosexual, onto his back. He said he wanted to take a political stance for those who are being called the derogatory term. “A lot of hate crimes in 2019 were subjected to not only kill-

ing, but carving on those that are that terminology as a way of saying, ‘Yo, they’re killing us but the state doesn’t recognize it,’” Wannam said. Diana Macias, a graduate student in the biology department, said what stood out to her the most was the wheelbarrow of waxed pink bananas on top of banana leaves. The bananas also had a symbol of Christ on them. Macias said she thought the bananas represented the way in which the United Fruit Company has created a lot of violence and genocide in Guatemala so that Americans can have this very affordable fruit available all the time. “It comes at a cost. The really low prices (are) actually a hidden cost of the pain, suffering and violence that it causes,” Macias said. “I think that having the wax sculpture of Christ on top of these bananas is kind of a parallel in the way that religion was used to colonize Guatemala and Latin America in general.” Macias said she thought the artist was trying to draw parallels between the way which

Carter also mentioned that after a more proper data collection system is put in place, they must continue to audit the process to make sure the data is collected in the correct way. López and Rankin got the ball rolling on what happens when this level of ambiguity exists within the prison system, with López stating that the census questionnaire leaves too many issues with the handling of the data. López said that an example of this is certain census questions included in the wrong category. Rankin said one of the issues for her was self-identification and the process that is meant to jumble people’s opinion as to what their race is. She added that the data collection needs to be transparent. “When the data is corrupted, everything that flows from it is useless,” she said. A good chunk of the second half of discussion was directed toward the controversial data collection program known as Correctional Offender Management Profiling

for Alternative Sanctions, which is used in a majority of states to collect data on the prison population across the nation. The program has come under fire in recent years for being biased toward African-American inmates. While there was an allotment of time directed toward the audience asking the panel members questions about the issues addressed in the program, many in the audience that were called upon gave their opinions and concurred with many of the issues. Director of Access Services and Undergraduate Engagement Cindy Pierard and Subject Librarian Elizabeth Cooper, who helped with coordinating the event, were both ecstatic about how the event turned out. Pierard said she was “really pleased with the number of people who came out.” Spencer Butler is a beat reporter at the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @SpencerButler48

CFA thesis shows Guatemalan sociopolitical system through queer lens By Amanda Britt

@AmandaBritt__ DOWNTOWN, ABQ — Martin Wannam’s thesis show “La Eterna Resistencia” examined the sociopolitical system in Guatemala through a queer, brown lens with content based off of religious narratives and normative societal ideologies. Wannam’s work manifests itself through large-scale prints hung from the walls of the Center for Fine Arts Downtown Studio. The prints showed queer men and women from Guatemala dressed as folklore legends, both from South America and Wannam’s own imagination. “I started taking Guatemalan legends and queering them out,” Wannam said. “I would change their narrative and change the way they’re perceived as queer.” Hanging on one of the walls of the studio was the work of a Guatemalan piñata maker who made replicas of seven people who died either in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

Amanda Britt / @AmandaBritt__ / Daily Lobo

Art goers observe Martin Wannam’s prints on the opening night of his thesis show “La Eterna Resistencia” at the CFA Downtown Studio on Feb. 28, 2020.

religion and corporations have taken advantage of people and created pain and suffering in these communities. She also said she came to the event not knowing much about what it’s like to be queer and a person of color in Guatemala, but thought the exhibit would give her a way to learn about those unfamiliar narratives. “I think this exhibit does a really good job of showing how it is to be queer and express your gen-

der,” Macias said. “Also, there’s this whole side of the exhibit where there’s all these myths that have been queered, so at the same time the artist is showing a utopia or a world in which he can imagine what it would be like to be queer in Guatemala.” Amanda Britt is the photo editor at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at photoeditor@dailylobo. com or on Twitter @AmandaBritt__

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LOBO OPINION

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Opinion Editor / opinion@dailylobo.com

LETTER

HOROSCOPES 3/5/20 - 3/9/20

Aries This is the time to set goals in both your work and personal life, which can greatly increase your chances of success.

Libra Many work opportunities will present themselves soon, so be prepared to take advantage of them.

Taurus Your social life will be very interesting this week, so go out and meet new people.

Scorpio This is a good time for starting new relationships, as you never know who you might meet.

Gemini You will be in a very adventurous mood, and trying a new activity or hobby will be good for you.

Sagittarius You will have lots of inspiration this week, and you will find it easier than ever to complete projects.

Cancer The moon in your sign will help inspire your creativity, so make sure to use as much of it as you can.

Capricorn If you are feeling restless, this may be a good time to challenge yourself with something new. Aquarius This is a good week to work on communicating your feelings and desires to those close to you.

Leo You will be given many different choices soon. Remember that you can wait and think, then choose wisely.

Pisces You may feel daunted by everything you have to do, but remember that breaking tasks up makes them easier.

Virgo Romance is in the air, and you will have great luck in finding someone new.

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The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Michel Rivera endorses the ’I AM UNM’ slate Dear Mr. Editor, I do not like endorsing people all that often, especially when you know everyone running; it creates a tense environment and you lose friends that way. This is no different. I have worked with both slates running this year in ASUNM and I believe that both slates have wonderful, talented individuals. However, I am one to believe that a great leader needs to be someone who comes from a different perspective and has with them new ideas. This is why I would like to personally endorse I AM UNM. Being in ASUNM Senate for almost a year now, I have seen just how important ASUNM is and someone that brings in more diversity into it like I AM UNM would is something that I love. Mia has proven herself as a great leader as Finance Director for LoboTHON, as New Student Orientation Leader, and in helping create the Center for Financial Capability. As for Ana, being Senior Resident Advisor,

New Student Orientation Leader and Finance Senator among many other things have shown me just how dedicated and eager to learn she is. They don’t lack in anything; these two ladies are just as qualified as anyone vying for ASUNM President and Vice President. I am a strong believer that one doesn’t have to necessarily have worked within ASUNM to be President and Vice President. As long as one has proven themselves as an effective leader and able to bring something new to the table, they are capable of achieving great things within ASUNM. In my experience in organizations like College Democrats and Kappa Sigma, experience does not necessarily mean you’re the most qualified. Being elected to the highest position like President takes more than experience. It also requires confidence and hope in the candidate that they can run an office with the full confidence of everyone involved in the many departments for the entire organization to

run smoothly. Ana and Mia would definitely be a change— a good change— from the usual candidates that vie for President and Vice President and would bring more of that long-needed diversity into ASUNM. Both are international students, both are from underrepresented communities, both bring unique perspectives outside of ASUNM, and both want to include ALL of the student body and not just those that benefit from ASUNM. This is the appeal of I AM UNM— inclusivity and diversity— that is still greatly needed on our campus. I have full confidence that I AM UNM can help bring this or otherwise I wouldn’t be writing this. This is why I AM voting #2 on March 9th and I believe you should too! Sincerely yours, Michel Rivera President — College Democrats of New Mexico Finance Senator of ASUNM

Sloan Moulton is a horoscopist at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at culture@dailylobo.com

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Volume 124 Issue 48 Editor-in-Chief Justin Garcia

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NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2020 / PAGE 5

Annual fashion show pays homage to Black History Month By Joseph McKee @josephdmckee SUB — The Powerful Movement of Educated Sisters (PMES) hosted their annual fashion show on Friday, Feb. 28. This year the PMES fashion show emphasized a focus on Black History Month and celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Africana Studies department. PMES is a women's student group at the University of New Mexico under the Black Student Alliance (BSA). The event opened with a performance from the Explosive Dancers, a local Albuquerque group of young hip-hop dancers. Then a brief history was given discussing the origins of the Africana Studies department, which opened in 1970. UNM student Beth Glenn, a

HAPS

member of the Africana Studies department, was honored during the fashion show. In a YouTube clip shown during the event, Glenn talked about her involvement in the department and what she enjoys about it. "The people that I work with, the teachers I study under, have instilled so much confidence and just growth — I've grown so much just being here," she said. The PMES show represented the Africana Studies department by including past and present faculty and directors within the fashion show. Members of the department graced the runway in traditional African garments with colorful textile designs. The second half of the PMES fashion show featured an original collection by UNM student designer Jeremy Gonzales designing under the pseud-

onym Jeremih Sinclair. Sinclair's six piece collection combines a mix between a soft color palette and active textile designs, with a focus on childhood innocence. "I think I just wanted to represent our inner child. That inner kid in all of us that we need to let out sometimes," Sinclair said. His collection includes a full-length silk white dress and a redgold romper which he described as an "homage to Black History Month" and his identity. Sinclair said joining the BSA has been an eye-opening experience for him. "Coming from predominantly white and Hispanic schools I've never been exposed to any of this, and I think it's been really lovely working with other black people," Sinclair said. All proceeds from the PMES

fashion show will be donated toward a prom scholarship. The scholarship will be awarded to a deserving high school senior in the Albuquerque area. "The goal every year is to highlight something that is Black History relevant ... It's about highlighting black excellence throughout the community," PMES president Miracle Luster said.

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Look for Me We’re All Going Somewhere Pedestrians and Motorists Share Responsibility. It’s the law!

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Escape In Time Escape Room and Ice Cream Parlor 1:00pm- 10:00pm Student discount 15%. On the corner of Lomas and San Mateo

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Outpost Performance Space Season opener, Thollem McDonas with Dave Wayne & Carlos Sanistevan 7:30pm. Piano, bass, drum trio Student discounts and rush tickets available. outpostspace.org

Sunshine Theater Soul Asylum, With Local H. Mar 16: 13+ Ages. Doors Open 7pm 2nd & Central sunshinetheaterlive.com

Monday

Look for Me We’re All Going Somewhere Pedestrians and Motorists Share Responsibility. It’s the law!

Look for Me We’re All Going Somewhere Pedestrians and Motorists Share Responsibility. It’s the law!

Saturday Escape In Time Escape Room and Ice Cream Parlor 10:00am- 10:00pm Student discount 15%. On the corner of Lomas and San Mateo Outpost Performance Space An Evening with Lara Manzanares 7:30 pm. Award-winning NM singersongwriter. Student discounts and tickets available. outpostspace.org

Sunshine Theater Phantogram with Lindy Vision Mar 17: All Ages. Doors Open 7pm 2nd & Central sunshinetheaterlive.com Look for Me We’re All Going Somewhere Pedestrians and Motorists Share Responsibility. It’s the law!

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The PMES meets Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. in the African American Student Services Lounge. For more information on UNM African American Student Services and the BSA groups, visit afro.unm.edu. Joseph McKee is a graphic designer at the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted at culture@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @josephdmckee Cam Ward / @ xx_cameo_xx / Daily Lobo

Jeremy Gonzales and Odelle Brown pose to show off the new collection of clothes on March 1, 2020. Sunshine Theater Lords of Acid with Aesthetic Perfection and Praga Khan. Mar 18th:All Ages. Doors open 7pm. 2nd & Central sunshinetheaterlive.com


PAGE 6 / THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2020

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Orwellian story brought to life by small cast at Popejoy By Megan Gleason @fabflutist2716

POPEJOY HALL — Albuquerque was just one stop along the "1984" tour, but I'm glad they performed here. Seeing a live performance of such a fundamental novel is something that I won't forget. The Aquila Theatre presented George Orwell’s "1984," as adapted by Michael Gene Sullivan, at Popejoy Hall on March 1 at 3 p.m. This production had only six cast members on stage, with five others on the creative team and five more on the production team. "1984," along with "The Odyssey," are the two shows performed on the Aquila Theatre's national tour. I admit that when I saw how small the cast was, my expectation for the show was low. The cast, however, proved me wrong almost instantly. The show had a quick start, with a fast and hectic pace that was difficult to keep up with at first. My sunny Sunday in New Mexico had suddenly turned to a gloomy cell in the Ministry of Love, but once I was adjusted it was easier to keep up. One of the most interesting things about this adaptation was that, instead of going through scenes chronologically, we start at the end of the book. "The adaptation is actually quite different to the book," said Hannah Sinclair Robinson, who portrayed O'Brien and the Voice in the adaptation. "It doesn't quite follow the

linearity that the book does." Here we see four different party members reenacting Winston's past to gain his confession. All are directed by a mysterious "Voice" who seems to have the ultimate authority in the room. "The majority of my track is offstage ... so it's interesting where I get placed in every venue," Robinson said. One thing that stood out most to me was the paranoia of the party members. They were constantly afraid that these orders to reenact Winston's crimes were a test on themselves. The fear of doing something wrong was heavy in the air. "There's variations within the script — it is a difficult book to adapt to the stage," Reece Richardson, the actor portraying Winston, said. Another interesting detail was that the set never changed. The lighting and props were moved around effectively enough to distinguish different settings, but the set stayed the same. That was a simple solution for a small cast. My biggest complaint in this production was the faulty sound quality and microphone issues. Loud bursts of static occasionally covered up the actors' dialogue and really disrupted the Orwellian setting they were trying to achieve. In addition, the microphone for the actor reenacting Winston's past would go on and off frequently in the first act. If I had been sitting any further, I would have missed crucial dialogue. However, this may be due to the fact that the company's first time in Popejoy fell on the same day as the show. The pressure to set up

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everything correctly is immense for a one-time performance in a new location. The actors had read "1984" numerous times to better understand the stage adaptation and consequently gained their own takes on what this show is supposed to give an audience. "'1984' shows the value of empathy and the danger of when that starts disappearing in all aspects of life," Richardson said. The ultimate symbol representing the dictatorship in "1984" is the authority known as Big Brother. Big Brother leads Oceania with a painstakingly tight grip on his own citizens, ensuring obedience.

Interestingly enough, Big Brother never actually appears in the novel and the same applied to the performance, making the audience question if this dictator is real at all. It was amazing watching the party members drive Winston to insanity through the cruel acts that Orwell presents in the novel, such as the use of one's deepest fear to betray love for an individual and instead replace that with love for Big Brother. Richardson's performance in the second act especially was phenomenal. I was clearly able to see Winston delve further and further into the insane asylum

that his own mind was turning into, fed by the lies of Oceania and Big Brother. The audience seemed very impressed by the performance, and many rewarded the actors with a standing ovation. Six actors are all that it took to turn an empty stage with a few props on it into a different reality that transported the audience into an Orwellian society. Megan Gleason is a freelance reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at culture@ dailylobo.com or on Twitter @fabflutist2716

Photo Courtesy of schooltimeseries.com

LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events Thursday-Sunday, March 5-8, 2020 Current Exhibits

Joan Brown, Judy Chicago, Bruce Conner, Luis Jiménez, Andy Warhol, and more.

Intertwined: The Mexican Wolf, and the People and the Land 10:00am-4:00pm, TuesdaySaturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology Wolves have been of interest to humans as long as the two have kept company together on this planet, with the importance of this relationship being woven into the cultural fabric of many peoples around the world.

Drowned River: The Death and Rebirth of Glen Canyon on the Colorado 10:00am-4:00pm, TuesdaySaturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology Drowned River documents both the devastation of the dam project, as well as the unanticipated resilience of the Colorado River. The exhibition is free and open to all.

People of the Southwest 10:00am-4:00pm, TuesdaySaturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology The exhibition celebrates the cultural history of the Southwest, especially the close relationship southwestern people have had with the land around them.

Ancestors 10:00am-4:00pm, TuesdaySaturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology This exhibit introduces our ancestors and close relatives. These ancient relatives will take you through the story in which all of our ancestors had a role.

HINDSIGHT / INSIGHT: Reflecting on the Collection 10:00am-4:00pm UNM Art Museum The exhibition focuses primarily on international art movements of the 1960s and 70s including Pop, Minimalism,and California Funk. Visitors will discover the museum’s rich holdings from this era by artists such as Robert Arneson,

To Survive on This Shore: Photographs and Interviews with Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Older Adults 12:00-5:00pm University Art Museum As an exhibition, To Survive on This Shore is the product of over five years of research and photography by Dugan and Fabbre, who traveled across the United States

to document the life stories of older transgender adults. The project is a response to the absence of nuanced representation of older transgender and gender nonconforming individuals in US culture.

Neuroscience Seminar 12:00-1:00pm Basic Medical Sciences Building UNM Health Sciences presents “Interaction of spreading depolarization and seizure in cerebral edema and stroke.”

Lectures & Readings

Dissertation Presentation 3:00-4:00pm PAIS Building, Room 2540 Gopikrishnan Muraleedharan, Physics Astronomy, presents “On the complexity of Boson Samplingusing atoms in optical lattices.”

THURSDAY

HSLIC’s Biomedical Informatics Seminar Series 9:00-10:00am Health Sciences Library & Informatics Center, Room 228 Jonathan Eldredge, PhD, Associate Professor, School of Medicine, presents “Integrity of Scientific Evidence.” Director’s Lectureship Seminar 12:00-1:00pm UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center Dr. Demark-Wahnefrield, professor and Webb Endowed Chair of Nutrition Sciences and the associate director for cancer prevention and control at the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center, presents “Creating scalable diet and exercise interventions to improve the health of diverse groups of cancer survivors.

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

Art & Music The Mikado 7:30-8:30pm Popejoy Hall New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players return with their delightfully reimagined, critically acclaimed The Mikado that brings the history and inspiration for it to center stage while keeping the delightfully droll libretto and score fully intact. We meet Gilbert and Sullivan in a new prologue, leading to late 19th Century Japan with the timeless story, beautiful music, and beloved characters, and where Gilbert’s satire blossoms anew.

Theater & Film Zombieland: Double Tap-Mid Week Movie Series 3:30-5:30pm SUB Theater One long decade after the postapocalyptic events in Zombieland, the resilient quartet of survivors find themselves in the bosom of a nowderelict White House. However, in a world still overrun by multitudes of walking dead, a premeditated separation will send the team back to square one, searching, once more, for the promised land. $2/$2.50/$3 cash only. Zombieland: Double Tap-Mid Week Movie Series 3:30-5:30pm SUB Theater One long decade after the postapocalyptic events in Zombieland, the resilient quartet of survivors find themselves in the bosom of a nowderelict White House. However, in a world still overrun by multitudes of walking dead, a premeditated separation will send the team back to square one, searching, once more, for the promised land. $2/$2.50/$3 cash only.

Campus Calendar continued on pg 7

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ACROSS 1 Incite 5 Modern “methinks” 9 Pink flowers in a van Gogh still life 14 Water-diverting feature 15 It’s not optional 16 Brigham Young University city 17 *Bargain on the last day of Oktoberfest? 19 Urdu for “palace” 20 Blunder 21 Barbarian in Dante’s Seventh Circle 23 Butterfield of “Ender’s Game” 24 Cartomancy deck 26 *Singer Damone, vis-à-vis actor Morrow? 29 Starfleet school 32 Record holder 33 Ship 34 Accessories for a Red Hat Society lunch 37 Bond and Bourne 38 *Snoopy’s specialist? 41 Scratching post material 44 Jai __ 45 Its first version was egg-shaped 49 Spotted cat 51 Argentina’s “City of Diagonals” 53 *One who’ll talk your ear off about osso buco and saltimbocca? 56 Norse group that fought the Vanir 57 Hypotheticals 58 Part of AC/DC 61 Minn. neighbor 62 A-listers 65 Basic auto maintenance, and how each answer to a starred clue was created 67 “Who’s on First?” catcher 68 Composer Sibelius 69 While away 70 Note next to a red F, maybe

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71 __-Navy game 72 Downfall of many kings? DOWN 1 Old Iberian coins 2 Grind 3 Exceeded, as a budget 4 Agnus __ 5 MIT center?: Abbr. 6 Substantial content 7 Sun: Pref. 8 The “O” in football’s OBJ 9 Tach readout 10 60 minuti 11 “Me too” 12 Hard to follow 13 Says “There, there,” say 18 Silver of FiveThirtyEight 22 Spots 25 Eccentric 27 “What __ can I do?” 28 Snake, for one 30 MIT Sloan deg. 31 Class with mats 35 Entirely 36 Authenticating symbol

March 2nd issue puzzle solved Thursday’s Puzzle Solved

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39 North Carolina university 40 Through 41 Khrushchev and Gorbachev 42 Baffin Bay hazard 43 Coastal region 46 Like some lodges 47 Goose-pimply 48 Price-fixing groups

3/5/20 3/20/20

50 “Chopped” host Allen 52 Way to go 54 Spanish red wine 55 Less rainy, as a climate 59 Oater actor Jack 60 Harlem sch. 63 Bagpiper’s hat 64 London __: Ferris wheel 66 Letters in an APB

LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events Thursday-Sunday, March 5-8, 2020 Campus Calendar continued from pg 6 “Meta/Physical” 7:30-8:30pm UNM Rodey Theater The UNM Department of Theatre & Dance presents, “Meta/ Physical” the Spring 2020 Faculty Dance Concert. Artistic Director: Donna Jewell. Parental discretion. $10/$12/$15.

Sports & Recreation UNM Womens Tennis vs BYU 12:00-1:00pm McKinnon Family Tennis Stadium

Student Groups & Gov. Open Recovery Meeting 12:00-1:00pm Logan Hall, B67E Sponsored by the UNM Collegiate Recovery Center. CRC drop-in hours: 10am-2pm daily. Christians on UNM 12:30-2:00pm SUB Scholars

feelings. No prior writing experience needed; spelling and grammar do not matter. In partnership with Cancer Support Now.

FRIDAY Campus Events UNM Law Med Day 8:00am-1:00pm Domenici 3740 North Campus UNM The Law Medicine Day seminar will connect small groups of law students and medical students, as well as some residents and fellows, to discuss various scenarios/ vignettes of actual dilemmas that reflect significant ethical and legal conflict. You will have the opportunity to discuss these cases and attempt to resolve them with suggested sources of action, all of which will pit medical ethics against significant legal issues. The goal is to encourage different points of view to surface to increase understanding between the two professions.

Lectures & Readings

Dissertation Presentation 1:00-2:00pm Department of Economics, Room 1015 Siobhan Yilmaz, Economics, presents “Adolescent Mental Health in the Developing World: Three Economic Analyses of Stressors, Support, & Coping Strategies.” Department of Philosophy Colloquium 3:30-5:00pm MITCH 102 Jessica Berry, Georgia State University, presents, “Poor Mankind!’ Nietzsche on the Problem of Suffering.” Stress and Anxiety Toolbox 3:30-5:00pm SHAC 234 Free Writing Workshops Spring 2020 4:30-6:00pm TECH, Room 120 The College of Education presents “Paragraph structure, topic sentences, and transitions/ advance organizer sentences.” No advance registration needed. These workshops are free and open to all UNM and CNM students. Undergrads through dos students welcome!

Art & Music Andrew Cardwell, Percussionist 6:30-7:30pm Keller Hall Graduate Recital

Meetings

Dissertation Presentation 10:00-11:00am Clark Hall, Room 214A Tefera Entele Tesema, Chemistry, presents “Photophysics of Plasmonic gold particles and their mode of involvement in spectroscopic characterization of Phenothiaziniums.”

Family & Friends Journaling Group 4:00-5:30pm UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center, Room 1604 A journaling support group for family & friends of cancer patients. Discover the healing power of writing to express thoughts and

Thesis Presentation 10:00-11:00am C & J, Room 219 Benjamin Bradley, Communication Journalism, presents “This is How You Navigate the World?: Impacts of Mormon Rhetoric on White Queer Members’ Identity Performances.”

Parasite - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater Jobless, penniless, unmotivated patriarch, Ki-taek, and his equally unambitious family, occupy themselves by working for peanuts

Sprechtisch 7:30-10:00pm Joe’s, 108 Vassar Dr SE We meet in a friendly atmosphere to practice speaking German.

Theater & Film

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

in their squalid basement-level apartment. Then, by sheer luck, a lucrative business proposition will pave the way for an ingeniously insidious scheme. Now, the stage seems set for an unceasing winnertake-all class war. How does one get rid of a parasite? $3/$4/$5 Cash Only! “Juicy and Delicious” 7:30-8:30pm UNM Experimental Theater Hushpuppy lives with his Daddy and his ghost Mamma on the edge of the earth. Life is juicy and delicious until Hushpuppy’s dad gets sick, the world starts to fall apart, and prehistoric beasts begin to crawl out of the red Georgia clay. As Daddy gets weaker, the world becomes more fragile and nature itself begins to come unrendered. Hushpuppy and his friends must learn to care for each other while they battle the fearsome aurochs in this magical Southern fantasia that inspired the movie Beasts of the Southern Wild. “Meta/Physical” 7:30-9:00pm UNM Rodey Theater The UNM Department of Theater & Dance production, “Meta/ Physical” Spring 2020 Faculty Dance Concert. Artistic Director: Donna Jewell Parasite - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater Jobless, penniless, unmotivated patriarch, Ki-taek, and his equally unambitious family, occupy themselves by working for peanuts in their squalid basement-level apartment. Then, by sheer luck, a lucrative business proposition will pave the way for an ingeniously insidious scheme. Now, the stage seems set for an unceasing winnertake-all class war. How does one get rid of a parasite? $3/$4/$5 Cash Only!

Student Groups & Gov. AA Meeting 11:00am-12:00pm Logan Hall, Room B67E Sponsored by the UNM Collegiate Recovery Center. CRC drop-in hours: 10am-2pm daily. Meditation/Open Recovery 12:00-1:00pm Logn Hall, Room B67E Sponsored by the UNM Collegiate Recovery Center. CRC drop-in hours: 10am-2pm daily. The Society for Physics Students 2:00-3:00pm Pais Buliding, Room 2540 The Society of Physics Students is a group open to anyone who likes physics! We engage in outreach to local schools, put on demo shows, travel to conferences and go camping. ELL Weekly Meeting 5:00-7:00pm SUB Lobo A & B Circle K International 7:30-8:30pm SUB Acoma A & B

SATURDAY Art & Music

Suzuki Lab 12:00-1:00pm Keller Hall UNM Suzuki Lab School Noon Recital. Featuring the students studying in the Lab School under the direction of the UNM String Pedagogy Intern Teachers.

Campus Calendar continued on page 8

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Announcements Announcements Auditions Fun, Food, Music Garage Sales Health & Wellness Legal Notices Looking for You Lost and Found Services Travel Want to Buy Your Space

MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. 505‑ 401‑8139, welbert53@aol.com MATHEMATICS TUTORING, 505‑730‑ 5901. PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 505‑569‑2626 (Text Only); 505‑254‑ 9615 (Voice Only). MasterCard/ VISA. WritingandEditingABQ.com

Apartments 2BDRM APARTMENT ON UNM Campus!

$875/mo. +Electric +$875dd. Contact Cal 505‑453‑8835.

Housing Apartments Condos Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Office Space Rooms for Rent Sublets

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FPs, court‑ yards, fenced yards. Houses, cot‑ tages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 505‑843‑9642. 3BDRMs. Garages. Open 6 days/week. 3308 4TH ST NW, Cascade Crossing Apartments, brand new studios, 1BDRM & 2BDRM. Close, quiet, clean, no smoking, card access, gat‑ ed/covered parking, all electric, stain‑ less steel appliances, granite coun‑ ters, balconies, W/D hookups, eleva‑ tor, inside mailboxes. Rent from $850‑$1250. Call 505‑934‑0702.

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LAW OFFICE FOR RENT ‑ Downtown ABQ, 820 Kent NW, 87102. Pre‑wired for high speed internet. Well‑main‑ tained bungalow, $1100/mo. Extra parking possible. Furniture available. Call Monica 505‑280‑0855.

Child Care Jobs Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Internships Jobs Wanted Volunteers Work Study Jobs

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7 days of online advertising, and 2 days of print, for $1 per word per week. Graphics can be added to print and online publications for $24.99 per week. Special effects are charged additionally per line: bold, italics, centering, blank lines, larger font, etc. Color is available for $1 per line per day. Logos can be included with text: Black & white is $5 per day. Color is $10 per day.

For Sale BEGINNING TELESCOPE WITH 3 eye‑ pieces and stand. $40. 505‑256‑7810.

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Child Care SPRING BREAK SITTER, 12 year old girl. March 9‑13. 11‑4pm. Los Lunas. 363‑0894.

Jobs Off Campus TALIN MARKET WORLD Food is hiring for the following positions FT/PT: cashier, stocker, produce clerk, cus‑ tomer service representative. Flexible scheduling. Apply online at employ ment.talinmarket.com CAREGIVER / DIRECT Care Staff: assist adults who have intellectual, develop‑ mental and physical disabilities with all aspects of daily living. All positions are FT. Competitive wage, benefits, $500 sign on bonus at 90 days. Apply online https://providencesupport services.com/now‑hiring

LINE COOK, 66 Diner is hiring a profes‑

sional, reliable, energetic individual to work in a fast‑paced kitchen as part of a team. Those attributes are required, and evaluated during hiring process. Apply in person at 66 Diner, 2‑5PM during the week. NOW HIRING FOR before and after

school PT positions. Albuquerque, Be‑ len, Los Lunas, Socorro. Prefer avail‑ ability. Mon ‑ Fri. Morning shift: 6:45AM ‑9AM. Afternoon shift 2PM‑6PM. For information call 505‑873‑6035 or visit www.rgec.org HIRING TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS at our call center near Eubank and I‑40! Looking to work nights with a flexible schedule, apply now at workthatmatters.norc.org. Starting pay: $11.00/hr English. $11.50/hr. Spanish bilingual. No sales.

FOODCORPS SERVICE MEMBER Paid service to teach in elementary and middle schools in NM for one year, ap‑ ply at foodcorps.org/apply by March 15. CONTROLLER, FT, RESPONSIBILITIES include internal and external reporting, month end close, tax reporting, and technical accounting skills. Previous construction accounting experience helpful. Demonstrated leadership expe‑ rience and excellent written and oral communications skills required. We of‑ fer a fantastic benefits and compensa‑ tion package: medical,dental, 401(k), PTO, pd. holidays + more. EOE. Sub‑ mit resume to job4538@gmail.com EXPERIENCED WAIT STAFF needed. Looking for someone energetic to work in a fast paced environment. Ap‑ ply in person. The Taj Mahal Restau‑ raut. 1430 Carlisle NE.

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LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events Thursday-Sunday, March 5-8, 2020 Campus Calendar continued from pg 7 Anne Lingerger, Trumpet Graduate Recital 2:00-3:00pm Keller Hall Amanda Cardwell, Tuba/ Euphonium Graduate Recital 6:00-7:30pm Keller Hall Pilobolus 8:00-9:00pm Popejoy Hall Pilobolus invites you to Come to Your Senses! Engage with childlike wonder in the miracle of your senses through both classic and brand new repertory that begins by examining our biology and ends by utilizing the senses in a refreshing immersion in the biosphere.

Theater & Film Parasite - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater Jobless, penniless, unmotivated patriarch, Ki-taek, and his equally unambitious family, occupy themselves by working for peanuts in their squalid basement-level apartment. Then, by sheer luck, a lucrative business proposition will pave the way for an ingeniously insidious scheme. Now, the stage seems set for an unceasing winnertake-all class war. How does one get rid of a parasite? $3/$4/$5 Cash Only!

“Juicy and Delicious” 7:30-8:30pm UNM Experimental Theater Hushpuppy lives with his Daddy and his ghost Mamma on the edge of the earth. Life is juicy and delicious until Hushpuppy’s dad gets sick, the world starts to fall apart, and prehistoric beasts begin to crawl out of the red Georgia clay. As Daddy gets weaker, the world becomes more fragile and nature itself begins to come unrendered. Hushpuppy and his friends must learn to care for each other while they battle the fearsome aurochs in this magical Southern fantasia that inspired the movie Beasts of the Southern Wild. “Meta/Physical” 7:30-9:00pm UNM Rodey Theater The UNM Department of Theater & Dance production, “Meta/ Physical” Spring 2020 Faculty Dance Concert. Artistic Director: Donna Jewell Parasite - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 8:30-10:30pm SUB Theater Jobless, penniless, unmotivated patriarch, Ki-taek, and his equally unambitious family, occupy themselves by working for peanuts in their squalid basement-level apartment. Then, by sheer luck, a lucrative business proposition will pave the way for an ingeniously insidious scheme. Now, the stage seems set for an unceasing winnertake-all class war. How does one get rid of a parasite? $3/$4/$5 Cash Only!

SUNDAY Art & Music

Enchantment Brass 3:00-5:00pm Keller Hall Second Sunday Faculty Spotlight Series Enchantment Brass featuring Music of John Cheetrum John and Brynn Marchiando, trumpet. Michael Walker, horn. Chris Buckholz, trombone. Richard White, tuba. Adult $12, Senior $10, Youth $5. Michael Londra and the Celtic Fire 3:00-4:00pm Popejoy Hall One of Ireland’s leading tenors brings you an evening of songs, stories tunes and dance from the heart of the Emerald Isle.

Theater & Film Parasite - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 1:00-3:00pm SUB Theater Jobless, penniless, unmotivated patriarch, Ki-taek, and his equally unambitious family, occupy themselves by working for peanuts in their squalid basement-level apartment. Then, by sheer luck, a lucrative business proposition will pave the way for an ingeniously insidious scheme. Now, the stage seems set for an unceasing winnertake-all class war. How does one get rid of a parasite? $3/$4/$5 Cash Only!

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

“Juicy and Delicious” 2:00-4:00pm UNM Experimental Theater Hushpuppy lives with his Daddy and his ghost Mamma on the edge of the earth. Life is juicy and delicious until Hushpuppy’s dad gets sick, the world starts to fall apart, and prehistoric beasts begin to crawl out of the red Georgia clay. As Daddy gets weaker, the world becomes more fragile and nature itself begins to come unrendered. Hushpuppy and his friends must learn to care for each other while they battle the fearsome aurochs in this magical Southern fantasia that inspired the movie Beasts of the Southern Wild. “Meta/Physical” 2:00-4:00pm UNM Rodey Theater The UNM Department of Theater & Dance production, “Meta/ Physical” Spring 2020 Faculty Dance Concert. Artistic Director: Donna Jewell

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Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.