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June 20-26, 2016 | Volume 120 | Issue 70
In this issue Forum held to discuss seal changes ALBUQUERQUE MOURNS
Students and supporters flocked to the heart of campus in solidarity with the victims of the Orlando shooting earlier this month. It was at least the second major vigil held in Albuquerque since the morning of the massacre. Story on (Page 2).
TECHNICALLY, A UNIQUE SOUND
James Coulter / Daily Lobo / @James_C_Coulter
Cheyenne Antonio speaks at the UNM Seal Forum on Thursday evening in the SUB Ballroom. The forum was designed to start a conversation about the racial biases thought to be found on UNM’s official seal.
By Cathy Cooke @DailyLobo
Electronic Dance Music has exploded in popularity over the last decade. Meet a local duo trying to make their mark on the genre. Story on page (Paage 3).
FROM FRANCE TO THE US, LEAVING A MARK
The decision to come to the University of New Mexico fit Ludivine Burguier’s plan of getting an education and competing in the sport she loves. The transition from her French roots to the Land of Enchantment has added to the diverse nature of the women’s tennis team. Read more on page (Page 6).
THIS WEEK’S MONDAY ON THE STREE QUESTION
What is the biggest takeaway from the Orlando shooting? (Page 5).
The fight for racial justice by local Native American advocacy groups remains unsealed as UNM held a public forum over the controversial symbol. The Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) held a forum to gather community input on whether the official UNM seal should be changed. It is also gathering suggestions for a possible new seal design. The Office is assembling a report to give the Board of Regents in September. Jozi De Leon, vice president of OEI, started by outlining the changes the official seal has already undergone, from an eagle design similar to the New Mexico seal to a heraldic design that first featured the conquistador and frontiersman. De Leon said there have been complaints about the seal’s limited representation since 1991, but the Board of Regents has a history of reluctance when it comes to changing the seal’s design. Tony Padilla delivered a letter that supports Kiva Club and the Red Nation’s eleven demands being met, which include abolishing the seal. The letter had the signatures of over forty people and four organizations including Young Women United, Strong Families of New Mexico and Families United for Education. Laura Harris, director of Americans for Indian
Opportunities, said her relationship with the University has always been a fight. “We had to fight for Native Studies to be a minor. We had to fight for Native Studies to be a major. We’re currently still fighting for a master’s,” she said. Harris brought with her a letter signed by twenty-one indigenous leaders also in support of changing the UNM seal. Rachel Levitt, a doctoral candidate in American studies and women’s studies, said Spanish conquistadors systematically murdered gay and transgender Native American people by throwing them to dogs and burning them. “The seal, and by extension the University, celebrates this history of violence against Native gay and transgender people when proudly celebrating a weaponized conquistador,” Levitt said. Levitt asked that the school completely change the seal. “Don’t merely add a Native to alibi the two exiting figures who have been agents of such profound violence,” Levitt said. Pat Rogers was the sole represented voice of support for the seal at the forum. “What that seal represents to me is, yes, the European people coming here and some of that was bad, but a lot of that was really really good,” he said. Although there were no new design proposals presented that excluded white men, Rogers said he felt “a lot of people are talking about being
inclusionary, but apparently what ‘inclusionary’ means is excluding white men.” Elmer Maestas, author of “New Mexico’s Stormy History: True Stories of Early Spanish Colonial Settlers and the Mestas/Maestas Families,” spoke in support of the Spanish. He said he favors a new design that includes a portrayal of the Spanish, citing contributions they made to farming and jewelry making, while also being more inclusive. Maestas asked that the audience focus on the future rather than the past. However, many of the Native students who spoke offered examples of the challenges they currently face. 2016 graduate Cheyenne Antonio discussed historic land losses for Native communities and the continued battle to reclaim land, as well as other cultural artifacts like pottery. “We are constantly looking at Maxwell Museum which has an entire collection of what our ancestors used to have. You won’t acknowledge our history but you will there,” Antonio said. “We’re already dead to UNM. All of our brothers and sisters are buried in the archive.” Hope Alvarado said historical trauma still affects Native communities and discussed her own family’s experience with the Navajo, Hopi relocation. “When I think of my greatgrandma, when I have to look into her eyes, when I am tak-
ing care of her because she lost her land, because we were forced to move from our land, when 13 kids were made homeless, I can’t bare it,” she said. Alvarado said she is the only member of her family who has been able to go to college, but she said, “When I look at this institution I tell them not to come, because this institution is dehumanizing.” Kiva Club President Demetrius Johnson has heard many comments on thinking about the past and moving forward. “How can we move forward, how can we heal, when the knife is still in our back?” he asked. Nick Estes, a doctoral student in American studies, said he believes it’s indicative of UNM administration’s stance that they’re just now having dialogues, such as this forum. “These forums are profoundly painful as those allowed to speak in favor of the seal say dehumanizing things that at least dismiss violence against Natives, but at worst justify it as benevolent,” Estes said. “Rather than asking for community input on if the seal is racist, this should be treated as a matter of federal law; it creates a hostile educational and working environment.” The next seal forum will be held on July 12 from 12 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. It will be a forum to gather staff input, but everyone is welcome to come and voice their input.
The controversy at a glance
The campaign to abolish UNM’s official seal has been an ongoing one since the spring semester. Here are some of the biggest developments in the controversy. Other coverage and in-depth reporting can be found on the Daily Lobo’s website. March 17th Facebook group seeking to abolish the official UNM seal is created.
April 29th Seal opponents present UNM administration with a list of demands regarding the seal and UNM relationship with Native Americans.
May 2nd UNM president Bob Frank discusses the history of the seal on Twitter, inviting suggestions for possible changes.
LOBO PAGE TWO
June 20-26, 2016
UNM mourns Orlando shooting victims
James Coulter / Daily Lobo / @James_C_Coulter
Vigil attendees light candles on Thursday night at the UNM Duck Pond. The vigil was held in memory of those who lost their lives during Sunday’s shooting in Orlando, Florida.
By Jon Natvig @Natvig99 Students gathered at the UNM Duck Pond on Thursday night to support Orlando with love and candlelight following the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history. Rainbow flags adorned the west end of Zimmerman Library, luminarias were placed around the Duck Pond and pictures of all 49 victims were displayed by audience members, as the slogan “We Stand Together” united LGBTQ community members and supporters. UNM students were eager to stand in solidarity with Orlando, as they joined grieving communities around the country affected by the largest mass shooting in our nation’s history. Albuquerque held its own vigil last Sunday night, the same day as the shooting.
The vigil was hosted by the UNM LGBTQ Resource Center, a studentfounded organization dedicated to caring for UNM’s LGBTQ community. Alma Rosa Silva-Bañuelos, director of the LGBTQ Resource Center, welcomed the UNM community by acknowledging the importance of community and emotional support for both victims and UNM students in mourning. “Look around,” Silva-Bañuelos said. “This is your family and community. We were dancing in bars that night too. Our bars are not just bars. These bars are our home, our safety, a place where we can find love.” Silva-Bañuelos said the LGBTQ Resource Center is dedicated to all UNM students to help them cope with any emotion. Silva-Bañuelos finished by telling supporters, “It is up to us to respond. Change is coming.” UNM officials, students and
members of the Red Nation pledged their support to Orlando and the UNM student body. Josephine “Jozi” De Leon, vice president of UNM’s Division for Equity and Inclusion, advised UNM students that it is time for change and this event “has to have a profound impact.” De Leon said that phobia divides the populace, and inclusion is critical to the LGBTQ movement. “It is upsetting to see our brothers and sisters in pain. But we can certainly reach out to our brothers and sisters. And we stand with our LGBTQ community,” De Leon said. UNM officials including Associate Provost for Faculty Development Virginia Scharff; Vice President for Student Affairs Eliseo Torres; Executive Vice Chancellor of UNM Hospitals Richard Larson; Dean of Students Natasha Torrez and UNM President Robert Frank showed support for Orlando and the
community with details on how UNM students and faculty can help aid Orlando families and victims. Scharff said the attack in Orlando was an attack on Latino, LGBTQ and Muslim communities. Scharff told vigil participants that UNM should strive for inclusivity for all groups. Scharff reflected on a bracelet she started wearing a week before the event in Florida that displayed the words “All Means All” and told participants that those words should be sacred to all. Torres and Torrez focused on using Orlando to direct concerns about gun laws and minority marginalization. UNM students were encouraged to reach out to each other, love one another and use the crime in Orlando as a call to action. “We can write to legislators, use social media and let everyone know we do not stand for violence and open gun laws. We offer our
condolences to the beautiful people. Let’s show the rest of the world we can be inclusive,” said Torrez. Larson appealed to the UNM community on America’s ideals, saying that it was founded on tolerance and freedom of expression and events in Orlando reminded us how important those rights are. “These actions remind us that there is a difference between good and evil,” Larson said, “We can come together to prevent further acts of violence.” At the end of the vigil, audience members holding large images of each victim read the victims’ names as audience members recited “present” after each name was read. The images illuminated by candlelight were then walked through the crowd to the edge of the Duck Pond for a moment of silence and reflection.
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New Mexico Daily Lobo
june 20-26, 2016 / Page 3
Duo takes EDM to its technical limits By Audrin Baghaie @DailyLobo It seems serendipitous for musicians Brad Smith and Tristin Sullivan to randomly meet on a bus in 2013, initially bonding over artists and a mutual interest in the GarageBand mobile app. Just a few collaborations later, the duo became Akelli & Orion, an electronic music collective focused on both energized hooks and chillwave beats that cater to most audiences with ease. Smith (Akelli) and Sullivan (Orion) quickly became colleagues thereafter. It was during the 2014 SunCity music festival in El Paso that the duo when was motivated to delve deeper into EDM production and experiment with more diverse sounds. “That’s what got me really inspired to make more music,” Sullivan said. “Because I was making music at the time, but I didn’t really know the scale of what you could do with EDM. Even back then, you didn’t really know what’s going on until you see it live. It was the real deal.” The first release for the duo was a remix of the Flo Rida song “Goin’ Down For Real” featuring rapper Sage the Gemini. The song exemplified the duo’s competence in EDM production by hitting listeners with a powerful synthlaced chorus over heavy drums, in turn considerably boosting their online presence. “Sunset Shades” was released not long after, an original upbeat EDM tune that established the group as more than just remix artists. The instrumental track invokes an urgent, bouncy feeling paired with an infectious synthesizer, and is now one of many original compositions by the group. Akelli & Orion are notable in using advanced production
techniques to get the sound they want. The group is comfortable with the technical side of their music, frequently using sidechains and automation to paint a picture onto their speakers. “It gets to the point where it’s all just preference. Like if you paint, you need to learn to do so with every brush, every color and every angle. It’s the same when it comes to mixing and mastering,” Sullivan said. “When you’re comfortable with the tool set, there’s 40 million ways to do the same thing. It’s based on what the artist wants and I like having try out all 40 million options.” Moreover, both Akelli & Orion specialize in particular parts of songwriting. Smith began as a DJ and would frequently spin live during high school while Sullivan started as a producer, honing in on certain sounds with virtual instruments to meticulously create in the workplace. The group has since grown in that respect, teaching one another what they do best, and synthesizing those talents as a team. Most recently the band played at UNM Fiestas in April. Their 50 minute set broke through the cold rain and wind that marauded over the concert-goers, who relentlessly danced and jumped alongside the duo through the abrasive weather. As for the future of the band, the group is set on releasing an EP later this year. “It should be around five songs, maybe more potentially if we can find the right collaborations,” Smith said. “We have some other singers and producers in mind to work with. It has a nice mix of tropical house, chill wave and EDM.” Check out Akelli & Orion online at https://soundcloud.com/ akelliandorion.
HAPS
Courtesy:Sam Katz / Daily Lobo / @DailyLobo
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LOBO OPINION
4
The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895
June 20-26, 2016
Opinion Editor / opinion@dailylobo.com
LETTERS Americans are capable of changing gun violence Editor, The gun violence of June, 2016 is unforgivable. These events are the latest in a string of near unfathomable grotesqueness. Children in Sandy Hook, theater patrons in Aurora, church goers in Charlotte and so, so many more. They share a common denominator of the worst humanity can offer. These events are unthinkably cruel and inescapably brutal. But we must fathom them; we must accept reality. This is not an admission of fear or defeat. Let our reactions as a city, as a state and as a nation be worthy of a people who claim to be free. I am an American citizen. I ask you, my representation, to do something. No one person or party has the answer. But we must do better; we must do more. Gun violence does not discriminate. Its victims cross the lines of human identity. We cannot cower. We will not hide. America is a democratically elected, representative republic. Mob rule does not hold the ultimate say, even in desperately painful times. You hold the power. You hold the ability to direct our people towards a greater good. I don’t know what the answer is. I admit that. What to do? Perhaps we can begin with federal funding to outfit every gathering space with metal detectors and other preventative security measures that do not infringe on current law. Perhaps we can revisit the second amendment with a common sense, twenty-first century approach. It seems to me that we have a well-regulated militia in the armed forces of the United States. America holds the most powerful military might known in the history of
Professor, foreign student relationships need laws Editor, The shocking killing of UCLA professor William Klug by his former graduate student in engineering, one Mainak Sircar who was from India, begs examination of exploitation of foreign students by American professors, because in this case Sircar reportedly bore a grudge against this former professor, having claimed earlier that Klug had “cleverly” stolen his code. Yes, UCLA like many schools requires intellectual property (such
the planet. Surely acknowledging the power, dedication and service of our military personnel and their families is a place to start in that important discussion. The supremacy of the American Armed Forces is not to be discounted. Perhaps we can strengthen and increase mental health facilities and funding across our great nation. I’m not a lawyer or a politician. But surely there are enough out there who hold the common peace in higher regard than party lines and tired rhetoric. I don’t care about political divides. I don’t care about superficial demarcations. I’m asking you to just start somewhere. If these suggestions are not viable, then start somewhere else. You claim to lead. You asked for and received your positions of power. Use that command to start working on the betterment of our people and our land in this specific regard of gun violence. I am an American citizen, and I put forth this petition: We are America. We have the money, the energy and the people ready and willing to serve. Give law enforcement the resources it needs. Don’t tell me we don’t have the funds – we are the most powerful economy on Earth. Don’t tell me we lack the energy – apathy is not an American value. Don’t tell we don’t have the personnel – we are hundreds of millions strong. America has exceeded its potential time and again. We have the time-tested experience of age and the glorious and optimistic hope of youth. A good idea is a good idea. No matter where it comes from, take it. You are hereby petitioned: Act. Act now. Keelan O’Riley College of Arts & Sciences, Department of Psychology as uniquely brilliant code) to be signed over to the university for subsequent licensing possibility, if it is developed at the university. But an American professor possesses extraordinary power over the future career of foreign students from a third world country. So how many professors exploit the typical naiveté of such a foreigner and take credit for what is really the student’s original work, in publication? Later the professor may just go ahead and use the research data acquired by the student to verify the goodness of fit to the student’s own mathematical model; the question here is whether this is
The U.S. Empire is the world’s worst terrorist Editor, I compliment Muhammad Ali for refusing to be a U.S. soldier. I highly compliment him for refusing to go murder people Vietnam. If anyone could have told Muhammad Ali, as a strong, confident young boxer, that he would later suffer for 32 years because of blows to his head — able only to move and speak slowly, how would he have it? Sadly millions cheered as he and other men, often
black men, bloodied and injured each other for fame and fortune. I condemn all boxing for adults or kids, for men or women. Repeated blows to the head can damage the brain permanently — even if the person is not knocked out. A dear friend here, a new dad, was “punch drunk” from boxing. He told me he did not want his children to be boxers. Did anyone at the recent Kirtland Air Show think of the terror thousands of parents in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan felt as they saw these U.S. war planes fly over knowing that soon their families might be massacred?
Did anyone at the air show of war planes think how man grieving survivors abroad fear and hate this government for its massive atrocities? As Martin Luther King Jr. said decades ago, “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today is my own government.” The U.S. Empire is the world’s worst terrorist gang! Concerning the May 24 Trump event here, I am glad, very glad, I participated in the early evening protest against Trump. I condemn the violence and riot late that evening. Don Schrader Daily Lobo reader
ethical, because pure data could at some level be considered intellectual property, however elemental. And the student who not only benefits by but absolutely needs a good recommendation from the professor typically just accepts this quietly, a huge reason being this third world student may be the best and brightest in the world, but they want to stay on in America and this is the only way to get that green card. All this time, the foreign student not being an American may not know and definitely may not get apprised by the university, including said professor who is their advisor and/or the head of the correspond-
ing group, about royalty sharing, should a student’s invention be commercialized by the university. On top of this all is the sad fact that the culture in places like India (where Sircar got his first degree, in a top engineering school) is such that you do not argue such matters with your professor or do something about it. You are supposed to show your professor respect and obedience. So Sircar could have applied that mentality here in America and repressed for as long as he did any desire to complain about the possible “stealing” of code, and then he lost it. It is therefore imperative that
a non-fuzzy and uniform standard be applied in America, clarifying the transnational legalities of the working relationship between American professors and foreign students, in which grievances about the student not getting credit and even intellectual property rights and corresponding patents can be uploaded by the student even if they are a foreigner, without fear of retaliation, so that grudges do not build up to where such a tragedy happens. Arun Ahuja UNM student
PhD
Volume 120 Issue 70 Editor-in-Chief David Lynch Managing Editor Sayyed Shah News Editor Matthew Reisen
EDITORIAL BOARD David Lynch Editor-in-chief
Sayyed Shah
Matthew Reisen
Managing editor
News editor
LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo office in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.
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The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published on Monday and Thursday except 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.
New Mexico Daily Lobo
On the Street
@DailyLobo
june 20-26, 2016 / Page 5
By David Lynch / @RealDavidLynch
What is the biggest takeaway from the Orlando shooting?
Ben John graduate student classics “What we can take away is that we need to live in the moment, we should learn to love and appreciate each other in a more meaningful way.”
Becky Montano
Kristina Gallegos
Gwydion Brown
graduate student accounting
sophomore business
“One thing we can take away from the Orlando incident is change. Change is something that needs to be achieved but no one knows how to do it. They are saying more gun control and then they are saying that won’t do anything. I think people coming together and just figuring out how to do that change.”
“No matter what we do or what we think we can do, no place is ever truly safe. We have to raise our children to always be aware of our surrounding anywhere at anytime.”
graduate student family studies “I would say that this is what happens when a collective group of people come together in hatred and it breeds this kind of response, and we can’t be surprised by that. What we need to do is unify and come together as a group and stop hating each other. We created this problem and we need to fix it.”
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PAGE 6 / JUNE 20-26, 2016
NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO
TENNIS
From France to NM: Burguiere leaves mark at UNM
Di-Linh Hoang / Daily Lobo / @DailyLobo
Junior Ludivine Burguiere sends the ball back during a match April 24, 2016 at the McKinnon Family Tennis Stadium.
By Robert Maler @robert_maler The New Mexico women’s tennis team has an international flair, featuring players from four countries outside of the United States. One player from France had a particularly interesting journey on her way to New Mexico. Ludivine Burguiere might stand out to some, when compared to the average tennis player. She frequently wears a headband to pull her hair back when she plays, but always has on a pair of compression calf sleeves to complement a bright pair of tennis shoes. Though just part of the uniform, that careful planning and meticulous attention to detail are also some of the outstanding tennis qualities she possesses. However, it might also be something she focuses on off the court as well. Head coach Kelcy McKenna said Burguiere has a strong sense of fashion. She said when the team was about to travel earlier in the season, everyone wanted “Ludi” to come to the closet and pick out
their outfit. “I would say that Ludi is one of... if not the most fashionable athletes I’ve ever been around,” McKenna said. “Her sister is actually a fashion designer.” In addition to her sense of style, teammate Andrea Leblanc said Burguiere is a really good cook. Burguiere said she frequently cooks for the team, specializing in preparing crabs and crème brûlèe. “Yeah, she’s super fancy in the kitchen,” Leblanc said. Leblanc, a fellow transfer from Morehead State University, became roommates with Burguiere when the duo came to New Mexico. Burguiere said they were able to help each other adjust since they were going through the same situation, but she said everyone on the team was very welcoming. “We were new, but nobody ever made us feel that way,” Burguiere said. Leblanc said cooking and eating is one of many things the team does together. Burguiere said everyone gets along really well on and off the tennis court and both the men’s and women’s tennis team often
hang out together, which she said makes it feel like a family. She said they are more than just teammates and that the positive atmosphere took shape right away. It is something that may have been missing before transferring to UNM in the fall of 2015. Burguiere said she began playing tennis as a 4-year-old girl, becoming really good by the age of 12. She said if she stayed in France, she would’ve had to choose between school and tennis — a choice she wasn’t ready to make. She began her college career at Virginia Commonwealth. Burguiere said she thought it was a good business school, which was her original major. She said it was a great experience, but eventually she needed a change. Burguiere said it felt like there were two distinct cliques on the VCU tennis team, resulting in an environment with no persistent team spirit. Eventually she reached out to her agency and requested to transfer. She said she spoke with Erika Perkins Jasper, the UNM head coach at the time with whom Burquiere said she had great
beginning conversations. said both she and McKenna really listened and wanted to understand her situation. “Ludi was an interesting one because she worked with an agency,” McKenna said. “We got to meet Ludi at the French Open. To have the opportunity to meet her on an international trip was interesting.” Burguiere, a native of Marseille, France, met with the entire team at Roland-Garros, and McKenna said she started forging relationships with the women right away, which likely helped her decision to transfer to UNM. Burguiere said she really enjoys New Mexico. She said although she is an avid skier, she has never done so here, partly because of the possibility of injury. “I really like the culture, it’s really different,” she said. “It was amazing to discover something else.” Although Burguiere said she’s enjoyed her time in the United States, she plans to return to France to pursue a master’s degree in sports management when her collegiate career is over. Burguiere helped the wom-
en’s team fight all the way to the Mountain West Conference semifinals this spring before falling to UNLV 4-3.
“We were new, but nobody ever made us feel that way” Ludivine Burguiere UNM Tennis Player She received Mountain West Player of the Week honors and was named one of the top 10 French players in college tennis by the Universal Tennis Rating system. Burguiere has become one of the vocal leaders on the team and McKenna said they rely on her to lead by example. Things look bright next season as Burguiere returns for her final year of eligibility. Robert Maler is a sports reporter for the Daily Lobo. He primarily covers cross country, tennis, and track and field.
Lobo LifeMonday-Sunday, campusJune calendar of events 20-June 26, 2016 Current Exhibits Open Stories: Finding Art in All the Right Spaces 9:00am-5:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Open Space Visitor Center Mixed media artist Chris Meyer has explored many of our local Open Spaces, seeking out these stories to bring to life in his art with a unique blend of photography, collage, and digital darkroom techniques. Color Coded 9:00am-5:00pm Tamarind Insititute Featuring lithographs by David X. Levine, Matt Magee, Susan York and other artists who have
experimented with Tamarind’s workshop.
color
in
Evidence and Theory: Photographs from the Archive 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology This exhibit questions the fundamental interpretation of photographic imagery and the relationship between seeing and knowing truth. The exhibition explores this duality through a collection of historical images from the Maxwell Archive, many on display for the first time. Chinese Americans in New Mexico 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology
The exhibition recounts the story of Chinese immigrants and Chinese American communities in New Mexico through photographs, documents and family heirlooms. Earth, Fire and Life: Six Thousand Years of Chinese Ceramics 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology Exhibition of historic and contemporary Chinese ceramics from ancient times to the 21st century, where culture, political discourse and aesthetics combine. FABRICation 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday UNM Art Museum Features seven artists (Erin
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Castellan, Kristy Deetz, Virginia Derryberry, Reni Gower, Rachel Hayes, Susan Iverson, and Natalie Smith) who incorporate a textile sensibility in their artwork through elements of fabric and fabrication. Electricity Can Kill You 10:00am-4:00pm, Wednesdays & Fridays CFA Downtown Studio, 113 4th St NW 87102 An exhibition of electronically generated art at the College of Fine Arts Downtown Gallery (CFAD). Presents work of Faculty and graduate MFA students. Queering The Lens - Looking At The World
12:00-5:00pm, Thursdays & Fridays The Sanitary Tortilla Factory, 401 2nd St. SW 87102 An exhibition of photographic based works that stretch the dominant norms of the contemporary categories of photography. It features a collection of queer photographers and/or queer subject matters that expand the ideas of identity, politics and image making. Queering the Lens is not about specific sexual identities, but rather it is about the act of looking at the world itself.
Campus Calendar continued on pg 7
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@DailyLobo
New Mexico Daily Lobo
The ways to use your #1 UNM news source! chess
june 20-26, 2016 / Page 7
Scan QR Code to download FREE APP
FOR RELEASE Lobo JUNE 18, 2016
bo @DailyLobo /Daily DailyLo @ Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
crossword
Just Passing By (Level 1)
ACROSS 1 Alaska’s Alaskan Malamute, for one Just Passing By (Level 1) 9 Have rounds all White to move and mate in 1 around 15 Locks By Eddie Wyckoff maintenance Solution to last week’s puzzle: The problem 16 Tennyson’s “lily maid of Astolat” White move and(should mate inhave 1 stated: description wasto incorrect 17 Volcanic glass find White’s best move), as Black can get out 18 Omitted from a Solution to last week’s puzzle: The problem speech? of immediate material loss! Still, the solution description was incorrect (should have stated: 19 Calms is 1.Nd5!, winning a piece in all lines but the 20 Spells out find White’s best move), as Black can get out of 22 __ United: miraculous 1. … Kd8!!, where 2.Qxg4 (2.Nxf6 English soccer immediate material loss!favorable) Still, the solution Qh4+ and 3. … Qxf6 is less 2. … is team 1.Nd5!, a piece in all lines the 23 Serious order Nxg4 3.h3 Nh6 winning 4.fxe5 dxe5 5.Bg5+ Kc8 but 6.Bf6 shortage? miraculous 1. … Kd8!!, whereadvantage, 2.Qxg4 (2.Nxf6 24 Ideal: Rg8 7.O-O-O! will provide a decisive Abbr. and 3.less … Qxf6 is lessone. favorable) 26 Where Andorra though Qh4+ a much obvious This 2. is … is Nxg4 3.h3ofNh6 dxe5in5.Bg5+ Kc8 6.Bf6 28 __-American commemorative the4.fxe5 richness Korchnoi’s provide a decisive advantage,29 Picketing games, Rg8 may 7.O-O-O! he rest in will peace. displays though a much less obvious one. This is 33 Iranian city Suggestions? Comments? commemorative of the richness in Korchnoi’s known for its lobochesspuzzle@gmail.com carpets games, may he rest in peace. 35 Rest 36 Where Andorra is Suggestions? Comments? lobochesspuzzle@gmail.com 37 Ascribe (to) 38 Few are chosen 40 Hamlet June 13th issue puzzle solved 41 “Moulin Rouge” (1952) co-star, familiarly 43 Storm dir. 44 __-wip 45 Underhanded undertaking 50 Bonus 52 Southwestern native 53 Hyphenated frozen food brand 54 Ear-piercing 56 Analgesic rub 57 Gave the business 58 Auto options 59 Blows
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5 One barely working? 6 Place of honor 7 __ pro nobis 8 Pair in many languages 9 Britain’s Yeoman Warders, familiarly 10 “Hyperbole and a Half” blogger Brosh 11 __ check 12 Avoids being seen by 13 Private sign? 14 __ XING 21 “The Good Wife” crisis manager Gold 23 Rx 25 Drops off 27 Some house-togarage links 28 Yellow Pokémon species that ultimately evolves to Alakazam 29 Roaring group 30 What “love is like,” in a 1960s hit
06/20/16 6/18/16 June 13th Puzzle issue puzzle Friday’s Solvedsolved
06/13/16 6/18/16
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
31 Take in 32 No small feat 34 Bare 38 Bad news metaphor 39 Eponymous weapon 42 Star Wars, initially 44 Godzilla ally, at times 46 Prefix with tropic
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Lobo Life campus calendar of events Monday-Sunday, June 20-June 26, 2016
Campus Calendar continued from pg 6
Monday Campus Events Coffee & Tea Time 9:30-11:30am LGBTQ Resource Center
Sports & Recreation EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 1:00-3:00pm SUB Atrium Russia vs Wales EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 1:00-3:00pm SUB Atrium Slovania vs England
Lectures & Readings Dissertation Defense 10:00am-1:00pm Mesa Vista Hall 3080 Geneva Bencenti, Education, defends “Indigenous Language Educators Experiences: Addressing Issues on the New Mexico Indian Education Act of 2003 and Strengthening New Mexico Indigenous Language Programs in Public Schools.” Thesis/Dissertation Manuscript Formatting Workshop 10:00am-12:00pm SUB Lobo A&B For graduate students who are interested in information that will help them understand the basic procedure to format their manuscript and meet the final
degree requirement to submit electronically a thesis or dissertation to the LoboVault repository. Dissertation Defense 3:00-6:00pm Humanities 134 Benjamin Anible, Linguistics, defends “Iconicity effects in translation direction: bimodal bilingual language processing.”
tuesday Campus Events
Coffee & Tea Time 9:30-11:30am LGBTQ Resource Center
Meetings Staff Council Business Meeting 1:00-3:00pm SUB Lobo A&B
Meetings Nuclear Disarmament Teach-In 8:00am-12:00pm SUB Lobo A&B
Theatre & Film Disney’s Newsies 7:30-10:00pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
wednesday Campus Events Meditation 9:00-10:00am WRC Group Room Coffee & Tea Time 9:30-11:30am LGBTQ Resource Center Peace Circle 5:30-6:00pm Front of UNM Bookstore Silent prayer circle for peace.
Meetings Alcoholics Anonymous 12:00-1:00pm WRC Group Room
Sports & Recreation EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 10:00am-12:00pm SUB Atrium Iceland vs Austria EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 10:00am-12:00pm SUB Atrium Hungary vs Portugal
Nikolas Anton Tezak, Stanford University, presents “Scalable Techniques for Quantum Network Engineering.”
Student Groups & Gov’t Topics in Cancer Research Journal Club 10:30am-1:30pm CRF 104 Signal Transduction and Trafficking Journal Club 12:00-1:00pm CRF 204 Out Womyn Meeting 1:00-2:00pm LGBTQ Resource Center
Theatre & Film Disney’s Newsies 7:30-10:00pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 1:00-3:00pm SUB Atrium Italy vs Republic of Ireland
thursday
EUFA Euro 2016 Watch Party 1:00-3:00pm SUB Atrium Sweden vs Belgium
Campus Events
Lectures & Readings CQuIC Seminar Series 3:00-5:00pm Physics & Astronomy, Room 1131
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Coffee & Tea Time 9:30-11:30am LGBTQ Resource Center Food Not Bombs! Free Lunch 12:00-1:00pm Front of UNM Main Bookstore Everyone welcome.
Meetings Native American Fellowship Meeting 3:00-4:30pm SUB Amigo
Christian
Narcotics Anonymous 5:00-6:00pm WRC Group Room
Sports & Recreation Jitterbugs Anonymous! 8:30-10:40pm Johnson Gym’s Large Dance Room Learn how to swing dance.
Student Groups & Gov’t Genomics Journal Club 9:00-10:00am CTRC 240 Immunology Journal Club 9:30-10:30am Fitz Hall 389 Lobo Toastmasters Meeting 11:45am-1:15pm SUB Mirage/Thunderbird Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Journal Club 12:00-1:00pm BRF 218 Black Student Union Meeting 3:45-4:45pm African American Student Services Cardiovascular Physiology Journal Club 4:00-5:00pm Fitz Hall 205 Students for Life Meeting 6:30-8:00pm SUB Thunderbird/Mirage
Campus Calendar continued on pg 8
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PAGE 8 / JUNE 20-26, 2016
NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO
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Your Space Hey lobos! Did you know you can receive free advertisements (25 words or less) in this category? Email classfieds@dailylobo.com from your UNM email account or call 505‑277‑5656 for more details!
Apartments aParTmenT HunTing?
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Free unm Parking. Large, clean 1BDRM. No pets. $525/mo. +electricity. 4125 Lead SE. 850‑9749.
dry facility, close to UNM and CNM. $500/mo. +utilities +$300dd. 2306 Garfield SE 87106. Contact 505‑255‑ 7129. cnm sTudios, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, real estate con‑ sultant: www.corneliusmgmt.com 243‑2229.
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2bdrm 1ba near UNM/ UNMH. New W/D and dishwasher, garbage dis‑ posal, FP, energy efficient windows, refrigerated air. $775/mo. +gas and electric +dd. Cats okay. Available now. 621 Monroe NE. 550‑1579. sTudios w/ Free utilities. Move‑in spe‑ cial. 1 block UNM. 1515 Copper NE. $465‑ 485/mo. 246‑2038. www.kachina‑properties.com
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advanced math tutor‑ former School Instructor‑ 505‑448‑9321.
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Fully FurnisHed Home to share. NE Heights, near parks. Carlisle and Co‑ manche. NS, female only. W/D. Appli‑ cation and 3 month lease. $420/mo. +dd. Call 805‑698‑5817. Fully FurnisHed near north campus.
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Computer Stuff comPuTer TransFormers. com‑ PuTer repair Mac or PC. $45 one time
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Vehicles For Sale 1990 mazda 626. Power everything ex‑ cept steering. Good on gas. Clean in‑ side and out. Clean title. Economical. $1650. CC payments accepted. Contact 505‑712‑6110 or fredtrujillo8@yahoo.com 2002 cadillac srs. Power every‑
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Hey lobos! Did you know you can receive free advertisements (25 words or less) in this category? Email classfieds@dailylobo.com from your UNM email account or call 505‑277‑5656 for more details!
place looking for someone who enjoys working with kids and believes that play is an important part of childhood development. Positions available early morning and afternoons. Apply online at www.childrens‑choice.org
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Jobs Off Campus be a driver for Kona Ice! Join the
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Lobo Life campus calendar of events Monday-Sunday, June 20-June 26, 2016
Campus Calendar continued from pg 7 Sprechtisch Meeting 7:30-10:00pm Joe’s 108 Vassar Dr SE Practice speaking German.
Lectures & Readings Dissertation Defense 9:30am-12:30pm Northrop Hall 116 Keven Hobbs, Earth and Planetary Sciences, defends “Sedimentation, Pedogenesis, And Paleoclimate Conditions In The Paleocene San Juan Basin, New Mexico, U.S.A.”
Theatre & Film Disney’s Newsies 7:30-10:00pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
friday
Campus Events Coffee & Tea Time 9:30-11:30am LGBTQ Resource Center
Student Groups & Gov’t Nueroscience Journal Club 9:00-10:00am Fitz Hall 243 Student Special Events Meeting 12:00-1:00pm SUB 1064 Lobo Spirit Meeting 3:00-4:00pm SUB 1062 Open to all!
Lectures & Readings Portfolio Defense 9:30-11:00am Humanities 231 Christopher Ryan defends. MA students in Language and Literature must complete a portfolio and defense as the equivalent of the Master’s Examination. Dissertation Defense 1:00-4:00pm Physics and Astronomy 190 Paul T. Greninger, Physics and Astronomy, defends “Seasonality of VLF Attenuation Through the Ionosphere.” Dissertation Defense 9:30-12:30 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Conference Room Lisa Sanchez, Political Science, defends “Latino Ideology,
Congressional Racial Threat: Influence of Congressional
Polarization, and An Analysis of the Latino Voters on Politics.”
Theatre & Film Disney’s Newsies 8:00-10:30pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
Art & Music Alumni Chapter Social: Summer Nights Zoo Music 6:00-9:00pm Albuquerque Zoo Summer Nights Zoo Music with Ryan McGarvey. Listen to the “Next King of the Blues” at the Albuquerque Zoo. Tickets: $3-$10.
saturday
the former NMSU Aggie greats. Tickets are $14-$29 with club level seating at $35.
Theatre & Film
most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
Disney’s Newsies 2:00-4:30pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
Disney’s Newsies 6:30-9:00pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
Disney’s Newsies 8:00-10:30pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the most powerful men in New York in a high-energy explosion of song and dance. Top Critics’ pick (New York Magazine, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly). Tickets $37.50-60.
Want an Event in Lobo Life?
sunday
Sports & Recreation
Theatre & Film
The Battle of the Rio Grande: Lobos vs Aggies Alumni Basketball Game 7:00-10:00pm The Pit aka Wisepies Arena The former UNM Lobos greats play
Disney’s Newsies 1:00-3:30pm Popejoy Hall True story about a band of underdogs who stand up to the
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1. Go to www.dailylobo.com 2. Click on the “Events” link near the top of the page. 3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page 4. Type in the event information and submit! * Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organization or department * Classes, class schedules, personal events or solicitations are not eligible. * Events must be of interest to the campus community. * Events must not require pre-registration.
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