new mexico daily lobo 040810

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Inside the Daily Lobo I can’t contain my garden! “Every day is a miracle.” The Daily Lobo See page 6 volume 114 issue 131 Today’s weather 69° / 38° D AILY L OBO new mexico The almighty wheel see page 2 April 8, 2010 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 thursday by Shaun Griswold Daily Lobo After Arnold Woods, a homeless man, was found sleeping in Pope- joy Hall, his mother, Mary, asked the Albuquerque community for help finding her son. She filed a classified ad in the Daily Lobo and went on Channel 4 news with her plea for help. She hadn’t spoken with her son in two years. She said he’s now staying with family friends. After she filed the classified ad, Mary said a friend rec- ognized Arnold on campus and took him to his/her home. “ey feel they can work with him slowly and hopefully that he will accept their help,” Mary said. “ey have taken him fishing, on a hike in the Sandias and are doing their best to put him on the right track.” Mary still has not talked with her son. Instead, she is corresponding through e-mail with the people he is staying with to ensure her son’s safety, she said. “I love him very much and I am anxious to see him,” she said. e latest on-campus incident occurred March 26 when a UNMPD officer arrested a man near the An- thropology Building for suspicious behavior. According to the police report, UNMPD officer P. Klaurens recognized the man, because he had “a couple of news stories … detailing family members being concerned.” Mary said her son was, in fact, ar- rested on March 26. Police responded to a radio call from UNM security about a suspi- cious person riding a bicycle back and forth in front of the Anthropolo- by Leah Valencia Daily Lobo ASUNM Candidates had their fi- nal chance to speak out Tuesday by answering questions from students and student organizations. ASUNM Election Commission Director Brian Moore said the com- mission hosted the event — which about 40 people attended — to give students a chance to decide which candidates will best represent them in ASUNM. “Any student can ask a question directly to any of the candidates,” he said. “We get all the candidates in one place so that students can ask them directly what they really stand for.” e candidates from both the Full Circle and Wolfpack slates dis- cussed the issues that were of high- est priority to them, such as sustain- ability, containing student costs, communication and campus safety. Student Senate candidate Alon- zo Castillo, who is running with the Wolfpack slate, said he wants to implement more sustainability on campus starting with the Student Union Building. “is is our building,” he said. “If we start here and show the admin- istration what we want, it is a great way to get the whole campus that way.” David Conway, ASUNM presi- dential candidate, said his sustain- ability plan would include revamp- ing the campus recycling program. “We need more bins and we need them to be advertised better,” he said. “Make it so students want to keep using it.” Conway said this would also mean staffing new programs to keep them efficient. “We need to put our money where our mouth is and help out the University as far as staffing these new programs,” he said. Full Circle slate presidential can- didate Lazaro “Laz” Cardenas said his priorities included beefing up campus security by implementing student-run safety services. “UNM is a safe campus,” he said. “But we want to bring the commu- nity together to keep it safe.” Cardenas also said he planned to address the $10 printing allow- ance for students and explore other options. “Right now we are taking a sur- vey and it is 50-50 whether students want the printing cap or not,” he said. Other candidates at the forum emphasized the importance of keeping down tuition and student fees. “We need to keep student costs as low as possible,” said Wolfpack Senate candidate Kelly Williamson. “And definitely not increase pay for administrators.” Among the biggest priorities for both slates was developing more student participation. Full Circle Senate candidate Nick Ramos said keeping students active is part of the by Pat Lohmann Daily Lobo If you’ve ever considered mak- ing a short jaunt to Iran for summer break, Diego Mathieu has a story that’ll change your mind. Mathieu, a Belgian, was hitch- hiking through Iran’s Great Salt Des- ert in September 2009 when Iranian officials arrested him and charged him with espionage. He said he then spent the next three months in an Iranian prison awaiting trial — enduring solitary confinement and psychological torture. Mathieu’s goal was to hitchhike around the world. He even set up a blog about it. After arriving in Iran, Mathieu happened upon two other Belgians and planned to meet up with them a few days later. Shortly after, the two other men were arrested after being caught in a restricted area. Mathieu said the men were charged with spying. And, when Mathieu tried repeat- edly to contact his fellow country- men for the rendezvous, Iranian police tracked his phone calls and jailed him indefinitely for spying just before he made it out of the country. He said Iranian officials told him he was charged with espionage and accused of taking photos of restrict- ed areas and plotting coordinates with a GPS. For hours, Mathieu said, Iranian officials interrogated him. “ey asked me billions of ques- tions,” he said. He said he then spent a week in solitary confinement in a jail in Mashhad, Iran before being taken to Section 209 of the Evin Prison in northwestern Tehran, Iran’s capital. en he said he spent the next Popejoy homeless man update ASUNM candidates stress sustainability, safety Former Iranian prison detainee visits Burque Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo Chunks of asphalt pile up in the parking lot of The Pit on Wednesday. The stadium is now officially closed and is scheduled to reopen in time for the next basketball season, according to Athletics spokesman Greg Remington. see Mathieu page 3 see ASUNM page 5 see Woods page 5 To help the American hikers in Iranian prison: FreeeHikers.org Pitiful Early ASUNM voting: Begins today Regular Elections April 14

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Page 1: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Inside theDaily Lobo

I can’t contain my

garden! “Every day is a miracle.”The Daily Lobo

See page 6volume 114 issue 131

Today’s weather

69° / 38°

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

The almighty wheelsee page 2

April 8, 2010 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895thursday

by Shaun GriswoldDaily Lobo

After Arnold Woods, a homeless man, was found sleeping in Pope-joy Hall, his mother, Mary, asked the Albuquerque community for help � nding her son.

She � led a classi� ed ad in the Daily Lobo and went on Channel 4 news with her plea for help. She hadn’t spoken with her son in two years.

She said he’s now staying with family friends. After she � led the classi� ed ad, Mary said a friend rec-ognized Arnold on campus and took him to his/her home.

“� ey feel they can work with him slowly and hopefully that he will accept their help,” Mary said. “� ey have taken him � shing, on a hike in the Sandias and are doing their best to put him on the right track.”

Mary still has not talked with her son. Instead, she is corresponding through e-mail with the people he is staying with to ensure her son’s safety, she said.

“I love him very much and I am anxious to see him,” she said.

� e latest on-campus incident occurred March 26 when a UNMPD o� cer arrested a man near the An-thropology Building for suspicious behavior. According to the police report, UNMPD o� cer P. Klaurens recognized the man, because he had “a couple of news stories … detailing family members being concerned.”

Mary said her son was, in fact, ar-rested on March 26.

Police responded to a radio call from UNM security about a suspi-cious person riding a bicycle back and forth in front of the Anthropolo-

by Leah ValenciaDaily Lobo

ASUNM Candidates had their � -nal chance to speak out Tuesday by answering questions from students and student organizations.

ASUNM Election Commission Director Brian Moore said the com-mission hosted the event — which about 40 people attended — to give students a chance to decide which candidates will best represent them in ASUNM.

“Any student can ask a question directly to any of the candidates,” he said. “We get all the candidates in one place so that students can ask

them directly what they really stand for.”

� e candidates from both the Full Circle and Wolfpack slates dis-cussed the issues that were of high-est priority to them, such as sustain-ability, containing student costs, communication and campus safety.

Student Senate candidate Alon-zo Castillo, who is running with the Wolfpack slate, said he wants to implement more sustainability on campus starting with the Student Union Building.

“� is is our building,” he said. “If we start here and show the admin-istration what we want, it is a great way to get the whole campus that

way.” David Conway, ASUNM presi-

dential candidate, said his sustain-ability plan would include revamp-ing the campus recycling program.

“We need more bins and we need them to be advertised better,” he said. “Make it so students want to keep using it.”

Conway said this would also mean sta� ng new programs to keep them e� cient.

“We need to put our money where our mouth is and help out the University as far as sta� ng these new programs,” he said.

Full Circle slate presidential can-didate Lazaro “Laz” Cardenas said

his priorities included bee� ng up campus security by implementing student-run safety services.

“UNM is a safe campus,” he said. “But we want to bring the commu-nity together to keep it safe.”

Cardenas also said he planned to address the $10 printing allow-ance for students and explore other options.

“Right now we are taking a sur-vey and it is 50-50 whether students want the printing cap or not,” he said.

Other candidates at the forum emphasized the importance of keeping down tuition and student fees.

“We need to keep student costs as low as possible,” said Wolfpack Senate candidate Kelly Williamson. “And de� nitely not increase pay for administrators.”

Among the biggest priorities for both slates was developing more student participation. Full Circle Senate candidate Nick Ramos said keeping students active is part of the

by Pat LohmannDaily Lobo

If you’ve ever considered mak-ing a short jaunt to Iran for summer break, Diego Mathieu has a story that’ll change your mind.

Mathieu, a Belgian, was hitch-hiking through Iran’s Great Salt Des-ert in September 2009 when Iranian o� cials arrested him and charged him with espionage.

He said he then spent the next three months in an Iranian prison awaiting trial — enduring solitary

con� nement and psychological torture.

Mathieu’s goal was to hitchhike around the world. He even set up a blog about it.

After arriving in Iran, Mathieu happened upon two other Belgians and planned to meet up with them a few days later. Shortly after, the two other men were arrested after being caught in a restricted area. Mathieu said the men were charged with spying.

And, when Mathieu tried repeat-edly to contact his fellow country-

men for the rendezvous, Iranian police tracked his phone calls and jailed him inde� nitely for spying just before he made it out of the country.

He said Iranian o� cials told him he was charged with espionage and accused of taking photos of restrict-ed areas and plotting coordinates with a GPS. For hours, Mathieu said, Iranian o� cials interrogated him.

“� ey asked me billions of ques-tions,” he said.

He said he then spent a week in solitary con� nement in a jail in

Mashhad, Iran before being taken to Section 209 of the Evin Prison in northwestern Tehran, Iran’s capital.

� en he said he spent the next

Popejoyhomeless

manupdate

ASUNM candidates stress sustainability, safety

Former Iranian prison detainee visits Burque

Vanessa Sanchez / Daily LoboChunks of asphalt pile up in the parking lot of The Pit on Wednesday. The stadium is now o� cially closed and is scheduled to reopen in time for the next basketball season, according to Athletics spokesman Greg Remington.

see Mathieu page 3

see ASUNM page 5

see Woods page 5

To help the American hikers in Iranian prison:

Free� eHikers.org

Pitiful

Early ASUNM voting:Begins today

Regular ElectionsApril 14

Page 2: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

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Text “GIBILL” to 99702 or visit www.gibill.va.gov for more information.Standard Message and Data Rates May Apply

PAGETWO NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 2010

new mexicoDAILY LOBOnew mexicoDAILY LOBO

volume 114 issue 131Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published daily except Saturday, Sunday and school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $65 an academic year.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 re� ect the views of the students, faculty, sta� 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. Periodical postage for the New Mexico Daily Lobo (USPS#381-400) paid at Albuquerque, NM 87101-9651. POST-MASTER: send change of address to: New Mexico Daily Lobo, MSC 03 2230, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001. 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.

PRINTED BY SIGNATURE

OFFSET

Editor-in-ChiefEva Dameron Managing EditorAbigail Ramirez News EditorPat Lohmann Assistant News EditorTricia Remark Staff ReportersAndrew BealeShaun GriswoldKallie Red-HorseRyan TomariLeah Valencia

Online EditorJunfu Han Photo EditorVanessa Sanchez Assistant Photo EditorGabbi Campos Culture EditorHunter Riley Assistant Culture EditorChris Quintana Sports EditorIsaac Avilucea Assistant Sports EditorMario Trujillo

Copy ChiefElizabeth ClearyOpinion EditorZach Gould Multimedia EditorJoey Trisolini Design DirectorCameron SmithProduction ManagerSean Gardner Classified Ad ManagerAntoinette Cuaderes Advertising ManagerSteven Gilbert

Presidential Candidate Lissa KnudsenGet to know

� e Daily Lobo chatted with GPSA presidential candidate Lissa Knudsen about her views on Athletics, research and job hunting after graduation. Knudsen is the president of GPSA this year.

Daily Lobo: What do you think your main focus would be as president?

Lissa Knudsen: I’m thinking of an analogy of a wheel, and the cen-ter with all the spokes that come out of it. I see myself as a person who knows di� erent groups on campus and o� campus. I could be that center piece — I could be the connector that brings these groups together. So, in the next year we could form collations that are even stronger between stu-dent groups, undergraduates, gradu-ates, community members, neighbor-hood associations, faculty and sta� . I think the foundation has been laid; I feel like I have a really good relation-ship with both the faculty and sta� councils and senates.

DL: GPSA had a special election concerning athletics last semester. What do you see happening in the fu-ture with those types of issues?

LK: If I’m re-elected, we will abso-lutely continue to do the same things that we did this year, as far as going

back to the constituents — asking them they want. And then when they tell us, acting with courage and with-out hesitation on what they say they want to have happen. I wouldn’t have it any other way. I wouldn’t want any-one who was elected be more con-cerned about their résumé or their political connections than be willing to do what the students want.

With regards to Athletics, I have no idea what the future holds. … It’s un-fortunate that they increased their sal-ary budget since last year of all things. If they’d increased scholarships, or if they’d increased something that was in line with helping student-athletes graduate, that would be one thing. But to have even greater salaries in hard economic times, that just seems ridiculous to me. I’m not optimistic that things are going to get better if we don’t do anything. I do think that if students come together and a co-alition is formed, and they continue to voice their concerns, I think things will absolutely get better.

DL: What do you think are a few is-sues that are most important to grad-uate students?

Terrance Siemon / Daily Lobo

see Lissa page 3

Page 3: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

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LK: Most people would really like financial support for research. ... We have a graduate research de-velopment grant that we worked re-ally hard this year trying to preserve funding while everything was get-ting cut left and right, and we were luckily able to preserve $60,000 for graduate funding research. Right now, Career Services is not meeting the needs of graduate students. I’m not even sure it can because I think that each department is specific. … When you go on the Web site for say, biology, you should be able to go through professor by professor and find out how many of the graduate students they work with get fellow-ships afterwards or are immediately hired after graduation. … Many peo-ple are concerned that if they gradu-ate they won’t be able to get a job.

DL: What do you think your biggest success was last year as president?

LK: There are a few I’m proud of, but I would have to say the Student Fee Review Board was just some-thing I’m very proud to be a part of. The undergraduate students were especially open this year and the whole team was very diligent and intelligent, putting in more than 100 hours and decisions that they came to I think were really in the best interests of the students. We were able to fund PNMGC — Proj-ect New Mexico for Graduates of Color, all three ethnic centers and the Office of International Pro-grams with graduate student mon-ey alone.

DL: What are some differ-ences between you and the other

candidate?LK: I have experience. I think

that I understand the different groups on campus and I have re-lationships with the key opinion leaders and decision makers with-in those groups, on and off cam-pus. I think that that’s really criti-cal in order to effectively represent graduate students. I think that only comes from time and I don’t think you have to be president in order to have that, but I do think you have to be involved. I’d like to think that we’ll have somebody in this position who has been at regents meetings, who has attended GPSA council meetings, who goes to city council meetings, who is just active and involved and knows the struc-ture and the people who are neces-sary to enact change.

three months of his life in a small cell adjacent to that of a captured Amer-ican hiker and college student.

“I could hear him singing in his cell,” he said.

He said prison guards offered him a guide book to read after two weeks, but only gave him his glasses to read it after four.

So, even though Mathieu said prisoners weren’t allowed to talk to each other, he picked up bits of information about his American neighbor. He said the American man and two of his friends began traveling from Northern Europe and were arrested in Kurdistan, Iraq.

He said the three American pris-oners — Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd and Josh Fattal — are still impris-oned in Iran.

According to FreeTheHikers.org, a Web site dedicated to the Ameri-cans, the three hikers have been im-prisoned since July 2009. The Web site offers a petition asking the gov-ernment of Iran to release Bauer, Shourd and Fattal.

When Mathieu and his Belgian colleagues were finally released, news outlets including Al Jazeera and BBC reported their release.

He said he was released from prison to be formally charged with

espionage and go to trial, but it nev-er got that far.

“We were ready to go on trial,” he said. “But at the end they just said, ‘OK, you can go.’”

So Mathieu was free to go in De-cember 2009, and he headed back to Belgium to be with family. He said he never forgot about the American prisoners, especially when he later met up with his good friend Jeff Rich in Albuquerque.

Mathieu is now taking a cross-country journey from Boston to San Francisco. He said he might contin-ue his worldwide journey, but only through the “free world.”

Lissa from page 2

Mathieu from page 1

Diego Mathieu stands on a bridge in Brussels, Belgium, his home country. Mathieu was imprisoned for three months in an Iranian prison in late 2009 and is asking for help freeing three fellow American prisoners.

Courtesy of Diego Mathieu

Page 4: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

[email protected] / Ext. 133Opinion editor /Zach Gould The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Thurday

April 8, 2010

Page

4

Editor,Reporter, photographer and Palestinian

propagandist Mohammed Omer Saleh Al-Moghayer, who uses the professional name Mohammed Omer, will speak at UNM this week, following on the heels of fellow pro-pagandist Ziad Abbas.

The Lannan Foundation, located in Santa Fe, donated $500,000 to cover ex-penses. For that price they could have got-ten Jimmy Carter, Ahmadinejad, Abu Ma-zen or Khaled Meshaal to inspire them. Haymarket Publishing Co. of Chicago was in charge of getting Al-Moghayer from the Netherlands to the U.S. The U.S. consulate in the Netherlands initially refused to grant Al-Moghayer a visa to re-enter the U.S., fol-lowing the “panty bomber” fiasco in De-cember 2009, where a Nigerian student terrorist was granted a visa and allowed to fly into the U.S. despite his terrorist ties. Anti-Israel groups in the U.S. mounted an e-mail and phone barrage on the consul-ate and state department, with the help of several anti-Israel congressmen and EU offi-cials. Finally Al Moghayer was granted a visa to enter the U.S. in spite of the misgivings of the U.S. consulate in the Netherlands. Why was Al-Moghayer, an Arab from Rafah in Gaza, residing in the Netherlands? Ac-cording to the various and changing ren-ditions of Al-Moghayer’s story in 2008, he was detained, beaten up and tortured by Shin Bet while crossing the Allenby into Israel from Jordan, under the escort of a Dutch envoy, after receiving a prize for excellent propaganda in Great Britain. CAMERA (Committee for Accuracy in Mid-dle East Reporting in America), the well-known truth in journalism group, has com-piled his many accounts of this event and found several contradictions and some logi-cal impossibilities. The account has grown and changed considerably with time. Al Moghayer moved to the Netherlands shortly after this event, ostensibly to receive medi-cal and psychological treatment.

Al Moghayer and Al Moghayer’s Dutch friend said that the bigger reason for his move to the Netherlands was that he would be killed if he remained in Rafah.

Maybe he was keeping the funds he collected on his speaking tours to him-self instead of turning it over to the boss-es, and they roughed him up, which is common among criminals and Arab lead-ership. Maybe that’s how he ended up hid-ing out in the Netherlands. It sure makes a lot more sense than his stories do. Last week in his talk at UNM, Ziad Abbas used the undeath of an Arab teenager named Mohammed to launch his tear jerkingly in-accurate talk here at UNM. The young dead man and his “wounded” schoolmates showed up healthy at home four days later. Likewise Mohammed Omer Saleh Al Moghayer is well loved for his propaganda, and is bound to tell many stories about Isra-el and Palestinians. If you are a fantasy fan, go hear him.

Lynn ProvencioUNM staff

Editor,It is one of the miracles of Islam that

its most bitter enemies can become

sincere Muslims. Daniel Streich, former-ly of the Swiss People’s Party, played a sig-nificant role in outlawing the construction of minarets. Since the passage of the ban, Streich has become a Muslim. As if this turn of events was not shocking enough, Streich has vowed to form a new political movement which will promote religious

tolerance. Additionally, Streich says that he will work hard to break ground on Swit-zerland’s newest mosque. One can only say “Allahu Akbar” or “God is great.”

Muhajir RomeroUNM student

Letter

COLumn

Letter submissiOn pOLiCy

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

expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.

editOriaL bOard

Eva DameronEditor-in-chief

Abigail RamirezManaging editor

Zach GouldOpinion editor

Pat LohmannNews editor

Gaza strip propagandist flip-flops on story of exile

Convert proves that anything is possible: Inshallah

This is the dawning of the age of Anthropocene

by Zach GouldOpinion Editor

Did you know we are living in an Anthro-pocene Age? Yep. According to geologists, hu-mans have so messed up our planet in the last 12,000 years that we have created a new ep-och of geological time. Marked by monocul-tures and mass extinction of species, the An-thropocene Age means, “human epoch” and is truly a time to call our own.

Geological time is perhaps the slowest and least affected shift of time. Usually marked by millions of years rather than a few lifetimes, it seems ludicrous that the effect of humans could have such an immense force as alter-ing it. But a growing number of scientists say there is substantial evidence that humans have drastically changed the Earth, and the Holocene Age (which we are in now) is over.

The idea is that through introduction of in-vasive species amplified by global warming and mass extinctions the fossil records and sediment changed. Different looking rock re-sults in a different age. Thus we have a new name.

The soot created by the industrial rev-olution alone has left its “fingerprint”

on the world. The Holocene Age started after the last

ice age about 12,000 years ago. It is already widely regarded as the age of humanity, spe-cifically the switch from hunter-gatherer life-style to agricultural. The drainage of bogs, deforestation and intensive agricultural prac-tices have already dramatically changed our environment.

There is a heavy debate in the scientific community about whether the change of the industrial revolution warrants a new name, and a small majority claims that only in a cou-ple thousand years would it be legitimate to declare a new time period.

However you slice it, the scientific com-munity agrees that humans have significantly affected the world. Whether it was just once or many times, our mark has been left on Earth. There has been an effect so significant that it has altered rocks. So, why don’t people think that our actions effect anything greater than ourselves? Why does the majority of America believe that global warming is manmade but only fictionally so?

I work as a janitor in an environmental consultant agency’s office. In between ana-lyzing who people are by the content of their trash, I end up reading a lot of fact charts about indigenous people pinned up everywhere. The charts cover anthropological evidence of some ancient tribe’s existence in New Mexico, complete with depictions of a pueblo people wearing grass skirts in the middle of a mesa landscape.

The expansion of humans across the world seems bizarre at times; a vision of a time with no water bottles, no flint and not even a Star-bucks in sight is daunting.

The same thing crosses my mind with as-tronauts, but at least satellites went before

them to scope the area out a little before they strapped themselves to a rocket and flew into the abyss.

You know things continue to exist even if you don’t see them.

This seems to be the problem that people have. They don’t realize the impact they have on Earth. We have changed this environment to the point that it is unrecognizable.

With unlimited space to move and grow our migratory instincts are strong, but at this point we stretch far across the Earth. There is no more outward expansion, only upward growth.

As an extension of our evolution, human-ity has used technology to compensate for what our physical bodies can’t do. Miles un-der the ocean and above the ground, we are everywhere — places that even after they are reached seem impossible.

Living this way is out of touch with nature. Too many distractions exist, and we no lon-ger have a choice how to live as a species. We don’t have fur or talons; we cannot return to the wild.

Lay down and close your eyes and picture the world. Feel the turn of Earth and imagine the satellites orbiting above you, and then pic-ture the space in every direction. Even if there isn’t infinite mass, there is space. We exist in a universe that we cannot fully fathom. We can accept the existence of things, but compared with how much we can personally prove or even see, after a while, you just have to take people’s word for it.

I say: Embrace it — our new epoch. We are here, so let’s make the best of it. Just because we now own a layer of sediment that has our name on it, doesn’t mean it has to be full of soot.

“I’m growing it out for South America”

Letter

Page 5: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Thursday, april 8, 2010 / page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

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Announcing Graduate and Professional School Association (GPSA) Candidate Forums

The GPSA Elections Committee is happy to announce the GPSA Candidate Forums!

Come meet the candidates, listen to their ideas and ask them questions!

GPSA Candidates for President:Lissa Knudsen (Incumbent)Martin M. Martinez

Candidates for GPSA Council Chair:Danny Hernandez (Incumbent)Megan McRobert

The Candidate Forums will be held:

SUB Acoma A&B: Monday, April 12, 2010 @ 10am-12pm.

Domenici Center (West Bldg) B112: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 @ 10am-11:30am.

Mesa Vista Hall Ethnic Center Foyer: Wednesday, April 15, 2010 @ 2pm-4pm.Co-hosted by the Society for Native American Graduate Students, the Black Graduate Student Association, and the Raza Graduate Student Association.

by Kallie Red-HorseDaily Lobo

Albuquerque’s streets may soon be cleared of pesky red-light cameras.

Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry signed a $36,000 contract with UNM’s Institute for Social Re-search to evaluate the effective-ness of the cameras in preventing crashes, said T.J Wilham, Albu-querque’s public safety director of communications.

“He wants the cameras to be an effective tool to make our streets safer,” he said. “The study is going to tell him whether or not they have been effective and (he) will make a decision based on the findings.”

Over the next seven months, ISM will work on compiling data from both the red-light camer-as and motor vehicle records to

determine if the cameras are suc-cessful, said Paul Guerin, a re-search scientist at ISM.

“We are going to look at crashes that occur at intersections where the red-light cameras are over time, from before the cameras to some-time after they were installed,” he said. “We are also going to com-pare those red-light camera inter-sections to other similar intersec-tions that don’t have the cameras.”

The mayor wants Albuquer-que drivers to think twice before speeding through intersections.

“He wants the cameras to be instrumental in changing driv-ing behavior,” Wilham said. “Make people more aware of their speed, more aware of when they go into an intersection.”

The cameras used to generate revenue for the city, but not any-more, Wilham said.

“Right now there is no profit be-ing generated from it, but prior to (Berry) taking office, the cameras generated $8 million,” he said. “In the past, the city council passed legislation to use part of the mon-ey to pay for a fire station, part of the money to pay for police cars and several other items.”

Improving the safety of Albu-querque’s streets has no pricetag, Guerin said, but it’s unclear if the cameras actually help.

“If they don’t make a difference, is there a good enough reason to have them?” he said. “The goal of the cameras is, primarily, to re-duce the instances of the crashes, and the mayor clearly said that if they do that, (Berry’s administra-tion) may be okay with paying for them. If they don’t reduce crashes, he may not be okay with them.”

Study to test red-light cameras’ efficacy

college experience.“I would like to have a bigger out-

reach to new students,” he said. “Try to get them involved and show them that there are a bunch of things that they can get involved in.”

Both presidential candidates ac-knowledged that new ideas could be difficult to implement after deep state budget cuts to university fund-ing. Cardenas said dealing with a budget is a process, and he is pre-pared to handle it.

“We have to come up with a plan

of what we are going to do and how much we think it is going to cost,” he said. “I want to do that right away.”

He said communication with the administration is key to making gains for students.

“It is about the process and also having a strategic plan that fits the administration’s plan and the stu-dents’ plans, and then we can go from there,” he said.

Conway said his experience would set him up to work easily with the administration.

“We need somebody that knows the process, knows the people that are the stakeholders and can out-reach to students,” he said.

Conway emphasized his ideas for a transparent administration, saying he plans to utilize Facebook, Twitter and the Daily Lobo to communicate with students.

“We are going to keep students informed on what we are doing,” he said. “So if I put something on Face-book, you can leave comments right away.”

gy building. UNMPD made repeated requests to stop and talk to the indi-vidual, but he refused each time

When UNMPD arrived on scene, the man suspected to be Arnold Woods had moved to the bushes in front of Dane Smith Hall.

“I arrived on scene and was di-rected to the second level of Dane Smith Hall,” Klaurens wrote in his report. “As I climbed the ramp, I saw the bicyclist riding his bicycle on the second floor walkway.”

Officer Klaurens asked the man to stop his bike but he refused and rode directly in the path toward the officer.

“I ordered him to stop, and he made no effort to comply and con-tinued to ride toward me,” he said in the report. “I sidestepped out of his path, again ordered him to stop and

pushed him into the railed fence.” The man then tried to climb

over the fence, but officer Klau-rens pinned him into the fence and placed the suspect into an arm bar.

The man told police he did not stop because he did not recognize the officers.

“He said that my jacket was cov-ering the uniform,” officer Klaurens wrote in his report. “I was not wear-ing a jacket, and both my badge and sleeve patch were visible. He then told me that I smelled of alcohol and asked if I had been drinking.”

Officer Klaurens recognized the suspect from news reports detailing his homelessness and schizophre-nia and asked if the man had been in contact with his family. Accord-ing to the police report the man re-sponded, “The NSA won’t let me do

anything like that.” Mary said Arnold’s life crumbled

in front his eyes and resulted in the loss of his mental health.

“Before he lost his mind he was a computer consultant making $80,000 a year and he had a beau-tiful wife,” she said. “He got fired from his job, they repossessed the car (and) cut off all his utilities so he was living in filth, and he was physi-cally evicted from his home.”

Left with nothing, Arnold began a two-year homeless journey and he stopped talking to his family.

“He needs medical help. Arnold would not have suffered like this if we could recognize he had mental problems years ago,” Mary said. “He would look depressed all the time. He could put up a good front with his friends.”

Woods from page 1

ASUNM from page 1

Page 6: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

[email protected] / Ext. 131Culture editor / Hunter Riley The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

ThursdayApril 8, 2010

Page

6LoboCulture

Junfu Han / Daily Lobo

Top: “Beebop” eats catnip from a freshly planted container garden on Wednesday. The Daily Lobo gathered the necessary plants and containers to start a container garden. The whole garden, including the container, cost just less than $80 to pull together. Bottom: You can choose from shelves of seeds at Veggiegrower Gardens of New Mexico. You can get seeds for squash, lettuce mixes, kale, spinach, carrots, and a bunch of other stu� , too.

DIY Gardenby Hunter Riley

Daily Lobo

Until UNM starts its own community garden, students can take their food into their own hands.

Container gardening was designed for people who don’t have enough space for a garden bed, for places with poor soil quality, less-than-optimal sun exposure and for many other problems one might encounter while greening their thumb.

Chuck O’Herron-Alex, owner of Veggiegrower Gardens of New Mexico, said container gardening is perfect for stu-dents. O’Herron-Alex builds raised bed container gardens

with covers for summer and winter. He calls them micro-gardens.

“A lot of students don’t have their own house or yard so container gardens let you still grow stu� even though you may have limited space,” O’Herron-Alex said. “� e other ad-vantages of containers are that you can be very successful, it doesn’t take a lot of time, it uses a lot less water than tradi-tional agriculture and they’re portable.”

O’Herron-Alex’s gardens have drainage and aeration chambers at the bottom of the beds which helps prevent root rot.

“� ey have a plywood bottom and on top of the plywood there is an inch thick layer of lava rock,” he said. “And on top

of that they have a semi-permeable layer so that provides drainage for the garden, and also when water is not pass-ing through there is air � owing underneath to help aerate the soil.”

� e micro-gardens range from $150 to $1,000 and, de-pending on the size, can feed two to six people all year long.

Container gardening can come in many forms. � ere are pre-made pots that allow for multiple plants to be grown in the same container. � ere are raised bed container gar-dens. � ere is window gardening, which can be done in con-tainers, or through a hydroponic hanging system. Basically,

see Garden page 7

Page 7: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Thursday, april 8, 2010 / page 7New Mexico Daily lobo

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green culture

by Candace HsuDaily Lobo

Kermit was lying when he said, “It isn’t easy being green.”

The Home Builders, Remodelers and Green Ideas Showcase is coming to the Albuquerque Convention Cen-ter this weekend to prove it.

Rick Shoudt, owner of Special Events Marketing, is the producer of the expo and co-founder of Interna-tional Green Ideas.

“The expo is a consumer trade show,” Shoudt said. “Our goal is to generate traffic and show what is available for our consumers. We want to hopefully create some leads for fu-ture business and stimulate the green economy.”

This company will show a wide range of eco-friendly products and services, from organic cosmetics to solar energy, he said.

Shoudt said the expo includes panel discussions and speakers. Chris Paine is the featured speaker who cre-ated the documentary, “Who killed the electric car?” This documentary investigates the recall of GM’s elec-tric car. Paine is also part of the Alter-native Fuel Vehicle Panel along side Olga Lavrova, a professor at UNM.

“The panel discussion will dis-cuss all the different fuel alternatives — bio-diesel, natural gas, electric-ity, propane and more,” Shoudt said. “UNM has a solar race car, like an Indy 500 car. It competes in the Race Across America every other year. It is an electric waste car that Dr. Olga Lav-rova maintains. It will be on display at the show as well.”

This is the second expo for Green Ideas. The first one was in October 2008. Shoudt said green living has many facets beyond recycling and

riding your bike.“We hope that the audience will

learn about what’s available in the market for green living,” Shoudt said. “These products can lead in conser-vation, insulation and elimination of waste. There are a lot of products and services that can help people live a sustainable lifestyle.”

William Perkins, an adjunct asso-ciate professor in the landscape ar-chitecture department, and Roger Schluntz, the dean in the architecture department, teach and promote sus-tainability through their curriculum.

“We’ve been teaching sustainabil-ity all along. I like to call it ‘sound’ de-sign principles,” Perkins said. “We’ve been teaching it for many years. Green living is being environmentally responsible and mindful of the lim-ited resources. It is clear that people need to have personal responsibility when it comes to sustainability, but we also need to commit as communi-ty members. College students are no different.”

Schluntz said that “green” archi-tecture includes mindful selection of materials, methodology, size and lo-cation, awareness of energy consump-tion, carbon neutrality and comfort.

“A recent change to go with sus-tainability is downsizing, which is also something that came with the econo-my,” Schluntz said. “Ways to incor-porate sustainability in architecture include orientation, day lighting, in-sulation and natural ventilation. Here at the school of architecture, we are going to have a hallway that incorpo-rates natural day lighting.”

The curriculum at the School of Ar-chitecture has been revised to incor-porate sustainability more in depth.

Choose a pot that is the right size for •what you are planting. Ask someone at a gardening store before you buy your pots and seeds.Use potting soil and fertilizers that are •meant for pots and not for outdoor gardening.Keep the pot shaded from the sun. •While the leaves and fruits of a plant love the summer sun, the roots might not.Fertilize monthly.•Use a tray so that extra water doesn’t •ruin your floor (if indoors).Use mulch, such as bark or pecan •shells, to help retain water.Fertilize with fish emulsion or low ni-•trogen fertilizers.

Sustainable is attainable

Over water. This is important for con-•tainer gardens because they can eas-ily get root rot, which will kill the plant. Only water if the top two inches of the soil are dry.Use compost because it won’t drain and •aerate as well as potting soil. Grow tall plants because the wind might •damage them and the container probably won’t support the roots.

Here are some basics for container gardening:

Where to get your potting needs or more container gardening

information:

Rehm’s Nursery5801 Lomas Blvd. N.E.

Veggiegrower Gardens of New Mexico3211 Silver Ave. S.E.to buy tickets

Left: Hunter Riley plants a sage sprout in a container garden on Wednesday. Right: Churck O’Herron-Alex, owner of Veggiegrower Gardens of New Mexico, builds one of his micro-gardens outside his shop on Silver Boulevard.Junfu Han / Daily Lobo

Garden from pAgE 6

DO: DON’T:

see Green Homes page 8

there are lots of containers just waiting for a garden.Don Childs, manager of Rehm’s Nursery, said he

has about 20 containers at his house. “Always con-sider gardening as an experiment and don’t take it personal,” Childs said. “With container gardening

you have some options but just try it a couple times. Don’t give up because you’re unsuccessful with it.”

Childs said tomatoes, chilies, garlic, peppers and herbs are all good things to grow for warm weath-er. But you can also do vegetables such as carrots,

Page 8: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

New Mexico Daily loboPage 8 / Thursday, aPril 8, 2010 culture

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by Alisha Catanach Daily Lobo

Dancers chaotically spin and leap over rows of plastic water bottles, all of which are knocked over and then gathered in a segment of “The Good Dance.”

Avant-garde African and Aboriginal-inspired contemporary dances will make their way to Al-buquerque this weekend and the next at Global Dance Festival.

Santee Smith, an Aboriginal choreographer and dancer, said this show gives a new perspec-tive to traditional Aboriginal dance shows.

“Don’t expect to see a re-creation of a long ago ritual or pow-wow,” Smith said. “You will not see beads, feathers or painted faces. What the performance transmits is a profound con-nection to indigenous concepts and essence of movements.”

Reggie Wilson, a choreographer from the

Fist & Heel Performance Group in Brooklyn, has shown “The Good Dance” in various cit-ies around the country. Wilson said African cultures have a good dance instead of a “good book” as a root to live by. “The Good Dance” demonstrates that instead of a text at the heart of person’s belief, the body is the core. Wilson said it is the tradition of a lot of Earth-based and Af-rican religions. “The Good Dance” fuses African and African-American dance styles with mod-ern dance and entertains ideas of culture and the African Diaspora.

Two narrators voice beliefs and traditional Aboriginal sayings along with the music in the background of “A Constellation of Bones.” Smith is from the Kaha:wi Dance Theatre and she will showcase “A Constellation of Bones” as well as excerpts from “Kaha:wi” and “Here on Earth.” Smith said the three dances communicate uni-versal themes of love, duality, cycles of life and honoring the natural environment. The style of

the pieces are a postmodern mixture that incor-porate high-energy raw movement with tradi-tional dance styles like ballet.

Donna Jewell, head of the Dance program at UNM, said students are fortunate because the artists from these productions are teaching a Master’s dance class at UNM for modern dance students. Jewell said they will receive hands-on training from the dancers and choreographers in each company.

“Without this festival, majors and minors in the Department of Theatre and Dance would not be personally exposed to the high caliber of what is happening in the contemporary dance scene today,” she said.

Susanna Kearny of VSA North Fourth Art Center said UNM students will receive a special discount if they go to both shows. If students at-tend the first weekend, they can see the dances for free the following weekend by showing their ticket stub. Students can also get a discounted

rate of $10 per ticket. “If students want to see examples of some

of the best contemporary dance, this is their chance,” she said.

Festival fuses love & duality with tribal & modern dance

“Sustainability is more important now be-cause when we reach closer to the world’s ca-pacity, there will be more stress on the envi-ronment and ourselves,” Perkins said. “It is important that we are more aware of how we use our resources.”

Shoudt said the expo will also inform people about the federal tax credits that are available to buildings that have energy efficient products.

“We want to give people the knowledge of green living,” he said. ”So this showcase is for ed-ucational purposes as well as hopeful leads for businesses. One of our goals is to stimulate our

economy while educating the public.” Shoudt said college students need to set an

example for everyone else by embracing sus-tainable practices.

“College students can get involved with green living by conserving and recycling,” he said. “Students can unplug their electronics at night, ride their bikes and take the bus. Also, re-cycling is a big thing. We should recycle paper, plastic, cardboard, glass, anything.”

The showcase will also have 15 workshops over the weekend from the New Mexico Solar Education Association.

“Global warming is real and is a serious threat to all of humanity. We need to reduce car-bon emissions,” Shoudt said. “We send tens of billions of dollars to countries overseas for for-eign oil. We have taken some steps toward re-ducing carbon emissions, but we need to step up the pace. We should reduce our dependen-cy on foreign oil. We need to get more involved and produce more advocacy with the federal government. Our showcase is trying to provide incentives for individuals and companies to use renewable energy.”

Green Homes from page 7

“The Good Dance”

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Friday and Saturday8 p.m.

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Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

admission: $8 for adults, $5 for juniors (13-17), seniors and active-duty military

Page 9: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

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$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

Holiday Salis, Sage Harrington - Singer/Song Writer - 7pm

Magic Saturdays w/ Magic Pants - 10pm

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

Sunday 4/11

Southwest Film CenterZhao Dayong’s Ghost Town

1:00PM, 4:30PMFor more information call 277-5608

Ned’s On The Rio GrandeFREE Cerviche and Chicharones$3 Bloody Marys and Margaritas$2 Domestic Drafts 25¢ Wings

$3.95 Huevos Rancheros.Breakfast All Day

Sushi and SakeClosed Sundays

The Library Bar & GrillCaliente Sundays: Drink specials

start at 8pm, $3 shots of Cuervo and $3 Mexican Beers Draft & Bottles (Tecate, Negra Modelo, Corona,

Corona Light, Dos Equis). Free Salsa Lessons with prizes. DJ Quico spin-ning your favorite Salsa, Merengae,

Cumbia, and Reggaeton.

Copper Lounge2pm-7pm Alien IPA, Blue Moon,

Honeybrown $2.50. $2.25 Domestic Beer. $2.75 Well Drinks. $6 Potato Skins. 7pm-close Copper Burger $5. Smithwick’s, Sam Seasonal, Marble Red, Bass, Stella $3. Copper house

Martini and Skyy U- call it $4

Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30

The Library Bar & GrillThe hottest booty shakin’ contest in

town! 1st Place gets $200, 2nd Place $100, & 3rd Place $50! All contes-tants will receive gift certificates for

participating. Starts around 11:30pm. $2.50 Coronas and $3.00 Cuervo from

8pm-close. No Cover

Outpost Performance SpaceGretchen Parlato Quartet

7:30 pm & 9:30 pm“A mysterious brew of sound & breath,

simmering rhythms & phrasing

Burt’s Tiki Lounge*THE UNIVERSAL!* *The Original

Weekly Dance Party!* *Dance/ Elecro & Indie* *CLKCLKBNG and Guests*

*75 Cent PBR Until Midnight*

Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All

Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM!

Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters

only $4.00 All Day And Night!

The Blackbird Buvette Happy Hour 4PM-8PM

$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

Sloan Blue - Acoustic - 7pmThe Planet Rock - DRLM DJ’s - 10pm

Page 10: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Page 10 / Thursday, aPril 8, 2010 New Mexico Daily lobothe haps

saturday

friday

1504 Central Ave SEAlbuquerque, NM 87106(505) 242-7490

Enjoy our new PatioOpen Tues-Fri Night

thursday

wedn

esda

y

tuesday

mond

ay

2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 Blue Moon

Sam Adams Seasonal Honeybrown Pints

$2.25 Domestic Beers$2.75 Well Drinks

7:00pm - Close$3.00 Bridgeport IPA

Blue Moon; Shiner BockHardcore; Alien

$4.00 Lemon DropsKamikazes

$5.00 9” 1-Topping Pizza$5.00 Cheeseburger w/ FF

11:00am - 7:00pm$2.75 Well Drinks

$2.50 Bloody Marys$2.25 Domestic Bottles

2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 Alien, Blue Moon,

Honeybrown7:00pm - Close

$3.00 Alien; Smithwick’sSierra Nevada; New Castle

Marble BlondeSmirnoff U-Call-It

$6.75 Chicken or Ground Beef Burrito

2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 Blue Moon

Sam Adams Seasonal Smithwick’s Pints

$2.25 Domestic Beers$2.75 Well Drinks

7:00pm - Close$3.00 Dos Equis

Tecate; Rolling RockHoneybrown; Marble Blonde$4.00 Margaritas; Cosmos

Slippery Nipples$5.00 9” 1-Topping Pizza

$1.00 Tacos

2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 AlienBlue Moon

Marble Red Pints $2.25 Domestic Beers

$2.75 Well Drinks

7:00pm - Close$3.00 All Pints

$4.00 Bacardi U-Call-It*$5.00 9” 1-Topping Pizza

1/2 of Selected Apps*no 151-proof

2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 Alien; Blue Moon

Honeybrown Pints $2.25 Domestic Beers

$2.75 Well Drinks$6.00 Potato Skins

7:00pm - Close$3.00 Smithwick’s

Sam Adam’s SeasonalMarble Red; Bass; Stella Artois

$4.00 Skyy U-Call-It*Copper House Martini$5.00 Copper Burger*no Red Bull or Martinis

2:00pm - 7:00pm$3.00 Bridgeport IPA

Paulaner; 90 Shilling Pints $2.25 Domestic Beers

$2.75 Well Drinks7:00pm - Close

$3.00 Dos Equis; TecateAlien; Sam Adam’s Seasonal

90 Shilling$3.25 Corona and Corona Light

$4.00 Salty DogsRazzitinis; Mind Erasers

$4.50 Jose Cuervo$6.00 Manzano Martinis

$5 Stuffed Sopapillas(Chicken or Beef)

APRIL 17, 2010 AT SPORT SYSTEMS

FROM 10AM TO 4PM. CHECK-IN FOR ITEMS WILL BE APRIL 15-16 ONLY, FROM 10AM

TO 7PM AT SPORT SYSTEMS. $1 PER ITEM CHECKED-IN.

BIKESWAP

b u y • s e l l

BikeABQ’S Annual

6915 MONTGOMERY NE • WWW.BIKEABQ.ORG

OUTPOST 210 YALE SE

Student Rush Tickets! $10 the night of the show available 5-10 minutes prior to showtime

EXPERIENCE JAZZ IN NEW MEXICO LAND OF ENCHANTMENTFunded in part by the New Mexico Tourism Department

Thursday, 7:30pm & 9:30pm APRIL 8

Sponsored by JWelles & Associates, LLC

Saturday, 7:30pm APRIL 10

Ty Burhoe, tablas

—— ——

Thursday APRIL 15

Friday APRIL 16

Barrett House AtticAlbuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

Bring this ad for 5% off!

Located at 4308 Lomas NE (just west of Washington on the south side of Lomas)Mon- Sat 9:30-5 262-1073

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

Monday 4/12

Copper Lounge2pm-7pm Blue Moon, Sam’s

Seasonal, Honey Brown $2.50 Pints. $2.75 Domestic Beers. $2.75 Well

Drinks.7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Cheese

Burger w F.F $5. Alien IPA, Blue Moon, Shiner Bock, Hardcore $3

pints. Kamikaze or Lemon Drop $4.

The Library Bar & GrillHappy Hour 4pm- 7pm

Serving Full Menu for Lunch, Happy Hour & Nightime

Ned’s On The Rio Grande$4.95 Frito Pie, $2.00 Corrslight Draft

$2.50 Corona and Corona Light. Appetizers $3.00 4-6pm

Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30

Burt’s Tiki Lounge*TBA* *Indie*

Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All

Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A

Week From 3-7PM!Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters

only $4.00 All Day And Night!

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

The Blackbird BuvetteHappy Hour All Day!

Blackbird Karaoke with DJ Kammo - 9pm

Tuesday 4/13

Ned’s On The Rio Grande$2.50 Tuesdays

Jam Night With The Memphis P-Tails 7-11pm, FREE

Food and Drink Specials for $2.50

The Library Bar & Grill$2.50 well, wine, & domestics from 8pm to close. Wet T-Shirt Contest every Tuesday with cash prizes!

Copper Lounge2pm-7pm Shiner Bock, Sam’s

Seasonal Smithwick’s $2.50 pints. $2.25 Domestic Beers. $275 Well

Drinks. 7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Tacos $1. Margaritas, Slippery Nipple, or Cosmopolitan $4. Dos XX, Rolling

Rock, Tecate, Marble Blonde $3Sushi and Sake

Open 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30

Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Tiki Tuesdays!* *Against All Odds*

*$4 Tiki Drinks All Night**Indie/ Electronic*

Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All

Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM!

Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters

only $4.00 All Day And Night!

The Blackbird Buvette Happy Hour 4PM-8PM

$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

Geeks Who Drink - 7pmReggae @ Blackbird w/ DJ’s Solomon

& SP - 10pm

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

Wednesday 4/14

The Blackbird BuvetteHappy Hour 4PM-8PM

$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

Justin & Angelica - 7pmBody Language w/ Rev. Mitton &

Justin O’Brien - 10pm

Ned’s On The Rio GrandeAnnie Jean Trio 8-12midnight, FREE

Wednesday Live MusicWoohabs 8-11 FREE

Copper Lounge2pm-7pm Alien IPA, Blue Moon,

Marble Red $2.50. $2.25 Domestic Beers. $2.75 Well Drinks. 7pm-close 9” 1-top pizza $5. Selected appetizers 50% off. All pints $3. Bacardi U- call

it (no 151 proof) $4.

Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30

Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Vinyl and Verses* *Underground

Hip Hop* *UHF B-Boy Crew* *$2.50 Select Pints*

Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All

Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM!

Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters

only $4.00 All Day And Night!

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

Barrett House Attic Albuquerque’s Premier Thrift Store

HOT CLOTHING AT COOL PRICES. Visit our thrift store and get another

5% off with this ad. 4308 Lomas NE 262-1073

Check the Haps

Every Thursday

to find out what’s going on in Albuquerque

Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour Specials! $1.00 Off All

Drinks Except Bottled Beer, 7 Days A Week From 3-7PM!

Featured Drinks: Smirnoff Strawberry, PBR Pints for $2.00, And PBR Liters

only $4.00 All Day And Night!

The Blackbird BuvetteHappy Hour 4PM-8PM

$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor) $3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks

The Do Over Special Event - 3pm

Page 11: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Thursday, april 8, 2010 / page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

Times Square Deli MartTRY OUR HUGE

BREAKFAST BURRITOS

Call in your lunch order! 505-242-0809

Delicious Hot & Cold Deli Sandwiches

“A Touch of Manhattan”

Hours: Mon-Fri 7am to 9pm Sat 8am to 9pm

Sun 10am to 6pm

Yale & Central

AHL

AHL Year Round Garden SupplyThe Indoor Garden Specialists • hydroponics • indoor grow lights • and organics!

1051 San Mateo Blvd SE • 255-3677New Location! 9421 Coors Blvd. NW Suite K • 899-0592

www.ahlgrows.com

Havana Cuban RestaurantFresh & Delicious

10% Discount w/ Student I.D.

Located east of San Mateo on Menaul, in the Daskalos Shopping Center

Miles for Smiles!Come support the International Medical

Delegation raise funds for Honduras, while having fun running or walking!!

Where:UNM North Campus

Golf CourseWhen:

Saturday April 10th Check In/Registration:

8:00-9:00am5K Race: 9:30am

Kids Mile: 10:00amAwards: 11:00am

5K Race: 9:30am5K Race: 9:30amKids Mile: 10:00amKids Mile: 10:00amAwards: 11:00amAwards: 11:00am

active.comsearch “miles for smiles”

SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI SUSHI HANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANAHANA521 Central NW on Central & 6th

505-842-8700

HAPPY HOUR SUSHI SPECIAL! 1/2 PRICE

MONDAY - SATURDAY 11:30AM-2:30PM4:00PM-8:00PM BEST SUSHI

IN TOWN

To Do:call Molly @8buy tixpick up Daily Lobo

The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board

is now Accepting Applications for

Best Student Essays2010-2011 Editor

This position requires approximately 10 hours per week and entails supervision of a volunteer staff.

Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Term of Office: Mid-May 2010 through Mid-May 2011.

Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 9, 2010.

Requirements: To be selected editor of Best Student Essays you must have completed at least 18 hours of credit at UNM or have been enrolled as a full time student at UNM the pre-ceding semester and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student throughout the term of office and be a UNM student for the full term. Some publication experience preferable.

For more information call 277-5656.

The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board

is now Accepting Applications for

Conceptions Southwest2010-2011 Editor

This position requires approximately 10 hours per week and entails supervision of a volunteer staff.

Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Term of Office: Mid-May 2010 through Mid-May 2011.

Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 9, 2010.

Requirements: To be selected editor of Conceptions South-west you must have completed at least 18 hours of credit at UNM or have been enrolled as a full time student at UNM the preceding semester and have a cumulative grade point aver-age of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student throughout the term of office and be a UNM student for the full term. Some publication experience preferable.

For more information call 277-5656.

by Scott Adams dailycrossword

dailysudoku

Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strate-gies on how to solve Sudoku, visitwww.sudoku.org.uk

Solutions to Yesterday’s PuzzleLevel: 1 2 3 4

dilbert©

Yesterday’s Solutions

SPONSOR THISCROSSWORD

Get your name out there with the Daily Crossword

505.277.5656SPONSOR THIS

SUDOKUGet your name out there with the Daily Sudoku505.277.5656

Page 12: New Mexico Daily Lobo 040810

Page 12 / Thursday, aPril 8, 2010 New Mexico Daily loboclassifieds

AnnouncementsWORRIED? LOG ON to www.Spirituality.com

Students can place ads for free in the following categories:-Your Space-Rooms For Rent-For Sale

Lost and FoundLOST STYLIST PEN for PDA found on UNM bus. Please call 505-277-5656 or come to Maron Hall for info.

ServicesTUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799.

MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown, PhD. [email protected] 401-8139.

PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instruc- tor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA.

ABORTION AND COUNSELING ser- vices. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242- 7512.

SILK SCREENING CLASSES Adults and children. [email protected]

BIRTHRIGHT CARES. FREE pregnancy tests, help. 262-2235.

STATE FARM INSURANCE3712 Central SE @ Nob Hill232-2886www.mikevolk.net

Vehicles WantedLOOKING FOR 2000-2006 Ford Mus- tang. Non-convertible, automatic, good condition, less than 80,000mi. Call or text 505- 907-4779 or email lino [email protected]

Your SpacePLEASE VOTE FOR me at www.kasa. com, click Face of Fox. If you have ever said I talk too much, thanks for your vote, Tamara Levette Farmer.

PLEASE COMMENT AND vote (take survey) on my C&J 479 Electronic Pub- lishing Class blog. http://collegegradu ationfirst.blogspot.com Thank you, Spanish-Amiga$$ (Ms. Plain-Jane Edu- cation Enterprises). Dream big because dreaming is still free!

ApartmentsAPARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com

UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1 and 2BDRMS $490-$650/mo +utilities. Clean, quiet, remodeled. Move in special! 573-7839.

MOVE IN SPECIAL- walk to UNM. 1and 2BDRMS starting at $575/mo includes utilities. No pets. 255-2685, 268-0525.

1 AND 2BDRMS, 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. Clean, quiet, and affordable. 301 Harvard SE. 262-0433.

SANDIA LABS INTERNS, Teachers, Grad Students. Two FURNISHED SUM- MER 1 Bedroom Guest Houses. Com- pletely furnished, dishes/linens in- cluded, wireless internet, utilities paid. BIKE to Sandia Labs or CARPOOL with other INTERNS living in our small com- pound. Walk to UNM. $444/mo and $544/mo. Just bring clothes & com- puter. References. 505-220-8455 bon_neal @ hotmail.com

PRETTY 2BDRM CONDO style. W/D, small storage, close to UNM, off-street parking. 842-1640.

UNM/ CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Con- sultant: 243-2229.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COMAwesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FPs, court- yards, fenced yards, houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1 and 2 and 3BDRMs. Garages. Month to month op- tion. 843-9642. Open 7 days/ week.

A LOVELY KNOTTY Pined decor 3BDRM 1.5BA. Skylight, parking, UNM area. $850/mo. 1814 Gold. 299-2499.

A LOVELY 2BDRM- UNM area, hard- wood floors, parking. $750/mo. 2118 Gold. 299-2499.

STUDIO- FIRST MONTH FREE w/ex- tended lease, 1 block UNM, Free utili- ties, $435-$455/mo. 246-2038. www.kachina-properties.com

Houses For SaleUNIQUE ADOBE HOME Lomas/ I-25. MLS#678571. 220-7517.

HOME FOR SALE by owner. North Val- ley 3BDRM 2.5BA 2100 Sqft. $225,000 Owner will carry the note. 345-3677

Rooms For RentFEMALE TO SHARE charming house. $350/mo +1/2utilities. 281-6290.

GRADUATE STUDENT, FURNISHED ROOM, W/D, cable, smokeless, free utilities, $295/mo +$50dd. 344-9765.

For SaleBRAND NEW! AVANTI Cube Refrigera- tor. 1.7 Cu. Ft and 20.25” H x 17” W x 19” D. $100new- Buy this one for $65! Sierra 575-770-8441.

SPRING CLEANING--MUST Sale: Small Washing Machine HLP021 (hookup to sink) $100-130, HP printer ($25), GE DVD player ($25), & free misc. Make of- fer: 321-4903.

BRADLEY’S BOOKS MWF 379-9794.

Vehicles For Sale2000 SATURN SL2 Auto., 4dr, good con- dition. Student car, selling for the pur- pose of moving. Asking $2000. Price ne- gotiable. 620-1103 (Leave message if no answer.)

Child CareCHILD CARE HELPER, children age 13, 2 hrs 3 times/wk, 4:30-6:30PM. Supper, homework, need car. Osuna San Mateo Vista Del Norte Housing Tract. Kim 410- 9043, 345-2198.

PT/FT OPENING - Childrens Learning Center Email resume to dx6572@g mail.com

NEED A JOB? Make sure to check the Daily Lobo Classifieds

Monday through Friday

for new employment opportunities. Visit us online, anytime at

www.dailylobo.com/classifieds.

Jobs Off Campus

BARBIZON MODELING seeks current or former models, actors, or makeup artistry professionals to teach classes on weekends. Contact Rachel at 727- 215-5251 or [email protected].

!!!BARTENDING!!!: UP TO $300/day. No experience necessary, training pro- vided. 1-800-965-6520ext.100.

TALIN MARKET IS looking for an office assistant. Must be organized, able to type at least 50 words per minute, and proficient with ten key. Please pick up an application at 88 Louisiana SE (cor- ner of Central & Louisiana).

OFFICE SUPPORT/ COURIERBusy downtown law firm is seekingTo fill PT office support/ courierPosition. Must be dependable andHave good computer, phone andOrganizational skills. Must haveDependable transportation, insuranceAnd a good driving record. ForConsideration, please forward resumeTo: Office Manager, P. O. Box 1578,Albuquerque, NM 87103-1578, Fax to505-247-8125 or e-mail [email protected].

EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.YouDriveAds.com

FT INCOME, PT flexible hours,Call today for appointment!Rosanna 228-1558 or Tim 328-5532.

LOOKING FOR JOB? Our fast pace ani- mal hospital is looking for a positive, up- beat, and personable part-time recep- tionist. The right person for the position will be able to multi task while paying close attn to detail, the ability to man- age a multi line phone system with effi- ciency, knowledge of basic computer skills, and professionalism in communi- cating with our clients both verbally and in writing. If you feel you are the right person for the position and would enjoy working in a fun and fast pace environ- ment, please email your resume to [email protected]. VCA Vet Care 292-5353.

THE CAREER DEVELOPMENT Pro- gram, an option of the Albuquerque Public Schools/University of New Mex- ico Partnership Programs, offers an ac- celerated 17 month, 4 semester gradu- ate program of studies culminating in a Masters Degree in Elementary Educa- tion and New Mexico Elementary K-8 Teaching License. Albuquerque Public Schools and the University of New Mex- ico are seeking highly motivated and academically talented college gradu- ates (bachelors degree minimum) to participate in this teacher education pro- gram. The program consists of a semester of combined methodology and student teaching, a summer of sup- porting coursework, and a year of paid internship in an APS classroom. The 24 individuals selected will also receive paid tuition for 21 of the 42 credits re- quired in the program. A 2.5-3.0 (pre- ferred) GPA, completion of the NM Teacher Assessment Basic Skills exam, and official transcripts are among the application requirements. For program and application informa- tion, attend an information session on Thursday, April 8, 2010 from 6:00-7:00 p.m. at the APS Transitions Outcomes Special Education site at 1730 Univer- sity SE, 87106. Applications will be available at the information session, but can also be picked up at UNM Hokona Hall rooms 114 or 124. The Application deadline is Thursday, September 9, 2010 at 4:00 in the College of Educa- tion Hokona Hall Room 114. Contact person: Eileen Waldschmidt, Program Manager, APS/UNM Career Develop- ment Program, Hokona Hall 124, UNM, Albuquerque, NM 87131-1241, (505) 277-6114 or [email protected] or visit our website at http://ted.unm. edu/teaser1.html. Click on “Career De- velopment Program”.

RESPONSIBLE PT CAREGIVER: effi- ciency apartment salary of $750-$800/mo. Cable, utilities, internet access. Daily ride to/from CNM/UNM (ideal for students). Weekday evenings and mornings, finalists will be required to have valid DL, we pay for drug and background check. No pets or smoking. Located near Academy and Wyoming. 856-5276.

!BARTENDER TRAINING! Bartending Academy, 3724 Eubank NE, www. newmexicobartending.com 292-4180.

Jobs On CampusTHE DAILY LOBO IS LOOKING FOR

AN ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVE!

Flexible scheduling, great money-mak- ing potential, and a fun environment! Sales experience preferred (advertising sales, retail sales, or telemarketing sales). Hiring immediately! You must be a student registered for 6 hours or more. Work-study is not required. For in- formation, call Daven at 277-5656, or apply online at unmjobs.unm.edu. search department: Student Publica-tions

VolunteersHEALTHY VOLUNTEERS AND subjects with and without asthma are needed for a research study looking at the effects of fat and physical activity on the breath- ing tubes. If you qualify, compensation will be provided for your time and incon- venience upon study completion. If you are healthy or have asthma, over the age of 18, and are interested in finding out more about this study, please con- tact or leave a message for Teresa at (505)269-1074 or e-mail [email protected]

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

• Come to Marron Hall, room 131, show your UNM ID and receive a special rate of 10¢ per word in Personals, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale category.

new mexicoDAILY LOBOCLASSIFIEDs • 30¢ per word per day for five or more consecutive days without changing or cancelling.• 40¢ per word per day for four days or less or non-consecutive days.• Special effects are charged addtionally: logos, bold, italics, centering, blank lines, larger font, etc. • 1 p. m. business day before publication.

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Call 277-5656.• Fax or E-mail: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Fax ad text, dates and category to 277-7531, or e-mail to [email protected].• In person: Pre-pay by cash, check, money order, Visa or MasterCard. Come by room 131 in Marron Hall from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, MasterCard. Mail payment, ad text, dates and category.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230

1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

• All rates include both print and online editions of the Daily Lobo.

• Come to Marron Hall, room 107, show your UNM ID and receive FREE classifi eds in Your Space, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale Category.

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Call 277-5656• Fax or Email: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Fax ad text, dates and catergory to 277-7530 or email to classifi [email protected]• In person: Pre-payment by cash, money order, check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Come by room 107 in Marron Hall from 8:00am to 5:00pm.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Mail payment, ad text, dates and catergory.

WHAT?FREE

Daily LoboClassifieds

for students?

Yes!If you are a UNM student, you get free classifieds in the following categories:

Your SpaceRooms for RentFor Sale Categories-- Audio/Video Bikes/Cycles Computer Stuff Pets For Sale

FurnitureGarage SalesPhotoTextbooksVehicles for Sale

The small print: Each ad must be 25 or fewer words, scheduled for 5 or fewer days. Free ads must be for personal use

and only in the listed categories.

To place your free ad, come by Marron Hall, Room 131 and show your student ID,

or email us from your unm email account at

COOL!

[email protected]

107

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo Classifieds

AnnouncementsAnnouncementsFun, Food, MusicLost and FoundMiscellaneous

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

Work Study Jobs

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:

1.) Go to www.dailylobo.com

2.) Click on “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!

Please limit your desription to 25 words (al-though you may type in more, your descrip-tion will be edited to 25 words). To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will apear with the title, time, location and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.

Campus EventsMohammed Omer, Palestinian JournalistStarts at: 1:00pmLocation: UNM Ballroom A, second floor SUBOmer, ‘voice for the voiceless,’ has written for the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, The Nation, Inter Press Service News Agency.He will discuss Palestinian rights.

FILM: The Battle of Durban II: Israel, Palestine and the United Nations.Starts at: 1:00pmLocation: Ballroom A, SUB 2nd floor, UNM.This documentary shows how the longstand-ing Israeli-Palestinian Conflict disrupted two successive United Nations World Conference--leaving hundreds of millions of victims voiceless

CAPS: Memorization strategies workshopStarts at: 8:00pmLocation: Lobo Center for Student Ath-lete Success (LCSAS) 2nd Floor Student Support & Services Center Hey UNM students! Want to learn study strat-egies to achieve academic success, come and attend memorization strategies workshops offered by CAPS for FREE.

Changeling the LostStarts at: 8:00pmLocation: Student Union Building, Up-per Floor Santa Ana A&BMind’s Eye Theatre UNM presents the Cama-rilla’s Changeling The Requiem venue. Please call Marco at 505 453 7825 for information/confirmation.

Get it done! Finish You Dissertation WorkshopStarts at: 12:00pm

Location: 1160 Mesa Vista HallYOU CAN DO IT! HOLLY CAN SHOW YOU HOW!Holly Siebert Kawakami, Ph.D. is a profession-al coach. Fo info 277-3716 or email [email protected], tell classmates and friends!

Community EventsSai Baba devotional singing (bhajans)Starts at: 7:00pmLocation: 111 Maple Street (corner of Central & Maple Street)UNM area-Phone: 505-366-4982

new mexico LOBO LIFE Events of the DayPlanning your day has never been easier!

DAILY LOBO

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com

LARRY’S HATSBEST HATS FOR ANY OCCASION

HIKE - TRAVEL - WEDDINGCUFFLINKS AND ACCESSORIES

3102 Central Ave SE 266-2095

RESTAURANTOPENINGS AVAILABLEStarting at $8.50/hr. Day, night, late night, weekends.

Cashiers/busing positions. Will work around your schedule.

Apply in person.2400 Central SE

Hiring Summer Interns Civil Engineering,

Construction Engineering, and Construction Management

Pay starts at $8.00-$10.00/hr

Contact us for more information

505-771-4900Fax resumé to [email protected]