nm daily lobo 040813

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Goodbye social security see Page 4 April 8, 2013 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 monday Inside the Daily Lobo Not to be repeated see Page 8 volume 117 issue 133 73 | 39 TODAY Making a splash see Back Page by Ardee Napolitano [email protected] This week, undergraduates can vote for student govern- ment representatives from the “Unite for ASUNM,” “Believe for ASUNM” and “Shout for ASUNM” slates in the ASUNM elections. Read up on the vice- presidential candidates and their platforms today before casting your ballots Wednes- day. See Friday’s edition of the Daily Lobo for a Q-and-A with the presidential candidates. Daily Lobo: If elected, on what principles would you mod- el your vice presidency? David Saucier, “Unite for ASUNM”: The key principles that I intend to base this vice presidency are openness to our organizations, accountability for our senators and myself, and transparency in all processes of our business. Brandon Meyers, “Believe for ASUNM”: The first is hard work. I think the best Senate is one that is trying to do ev- erything they can to not only reach out to the students but also write great legislation. The second one is accountability. There are a lot of responsibili- ties in the ASUNM Constitution that may seem burdensome to people, and I want to make sure senators are held accountable to those. Third and fourth are integrity and honesty in trying to hold true to your values as an individual but also representing your constituent base. Nancy Martinez, “Shout for ASUNM”: If elected, I would want to work with the sena- tors and the presidents to bring equality, even with senators that have been elected from other slates. I would love to cooperate with them to bring more equal- ity and diversity on campus. DL: After months of debate, the SUB Board finally decided in February to keep Chick-fil-A on campus. Would you work to support or refute this decision? DS: I recognize the contro- versy behind this situation, but I think that Chick-Fil-A offers jobs to students. I know the stu- dents that work at Chick-Fil-A to be kind and accepting of all people. BM: As a senator, I was in sup- port of the ASUNM resolution. I wanted to support the minor- ity in this scenario. My personal stance is that I love moving for- ward. I’ve talked with Amy Ves- per of the UNM Social Justice Club, and I like the progress that she and (ASUNM) President (Caroline) Muraida have made in drafting policies that are for all vendors that come into the SUB so that we don’t get into these sticky situations again. NM: I think it’s ultimately not up to me, but to the students, so I would work with them and see what they want. Eventually, it’s everyone’s decision. My person- al opinion didn’t really matter, but after all, I was against it just because of how it was directed. DL: Earlier in this semester, the University witnessed various cases of assaults on campus that prompted safety initiatives from the administration. If elected, how do you plan to make the campus safer for students? DS: One of the proposed so- lutions to this would be either to install more lighting around campus or even to provide an in- door running track to those of us who like to run during the night. Past that, I believe prevention is the best way to go. I think that we should form forums to help dis- cuss some of the risks specific to certain locations and how they can be avoided. I would also ask the UNM police officers to come in and talk and give their take on things at these forums. BM: I don’t have all the an- swers. In this situation I would be looking to get input and opin- ion about how I should repre- sent my constituents best. I was told that (UNMPD) has opened up a student position for some- one to walk around campus dur- ing the night and making sure everything’s OK. A lot of what UNMPD does is in their cars patrolling the streets. But of- ten it happens right here where there’s no streets. That makes sense, and it would be cool if we had students as neighborhood watch. NM: I would definitely bring up more lighting and increase security, because those issues should never even be tolerated. Being a girl, I think I’m afraid of walking around campus. And I would increase the lighting & Q A with ASUNM vice presidential candidates Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo Senior Amber Menke releases a pole after a vault on Saturday. The Lobos went on to garner several top-10 finishes. See Back Page for story. OVER THE BAR see ASUNM PAGE 3 Martinez approves 1% pay raise Governor signs bill raising salaries of all state employees by John Tyczkowski [email protected] Gov. Susana Martinez on Friday signed a bill that allows for a 1 per- cent pay increase for UNM faculty and staff. e governor had until noon on Friday to sign, veto or do nothing with bills passed through the Leg- islature this session. Martinez signed the $5.9 bil- lion state budget proposal Friday, which included several line-item vetoes. However, the 1-percent pay increase for state employees, in- cluding UNM faculty and staff, re- mained, as did the 3.5 percent in- crease in funding for UNM. It has been four years since the last faculty and staff pay raise at UNM. Martinez also signed into law the bill that proposed diverting $10 million from the tobacco set- tlement permanent fund into the Lottery Scholarship to prevent cuts to student tuition assistance. is will cover current scholarship re- cipients and the projected number to receive the scholarship for the 2013-14 school year. Martinez said in a statement that she signed the bill as a short- term measure while the search for a permanent solution to Lottery Scholarship solvency continues. “So, although I am signing this bill, I encourage lawmakers to work together to restructure the lottery program so we can maintain solven- cy and so the program is sustainable without a continued infusion of oth- er state funds,” Martinez said. A capital outlay bill saw $4.4 million in projects spending vetoed before the governor signed it into law. e vetoes included $125,000 in projects spending out of a total of $10.1 million in projects spend- ing for UNM. Martinez also signed a tax pack- age that included the so-called “Breaking Bad bill,” which was ve- toed last month then integrated into this tax package. e “Break- ing Bad bill” provision expands tax incentives for television crews film- ing long-running television shows in New Mexico. According to the bill, tax refunds for television crews are increased from 25 percent to 30 percent of a producer’s total qualified spending amount. The overall tax package focuses Gov. Susana Martinez holds a press conference at her office to address the end of the 2013 Legislative Session on March 16. Martinez had until noon on Friday to approve, veto, or doing nothing with bills that passed the Legislature this session. Luis Sanchez Saturno The Santa Fe New Mexican AP photo see Martinez PAGE 2

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 040813

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Goodbye social securitysee Page 4

A p r i l 8 , 2 0 1 3The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

monday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Not to be repeated

see Page 8volume 117 issue 133 73 |39TODAY

Making a splash

see Back Page

by Ardee [email protected]

This week, undergraduates can vote for student govern-ment representatives from the “Unite for ASUNM,” “Believe for ASUNM” and “Shout for ASUNM” slates in the ASUNM elections. Read up on the vice-presidential candidates and their platforms today before casting your ballots Wednes-day. See Friday’s edition of the Daily Lobo for a Q-and-A with the presidential candidates.

Daily Lobo: If elected, on what principles would you mod-el your vice presidency?

David Saucier, “Unite for ASUNM”: The key principles that I intend to base this vice presidency are openness to our organizations, accountability for our senators and myself, and transparency in all processes of our business.

Brandon Meyers, “Believe for ASUNM”: The first is hard work. I think the best Senate is one that is trying to do ev-erything they can to not only reach out to the students but also write great legislation. The second one is accountability. There are a lot of responsibili-ties in the ASUNM Constitution that may seem burdensome to people, and I want to make sure senators are held accountable to those. Third and fourth are integrity and honesty in trying to hold true to your values as an individual but also representing your constituent base.

Nancy Martinez, “Shout for ASUNM”: If elected, I would want to work with the sena-tors and the presidents to bring equality, even with senators that have been elected from other slates. I would love to cooperate with them to bring more equal-ity and diversity on campus.

DL: After months of debate, the SUB Board finally decided in February to keep Chick-fil-A on campus. Would you work to support or refute this decision?

DS: I recognize the contro-versy behind this situation, but I think that Chick-Fil-A offers jobs to students. I know the stu-dents that work at Chick-Fil-A to be kind and accepting of all people.

BM: As a senator, I was in sup-

port of the ASUNM resolution. I wanted to support the minor-ity in this scenario. My personal stance is that I love moving for-ward. I’ve talked with Amy Ves-per of the UNM Social Justice Club, and I like the progress that she and (ASUNM) President (Caroline) Muraida have made in drafting policies that are for all vendors that come into the SUB so that we don’t get into these sticky situations again.

NM: I think it’s ultimately not up to me, but to the students, so I would work with them and see what they want. Eventually, it’s everyone’s decision. My person-al opinion didn’t really matter, but after all, I was against it just because of how it was directed.

DL: Earlier in this semester, the University witnessed various cases of assaults on campus that prompted safety initiatives from the administration. If elected, how do you plan to make the campus safer for students?

DS: One of the proposed so-lutions to this would be either to install more lighting around campus or even to provide an in-door running track to those of us who like to run during the night. Past that, I believe prevention is the best way to go. I think that we should form forums to help dis-cuss some of the risks specific to certain locations and how they can be avoided. I would also ask the UNM police officers to come in and talk and give their take on things at these forums.

BM: I don’t have all the an-swers. In this situation I would be looking to get input and opin-ion about how I should repre-sent my constituents best. I was told that (UNMPD) has opened up a student position for some-one to walk around campus dur-ing the night and making sure everything’s OK. A lot of what UNMPD does is in their cars patrolling the streets. But of-ten it happens right here where there’s no streets. That makes sense, and it would be cool if we had students as neighborhood watch.

NM: I would definitely bring up more lighting and increase security, because those issues should never even be tolerated. Being a girl, I think I’m afraid of walking around campus. And I would increase the lighting

&Q Awith ASUNM vice

presidential candidates

Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo

Senior Amber Menke releases a pole after a vault on Saturday. The Lobos went on to garner several top-10 � nishes. See Back Page for story.

OVER THE BAR

see ASUNM PAGE 3

Martinez approves 1% pay raiseGovernor signs bill raising salaries of all state employees

by John [email protected]

Gov. Susana Martinez on Friday signed a bill that allows for a 1 per-cent pay increase for UNM faculty and sta� .

� e governor had until noon on Friday to sign, veto or do nothing with bills passed through the Leg-islature this session.

Martinez signed the $5.9 bil-lion state budget proposal Friday, which included several line-item vetoes. However, the 1-percent pay increase for state employees, in-cluding UNM faculty and sta� , re-mained, as did the 3.5 percent in-crease in funding for UNM.

It has been four years since the last faculty and sta� pay raise at UNM.

Martinez also signed into law the bill that proposed diverting $10 million from the tobacco set-tlement permanent fund into the Lottery Scholarship to prevent cuts to student tuition assistance. � is will cover current scholarship re-cipients and the projected number to receive the scholarship for the 2013-14 school year.

Martinez said in a statement that she signed the bill as a short-term measure while the search for a permanent solution to Lottery Scholarship solvency continues.

“So, although I am signing this bill, I encourage lawmakers to work together to restructure the lottery program so we can maintain solven-cy and so the program is sustainable without a continued infusion of oth-er state funds,” Martinez said.

A capital outlay bill saw $4.4 million in projects spending vetoed before the governor signed it into law. � e vetoes included $125,000 in projects spending out of a total of $10.1 million in projects spend-ing for UNM.

Martinez also signed a tax pack-age that included the so-called “Breaking Bad bill,” which was ve-toed last month then integrated into this tax package. � e “Break-ing Bad bill” provision expands tax incentives for television crews � lm-ing long-running television shows in New Mexico.

According to the bill, tax refunds for television crews are increased from 25 percent to 30 percent of a producer’s total quali� ed spending amount.

The overall tax package focuses

Gov. Susana Martinez holds a press conference at her o� ce to address the end of the 2013 Legislative Session on March 16. Martinez had until noon on Friday to approve, veto, or doing nothing with bills that passed the Legislature this session.Luis Sanchez SaturnoThe Santa Fe New MexicanAP photo

see Martinez PAGE 2

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 040813

PAGETWONEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOM O N D A Y , A P R I L 8 , 2 0 1 3

volume 117 issue 133Telephone: (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 $75 per academic year. E-mail [email protected] 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 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. 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.

Editor-in-ChiefElizabeth Cleary Managing EditorAlexandra SwanbergNews EditorJohn TyczkowskiAssistant News EditorArdee NapolitanoPhoto EditorJuan LabrecheCopy ChiefAaron Wiltse

Culture EditorNicole PerezAssistant Culture Editor Antonio SanchezSports EditorThomas Romero-SalasAssistant Sports EditorJ. R. OppenheimOpinion/Social Media EditorAlexandra SwanbergMulti Media EditorZachary Zahorik

Design DirectorConnor ColemanDesign AssistantsErica AragonJosh DolinAndrew QuickAdvertising ManagerBrittany McDanielSales ManagerJeff BellClassified ManagerMayra Aguilar

LookingLob

for a

NOTE: The marks of The University of New Mexico are controlled under a licensing program administered by The Collegiate Licensing Company. Any use of these marks will require written approval from The Collegiate Licensing Company.

Yes No Restrictions

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO LOBOS

• University seal permitted on products for resale:• Alterations to seal permitted:• Overlaying / intersecting graphics permitted with seal:• University licenses consumables:• University licenses health & beauty products:• University permits numbers on products for resale:• Mascot caricatures permitted:• Cross licensing with other marks permitted:• NO USE of current player's name, image, or likeness is permitted on commercial products in violation of NCAA rules and regulations.• NO REFERENCES to alcohol, drugs, or tobacco related products may be used in conjunction with University marks.

LOCATION: ALBUQUERQUE, NMMASCOT: LOBOSMASCOT NICKNAME: LOBO LOUIE, LOBO LUCY

ESTABLISHED DATE: 1889CONFERENCE: MOUNTAIN WEST

MARCH 16, 2011

RED SILVER BLACK BLUE-GREEN GRAY

The University of New Mexico ®UNM™New Mexico Lobos™New Mexico™Lobos ®The Pit ®Lobo Country™Lobo Nation™

Cherry and Silver™ Be a Lobo™ Lobo Pride™ Everyone's a Lobo™ Mile High and Louder Than...™ Lobo for Life™We Are New Mexico ®

REDSILVERSILVER ALTERNATEBLACKWHITEBLUE-GREENGRAYLIGHT GRAY

PANTONE 200PANTONE 428PANTONE PROCESS BLACK - 23%PANTONE PROCESS BLACKWHITEPANTONE 321PANTONE 410PANTONE 410 - 30%

MADEIRA 1147MADEIRA 1011

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University of New Mexico-Gallup

University of New Mexico-Los Alamos

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University of New Mexico-Taos

University of New Mexico-Rio Rancho

LookingLooking To that blue-eyed nerd who looked really cute in glasses at Bricklight, I can’t stop thinking about you. You looked gorgeous with your

navy-blue shirt, your trois jours and that pizza stain you had on your chin. I wanted to tell you to wipe it off so badly, but I was shy. Would you maybe want to hang out there again sometime? I’ll be waiting for you there, and I’ll bring napkins.

Send a message to the one who got away in an email [email protected]

and we will publish it in next week’s Looking for a Lobo

Saucy

on lowering income taxes on corporations operating within the state in an attempt to allow businesses to expand operations and new businesses to begin operations. It also gives tax breaks to corporations that sell most of their products outside New Mexico.

Martinez also signed into law a bill that would make it easier for space tourism companies to operate out of New Mexi-co’s Spaceport America by shielding them from civil damages lawsuits. The bill does so by creating state-specific legal defini-

tions of space flight and related terms, such as what a spacecraft and space tour-ist are.

Martinez vetoed a bill that would have raised the state minimum wage from $7.50 to $8.50.

In her veto statement, Martinez said she would have supported a 30-cent min-imum wage increase that would bring the state’s minimum wage in line with Arizona’s.

“I was clear with lawmakers that I support an increase in the minimum wage

in New Mexico — one that would put us on a level playing field with neighboring states,” Martinez said. “This compromise had bipartisan support, but failed on a tie vote in the House.”

By contrast, Albuquerque and Santa Fe both enjoy minimum wages higher than the state’s. Albuquerque’s new minimum wage of $8.50 took effect Jan. 1 after two-thirds of voters approved the ballot item in November.

Santa Fe’s new minimum wage of $10.51 took effect March 1. It’s tied to the

city’s Living Wage law, which makes mini-mum wage increases mandatory whenev-er there is an annual increase in the Bu-reau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Cleri-cal Workers in the Western Region.

Bernalillo County commissioners are considering a plan to raise the county’s minimum wage from $7.50 to $8 on July 1, and then to $8.50 on Jan. 1, 2014. Com-missioners will hold a final vote on the plan April 23.

Martinez from PAGE 1

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 040813

New Mexico Daily lobo

SHOGUNJAPANESE

RESTAURANTBest Sushi Best Service Best Taste

LunchMon-Fri: 11:30am-2pmSat: 12-2:30pmDinnerMon-Thurs: 5-9:30pmFri-Sat: 5-10:30pm

3310 Central Ave SE(505) 265-9166

Lunch Bento $8.95-$9.95Sushi lunch $11.45-$13.45

New Orleans is still very much in need of lots of reconstruction, and we hope you want to help.

Thank you very much. We are excitedly looking forward to

this trip to help those in need.

The Wesley Foundation will make a Mission Trip May 11-17,

to help with reconstruction through the Epworth Project.

The cost is $275 a person (including food), though if you

need fi nancial help it can be given.

Please register by April 19 by calling 323-1251.Call 323-1251 for more info.

What is Ready to Run New Mexico? Ready to Run New Mexico is a bipartisan program geared towards women interested in running for offi ce, working on a campaign, or positioning themselves for other types of public leadership. Ready to Run New Mexico participants will learn about launching a campaign, media training, fundraising, networking with political parties and organizations.

Conference Program: Ready to Run New Mexico features two special opening programs aimed at increasing the participation of woman in New Mexico politics.

Southwest Hispanic Research InstituteReady to Run New MexicoCampaign Training for Women

Friday, April 12, 2013 and Saturday, April 13, 2013

Southwest Hispanic Research Institute

Friday, April 12, 20135:00 PM – Registration6:00 PM - Welcome Dinner and Keynote Address: Congresswoman Heather Wilson (R) (Former U.S. Representative NM CD-1) MCM Elegante Hotel Embassy III Room 2020 Menaul Blvd. NE (866) 650-4900

Friday, April 12, 20132:00 PM-4:00 PM - UNM Student Union Luminaria Room - Miss Representation Video: The fi lm explores how the media’s misrepresentations of women have led to the under representation of women in positions of power and infl uence. The fi lm is sponsored by Political Science Graduate Student Association (GSA).

Saturday, April 13, 2013Training Program: Registration Begins at 8:00 AMSanta Ana A&B. Conference RoomsUNM Student Union Building

Other speakers include: State Senator Lisa Torraco; State Representative Jane Powdrell-Culbert; State Representative Georgene Louis; Mary Herrera, Former Secretary of State

Registration Fee: $50 (Fee includes meals and all conference materials.) Full student scholarships are available on a fi rst-come-fi rst-served basis.

For information on scholarship applications and how to register, visit our website: http://shri.unm.edu/readytorun.html or call the

Southwest Hispanic Research Institute at (505)-277-2965.

news Monday, april 8, 2013/ page 3

because I have noticed that in some areas on campus, it gets dark.

DL: There has been much discussion about whether the Athletics Department has been receiving too much money from student fees. What are your opinions on this, and how do you think the University could operate more efficiently on a tight budget?

DS: I think student athletics is an important part of UNM, and it allows opportunities for students to really get connected with this University. At the same time, a balance should always be made in terms of funding to make sure that things are not going overboard. As stated earli-er, I intend to have transparency though all business operations so that the students and others can keep us accountable.

BM: It’s a double-edged sword that I don’t like treading, because Athletics is a certain sect of students that you don’t want to choose to alienate by saying that we should slash their SFRB funding … I think what we need to look at when operating on a tighter budget is addressing what a student fee is and what should it go to … By address-ing what a student fee is for, we could achieve a more efficient budget process that can get tighter as we go through time.

NM: I personally think that the Athletics Department is get-ting too much funding. I think we should start focusing on oth-er areas first, and then eventu-ally on Athletics. A lot of the

students that I have talked to are upset with the budget, so I would direct it more to the stu-dents and see how they would want to spend funding.

DL: A number of UNM stu-dents are older, nontradition-al students who have one or two jobs while taking classes at UNM and commute to cam-pus. Considering that you are a young traditional student, how are you prepared to represent nontraditional students’ inter-est at UNM?

DS: As a friend to nontradi-tional students both in my de-partment and others, I believe that we are all students and even those that we label ‘nontradi-tional’ are students and should be represented just the same as all the others.

BM: Within the scope of the vice president, I would really be interested in inviting the Asso-ciation for Non-Traditional Stu-dents to speak as a guest speak-er at the Senate about what they do and in what ways ASUNM can collaborate with them to better represent their needs and inter-ests. While in a small way, I hope that the dialogue that is opened up would prove to be beneficial and begin strides towards a bet-ter representative senate.

NM: As far as parents or stu-dents who stay late here on cam-pus, I would try to create a center where the education department could help to create a daycare center so that parents could go to their classes. And even trans-portation, because I know a lot of them don’t drive on campus.

Having the buses running late would also be a great idea to ac-commodate their schedules.

DL: Why are you the best choice for vice president?

DS: I believe that based on my previous leadership experi-ences, I would offer a new ben-eficial view and leadership of the senate. This would allow for the transfer of different information that can be used for future sen-ators, vice presidents and be-yond to help the ASUNM Senate progress and grow. In addition the key thing that I have learned in my leadership roles was that leadership is about service. I am the best choice for vice president because I will serve UNM to make sure that all things that I do are for the progression and service of the student population at UNM.

BM: I’m not going to say that experience alone is going to be the predicator of why I am the best choice, though I do think that my five semesters as a senator play to my advantage. I know all these things that the vice president does for the Senate, and I think that’s why I’m a great candidate. And I’m someone that’s completely open to any dialogue, and I don’t shush any-thing out or cut anything out. I feel like I have an open-door policy, and that office there downstairs is about the best thing that I can have.

NM: I would be the best choice because I come from a different background. I have no experience with ASUNM, and I really don’t think that anyone who has started there has had an experience before. I would bring the equality back and make it stronger.

ASUNM from page 1

Student published in ‘Nature’by Astrid Galvan

The Albuquerque Journal

Scott Jasechko used his road trip from Canada to Albuquerque, where he was about to start a gradu-ate program at UNM, to gather water samples.

Less than two years later, his study of those water samples has landed him in Nature, the prestigious science journal. Jasechko is the lead author of “Terrestrial Water Fluxes Dominated by Transpiration,” a study that found plants use a vast amount of fresh wa-ter in their life cycles, which can help predict future climate change effects on water resources.

That Jasechko, a doctoral candi-date in Earth and Planetary Sciences, was published in Nature is “absolutely huge” and “quite remarkable,” study co-author Peter Fawcett said. Fawcett, a UNM associate professor, helped su-pervise Jasechko, along with second co-author Zach Sharp, also a UNM professor. They worked with three sci-entists from Alberta Innovates, a Ca-nadian research institution.

Fawcett said he can’t recall any other graduate student in his 16 years

or so at UNM who was lead author on a study in Nature.

The study is “really significant because it tells us that if we actual-ly change vegetation in a significant way, we can really alter the flux of water from the surface to the atmo-sphere,” Fawcett said.

Jasechko, a Canada native, be-gan collecting samples in summer 2011 when he was driving down from Canada to Albuquerque. He took wa-ter from the Great Lakes, Lake Mead, Yellowstone and Jackson lakes, Lake Winnipeg and Elephant Butte on his drive down.

Later, Jasechko compared those samples to others gathered by scien-tists around the world. In total, he an-alyzed water from 73 lakes to find that the amount of fresh water that plants use during their life cycles accounts for the biggest movement of fresh wa-ter on Earth. The amount of fresh wa-ter plants use is more than 1 1/2 times the movement of water in all of Earth’s rivers, Jasechko found.

The findings are groundbreaking in that, until now, there was no dis-tinction between the amount of water that comes from evaporation and the

amount produced by plants. But high carbon levels reduce

the amount of water plants release. Therefore, increased carbon levels in a warmer climate could affect water availability, Jasechko said.

“Where we’d like to take these re-sults now is to explain how vegetation will change in a future warmer cli-mate and what implications that will have for future fresh water resources,” Jasechko said. “This research pos-es new questions and insights into how future fresh water resources will respond to a warmer and car-bon-enriched atmosphere.”

Jasechko, who expects to com-plete his Ph.D. next year, submit-ted the article to Nature last fall. Its publication comes after a rigour-ous months-long peer-review process.

Jasechko said the study would not have been possible without a grant from the Caswell Silver Foundation or his mentors, Sharp and Fawcett.

“I think the research really shows how important funding graduate students really is for the University,” Jasechko said.

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 040813

[email protected] Editor/ Alexandra Swanberg/ @AlexSwanberg The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Monday,

April 8, 2013

Page

4

LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS:

THIS WEEK’S POLL:

8%

3%

61%

28%

GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM

TO VOTE D D L

EDITORIAL BOARD

Elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

Alexandra SwanbergManaging editorOpinion editor

John TyczkowskiNews editor

LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY

Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo offi ce in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. � e 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 refl ect the views of the author and do not refl ect the opinions of Lobo employees.

On April 1, the Daily Lobo printed its April Fools’ Day issue. What do you think about this?

Way to give away the surprise! Oh wait, is that today’s issue?

Wow, egg on my face. I thought this was legitimate news.

Considering the far-slanted news the Daily Lobo typically publishes, I wasn’t fooled. Then I realized there weren’t ty-pos and new it had to be a joke.

This paper had more color ink than usual, which makes for a smooth touch when I’m blowing my nose. Thanks for � nally thinking of your readers.

Out of 36 responses.

On March 30, former UNM men’s basketball head coach Steve Alford announced that he was leaving to coach at UCLA. This was the same week Alford agreed to a 10-year exten-sion and $240,000 raise with UNM. Associate men’s basketball coach Craig “Noodles” Neal is replacing Alford. What do you think about this?

Considering the money and prestige Alford is get-ting with the UCLA gig, I can’t really blame him for leaving UNM.

I don’t care what Alford left for. It is never admi-rable or understandable for a person to break an agreement.

Good riddance — Noodles is a legit replacement.

I don’t care who coaches the team; there are more important things to be concerned with at UNM.

Editor,

Hands — We enjoy using our hands to work, to garden, to play musical instruments, to prepare and eat meals, to pleasure our geni-tals, to make love with others … If we pay fed-eral income tax, we pay to destroy other peo-ple’s hands in war.

Eyes — We enjoy seeing � owers, sunsets, trees, mountains, written words, loved ones, attractive bodies … If we pay federal income tax, we pay to blind people in war.

Skin — If we pay federal income tax, we pay to severely burn babies and to rip open the � esh of grandmas and grandpas.

Feet — We enjoy walking, running, danc-ing … If we pay federal income tax, we pay to tear apart the feet of children who will never run again.

Home — We enjoy having here our favorite clothes, treasured photos, special keepsakes, protection from the cold and storms, a place to feel safe with loved ones … If we pay feder-al income tax, we pay to bomb other people’s homes.

� is is what Lockheed Martin, Kirtland Air Force Base, Sandia Weapons Labs, Los Alam-os Weapons Labs and federal income tax are about — the maiming, mutilation and mur-der of multitudes of our sisters and brothers abroad.

� e main purpose of the U.S. Empire is to make sure that most USA-ans, especially the large corporations and � lthy rich elite, keep stealing and hogging the wealth of the world. � e U.S. is less than 5 percent of the world’s people but consumes 25 percent of the world’s wealth.

� e United States routinely supports bloody regimes that bow to Wall Street and the U.S. Pentagon — allowing U.S.-based cor-porations to rob their nations’ masses of their resources and labor.

� e United States has deliberately supported brutal, rotten regimes in dozens of nations: Egypt, Afghanistan, Israel, Iraq, Iran, Zaire, Fiji, Ethiopia, Rhodesia, South Africa, Pakistan, Brunei, South Vietnam, Argentina, Liberia, Honduras, Paraguay,

Editor’s note: In this letter, the author refers to the letter he wrote that was pub-lished in the Daily Lobo March 26. The let-ter, “Lobo Men’s Basketball deserves recog-nition for solid season,” urged readers not to overlook how well the men’s basketball team did overall this season in light of the loss to No. 14 Harvard in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

Recently I lavished much praise on the men’s basketball team and its coach in a letter to the Daily Lobo, and while I am saddened by the choice of coach Steve Alford to leave, it is understandable in this day and age. During his press confer-ence, he sat and gleefully articulated his thoughts in front of a Lobo backdrop and said “I’m going to UCLA,” as if he were a kid with his first box of Pop Rocks. Despite the raise and 10-year contract extension, in this day and age, this is how the college basketball world moves.

LETTERS

Commitment is key to building decent teams

Your income tax dollars pay for global misery

Panama, El Salvador, Indonesia, Taiwan, Greece, Brazil, Portugal, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Dominican Republic, Turkey, Morocco, Spain, Columbia, Peru, Philippines, Cuba, Haiti, Chile, Guatemala, South Korea, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Mexico … � e U.S. Empire is the enemy of genuine democracy, justice, freedom and human rights.

� e best way to refuse to pay federal in-come tax to rob, terrorize, paralyze, cripple, blind, torture, make homeless and murder our sisters and brothers — with no � nes and no threats from this government — is to live simply, below the federal income taxable lev-el. I lived well for all of 2012 on $4,641 — less than half the federal income taxable level of $9,750 for a single person under 65. I have paid no federal income tax for war for 34 years and I pledge never to do so the rest of my life.

I have no right to pay tax to do to other people what I do not want them to do to me. Why march for peace and pay for war?

Don SchraderDaily Lobo reader

Hopefully Alford can continue his win-ning ways at UCLA, where a second-round loss to a 14th seeded team will not be re-warded with a raise and 10-year contract extension. Hopefully he can follow in the footsteps of John Wooden, the UCLA’s leg-endary coach, and bring the Bruins back to preeminence. Hopefully he will not fol-low in the footsteps of Ben Howland, who, with his run of Final Four appearances, was apparently not enough for the school and was bounced after a first-round loss. I hope coach Alford has more postseason gas in his tank in Westwood than he did in Albuquerque.

It’s always a tough time at the end of the season, when so many coaches move about the country. Generally they do so while pointing to the success of the Ca-dillac programs they are heading toward, the dream it is to coach there, and some legendary coach such as John Wooden who made them what they’ve become. It’s also tough because while these depart-ing coaches leave to fill the shoes of the failed coaches before them, they emu-late none of the qualities of the legendary men they praise. It’s hard to imagine John Wooden leaving UCLA after he had signed a 10-year extension, but this isn’t that era anymore.

While it is doubtful it will ever happen again, it would be nice to see a coach de-cide to come to and stick to a program to create and design their own legacy and de-fine a school as a pinnacle program for bas-ketball. Before John Wooden, was UCLA the top-tier program it is now? Not hardly, but he set about with conviction and loy-alty to build it to that. Coaches jumping to these legendary programs have an almost 100 percent failing rate, but they contin-ue to do so. UCLA will probably pay when Alford is canned ignominiously for failing to live up to the standards of a coach and program that had attributes that don’t ex-ist in college ranks anymore.

Best of luck, coach Alford; may the coaching job you receive after you follow the current trend of ship-jumping coaches to failure at UCLA not be a 1-AA school.

Jason StaffordUNM student

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 040813

newsNew Mexico Daily lobo Monday, april 8, 2013/ page 5

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Tortoise lost, not stolenThe Associated Press

DUBUQUE, Iowa — An Afri-can leopard tortoise thought to be stolen from an Iowa muse-um was actually trapped behind paneling in her enclosure, and a misguided employee who found her lied to keep up the story about her theft, the museum an-nounced Friday.

In a bizarre move, the employ-ee who found the 18-pound rep-tile named Cashew put her into a building elevator in an attempt to prevent the museum further embarrassment, said Jerry En-zler, president and CEO of the National Mississippi River Muse-um & Aquarium in Dubuque.

The tortoise was found alone in a museum elevator on Thursday, two days after the museum had discovered she

was missing and announced that she had been stolen. Museum officials told media outlets Thursday that they believed a regretful thief had smuggled her back inside.

But several hours later, a mu-seum employee came forward and told the truth: Cashew was never stolen.

“The action taken by the em-ployee Thursday afternoon was wrong and is not reflective of the integrity of the staff who dedi-cate themselves to the highest of Museum & Aquarium stan-dards,” Enzler said in a statement Friday.

Enzler said the employee, whose name and position has not been released, will be repri-manded. He said it was a person-nel issue and did not provide any additional information.

Cashew is one of six large tortoises on display in the enclosure. A 4-foot glass wall separates visitors from the creatures.

Enzler said the notion of a stolen tortoise grabbed national attention.

“The idea that someone may steal a tortoise was so disturbing, and I think people responded to that,” he said.

He’s just glad the tortoise is in good health, and he said staff is reviewing the enclosures.

“It has good karma to know Cashew wasn’t stolen and some-one didn’t violate the museum and its exhibit,” he said. “I think it restores our faith in humanity to know someone didn’t take the animal.”

The 9-year-old tortoise will be back on display Saturday.

Katlyn R. Gerken / AP photo

In this undated file photo provided by Katlyn R. Gerken, a staff member of the National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium in Dubuque, Iowa holds Cashew, an 18-pound African leopard tortoise. The museum said Friday that an employee found the tortoise behind paneling in her enclosure and hid her in an elevator in a misguided attempt to prevent further embarrassment after officials announced Tuesday that they believed Cashew had been stolen.

Turns out, tortoise reported stolen just ‘behind paneling in her enclosure’

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 040813

New Mexico Daily loboPage 6 / Monday, aPril 8, 2013 sports

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by Joe ResnickThe Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Hyun-Jin Ryu earned his first major league victory, shrugging off a two-run homer in the first inning by An-drew McCutchen and pitching the Los Angeles Dodgers past the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-2 Sunday for a three-game sweep.

Adrian Gonzalez drove in four runs with three hits and Justin Sellers homered for the Dodgers.

Ryu (1-1) allowed two runs and three hits in 6 1-3 innings, striking out six and walking two. The 26-year-old lefty from South Korea signed a $36 million, six-year contract with the Dodgers in December after they bid $25.7 million to win exclusive rights to negotiate with him.

Jeff Locke (0-1) of the Pirates lost in his season debut, giving up four runs and eight hits over six innings. The 25-year-old left-hander, beginning what he hopes will be his first full season in the majors, is 1-7 with a 6.32 ERA and nine home runs allowed in 11 big league starts over a three-

Dodgers sweep Piratesmlb

Series shutout is first for Pittsburgh in more than 40 years

Reed Saxon/ AP photoLos Angeles Dodgers’ Adrian Gonzalez is tagged out at second by Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman Neil Walker after he tried to stretch a long single into a double in the fifth inning of a baseball game in Los Angeles on Sunday. Gonzalez’s hit scored teammate Carl Crawford.

year span.Matt Kemp, who entered the

game in a season-opening 1-for-18 slump, gave the Dodgers a 3-2 lead in the third with a sacrifice

fly after Carl Crawford led off with a double and advanced on Nick Punto’s sacrifice bunt.

Gonzalez added a run in the see Pirates page 9

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 040813

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Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 040813

Page 8 / Monday, aPril 8, 2013 New Mexico Daily lobosports

Congratulatelast week’s

Lobo Winners! Baseball defeated Texas Tech 10-3, Air Force 11-5 & 19-5

Men’s Golf won the ASU Thunderbird Invitational

Men’s Soccer defeated UC Riverside 3-0 and Grand Canyon 2-1

Softball defeated Boise State 7-6 & 6-5

Track & Field won the women’s pole vault, women’s javelin, men’s long jump, men’s triple jump, men’s 800-m, and the men’s 4x100m relay in the Don Kirby Tailwind Invitational hosted by UNM

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by Antonio [email protected]

UNM men’s tennis head coach Alan Dils is a proponent of tough love.

The Lobos suffered a close loss against UNLV at home Fri-day afternoon, leading the day 3-1 before losing the next three matches to fall 4-3 to the Rebels.

Dils said that leading into

Sunday’s match against Fresno State, he did what he could to rally his team for the last home match of the season.

“I yelled at them and said things that probably shouldn’t be repeated, will not be repeat-ed,” Dils said. “We talked a lot about pride, which, in my opin-ion, we didn’t play with on Fri-day. We had opportunities to win that match, and at the end of the

day we were the ones that rolled over and not UNLV and on our home courts. With the person-nel that we have, that’s purely unacceptable.”

Dils’ finger-waving wasn’t for naught, for the Lobos then swept the Fresno State 7-0 Sun-day afternoon. UNM is now 10-11 overall.

Criticism turns team around

William Aranda / Daily LoboSophomore Samir Iftikhar gets ready to deliver a forehand against Fresno State on Sunday. The Lobos went on to win 7-0 in their final home meet of the season.

see Tennis page 9

men’s tennis

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 040813

Monday, april 8, 2013/ page 9New Mexico Daily lobo sportsUNM PD Annual Bicycle Auction

The UNM Police Department would like to extend an invitation to the University Community. We will be having our annual bicycle auction on Tuesday, April 23rd, from 10 AM to 2PM at the Sustainability Expo east

of the SUB. The bicycles we have are unclaimed, unregistered bicycles from the UNM campus. If you think we may have your bicycle, please call 277-0081 to make sure that we will not be auctioning off a

bike that may belong to you.

We also have skateboards, a number of calculators and iClickers and a few Lobo items up for auction.

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The day began with an early lead for the Lobos, as they won each doubles match against the Bulldogs. No. 1 doubles senior Conor Berg and freshman Andrew Van der Vyver rallied against Bulldogs Reid deLaubenfels and Sam MacNeil, coming from behind at 4-5 to win 8-6.

No. 2 doubles senior Jadon Phillips and sophomore Samir Iftikhar pulled through a similar-ly tough match against Sai Kartik Nakireddi and Jeremy Quiroz at 8-7, while No. 3 doubles sopho-mores James Hignett and Mads Hegelund strolled to a victory against Felipe Fritz and Nikolas Papic, winning 8-3.

Berg, one of the Lobos’ two seniors, won both of his matches against the Bulldogs, coming on top of his singles match 6-1, 6-4 against the third seed Nakireddi. Berg said team members wrote the word “pride” on their hands, a sentiment that showed growth from Friday’s match.

“Even though it was a close match and we had it right there, we felt like we handed them the match, they didn’t beat us, we beat ourselves,” Berg said. “We wanted to come out today with every single person believ-ing in not only the team but in ourselves.”

No. 5 seed Hegelund walked away from his match against MacNeil fairly unscathed, win-ning 6-0, 6-4. The last three

matches were decided in a third set, as Iftikhar, Hignett, and Mc-Daniels rounded out the day with a singles win each.

Senior and No. 1 seed Phillips took an early lead against Fritz, winning his first set 6-3. The match’s momentum went to Fritz in the second set, however, as Phillips fell early 0-3 before rally-ing to win five consecutive games for a 7-5 win. The match ended on a sour note, as Fritz threw his racket against the ground, lead-ing to an unsportsmanlike con-duct notice and a point handed to Iftikhar’s match.

Phillips said he was proud to win his last two matches at home.

“We need to take pride in be-ing a Lobo; being able to play tennis, being able to be a college athlete, you should honor that,” Phillips said. “We’re here for a purpose and we need to remem-ber that purpose every time we step on the court.”

Sports briefs

Tennis from page 8

BaseballUNM head baseball coach Ray Birmingham

earned his 1,000th career victory on Saturday in a 19-5 victory at Air Force.

“I’m proud that all of them were in the great state of New Mexico, my state,” said Birmingham, a native of Hobbs, N.M., in a press release.

Birmingham started his collegiate coaching ca-reer at the College of the Southwest in Hobbs, N.M., in 1988. Two years later, Birmingham took over the program at New Mexico Junior College. Birmingham became head coach of the Lobos in 2008.

The Lobos won the first game of the series versus the Falcons 11-5, but lost the finale 11-4 on Sunday.

New Mexico holds a record of 16-15, 8-4 Moun-tain West Conference.

Men’s soccerLobo midfielder Michael Calderon scored three

goals, a hat trick, for UNM in a 3-0 win over UC Riv-erside in Phoenix, Ariz., on Saturday.

Later that evening, the Lobos defeated Grand Canyon University 2-1. Calderon scored the first goal of the game while Ben McKendry scored the game-winner in the 54th minute.

~compiled by Thomas Romero-Salas

fifth with an RBI single. The Dodg-ers tacked on two more in the sev-enth against Chris Leroux with Sell-ers’ leadoff homer and Gonzalez’s run-scoring single.

Starling Marte opened the game with a single and McCutchen hit a one-out drive about five rows into the left field pavilion for the Pirates’ first home run of the season. Until

then, they were the only team in the majors without one.

Ryu walked Gaby Sanchez, but third baseman Juan Uribe helped minimize the damage by robbing Michael McKenry of a potential RBI double down the line with a diving stop and getting the force-out at second.

Los Angeles tied it in the bottom

half with three straight one-out hits, including a two-run double by Gonzalez.

Pittsburgh dropped the first two games of the series 3-0 to Zack Greinke and 1-0 to Clayton Kershaw, getting just two hits against each pitcher. The Pirates haven’t been shut out in three consecutive games since August 1968.

Pirates from page 6

“I yelled at them and said things that probably shouldn’t

be repeated, will not be repeated.”

~Alan Dilsmen’s tennis head coach

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Page 10 / Monday, aPril 8, 2013 New Mexico Daily lobolobo features

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She brings to those to love

Weekly Horoscopesby Alexandra Swanberg

[email protected]

Capricorn—Your finances come into intense focus starting with the new moon in Aries on Wednesday. This is nothing to fear, as you thrive off the pressure at this time. There is a feeling of “do-or-die” this week, prompting you to find your next path in life and pur-sue it with all you’ve got. It looks to be a productive week, as long as you take it easy for the first part of the week. Choose your battles and save that energy for a cause that truly matters to you.

Aquarius—Starting Wednes-day, you enter a phase of renewed personal freedom. The cosmos are in such a state that your will is a more powerful force. It’s time for you to take the first steps toward the dreams you’ve fostered the past few months. Keep an open mind regarding what you believe to be possible, as you’re capable of accomplishing more than you might think during the next couple of weeks.

Pisces—You may feel over-whelmed by the abundance of possibilities that you face with the new moon in Aries on Wednesday. You feel compelled to take action, but are having a difficult time dis-cerning what the best course of ac-tion is. Try to be patient with your-self while doing your best to go with the flow. Do what feels right, even if it doesn’t make much sense at the time. Done properly, you’ll have a ripe new opportunity when the moon is full.

Aries—You’ll quickly recov-er from some minor setbacks ex-perienced in the past week, and gain much needed momentum with the new moon on Wednes-day. Don’t let these minor hiccups trip you up this week, as it’s better to forgive and forget if you want to get what you want by the full moon in a couple of weeks. This is the ul-timate fresh start for you — don’t waste it by getting caught up in what you can’t change or control.

Taurus—You’ve been drag-

ging quite a bit in the last couple of weeks, as your stubbornness inhibits personal growth. The Ar-ies influence prompts every sign of the zodiac to fight for what they want and use innovation to do so. You are stuck in routine, which is frustrating you and the people who want to see you succeed. Loosen up and let go of precon-ceived notions of what’s right and wrong in your life. Try out differ-ent lifestyles in the next couple of weeks.

Gemini—You’ll find that if you stop worrying about what you should and shouldn’t be doing, your life will fall neatly into place over the next couple of weeks. The new moon in Aries on Wednesday is the beginning of your opportu-nity to discover how truly power-ful you are, if only you would be-lieve in yourself. Go with what your heart desires, and don’t let the wounds of past mistakes or soured relationships hold you back.

Cancer—You’re ready for a fresh start, which everyone enjoys starting with the new moon in Ar-ies on Wednesday. However, your anxiety casts a shadow over what could be the most productive time of year for you. Get control over your mind and emotions, or you risk worrying so much you com-pletely miss the doors opening up around you. Take a more active role in your life, and fully commit so that your every action moves to-ward your goals.

Leo—Be prepared to spread your wings and fly, as the new moon in Aries on Wednesday pro-pels you to a prosperous future. While the barriers to your success are diminished in the next couple of weeks, this should not translate as a time for rest and relaxation. Work your tail off so you squeeze every last drop of value from this period. The more you make out of it, the greater the rewards you’ll reap this year and beyond

Virgo—It’s time for you to

start letting go of deep-seated in-securities, especially those that are getting in the way of your relation-ships and work life. However, you do have a clear vision of who you want to be and you’re getting a bet-ter idea of how you can get there. In theory, you’ve got what it takes. Just weed out all the ways in which you are subconsciously holding yourself back. You owe yourself better than that.

Libra—With the exception of today and Tuesday, this is not the time for second-guessing yourself. You’re used to taking action based on the good of the crowd and what its consensus may be. Now, you do much better in a leadership ca-pacity, but you need to go out on a limb and do what you think is right. Of course, continue to be consider-ate, but the next couple of weeks are best used if you rely on your personal strength and direction to get ahead.

Scorpio—Uncertainty has been the bane of your existence the past couple of weeks. Despite having an increasing clear idea of where you want to be, you may be impatient with the pace at which you’re moving forward. The next couple of weeks throw your pro-gression into warp speed, so use today and Tuesday to re-charge and think about what your next steps might be. The new moon on Wednesday marks the start of a breathtaking journey to the “new you.”

Sagittarius—It’s an excit-ing week for you, as the curtains have parted and it is time for you to shine. While the week starts off rather shaky, by Wednesday you’ll feel like you woke up ready to con-quer the world. The last couple of weeks have been a trying period, and this is your chance to grow from the lessons you learned. No matter what, remember this is your life and it is up to you to make it what you want. This is you mission for the next couple of weeks.

dailysudoku

Solution to last week’s problem

available at

Level 1 2 3 4

DailyLobo.com

Across1 Eva or Juan of Argentina6 “Taking you places” pre-mium movie channel11 Suffix for hero14 ‘60s-’70s Twins great Tony15 Nest on a cliffside16 “Friends” actress Courteney17 Many a coffee shop, vis-ˆ-vis Internet access19 Corner PC key20 Subj. for immigrants21 Synagogue22 Cowpoke’s seat24 Flightless South Ameri-can bird26 Scottish hillside28 “... believe __ not!”29 Hairstyling immortal Vidal31 “Ship out” alternative34 Humble home35 1980s secretary of state Alexander36 False show37 “No need to hurry, is there?”41 “__ ‘nuff!”42 Move, in Realtor-speak43 “In __ Shoes”: Camer-on Diaz flick44 Meddles (with)46 “Pretty please ...”50 GPS choices

51 Pinnacle53 Geologic periods54 Extensive property57 Sorrowful cry59 Slangy “OK”60 “Wheel of Fortune” purchase61 Gender-determining heredity unit64 Mauna __: Hawaii’s highest peak65 Harbor cities66 ESPN analyst Garciaparra67 Bachelor in personals, briefly68 Early stage69 Extends across

Down1 __ that be: authorities2 Inventor Otis3 Remington weapons4 Egg: Pref.5 Casual turndowns6 Second-largest planet7 Physicist Nikola8 Dadaism founder9 Spanish rivers10 Greek letter that seems like it should be last11 Summer refreshers12 Hardly an amateur13 Quote in a book review18 “How frustrating!”23 Chip go-with

25 Pale as a ghost27 “La Bamba” co-star Morales30 Very strange32 Car headlight setting33 Strike a bargain35 “The Newsroom” channel37 Request for the latest update38 The Twins, at Minne-apolis’s Target Field39 “Born Free” lion40 Press for41 Windex targets

45 Free TV ad46 Words before “Can you give me directions?”47 Cellist who per-formed at Steve Jobs’s funeral48 Like a single-perform-er show49 Leads, as to a seat52 Gar on’s handout55 AutoCorrect target56 Keynes’s sci.58 Male heirs62 Appt. book rows63 Soak (up), as gravy

Year Zero

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Monday, april 8, 2013/ page 11New Mexico Daily lobo classifieds

Announcements

UNM IS RECRUITING women with asthma for research study. If interested, please contact study coordinator at 925- 6174 or e-mail [email protected]. edu

Lost and Found

BAG STOLEN FROM Farris Building 3/20/13. Large brown tote; contents in- clude wallet, car keys, cosmetics case, sunglasses, and sneakers. If found, please email [email protected]!

Services

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

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

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

AGORA HOTLINE IS now online. Chat: www.agoracares.org

Fun Food Music

BLOCK TO UNM, large clean 2BDRM/ 1BA. New carpet. Gated. No pets. $790/mo +utilities. 255-2685.

UNM NORTH CAMPUS - 1BDRM, start- ing at $585/mo, includes utilities. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets allowed. Move in special! 573-7839.

A SHADY 1BDRM/1BA. $475/mo +utilities. Call Scott 401-1076.

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

STUDIOS, 1 BLK UNM, $455/ free util. 246-2038 www.kachina-properties. com Ask Lobo free month special!

ON THE EDGE... of downtown 802 Gold Ave SW. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED. 1BDRM. Across from Silver Ave. Flying Star and Robinson Park. Gated, safe, courtyard, laundry, off street parking. $605/mo with $200dd. Please call Greg at 305-975-0908.

LIGHT AND BRIGHT. 1.5 miles from UNM/ CNM. 1BDRM apartment, 710sqft, $410/mo. Also, 2BDRM apart- ment, 910sqft, $510/mo. Coin Laundry. Off-street parking. No pets. 345-2000.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, court- yards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

2BDRM/ 1BA. ACROSS from CNM on Hazeldine SE. $575/mo. $500dd. $35 for application fee. Cats ok. 450-6407.

1 BLOCK UNM 1BDRM duplex. Sky- lights, driveway parking. $535/mo includes utilities. 299-7723.

2BDRMS, FREE UTILITIES! 313 Girard SE. 246-2038 www.kachina-proper ties.com / Ask Lobo special!

Rooms For Rent3 BED/2 BATH. Female student pre- ferred. 7min walk from campus, $400/mo+ut. Available mid May. Contact [email protected]

FEMALE INTERESTED IN taking over a single dorm lease at Casas del Rio for the Spring of 2013 contact me at [email protected] or 505-920-0257.

FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north cam- pus. $420/mo +1/4 utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated com- munity. Access I-40 & I-25. tkuni@unm. edu

LOOKING FOR A room for summer? En- joy a luxious private, fully furnished bed- room at Lobo village. Near campus $519/mo. June-August 2013. 505-720-7295.

N.E. HOME, quiet Carlisle area, parks, bike trails, N/S, female only, graduate student preferred. $350/mo. +1/2 utili- ties. 805-963-4174.

WAIVER DIRECT CARE staff needed (Albuquerque) Established DD waiver agency needs direct care staff and quali-fied house leads in it’s supported living homes. Low staff to client ratio. Good pay and medical benefits available. Qualified applicant must pass criminal background check per state regulations. Part-time and full time shifts available. Write our Program Manager at the following email. [email protected]

Houses For RentGATED DELUXE UNIQUE 2BDRM pent- house for two people. $900/mo. 415 Vassar SE. 266-7422.

For SaleSELLING MAGIC THE Gathering Trad- ing Cards. Contact for card lists and prices. [email protected]

ADIDAS BLACK BIKE helmet. Stylish! Never been in accident. Size: Large/Ex- tra large. Snell Certified. Tell Mama you are protecting your college brain. $20. [email protected]

VALEO COMPLETE PURPLE Yoga Pi- lates kit. Includes mat, leg stretching white strap, 2 blocks still sealed in plas- tic, black strapped carrying bag. For $20. [email protected]

3 PIECES BROYHILL furniture. Solid wood, 40 y/o, original 1960’s style. In- cludes two large dresser mirrors, very heavy. $150 for all. If interested e-mail [email protected]

2 CAMPING POP-up tents. Dark blue, great for Spring time. Boy/girlfriend camping getaway. Summer is coming get them now! $20 each. Email interest [email protected]

BREAD MAKING MACHINE Panosonic. Make yummy hot bread instead of tor- tillas. Put in the mix and out comes the gourmet style bread. $50. Email inter [email protected]

MONGOOSE MOUNTAIN BIKE seat, black with yellow trim. Includes alu- minum seat post and red reflector. $20. [email protected]

ROLLER BLADE HELMET, Black. Inline skating protection. Never been in acci- dent. Size: Large/Extra large. Protect your university thick skull on the cheap! $20. [email protected]

Garage Sales

RUMMAGE SALE ON Sunday 4/14. 7am - 2:30pm TREATS AND TREA- SURES! At MVD Express 10200 Menaul NE.

Vehicles For Sale2004 FORD MUSTANG convertible, 40th anniversary model, silver and black. 104,000 miles. Great condition. Asking $6,000. Call 505-290-7075.

Jobs Off CampusACCIDENTCAM IS HIRING! For an ap- plication, visit www.AccidentCAM.com or send a request to jobs@Accident CAM.com.

BLAKE’S LOTABURGER TEAM inter- view day!!! Thursday, April 18, 2013, 11AM - 4PM at 3806 Montgomery NE, Albuquerque (near Carlisle). Apply and interview for many open positions!

BLAKE’S LOTABURGER TEAM Inter- view Day, April 17, 2013!!! Store #29 lo- cated at 7520 Lomas Blvd. NE will be hosting a team interview day from 11AM- 4PM where you can stop by, ap- ply, and interview for open positions in all East Side locations!

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEP- TIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

PROJECT ENGINEER NEEDED:Con- struction Management or Engineer grad- uate needed for FT position with local company. Travel is required. Please email resume to info@victorcorpnm. com or download application at www. victorcorpnm.com. Call Mark with any questions, 505-771-4900.

!!!BARTENDING!!! $300/DAY potential. No experience necessary, training pro- vided. 1-800-965-6520 ext.100.

SOCCER COACH/REFEREE NEEDED. Great PT pay, 3-5 hours, Saturdays. Youth ages: 4-12. 898-9999.

HIRING LIFEGUARDS AND Pool Man- agers for the Bernalillo County Swim- ming Pools. Lifeguard classes begin April 16 at the Rio Grande Indoor Pool.505-314-0169.

FALL 2013 TEACH and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean govern- ment. $1,300~400/mo. (15hrs/wk) + air- fares, housing, medical insurance. Must have completed two years of undergrad- uate. Last day to apply: 5/31/13. Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr

2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride,

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6 Month lease: $700-$7206 Month lease: $700-$7206 Month lease: $700-$720MOVE-IN SPECIALS AVAILABLE!

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SIGN UP FOR LESSONS NOW!Starter Guitars for $79.99

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[email protected] Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 [email protected]

Lobo Monday, April 8, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

SportsSports editor / Thomas Romero-Salas/ @ThomasRomeroS

by Christian [email protected]

@cnaranjo7

For the New Mexico softball team, anything that could go wrong did go wrong on Sunday afternoon.

Boise State clobbered UNM 13-0 at Lobo Field in a � ve-inning mercy rule game.

� e Broncos accumulated all of their runs from only 14 hits. Mean-while, the Lobos recorded a mere three hits.

UNM freshman pitcher Lauren Soles (8-11) struggled to gain mo-mentum through 2 and 1/3 innings of work, surrendering � ve hits, three walks, and seven earned runs.

� e left-hander had a di� cult time delivering a legal pitch. � e um-pires judged four of her pitches ille-gal, which advances any base runners and eliminates any call of the pitch.

Head coach Erica Beach said the umpires’ rulings deeply impacted the result of the game.

“It completely changed the game,” she said. “When your pitcher is deemed legal for two days and then illegal the next, it changes the way she throws. I have no doubt it changed the outcome of the game. I’m disap-pointed about it.”

Soles pitched the previous two games against Boise State, totaling 10 innings and a 2.50 earned runs aver-age. She leads the team in three major pitching categories: innings pitched (106), strikeouts (93), and earned run average (2.70).

Boise State’s junior pitcher

by J.R. [email protected]

@JROppenheim

Junior Kendall Spencer earned two � rst-place � nishes at the Don Kirby Tailwind Collegiate Invitational on Saturday, one of several strong performances turned in by New Mexico in its lone home outdoor meet of the year.

� e 2012 indoor long jump NCAA champion, Spencer recorded a leap of 25 feet, 1/2 inch in that event at the Don Kirby despite an all-conditions personal-best mark by team-mate Zach Smith. � e junior placed second with a 23-6 and 1/4 jump.

Spencer’s long jump win came after he ran the anchor leg for UNM’s 4x100-meter relay-winning squad. � omas Tru-jillo, Derek Montoya, Smith and Spencer ran a 41.16 time. Smith and Spencer nearly missed the � nal exchange, but the team possibly � nished with the fourth-best Mountain West outdoor time this season.

“I give today about a B-minus,” Spencer said after the long jump ended. “I went out there and executed what I wanted to execute in practice. Really, this was just another day to have fun.”

� e Don Kirby meet was UNM’s third event of the outdoor season, which provides some challenges not experienced on the indoor track. � ose range from weather conditions to dif-ferences in depth perception to variation in the track size.

UNM head coach Joe Franklin said it was like the “� rst meet of the year” now that his team has adjusted to the out-door track.

“Some very positive things happened today,” he said. “We’re excited for the next three weeks.”

In all, UNM had six � rst-place � nishes in the 10-team meet, competing against Adams State, Colorado College, Colorado Mesa, Fort Lewis College, Grand Canyon, New Mexico Highlands, New Mexico State, Colorado-Colorado Springs, Western State and West Texas A&M.

In his outdoor debut, senior Ty Kirk won the triple jump with a 48-8 and 1/4 leap. Junior distance runner Gabe Ara-gon clocked a � rst-place 1:51.60 in the 800 meters, while teammate sophomore Alex Herring was sixth in 1:53.29.

Senior Amber Menke claimed the pole vault with a 13-1

Mercy rule ends 13-0 blowout in the fi fthDespite Boise’s 24 total runs to UNM’s 13, Lobos win series 2-1

William Aranda / Daily LoboSophomore pitcher Carrie Sheehan delivers a pitch against Boise State on Sunday at Lobo Field. UNM lost 13-0 but won the series 2-1 for its � rst two Mountain West Conference wins of the year.

Rebecca Patton dominated, tossing � ve innings, and allowing zero runs with four strikeouts. Patton did not allow the Lobos to earn a base hit until the third inning.

UNM senior in� elder Kaity Ingram and freshman out� elder

Mariah Rimmer combined to go 0-6 at the plate.

“It was back and forth all week-end long, so I knew it would be another tough game,” Beach said. “� ey are not a team that backs down.”

Despite the loss, the Lobos (18-24, 2-4 MWC) still won the series against the Broncos 2-1. New Mex-ico earned a 7-6 victory on Friday and 6-5 win on Saturday. UNM is 9-5 at home this season.

Beach said Sunday’s drubbing

does not diminish their � rst two wins of Mountain West play.

“I thought we played a great series overall,” she said. “I’m happy with how hard we played. I’m also happy to leave here with a 2-1 record.”

‘Some very positive things happened today’UNM records myriad top-10 fi nishes in last home meet of the season

Junior Kendall Spencer amid a jump at the Don Kirby Tailwind Invitational on Saturday. Spencer took � rst in the event with a jump of 25 feet, 1/2 inches. Juan Labreche@LabrecheModeDaily Lobo

and 1/2 leap. � e Albuquerque native clipped the backside of the bar after going over it, but the bar bounced and stayed up. Junior Margo Tucker placed third in the vault with a 12-9 and 1/2 mark.

Junior Lexi Ross added a � rst-place � nish in the javelin with a 142-5 throw.

Freshman Haley Sanner ran strong in her � rst 400 hurdles at the college level, clocking 1:02.89 for second place.

UNM had other second-place � nishes from J.P. Cordova in the 1,500 (3:57.48); the men’s 4x400 relay team of Montoya, Chris Kline, Aragon and Herring (3:17.67); Yeshemabet Turner in the long jump

(19-8 3/4) and the triple jump (40-7); and the women’s 4x400 relay team of Zoe Howell, Jasmin McCray, Tawsha Brazley, and Shirley Pitts (3:50.75).

� ird-place marks came from Precious Selmon in the 100 hur-dles (14.54); Howell in the 400 (56.69); and the women’s 4x100 re-lay team of Kayla Fisher-Taylor, Turner, Casey Dowling and Aasha Marler (46.79).

Competing as an unattached athlete, UNM senior Richard York won the javelin with a personal-best 215-8 throw. Former Lobo and 2012 Olympian Jarrin Solomon ran a 45.70 to take the 400.

SOFTBALL

TRACK & FIELD