nm daily lobo 090611

12
D AILY L OBO new mexico September 6, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 tuesday Inside the Daily Lobo Pitch like a pro See page 2 volume 116 issue 12 87 | 64 TODAY Sidewalk hipster blues See page 8 by Luke Holmen [email protected] e UNM Art Building is slowly sinking. e three-story building, which is home to the art department’s faculty, staff, labs and classrooms, has experi- enced worsening structural problems for nearly two years, according to art professor Adrienne Salinger. Salinger said the building is dan- gerous to students and staff. “e Art Building doesn’t appear to be structurally sound,” she said. “Sev- eral of the workers who insisted on an- onymity were shocked that we are still occupying the building in this condi- tion when I spoke with them over the last couple weeks.” Student John Acosta said he doesn’t feel safe walking around the building. “e floor is sinking, the walls are leaking, everything is really dusty, and it’s kind of nerve-wracking to walk on, to be honest,” he said. Salinger said the art department has sought help from UNM’s Physical Plant Department (PPD) numerous times. “Finally, on the Friday before class- es began, people showed up,” she said. “After jack-hammering through our studio floor, it was discovered that the floor contained no rebar, no reinforce- ment of any kind. ere are large gaps between the floor and the walls, and between the floor and the dirt beneath the building. It’s not safe, and it’s pre- posterous that we are trying to teach around the demolition and Band-Aid restoration.” PPD director Mary Vosevich said her staff was analyzing the building’s foundation. “We have sent a structural engineer to evaluate the foundation,” she said. “He will recommend a solution to us, and then we will take the necessary steps to address the problem.” Last week, PPD decided to fill in the gap between the dirt and the load-bearing walls with concrete, but Salinger said this is a temporary solution to a larger problem. “Applying provisional fixes to the ground floor of a three-story building at this point seems too little, too late,” she said. “Each problem that is discov- ered uncovers more complications, often unrelated, yet all supporting the claim that the building is significantly damaged.” Salinger said the metals and sculp- ture studios, a small photography class- room, and the print room all showed signs of structural damage. “When it rains, water gets in the print room,” graduate student Frol Boundin said. “It’s not just the photog- raphy floor, it’s the entire building.” Vosevich said there is currently no danger to students or staff, and that the building is operational, but Salin- ger said the art staff has been left in the dark. “We’re being told officially that the building is ‘stable,’” Salinger said. “We don’t know what that means. We feel ill-informed and increasingly mis- trustful. No one is clear about who is in charge as the leadership seems to shift. ere is a clear lack of concern for the people who use this building.” Salinger said the department either needed to be relocated or classes can- celled until the building is satisfactorily repaired. “e University’s lack of commitment to the program and its facility is startling, especially when we have such a successful program,” she said. “e students are loyal to the program, but fearful of the facilities. eir work is suffering by not having a studio or adequate working spaces.” Vosevich said she does not know at this point what would be done about the department. “It’s a large campus and there is a lot to maintain,” she said. “We focus on preventative maintenance. Ensur- ing that all of our systems are running correctly can save us a lot of money. If we can make buildings last longer, we don’t have to replace them as often, and with a limited budget like the cur- rent (one), that is very important.” by Michael Howland-Davis [email protected] Las Cruces Experts in economics, health care, national security, technology and education converged at the fourth annual Domenici Conference where they painted a bleak future for America. They worked with students from UNM and three other state schools to explore critical prob- lems facing the nation and ways to fix them. The conference focused on five policy areas: American competi- tiveness in science and technolo- gy, health care, the national debt, cybersecurity and national secu- rity, with a statement from Gov. Susana Martinez on state matters and the premier of “Domenici,” a documentary chronicling the life and service of former New Mexico Sen. Pete Domenici. Under the format adopted by the conference, university students were the only participants allowed to question the policy experts. Gene V. Henley, Associate Director of the School of Public Administration, said that the growth of UNM’s participation in the conference has more than doubled. “Last year we sent five people to the conference and this year we were able to send 14,” he said. “Best of all these weren’t just ob- servers — every student we sent are panelists who get to really frame the conversation based on the questions they get to ask.” The federal debt and how to fix it dominated discussions at the conference last week. Current- ly, America is $14 trillion in debt, which Domenici said represents a tremendous threat to American prosperity and security — more than America losing its competi- tive edge in science and technol- ogy or the nation’s inadequate health care system. “The truth of the matter is that if we don’t fix this within the next three to five years than all of the nice things we have been talking about — that we ought to do to catch up to the other countries — we aren’t going to have enough money to do them,” Domenici said. “We are not even sure that the great American dollar will be the dollar that it is. … Unless we put some fire in our bel- lies and will in our heart and show the world we mean business, other countries may abandon the dol- lar as international currency and America may become a second- rate power on the world stage.” Norman R. Augustine, former CEO of Lockheed Martin and former secretary of the U.S. Army, led the American competitiveness presentation stating that the United States is losing its edge because America’s K-12 education system is dysfunctional and technology and engineering research have fallen by the wayside. His findings can be found in the National Academies reports “Rising Above the Gathering Storm” and “Rising Above the Gathering Storm Revisited: Rapidly Approaching Category Five” available at nationalacademies.org. According to Augustine, the K-12 system is performing Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo Andrew Kiefer (left) and Tony Diaz, from 3B Construction, work inside of what used to be the UNM Art Building’s light studio. Diaz and Kiefer said the building is sinking largely because of shoddy construction practices, which were a result of lax building codes during the 70s. Art Building sinks into a depression Students query national experts see Domenici PAGE 3 FOOTBALL HELD BACK “How do we leverage the human and knowledge capital in our universities and get that into the market?” ~Jake Wellman UNM Student Regent “There is a clear lack of concern for the people who use this building.” ~Adrienne Salinger UNM Professor Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo Tarean Austin dodges CSU defenders Nuku Latu (left) and Dominique Vinson near the end of the game. The sprint by Austin would have brought UNM near the goal line if he was not called back on a holding penalty. The Lobos lost 10-14. See page 12 for full story. Mildly life-changing see page 10

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 090611

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

September 6, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895tuesday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Pitch like a pro

See page 2volume 116 issue 12 87 |64

TODAYSidewalk

hipster blues

See page 8

by Luke [email protected]

� e UNM Art Building is slowly sinking.

� e three-story building, which is home to the art department’s faculty, sta� , labs and classrooms, has experi-enced worsening structural problems for nearly two years, according to art professor Adrienne Salinger.

Salinger said the building is dan-gerous to students and sta� .

“� e Art Building doesn’t appear to be structurally sound,” she said. “Sev-eral of the workers who insisted on an-onymity were shocked that we are still occupying the building in this condi-tion when I spoke with them over the last couple weeks.”

Student John Acosta said he doesn’t feel safe walking around the building.

“� e � oor is sinking, the walls are leaking, everything is really dusty, and it’s kind of nerve-wracking to walk on, to be honest,” he said.

Salinger said the art department has sought help from UNM’s Physical

Plant Department (PPD) numerous times.

“Finally, on the Friday before class-es began, people showed up,” she said. “After jack-hammering through our studio � oor, it was discovered that the � oor contained no rebar, no reinforce-ment of any kind. � ere are large gaps between the � oor and the walls, and between the � oor and the dirt beneath the building. It’s not safe, and it’s pre-posterous that we are trying to teach around the demolition and Band-Aid restoration.”

PPD director Mary Vose vich said her sta� was analyzing the building’s foundation.

“We have sent a structural engineer to evaluate the foundation,” she said. “He will recommend a solution to us, and then we will take the necessary steps to address the problem.”

Last week, PPD decided to � ll in the gap between the dirt and the load-bearing walls with concrete, but Salinger said this is a temporary solution to a larger problem.

“Applying provisional � xes to the ground � oor of a three-story building at this point seems too little, too late,” she said. “Each problem that is discov-ered uncovers more complications, often unrelated, yet all supporting the claim that the building is signi� cantly damaged.”

Salinger said the metals and sculp-ture studios, a small photography class-room, and the print room all showed signs of structural damage.

“When it rains, water gets in the print room,” graduate student Frol

Boundin said. “It’s not just the photog-raphy � oor, it’s the entire building.”

Vosevich said there is currently no danger to students or sta� , and that the building is operational, but Salin-ger said the art sta� has been left in the dark.

“We’re being told o� cially that the building is ‘stable,’” Salinger said. “We don’t know what that means. We feel ill-informed and increasingly mis-trustful. No one is clear about who is in charge as the leadership seems to shift.

� ere is a clear lack of concern for the people who use this building.”

Salinger said the department either needed to be relocated or classes can-celled until the building is satisfactorily repaired.

“� e University’s lack of commitment to the program and its facility is startling, especially when we have such a successful program,” she said. “� e students are loyal to the program, but fearful of the facilities. � eir work is su� ering by not having a

studio or adequate working spaces.” Vosevich said she does not know at

this point what would be done about the department.

“It’s a large campus and there is a lot to maintain,” she said. “We focus on preventative maintenance. Ensur-ing that all of our systems are running correctly can save us a lot of money. If we can make buildings last longer, we don’t have to replace them as often, and with a limited budget like the cur-rent (one), that is very important.”

by Michael [email protected]

Las Cruces — Experts in economics, health care, national security, technology and education converged at the fourth annual Domenici Conference where they painted a bleak future for America.

They worked with students from UNM and three other state schools to explore critical prob-lems facing the nation and ways to fix them.

The conference focused on five policy areas: American competi-tiveness in science and technolo-gy, health care, the national debt, cybersecurity and national secu-rity, with a statement from Gov. Susana Martinez on state matters and the premier of “Domenici,” a documentary chronicling the life and service of former New Mexico Sen. Pete Domenici.

Under the format adopted by the conference, university students were the only participants allowed to question the policy experts.

Gene V. Henley, Associate Director of the School of Public Administration, said that the growth of UNM’s participation in the conference has more than doubled.

“Last year we sent five people

to the conference and this year we were able to send 14,” he said. “Best of all these weren’t just ob-servers — every student we sent are panelists who get to really frame the conversation based on the questions they get to ask.”

The federal debt and how to fix it dominated discussions at the conference last week. Current-ly, America is $14 trillion in debt, which Domenici said represents a tremendous threat to American prosperity and security — more than America losing its competi-tive edge in science and technol-ogy or the nation’s inadequate health care system.

“The truth of the matter is that

if we don’t fix this within the next three to five years than all of the nice things we have been talking about — that we ought to do to catch up to the other countries — we aren’t going to have enough money to do them,” Domenici said. “We are not even sure that the great American dollar will be the dollar that it is. … Unless we put some fire in our bel-lies and will in our heart and show the world we mean business, other countries may abandon the dol-lar as international currency and America may become a second-rate power on the world stage.”

Norman R. Augustine, former CEO of Lockheed Martin and former secretary of the U.S. Army, led the American competitiveness presentation stating that the United States is losing its edge because America’s K-12 education system is dysfunctional and technology and engineering research have fallen by the wayside. His findings can be found in the National Academies reports “Rising Above the Gathering Storm” and “Rising Above the Gathering Storm Revisited: Rapidly Approaching Category Five” available at nationalacademies.org.

According to Augustine, the K-12 system is performing

Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo Andrew Kiefer (left) and Tony Diaz, from 3B Construction, work inside of what used to be the UNM Art Building’s light studio. Diaz and Kiefer said the building is sinking largely because of shoddy construction practices, which were a result of lax building codes during the 70s.

Art Building sinks into a depression

Students query national experts

see Domenici PAGE 3

FOOTBALL HELD BACK

“How do we leverage the human and

knowledge capital in our universities

and get that into the market?”

~Jake WellmanUNM Student Regent

“There is a clear lack of concern for the people who use

this building.”~Adrienne Salinger

UNM Professor

Juan Labreche / Daily LoboTarean Austin dodges CSU defenders Nuku Latu (left) and Dominique Vinson near the end of the game. The sprint by Austin would have brought UNM near the goal line if he was not called back on a holding penalty. The Lobos lost 10-14. See page 12 for full story.

Mildly life-changingsee page 10

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 090611

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FontsHelvetica Neue LT Std 55 RomanHelvetica Neue LT Std 75 BoldUnivers LT Std 45 Light Univers LT Std 47 Light CondensedUnivers LT Std 55 RomanUnivers LT Std 65 BoldUnivers LT Std 67 Bold Condensed

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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboTuesday, sepTeMber 6, 2011

volume 116 issue 12Telephone: (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 reflect the views of the students, faculty, staff and regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content should be made to the editor-in-chief. All content appearing in the New Mexico Daily Lobo and the Web site dailylobo.com may not be reproduced without the consent of the editor-in-chief. A single copy of the New Mexico Daily Lobo is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies is considered theft and may be prosecuted. Letter submission policy: The opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Letters and guest columns must be concisely written, signed by the author and include address and telephone. No names will be withheld.

Printed by Signature

OffSet

Editor-in-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorElizabeth ClearyNews EditorChelsea ErvenAssistant News EditorLuke HolmenStaff ReporterCharlie ShipleyPhoto EditorZach GouldAssistant Photo EditorDylan Smith

Culture EditorAlexandra SwanbergAssistant Culture EditorNicole PerezSports EditorNathan FarmerAssistant Sports EditorCesar DavilaCopy ChiefCraig DubykMultimedia EditorJunfu Han

Design DirectorJackson MorseyDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanJason GabelElyse JalbertStephanie KeanSarah LynasAdvertising ManagerShawn JimenezSales ManagerNick ParsonsClassified ManagerRenee Tolson

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Rudy Jaramillo is a left-handed starting-and-relief pitcher for UNM’s baseball team.

He is a senior who has pitched 100 innings, 60 innings and 48 in-nings in the 2011, 2010 and 2009 seasons respectively, and he was willing to share his advice on how to throw several pitches.

Forcing Fastball: “Throw it across the laces, throw it as hard as you can — you want to repeat the same mo-tion in every pitch so that it looks the same and the hitter doesn’t know what the pitch is. I throw that about 88 miles an hour. This is just a pure speed pitch.”

Circle Changeup: “I place it in the palm of my hand, and throw it the exact same as a fastball. I let my fingers work the movement. If you’ve thrown it right, it looks like a fastball, but dies off at the last sec-ond and tails away from a right-

handed hitter and toward a left-handed hitter. This is the pitch I like to throw the most.”

Curveball: “The curveball is more of a loopy pitch for me. It’s my slowest pitch — I throw it at the fin-gertips on the edge of the laces and snap the top down as hard as I can. I throw that in the lower 70s and it breaks 11 to five, so on a clock my arm angle comes from 11 to five.”

Cutter: “My last pitch, which I just learned last year, is a cutter. I throw that more to a left-handed hitter — it tails away from them and toward a right-handed hitter. I kind of grip it like a forcing fastball, but I snap my wrist at the very end; and that is what makes it cut. I keep my fingertips kind of loose and that puts more speed on it. This was my best pitch last year, it was my out pitch.”

-Luke Holmen

Innings Pitched

103.2

Hits

108

Earned Runs

49

Strike Out

69

Rudy Jaramillo, #27

Circle Changup

Curveball Cutter

Forcing Fastball

Show me how to: Pitch

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 090611

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news Tuesday, sepTember 6, 2011 / page 3

Staff [email protected]

UNM Interim Provost Chaouki Abdallah promised to re-struc-ture the Provost’s office and save the University thousands of dol-lars, but it looks as though that plan will cost the University more money.

Abdallah planned to replace Vice Provost Wynn Goering with three part-time associate pro-vosts, saving nearly $70,000, but Goering had already signed a

contact to renew his $192,000 po-sition, the Albuquerque Journal reported Sunday.

Abdallah decided to proceed with his plan, adding three new administrators and $120,000 in expenses last week.

“I made my decision basically saying, ‘Look, I don’t need this person (Goering), another pro-vost’ … before I found out that in-deed this person is getting paid,” Abdallah told the Journal.

The Provost’s Office is now home to five vice-level positions

instead of the three it had last year.

Abdallah asked Schmidly for help, but University spokeswoman Susan McKinsey told the Journal Schmidly responded by moving Goering to oversee branch campuses while keeping his title and salary.

Abdallah said he would deal with the expense this year, but wouldn’t let it continue in follow-ing years.

Goering was unavailable for comment.

abysmally when compared to the rest of the world, more than six million U.S. students dropped out of high school over the past five years, and U.S. universities have fallen from their standing as first in the world due to massive budget cuts. The number of students graduating with science and technology degrees fell by 20 percent over the past two decades. Furthermore, funding for higher education is at a 25-year low.

“If this continues, the conse-quences likely will be that we’ll have profitable companies doing business abroad; CEOs will still get their bonuses, but there will be no jobs for most Americans,” he said.

In addition to highlighting problems facing U.S. competi-tiveness, Augustine recommend-ed ways to get the nation back on track.

“How do we leverage the human and knowledge capital in our universities and get that into the market?” asked Jake Wellman, a senior and student regent at UNM.

“The best way in my experi-ence is to move people in and out of universities,” Augustine said “Let these researchers form or join companies and get that product to market and then let them go back to a university and continue to teach, research and innovate, or take qualified people in our cor-porations and bring them to uni-versities where they can teach and share knowledge.”

Other conference presenters included former Sen. Tom Daschle who spoke on health care, Gen. Michael Hayden, former director of both the CIA and the National Security Agency, who spoke on cybersecurity, and Gen. James L. Jones, former national security advisor to President Barack Obama, who spoke on national security.

Domenici from page 1

by Michael Howland-Davis

[email protected]

Las Cruces — Gen. Michael Hayden, former director of the National Security Agency and the CIA, spoke about issues related to cybersecurity and the rapidly changing face of the Internet dur-ing the Domenici conference last week, but a group of New Mexico State University students said he had no right to be on campus.

NMSU Aggie Solidarity is a new student or-ganization that seeks to raise the level of pro-gressive political c o n s c i o u s n e s s at the univer-sity. NMSU stu-dent Alan Dick-er, a member of the organiza-tion, passed out leaflets decrying Hayden’s pres-ence to confer-ence participants outside the Las Cruces conven-tion center.

“As leader of the CIA and NSA, Michael Hayden represents the worst of American imperialist power and that’s why we’re op-posed to having him here,” he said. “We’re particularly con-cerned with the massive num-bers of civilian casualties in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Dicker’s organization accused

Hayden of helping establish the U.S. Air Force Unmanned Aerial Vehicle program, which uses UAVs like the Predator to conduct surveillance and combat missions, which the organization believes is responsible for the deaths of hundreds of civilians. The CIA denies the civilian casualty accusation stating that since 2010, no civilians have been killed in Predator attacks. The group also accuses Hayden

of publicly defending the use of torture.

Garrey Car-ruthers, dean of NMSU’s College of Business, di-rector of NMSU’s Domenici In-stitute and for-mer New Mex-ico governor, said members of NMSU Aggie Solidarity may not agree with the messenger, but it was impor-tant to hear what Hayden had to say.

“Clearly, cy-bersecurity is on everyone’s

mind,” he said. “Everything is in cyberspace, and keeping it se-cure has to be a priority. When experts like Michael Hayden weigh in on the subject it’s im-portant to listen. It’s also impor-tant for the voices of our students to be heard, and they did it in a proper and respectful way.”

NMSU students protest Hayden

Provost’s cost-cutting plan fails

“As leader of the CIA and NSA,

Michael Hayden represents the

worst of American imperialist power

and that’s why we’re opposed to having

him here,”~Alan DickerandNMSU student

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 090611

[email protected] Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Tuesday

September 6, 2011

Page

4

Readers,

On Monday morning, my sta� and I received the following petition from a number of individu-als, and it is my desire to let their voice be heard:

I just signed the following petition addressed to: Daily Lobo. ---------------- Tell the Daily Lobo to Drop the “I-Word.” According to the Drop the I Word (sic) campaign, “people may be out of status for many reasons, but that doesn’t make them ‘il-legal.’ No one should adopt dehumanizing terms that are racially charged, legally innacurate (sic) or deny people due process.”

We’re calling for an apology from the editors of the Daily Lobo for using the “i-word” in the cap-tion of the photo on the Daily Lobo’s cover on Fri-day, September 2. � e Daily Lobo should ‘drop the i-word’ and use accurate language like: un-documented or unauthorized immigrants.

Further, the Daily Lobo has a history of rac-ism including generally the invisibility in cover-ing our events and issues and more often derog-atory representation of people of color when we are featured in the student newspaper. � e Daily Lobo sta� and advisors should agree to pay for and attend anti-oppression training and commit to training all newspaper sta� , increasing stories about (and by) people of color and increasing stu-dents of color who are paid writers for the Daily Lobo.

� e caption in question:� ree-year-old Lourdes Barranco holds a sign

while her mother, Rocio Barranco, and her four-month-old brother, Pedro Barranco, sit next to her protesting the Governor’s new legislation that would ban illegal immigrants from possessing driver’s licenses in the state of New Mexico. � e protestors could be heard chanting, “¡Susana es-cucha, estamos en la lucha!”

Having heard their voice, I would be remiss if I, as a representative of the paper, didn’t respond to the accusations in the petition.

First, let’s analyze the words “illegal” and “im-migrant.” According to Merriam Webster, and this is the � rst de� nition, mind you, illegal means “not according to or authorized by law.” An im-migrant is one who immigrates to another coun-try to take up permanent residence. In tandem, the two words describe someone not authorized to reside in another country and/or live there.

Note: it’s not my intent to harm or o� end any-one, simply to relay the facts objectively, since that is the function of a newspaper.

In fact, the AP style guide, a book of standards for newspapers across the country, states “Ille-gal immigrant is used to describe someone who has entered the country illegally or who resides in the country illegally. It is the preferred term, not ‘illegal alien’ or ‘undocumented worker.’ Do not use the shortened term ‘an illegal’ or ‘ille-

gals.’” Note: We did not use the shortened form. Even the New York Times uses the term “illegal immigrants,” but I suppose they will be getting some letters shortly if these petitioners are seri-ous about their cause.

Second, I am unsure of the history of rac-ism presented in the letter, or who the “we” rep-resents. Is it all races, Hispanics, or illegal im-migrants? It’s not clear. Regardless, I would like to point out that the Daily Lobo strives to cover events that concern the Hispanic population and immigration issues.

To name a few, our coverage of the DREAM Act, the series of photo essays on the Mexican district of Colonia Anapra by Junfu Han, the col-umns and articles of Andrew Beale concerning immigration, and, most recently, an article on whether illegal immigrants would be able to ob-tain driver’s licenses.

On top of that, we have a history of cover-ing Hispanic cultural events such as the march to celebrate César Chávez last April. � e point is simple: Even though the “we” is ambiguous, the Lobo can still prove that we don’t make His-panic or immigrants invisible, and that we strive to bring the issues with which these groups deal into the light.

� ird, we are waiting to take sensitivity training as the petition so demands. Dr. Josephine “Jozi” De León, Vice President for

Equity and Inclusion, told the paper last year that she would set up the training at the beginning of this semester. I emailed her at the beginning of the semester asking for status of the training. She said she would get back to me, which should show the Lobo is striving to be sensitive.

Finally, and most galling about this petition, is the fact that the Lobo already employs a large amount of “colored” people. I, myself, am “col-ored,” though the more I write that word, the more o� ensive I � nd it. Every person involved with that cutline, furthermore, was Hispanic as well: the photographer, copy editor and my-self are all Hispanic. Furthermore, if you pe-ruse the sta� box or check the bylines now and then, you’ll � nd plenty of Hispanic names, as well as other nationalities, in both writers and photographers.

In short, while I am sure the petitioners are well-founded in their motivation, their delivery of the petition is incorrect and insulting to the people who strive to make the Lobo culturally sensitive.Perhaps next time, Chris Ramirez, you can talk to me in person rather than � ing accusations of rac-ism at my sta� .

Sincerely, Chris Quintana

Editor-in-chief

Editor,

On Monday, the Daily Lobo printed an opinion letter written by us regarding Safe-Connect, and on Tuesday there was an ar-ticle about it. We wanted to write a follow-up letter to discuss the di� erent versions of SafeConnect as we understand them.

� e � rst version of SafeConnect, which we analyzed in June 2011, was version 4250.121. � is version had a vulnerability which was so blatant and serious that it suggested to us a gross misun-derstanding of networking and cryptography on the part of the software’s creators. It also had a ba-sic architectural design issue that made it prone to many types of vulnerabilities.

In July we noti� ed UNM IT of this vulnerability. Representatives asked us to test a newer version, version 5036.223. Version 5036.223 had attempted to � x the vulnerability, but due to a basic error in logic, the vulnerability persisted. � e basic architectural design issue still existed.Before we submitted our original opinion letter to the Daily Lobo, we checked the versions that UNM IT was distributing on the LoboWi� wireless network and on its website, � nding 5036.223 and 4250.121, respectively.

On Tuesday, the day after the Daily Lobo published our original letter, our SafeCon-nect test machine was � nally upgraded to a new version, version 5059.242. We are still an-alyzing version 5059.242, but it does seem to address the basic architectural design is-sue. � is protects users from the type of vul-nerability that we found in the other versions.Our decision to move forward with alerting the UNM community about the vulnerability was

based on our belief that software such as Safe-Connect is fundamentally not secure in any ver-sion. Users must take responsibility for the secu-rity and privacy of their own systems; running software which has its security rooted in secrecy rather than sound practices is not something we condone.

We’re happy to see that UNM IT is tak-ing the lead in notifying other universities who are running unsafe versions of Safe-Connect. We’re not aware of any e� orts by the vendor to give any such noti� cations.Were it not for our legal right as researchers to reverse-engineer SafeConnect to reveal its en-cryption key and decrypt its network tra� c, how would the UNM community as a whole have known that we had been vulnerable for so long?

Je� rey Knockel and Jed CrandallUNM sta� and student

LAST WEEK’S POLL QUESTION:

THIS WEEK’S POLL:

How comfortable do you feel using the Wi-Fi at UNM?

What is the most poorly maintained build-ing on campus?

Fine. I don’t have any worries at all.

UNM Art Building

Mildly suspicious. I’ll browse the web, but I won’t check my bank account or anything sensitive.

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GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM

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Sara Reynolds Hall

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Other

Biology Annex

EDITORIAL

Accusation of racism at Daily Lobo off ensive, untrue

LETTERSafeConnect now fixed through legal curiosityEDITORIAL BOARD

Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief

Elizabeth ClearyManaging editor

Chelsea ErvenNews editor

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 090611

Tuesday, sepTember 6, 2011 / page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A pi-lot was communicating by radio with her boyfriend before their planes collided in the air over Alaska last week, killing the man, a federal investigator said.

The two pilots took off from different western Alaska villages Friday but met in midair on the way to Bethel, Alaska, National Transportation Safety Board investigator Clint Johnson told the Anchorage Daily News Sunday.

Kristen Sprague, 26, was flying a Cessna 207 operated by rural freight carrier Ryan Air, accord-ing to Alaska State Troopers. She made an emergency landing with one airplane wing seriously dam-aged and wasn’t hurt.

The other plane, a Cessna 208 Caravan, crashed and burst into flames Friday around 1:30 p.m. near the village of Nightmute, Alaska, about 400 miles west of Anchorage, killing Scott Veal, 24, of Kenai, Alaska. Each was flying alone.

It was the state’s third midair crash since July. A federal acci-dent investigator has said two ear-lier midair collisions were marked by the same factor: aircraft that were difficult to spot amid moun-tainous terrain.

In Friday’s collision, the two pilots were traveling together to Bethel and were communicating on a prearranged radio frequency while in the air, Johnson said. It’s too early in the investigation to say whether pilot error was a fac-tor in the crash, he added.

Sprague had taken off from the Bering Sea village of Tununak,

Alaska. She was headed to Beth-el with about 50 pounds of alumi-num cans for a recycling program, said Wilfred Ryan, president of Ryan Air.

Veal left from nearby Toksook Bay, Alaska, in an airplane oper-ated by Grant Aviation, an air taxi and cargo carrier. Efforts by the Anchorage Daily News to speak with a Grant representative were unsuccessful.

Sprague, of Idaho, told the in-vestigator she was dating Veal, who reportedly was going through a divorce, Johnson said.

“They meet up in the air,” Johnson told the Anchorage Daily News. “There’s some maneuvering that’s done en route at about 1,200 feet (above sea level). The 207 pilot loses track of where the 208 is.”

Sprague remembered saying over the radio something to the effect that she couldn’t see him. “The next thing she knows is his airplane strikes her right wing, and nearly severs the right wing,” Johnson said.

The bigger plane passed un-derneath the Cessna 207 and came out on the left side of it. Sprague saw it spiral down, hit the tundra, and burst into flames, Johnson said. She managed to land her plane on soft rolling tun-dra, about a mile away.

Wreckage from the Cessna 208 was strewn over a half-mile or more.

Johnson said investigators still need to review data collected on the Ryan Air plane and that the other plane didn’t collect similar data.

Veal was from Southern

California and always dreamed of becoming an Alaska bush pilot, his grandfather, Robert Veal, told the Anchorage newspaper.

“It’s in the family. His father and myself are both flight in-structors,” the grandfather said by phone from Winchester, Calif.

In a July 30 midair crash, Corey Carlson, his wife, Hetty, and their two young daughters, all from Anchorage, were killed when their single-engine Cessna 180 floatplane crashed and burned after hitting another floatplane north of that city. The other plane, a Cessna 206, sustained significant damage but was able to return to Anchorage with its pilot uninjured.

On July 10, nine people aboard a Piper Navajo and four people in a Cessna 206 were uninjured when the planes collided as they were flying directly toward each other in Lake Clark Pass — a nar-row river valley that runs between Anchorage mountains. Both air-craft had minor damage but were able to land safely.

Midair crash leaves one dead

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 090611

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By Matt Sedensky The Associated Press

PARKLAND, Fla. — Jean Nidetch ambles down the hallway of the senior community where she lives, two cups of Coca-Cola teetering on her walker. In her one-bedroom apartment, there are Klondike bars in the freezer and, in the fridge, Baileys Irish Cream beside Chinese take-out. If these don’t seem the trappings of the woman who founded Weight Watchers, don’t be alarmed: At 87, Nidetch has earned some allowances.

Besides, she says, she doesn’t touch most of the stuff anyway.

Fifty years after Nidetch went on the diet that changed her life, she says she still lives by most of the ide-als she espoused when she started the international weight loss group 50 years ago from her New York City home. Among the many thousands of Weight Watchers leaders who have followed in her footsteps, her name alone still prompts wide eyes, rapt at-tention and unflinching reverence.

David Kirchhoff, Weight Watchers’ current chief executive, says he’ll nev-er forget when he finally met Nidetch three years ago at a convention in Or-lando. He introduced her to a crowd of Weight Watchers leaders that gasped, grabbed for cameras and rushed the stage.

“I felt like I was at a Rolling Stones concert,” Kirchhoff said. “The whole place just completely erupted.”

When Nidetch moved to Florida a few years ago, she found residents in her Broward County complex would whisper “that’s her,” as she passed.

She’s grown to enjoy the attention. After all, people recognize her for do-ing something she’s proud of.

Nidetch struggled with her weight from an early age. She remembers struggling to squeeze out from her desk during a fire drill as a child growing up in Brooklyn, and by the time she was 38, in 1961, she was carrying 214 pounds on her 5-foot-7 frame. She had tried nearly every-thing, she says, but decided to give a New York City Board of Health obe-sity clinic a shot.

The tips she heard were simple: No skipping meals. Eat fish five times a week. Two pieces of bread and two glasses of skim milk a day. More fruits and vegetables.

In the first week she lost two pounds, but she dreaded going to meetings because of the way the clinic’s leader delivered informa-tion and how discussion seemed discouraged.

“I hate it here,” she remembers a woman sitting next to her saying. “So do I,” she replied.

In time, she began relaying the message to a group of friends that gathered in her living room. Friends brought friends and soon dozens were crowding in.

A hallmark of Nidetch’s group was sharing the dark secrets of com-pulsive eating with others who un-derstood. She never thought of it as a business, but two of her participants — Felice and Al Lippert — convinced her otherwise and papers were drawn up in 1963 to make it official.

Weight Watchers was born.The company grew fast, and

before Nidetch knew it she was a recognizable face, sitting beside Johnny Carson on television or staring out from boxes in the frozen food aisle.

Franchises were opened, a cookbook sold millions, and by 1968 the company went public with adherents across the globe. By the time the company’s 10th birthday came, it was so popular that the occasion was marked with a massive gathering at Madison Square Garden, some 16,000 people in attendance, Bob Hope on stage and a snaking line for her autograph.

When Nidetch and the Lipperts decided to sell the company to H.J. Heinz Co. in 1978, it fetched about $71 million.

Today, though, Nidetch lives sim-ply. In a 2009 autobiography, “The Jean Nidetch Story,” she said, “I’m not a millionaire anymore.” Asked by a reporter recently, she said “Maybe I am, I don’t know.”

Though she has slowed a bit from her younger years, Nidetch is still feisty as ever, and is blunt when she boils down her advice to dieters: “Drop the damn fork!”

Nidetch, who is twice divorced, still maintains a touch of glamour from her high-profile days, dying her wavy hair blonde and wearing gold hoop earrings, a frilly red shirt and a white sweater on a recent visit. And she still keeps her weight steady, stepping on the scale regularly to make sure she’s on target.

She most recently weighed in at 142 pounds, precisely the goal weight she reached in 1962.

Diet icon recalls company story

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 090611

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Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 090611

Page 8 / Tuesday, sePTember 6, 2011 New Mexico Daily loboculture

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by Felipe Medina-Marquez [email protected]

In an era when Auto-Tune and heavily produced music reign, PK Dwyer is an anomaly.

You won’t find him on MTV or VH1, you’ll see him sing-ing and playing the blues on the street with his guitar case full of dollar bills and loose change. He performs anywhere he can find an audience — on street corners, in coffee shops, clubs, and at mu-sic festivals all over the world — but for the last few years, he’s found his home by Popejoy Hall on UNM campus.

The 61-year-old singer/song-writer didn’t always play the blues: For the greater part of his career, he played rock and roll and was in a band called the Jitters. It wasn’t un-til 2000 that he converted.

At the time, he was looking for a K-161 thin twin guitar, and he stum-bled upon a Jimmy Reed CD that he said he hadn’t listened to since he was young.

“It changed my life,” Dwyer said. “I went, ‘Oh my gosh, I’ve been drifting too far from shore.’”

He then fired his band and started writing blues songs. Dwyer plays without manipula-tion and synthesizers, using only his harmonica and guitar. This is his own version of the blues, or what his wife and manager Carol dubbed “sidewalk hipster blues.” He said he started busking, or street performing, in 1970 after he moved to Los Angeles. After two weeks

without work, Dwyer said someone told him that musicians were mak-ing money by opening up their gui-tar cases and playing at the UCLA campus.

“I played one night and I made $50, which in 1970 was actual-ly quite a bit of money, and I was thrilled,” Dwyer said.

A year and a half later, in 1971, he moved to Seattle where he said he was the first person to busk at the Pike Place Market. Since that time, Dwyer has made a liv-ing by busking in cities all over the world, including New York, Amsterdam, Paris and Barcelona. He said he likes playing on the streets because he is in charge.

“I can do it when I want to, where I want to, as long as I’m al-lowed to do it,” he said.

Dwyer said the blues are an im-portant part of western music be-cause they can express a range of emotions, and he said he hopes to drag them into the 21st century.

“Blues is the roots, the rest is the fruits. Everything springs from it,” he said.

He said he hopes to continue playing it and sharing it as long as he lives.

“The blues can be anything from being upset about what’s happen-ing in your life to a celebration of what’s happening in your life,” he said. “It’s not all sad, and even the sad stuff is the kind of stuff where it makes you feel better to hear it.”

On more than one occasion, Sam Korostyshevsky, a junior studying psychology, said he has watched

Dwyer play on campus.“I’m always pretty impressed

with his technique,” he said. “He’s very good, but jazz and the blues seem to be declining art forms.”

Orlando Madrid, a music edu-cation major, said he agrees.

“The blues is kind of fading with today’s youth,” he said. “People are in it for the money, but I think more people need to do music for the love of it, like street performing.”

To hear some of his music and to learn more about upcoming shows, visit: pkdwyer.com

Busking for the love of blues

Courtesy of PK DwyerPK Dwyer is a Folk/ Blues/ Roots musician often seen playing on campus. Dwyer’s wife describes his brand of music as “side walk hipster blues.”

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 090611

Tuesday, sepTember 6, 2011 / page 9New Mexico Daily lobo culture

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Fall 2011 FieldResearch Grants

For research in Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain, and Portugal

The Latin American and Iberian Institute (LAII), with funding from the Tinker Foundation, announces the availability of Field Research Grants (FRGs) for graduate student research. FRGs support research projects

in Latin America and Iberia that require limited time in the field. Awards typically cover airfare and some in-country travel and field expenses. Visit laii.unm.edu/node/84 for application and guidelines.

An INFORMATIONAL HELP SESSION will be held Monday, Sept. 12 at 12pm at the LAII

Application Deadline: Monday, October 17, 2011 by 5pm in the LAII (801 Yale Blvd NE)

Questions? Contact Alexandra Blodget at [email protected] (277-7049)

The charm of college has worn off and now you are eyeballs deep in homework. Well, the Daily Lobo wants you to rest your eyeballs for a couple hours and go do something that is fun and free. We found events, coupons and other random free things, and compiled a list to create the Weekly Free. If you know of or have an event which you want to put in the Weekly Free, email the event info to [email protected].

The Albuquerque Museum of Art and History

WEDNESDAYThe Albuquerque Museum of Art and History has

a myriad exhibits to show off to those of you who feel the urge to immerse yourself in the rich history and culture of New Mexico. Some of the exhibits right now include a celebration of Albuquerque in and around the year 1912 (that’s when New Mexico became a state). Another exhibit at the museum is called “Albuquerque’s New Town,” which highlights events from post-civil war New Mexico until the pinnacle of Route 66. The museum is on 2000 Mountain Road N.W.

The UNM ObservatoryFRIDAY

This one is good for all of you looking for a romantic date because what could be more romantic than looking at large quantities of gas that are very, very far away? Every Friday during the fall and spring semester the UNM observatory offers free entry to the public and you, hypothetical UNM student. Take advantage of it, and who knows, it might spark your life-long interest in space gas. Before you go, call 277-2616 to make sure the observatory is open. The observatory is on 1919 Lomas Blvd. NE.

Folk Art Festival and Giant Puppet Parade

SUNDAYIf giant puppets don’t intrigue you, you might

have a fear of giant puppets. This folk art market and giant-puppet samba parade will be held in Robinson Park (Eighth Street and Central Avenue) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. It features local art and general craftiness by New Mexican artists, live music and a samba parade. OFFCenter Community Arts Project is hosting the event.

FROM CRAIGSLISTThe wonderful website Craigslist strikes again

with some great freebies. All of the following items were posted on the website as of 5 p.m., Monday: for all the sexy time you may or may not be having, there is a free micro-fiber love seat. The listing only said “Cats, Dogs, Kids… But would be fine with a cleaning or a cover.” The listing said it is in Northeast Albuquerque just waiting to be picked up. Another item of interest on Craigslist was a 40-gallon aquarium. The ad said it is in fine shape and does not leak, but whoever comes to claim it will also be the proud new owner of the few remaining fish. The ad says the aquarium is in the UNM area.

Chili’s AppetizerGENERAL

The only price you have to pay for this deal is getting one more piece of junk mail in your inbox. But that junk mail may, in turn, get you more free stuff. To take advantage of this deal go to chilis.com and click on the email club link.

-Hunter Riley

The Weekly Free

by Justino [email protected]

It’s hard to hear an uncomfortable truth, and even harder to escape it once you’ve committed to see a play that isn’t afraid to slap you in the face with it.

As the 10 anniversary of 9/11 draws near, the Auxiliary Dog Theatre’s “Recent Tragic Events,” by Craig Wright, confronts some of the scariest questions from that day, with a simple honesty that moves you to listen.

The fully realized, light-heart-ed production earns the moments when it confronts you with notions of free will versus destiny. A “stage manager” delivers a prologue that asks for a volunteer to flip a coin, then proclaims the coin’s result will affect the show. Nothing is certain.

The play begins with Waverly and Andrew on a blind date the day after 9/11. Instead of using the

tragedy to capitalize on people’s emotions, like the Robert Pattinson film “Remember Me,” “Recent Tragic Events” explores how this historical, political and national tragedy affected average citizens.

Waverly hasn’t heard from her twin sister in New York since the towers fell. Andrew may know something about it; whether this is fate or coincidence is unclear.

When Andrew, along with his neighbor, his lady-friend and a pup-pet meant to represent Joyce Car-ol Oates all converge at Waverly’s apartment, the play moves into co-medic hyper-drive. The hilarity is grounded in each character’s strug-gle to grasp the enormity of a trag-edy with which none of them quite know how to grapple.

The play goes beyond dramatiz-ing how 9/11 affected people. The show adeptly flaunts its wicked hu-mor, but at the same time confronts the idea of fate versus free will. When

tragedy is an ever-present possibili-ty, the play asks the audience which is more terrifying: inevitable chaos, or the chaos we will?

A play attempting to deal with such lofty philosophical questions is daunting, but the Aux Dog’s five actors easily establish empathy with the audience.

Recent Tragic EventsThe Aux Dog Theatre

3011 Monte Vista Blvd. N.E.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

Sunday at 2 p.m.Runs until Sept. 25

General Admission $16Students, Seniors $12

Auxdog.com

9/11 play studies personal chaos

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 090611

Page 10 / Tuesday, sePTember 6, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo

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ACROSS

1 E.T. carriers, theoreti-cally5 Fetch10 Last letters in London14 Calamine mineral15 Where one’s name might go, on a form16 “Out of Africa” author Dinesen17 Composer Stravinsky18 Eight is enough for one19 Spitting sound20 1981 Fonda/Hepburn classic23 Mac maker26 “I Ching” readers27 2006 Bullock/Reeves romance31 Back talk32 “Hi-__, Hi-Lo”33 Annual sports awards37 In re39 Designer Karan42 Donkey’s need, in a party game43 Low on funds45 Winged peace symbol47 Director Ang or Spike48 1994 Streep/Bacon thriller52 Sleeve opening55 Puts in the mail56 2004 Kevin Spacey tribute (to Bobby Darin)60 Yankees superstar, fa-

miliarly61 “Old MacDonald” re-frain62 New Zealander66 Mafia boss67 Dog’s warning68 Michener novel, typi-cally69 Tinkertoy alternative70 Playable on a VCR71 Do, re or mi

DOWN

1 Israeli submachine gun2 Source of Eve’s leaves3 Yoko from Tokyo4 Dead Sea find5 Web opinion piece6 Puerto __7 Part of IMF: Abbr.8 Must9 French sponge cake10 Having the most pizazz11 These, in Tijuana12 Intimidate13 Loses control on the ice21 Host Conan of NPR’s “Talk of the Nation”22 Rudolph’s is red23 Book of maps24 Engage in an online scam25 __-Bismol28 Tease29 “Evil Woman” gp.

30 Delhi tongue34 “Going Rogue” author Sarah35 Give way36 Mushers’ vehicles38 Greek __ Church40 Oct. follower41 D.C.’s Pennsylvania, e.g.44 Suffix with tele- or Dance-A-46 Celtic language49 Firstborn

50 Light-sensitive eye part51 Debilitate52 Taken __: surprised53 Showed again54 Mr. Magoo, e.g.57 Jalopy58 Galway’s land59 Word after “going twice ...”63 NASDAQ debut64 Doro-thy Parker forte65 Arctic pier materialLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE SEPTEMBER 5, 2011

ACROSS1 E.T. carriers,

theoretically5 Fetch

10 Last letters inLondon

14 Calaminemineral

15 Where one’sname might go,on a form

16 “Out of Africa”author Dinesen

17 ComposerStravinsky

18 Eight is enoughfor one

19 Spitting sound20 1981

Fonda/Hepburnclassic

23 Mac maker26 “I Ching”

readers27 2006

Bullock/Reevesromance

31 Back talk32 “Hi-__, Hi-Lo”33 Annual sports

awards37 In re39 Designer Karan42 Donkey’s need,

in a party game43 Low on funds45 Winged peace

symbol47 Director Ang or

Spike48 1994

Streep/Baconthriller

52 Sleeve opening55 Puts in the mail56 2004 Kevin

Spacey tribute (toBobby Darin)

60 Yankeessuperstar,familiarly

61 “Old MacDonald”refrain

62 New Zealander

66 Mafia boss67 Dog’s warning68 Michener novel,

typically69 Tinkertoy

alternative70 Playable on a

VCR71 Do, re or mi

DOWN1 Israeli

submachine gun2 Source of Eve’s

leaves3 Yoko from Tokyo4 Dead Sea find5 Web opinion

piece6 Puerto __7 Part of IMF:

Abbr.8 Must9 French sponge

cake10 Having the most

pizazz11 These, in Tijuana12 Intimidate13 Loses control on

the ice21 Host Conan of

NPR’s “Talk ofthe Nation”

22 Rudolph’s is red23 Book of maps24 Engage in an

online scam25 __-Bismol28 Tease29 “Evil Woman” gp.30 Delhi tongue34 “Going Rogue”

author Sarah35 Give way

36 Mushers’ vehicles38 Greek __ Church40 Oct. follower41 D.C.’s

Pennsylvania,e.g.

44 Suffix with tele- orDance-A-

46 Celtic language49 Firstborn50 Light-sensitive

eye part51 Debilitate

52 Taken __:surprised

53 Showed again54 Mr. Magoo, e.g.57 Jalopy58 Galway’s land59 Word after “going

twice ...”63 NASDAQ debut64 Dorothy Parker

forte65 Arctic pier

material

Saturday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Andrea Carla Michaels 9/5/11

(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 9/5/11

lobo features

YOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSCOULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!

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dailycrossword

Capricorn—While it is difficult for some people to believe, the fear of success is not uncommon even in people for have already reached great heights. Your ambitions and work sphere have expanded in such a way you may be suffering this fear yourself. The key is in truly believing yourself is capable of reaching these heights. I suggest playing a game of make-believe—find a role model and soon the act will become natural.Aquarius—It’s not that you are trying to ignore the troubles in both your life and that of others. You’ve simply experienced a radical change in perspective that has your thinking mired in eternal inquiry. While you are able to see all the wonder in the world with a clarity you’ve never experienced, you’ll find yourself caught between immersing yourself in golden thought or focusing on those too troubled to notice or care. Pisces—You’ve established a firm routine that works for you, but it is about time for change. The world is in constant flux, so before you reject novelty and exploration think carefully about what you’re confining yourself from. If you let yourself roll through the motions, comfortably cut-off from active thinking, you are putting yourself in danger of stagnation. For all the work you’ve accomplished, you will want to make it worthwhile by nurturing your progress with personal growth and expansion.Aries—While a chill subdues the summer sun, there is a radiant warmth you’ve kept alive in your heart. It seems you are more receptive than ever to the small kindnesses of loved ones and strangers, perhaps because they are attracted to your new aura. While reciprocation is always necessary, you will find that leaps and bounds are not. Rather than focusing on the mass of your efforts to return the favor, concentrate your energy in a small package that is thoroughly considerate and genuine.Taurus—Unless you reside in the mountains, you are almost constantly coming into contact with people.

Consider for a moment the kind of energy transfer that occurs, like when you absorb a person’s bad mood when they glare past you walking down the street. Once you’re aware of how easily negative and positive energy is exchanged, think about how you can use this to your advantage. You can keep trifling frustration and annoyance at bay by paying small favors and courtesies free of expectations.Gemini—It seems you’ve come to a lull in the cycle. While pregnant with possibility, it will be easy for you to become bored and restless if what lies beneath isn’t immediately apparent. Rather than trying to stir up the works for your personal amusement, find a way to work with what is there. Reminisce on those moments you lived in the present, diving deep into a personal connection or conversation to discover the unexpected. Create a bridge to return to this place frequently, eventually daily.Cancer—I fear you’re confusing nervous energy with productivity, a dangerous lapse in logic to make. You may have yet to experience this firsthand, but if you care to let your restlessness run you wild two things will happen. You will accomplish many things at which point you will break down. This is similar to putting a heavy-duty motor in a vehicle too small to perform at the heights the motor can reach. Remember, no matter what pace you go, your destination will be reached. The question to ask is whether you want your sanity to accompany you.Leo—Where are your wings when you need them, you might be wondering. Work is dry, too dreary to face. You can’t play, because work has nagged you with a persistence that pierces your will to move in either direction. You can resent work, but understand that resentment will remain until you take care of obligations. I advise you to buckle down and work, make a game if necessary. Upon

completion, eliminate obligations that no longer fulfill your long-term goals. Virgo—Expect a turbulent week, but don’t approach it with a defeatist attitude. This mentality turns any tedious obstacle into an uncontrollable tempest with no end in sight. Visual this instead: you have a ball of yarn and some pussy cat roughs it up into a royal mess. It would be easier to buy another, though it less rewarding and efficient. A giant mess, yes, but there is not an endless pile of yarn. Take this week one knot at a time, planning for an extravagant weekend for all your patience.Libra—You hear yourself say, “Oh sorry about that,” or “Yeah, I’ve got to work on that,” about the same mistake several times even in a week. This glitch in your system, no matter the size, will be resolved this week. The drier tasks of daily life beg for attention like a child that incessantly taps your shoulder. You can “ignore” this, despite the heat rising. Or, if you stop treating these tasks as untouchables they will become less repulsive. Learn to love the satisfaction of a to-do list that is completely scratched out.Scorpio—I think it’s safe to say you have been especially hard on yourself in the past couple weeks, at least. This is natural for you, as Scorpios are in a constant state of change, shedding the old and unwanted and taking on new tasks to delve further into whatever the focus of their intensity is. For this change to happen, some self-scrutiny is inherently necessary. While energy spikes hold positive potential, it is more tempting for you to take it to a darker place. Be sure to keep a steady dialogue with a close friend about this change to keep it in perspective for you.Sagittarius—I see this last week as being a party for you, a time of rapid growth and ascension. Think about a time during a high-energy celebration when you felt the mood change. Suddenly, the excitement becomes anxiety; a dark shade is cast over the formerly sunny atmosphere. This week is one of those times when you’ll stop and think: The party looks ridiculous. Remember this feeling is through your darkened lenses. Remove yourself, forget what happened and rebuild on a foundation of the familiar and certain.

dailysudokuLevel 1 2 3 4

Solutions to last week’s sudoku and crossword

available at dailylobo.com

“ASTROLOGY: NOW FOR CANIS LUPI!”

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 090611

Tuesday, sepTember 6, 2011 / page 11New Mexico Daily lobo

Announcements

FEEL BETTER AT 277-3013. AgoraHelpline. www.agoracares.com

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AZTEC STORAGE ABSOLUTELY the BEST PRICE on storages.All size units.24 Hour video surveillance.On site manager.10 minutes from University.3rd month free.884-1909.3201 Aztec Road NE.

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

Lobo Tuesday September 6, 2011

Page

12The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

FootballSports editor / Nathan Farmer

by Mundo [email protected]

The smell of grilled hotdogs and burgers in the air, boozed-up football fans and a sea of red stretching from CNM to University Stadium can only mean one thing: it’s the Lobo football home-opener.

As expected, the first Lobo football game of the season saw a good turnout, as it had for the last two seasons.

There is always a good turnout for the first game, but as the loss-es pile up, fans just simply look for something less depressing to do. Luckily for the fans who showed up, we were treated to a pretty good, albeit low-scoring, game.

The Lobos could easily have come out with a win against CSU. They looked sharp on defense,

but in the end it was the poor play of the offense that cost them the game.

The big boys up front have a lot of work to do with the offensive line, having allowed 10 sacks on Saturday. On nearly every pass-ing play the pocket collapsed and quarterback Tarean Austin was forced to tuck the ball and run.

Fortunately for the Lobos, he was pretty good at it: The offense relied mostly on Austin’s legs. Part of the poor passing game can also be attributed to receivers running the wrong routes.

Offense had ball security is-sues, fumbling a total of six times and losing three of them to CSU.

It also didn’t help that the Lobos converted only 5 of 17 third downs.

Despite the Lobos having more total yards of offense and a longer

time of possession, they just could not pull off the win.

Offense’s one redeeming fac-tor was James Wright’s power run-ning. If there’s one kind of running back we like, it’s one who steam-rolls defenders, which James did on several occasions. He averaged 5.4 yards a carry on Saturday.

The defense, on the other hand, came up huge against CSU. They held the Rams to only 92 rush-ing yards and 270 yards of total offense.

Linebackers Carmen Messina and Dallas Bollema held the de-fense together with a combined 21 tackles. The strong duo made up for an undersized defensive line.

The biggest moment for de-fense came with 1:57 left in the game, when the Lobos stopped a fourth-down conversion attempt by CSU that would have surely

ended the game. With that stop, the offense had one more crack at the end zone for the go-ahead score that would win the game, except the offense didn’t come through.

If there is one thing to criticize about the defense, it would be its pass rush. It seems like CSU quarterback Pete Thomas had as long as he wanted to throw. Despite this, Thomas only had 178 yards and one touchdown.

When you think of an o� ense allowing 10 sacks and losing three fumbles, you think of a 30-point blowout, but the Lobos stayed in the game thanks to the tough play of the defense. If the o� ense can � x its pass protection, its route run-ning and its ball security, there is no reason why the Lobos can’t give opponents a lot of problems this season.

by Nathan [email protected]

Before last Saturday’s game against Colorado State, head football coach Mike Locksley said the key to winning would be for the Lobos not to be a detriment to themselves.

� e message did not reach the players, apparently, because the team had six fumbles, losing three of them in the 14-10 loss.

Quarterback Tarean Austin might have been the worst of the group, with just 23 seconds left when the Lobos were 15 yards away from scor-ing the winning touchdown.

“� e one side of the ball that I didn’t think showed up was the of-fensive side of the ball,” Locksley said. “I thought we moved the ball pretty well throughout the course of the game, but we had way too many penalties, and obviously when you fumble the ball three times, twice inside your own red zone, you don’t give yourself a chance to win.”

� e � rst quarter was full of spe-cial teams errors from both sides, as CSU’s Ben DeLine missed a 41-yard � eld goal on their � rst drive. � e Lobos punted on the ensuing posses-sion, but the Rams’ Momo � omas fumbled the kick, which was recov-ered by UNM’s Zoey Williams.

� e recovery led to a 48-yard � eld goal attempt by kicker James Aho, which was blocked.

With the quarter winding down, the Lobos put a good drive together all the way down to CSU’s 3-yard line. On second and goal, Austin handed the ball o� to running back Crusoe Gongbay, but Gongbay fumbled the ball on the 1-yard line.

“We made bad mistakes that set us back and brought us down,” Austin said. “It takes doing the little things and the big things will fall into place.”

� e game came to life in the last 4:16 of the half when 17 points were put on the board.

Aho made a 33-yard � eld goal be-fore the Rams marched down the � eld on a � ve-play, 69-yard drive to take the lead with a 33-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Pete � omas to wide receiver Crock Gillmore.

With just 1:32 left in the half, the Lobos made a run of their own on a seven-play, 80-yard drive which re-sulted in a 27-yard touchdown pass from Austin to Lamaar � omas, to take a 10-7 lead into the half.

� e touchdown was the � rst for the Lobos in an opening day game since 2005.

Daily Lobo Sports Report

Defense blocks the ball, offense drops, loses it

COLUMN

Men’s Soccer, San Luis Obispo, Calif.UNM 0

Cal Poly 0

Friday

Even though the team lost, Locksley said he was happy with its attitude.

“I thought overall the atmosphere for this game was great,” he said. “It was great to see our fans come out and support our players. I thought our players played with great e� ort for four quarters, which is something that we are going to need to be able to do to be the type of team we want to be.”

� e defense stepped up and forced CSU to three and outs on its two drives in the third quarter, but the o� ense couldn’t match its quality.

Last year, the Lobos defense gave up over 300 yards on the ground to CSU, but this year held the Rams to just 90.

“When you look at the way this game transpired, I thought we played well enough on defense to win the game,” Locksley said. “I thought we tackled well on defense and I thought we played great team defense. On the kicking game, I thought we were much improved and limited the big plays.”

At the beginning of the fourth quarter, the Rams had the chance to tie the game with a 28-yard � eld goal, but again DeLine missed it, wide left this time.

� e Lobos failed to muster any of-fense and punted the ball to CSU for what would be the game-winning drive, with 12:56 left in the game.

� e 11-play, 40-yard drive was capped o� with a 2-yard run by

running back Chris Nwoke and would give CSU the 14-10 lead for good.

UNM still had a chance to win, and went for it on 4th and 14, on CSU’s own 29, but Austin was sacked — one of 10 sacks in the game.

CSU tried to run out the clock, but on a 4th and one the Lobos stopped the Rams on their own 45-yard line.

� e stop gave the Lobos the ball with 1:57 left in the game, only 45 yards away from the end zone.

Austin drove the team down the � eld with back-to-back runs, total-ing 24 yards. With his third run of the drive, he got his team within 5 yards of the end zone just to see his run called back for holding.

Austin � nished the game with 105 yards rushing and 20 of 31 passing,

for 179 yards.On 3rd and 6 from the 15, Austin

dropped back and fumbled the ball after he was hit, ending any hope for a Lobo comeback.

� e Lobos gained 329 yards com-pared with the Rams’ 270, but were only � ve of 17 from third down.

Linebacker Dallas Bollema, who led the team with 13 tackles, said the team would � x its mistakes for the next game.

“I thought the defense did well, and we were all � ying around real-ly well, and the coaches had a good game plan set up for us,” he said. “We didn’t see anything that we weren’t prepared for. Tonight we beat our-selves, and that’s something we have to � x come Monday.”

Juan Labreche / Daily LoboRunning back Cruscoe Gongbay is stu� ed by the CSU defense as he tries to surge across the line of scrimmage for a � rst down early in the � rst half. The Lobos ‘ o� ense struggled in the season opener allowing 10 sacks.

Fumbles in season opener can be fi xed

Football at HomeUNM 10CSU 14

Women’s Soccer, Northridge, Calif.UNM 1

Cal-State Northridge 0

Volleyball, Flagstaff, Ariz.UNM beats

Hampton University 3-0

SaturdayVolleyball, Flagstaff, Ariz.

UNM beats San Jose State 3-1UNM loses to NAU 3-2

SundayMen’s Soccer, Santa Clara, Calif.

UNM 2Santa Clara 0

Women’s Soccer, Santa Barbara, Calif.UNM 1UCSB 0