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D AILY L OBO new mexico Dolla makes me holla see Page 4 October 2, 2012 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 tuesday Inside the Daily Lobo If that doesn’t grab attention... See Page 5 volume 117 issue 32 82 | 56 TODAY Foreboding See Page 7 Free by Svetlana Ozden [email protected] UNM President Robert Frank soon will seek student input as part of an exercise to envision the future of the University. At a GPSA Council meeting Saturday, Frank said his UNM 2020 plan is a tentative vision for the University in the year 2020. He said the exercise, which will allow the University to form a realistic vision for a better University, be- gan with the administration, but he will seek the student voice in the next four to six weeks. Frank said students will be able to provide feedback for the plan on a UNM 2020 website. “Don’t tell us so much what’s wrong, but tell us how you imag- ine the University,” he said. “And once we get that vision, we can come back and ask what we have to do to get there. What do we have to do by 2015 to get there in 2020?” Frank said that by 2013, the University should be able to un- derstand what the vision may en- tail and discuss which aspects are financially realistic and which are not. He said the plan will allow the University to understand which steps are necessary in order to achieve the University’s goals for the future. “You have to say ‘If that’s your goal then you have to do that,’” he said. “en you have to go back when you get all of these things and say ‘Here are all these chal- lenges’ and you can’t do all of them, so you decide what are the highest challenges to achieve that goal.” Center of campus life Frank said discussions among members of the administration, ASUNM and GPSA have begun for a recreational center on campus. He said the University is in dire need of a “center of campus life” to ensure students are more in- volved with the University. “We don’t have a center of campus life; campuses that have a center of campus life have beau- tiful rec centers and we’ve got an OK rec center, if you stretch the word ‘OK,’” he said. “We’d all have to come together, faculty, staff and students, and build something where people can go in between classes for physical activity or just to sit and enjoy life and it’s really critical that we create a place that serves our students.” Frank said that although John- son Gym is available for student use, the gym is only half of what he envisions the proposed center to be. He said the proposed center of campus life would be a wellness center for students that would in- clude Johnson Gym, the health and wellness center and a recre- ational center. In fall 2011, the Board of Re- gents approved the University’s Consolidated Master Plan, a 10- to 15-year development plan that aims to help accommodate a pro- jected 10-year state population growth of more than 1 million people. e plan includes a proposed recreation center and increased on-campus housing for under- graduate and graduate students. In spring 2011, 67 percent of students voted against an ASUNM ballot amendment that would have funded a recreation center by increasing student fees by more than $100 per semester. At Saturday’s meeting GPSA Council members asked Frank how the University would fund the recreation center and expressed concern that student fees would increase. Frank said the center is only a proposal that he believes will ben- efit the University, but that the ad- ministration will seek student in- put before making any decisions. He said that the University could seek funding from resources other than student fees, such as a one- time allocation from the state. Prioritizing costs Council members asked how the administration plans to pri- oritize future costs, such as the possibility of building a new rec- reational center, and costs the by Megan Underwood [email protected] An $18.5 million grant will fund UNM student efforts to make cellphone parts in larger quantities and at a lower cost. e National Science Foundation grant created the Nanomanufacturing Systems for Mobile Com- puting and Mobile Energy Technologies at the Uni- versity of Texas at Austin. UNM professor Olga Lav- rova said UT subcontracted UNM and the University of California, Berkeley to work on the project. UNM Center for High Technology Materials director Ste- ven Brueck will lead UNM’s participation in the program. Brueck said the focus of the project is manufac- turing parts for cellphone computing, such as mem- ory and processing chips, more efficiently and that the task is difficult because the pieces are very small. He said the parts and materials the group will work with will be as small as 20 nanometers, which he said is the equivalent of 40 atoms; just a fraction of a cross-section of a single hair. “We will have more computing capability,” he said. “But they are getting harder and harder to manufacture.” Brueck said students will work to perfect by Michelle Durham [email protected] A $6 million donation will help fund a University kidney research institute that will focus on end- stage renal disease, a health risk associated with diabetes and high blood pressure. According to 2009 data from the New Mexico Department of Health, 10.6 percent of adults in New Mexico had diagnosed or undiagnosed diabe- tes and about 30 percent of adults in New Mexico had high blood pressure. According to the Centers for Disease Control, about one in three adults in the U.S. has high blood pressure and according to the American Diabetes Association, about 8 percent of adults in the U.S. are diabetic. e donation was awarded to the Department of Internal Medicine of the UNM Health Sciences Center by a nonprofit dialysis firm, Dialysis Clin- ic, Inc. e donation will help build the UNM Kidney Research Institute, which will focus on prevention and treatment strategies in end-stage re- nal disease. e DCI operates 11 di- alysis clinics in New Mexico. According to the End Stage Re- nal Disease Network, more than 2,700 New Mexicans with end stage renal disease were living on dialysis in 2010. Dialysis artificially removes waste from the blood, when the kid- neys cannot. According to the net- work, about 403,000 people with end-stage renal disease are living on dialysis in the U.S. Health Science Center Depart- ment of Internal Medicine chair Pope Moseley that the institute will allow researchers to better understand how to treat or prevent end-stage renal dis- ease for New Mexicans. He said the New Mexico population is unique in terms of health risks associated with diet or genetics, and that the institute will allow for research that specializes in helping New Mexicans. According to the New Mexico De- partment of Health, Hispanics, Afri- can Americans and Native Americans are at a higher risk for kidney fail- ure due to a genetic risk for diabetes, which is one of the leading causes of chronic kidney disease. About 70 per- cent of chronic kidney disease is driv- en by diabetes or high blood pressure according to the Alabama Depart- ment of Public Health. “e hope is that we can find strategies that are focused on New Mexico’s unique populations to pre- vent the onset of kidney disease. We know that strategies that work in Boston don’t necessarily work in New Mexico,” Moseley said. “What we’re trying to do is develop a pro- gram that can really focus on the de- tection and prevention of kidney dis- ease to avoid some of the long-term complications.” Moseley said that focusing on end-stage renal disease is appropri- ate for New Mexico and that within the next month, UNM will launch a nationwide search for a prominent researcher in kidney disease to direct the institute. UNM partners with UT on nanoscience Frank looks to students for vision UNM gets grant to fight renal disease UNM president to outline plan for University in 2020 see Tech PAGE 3 see GPSA PAGE 3 AKI MATSURI Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Two-year-old Jen Janert dances a traditional Japanese dance during Aki Matsuri, an annual Japanese Fall Festival held at the National Hispanic Cultural Center on Sunday. See the full photo column on Page 2.
Transcript
Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 100212

DAILY LOBOnew mexico Dolla

makes me hollasee Page 4

O c t o b e r 2 , 2 0 1 2The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

tuesday

Inside theDaily Lobo

If that doesn’t

grab attention...

See Page 5volume 117 issue 32 82 | 56TODAY

Foreboding

See Page 7

makes me makes me

Free

by Svetlana [email protected]

UNM President Robert Frank soon will seek student input as part of an exercise to envision the future of the University.

At a GPSA Council meeting Saturday, Frank said his UNM 2020 plan is a tentative vision for the University in the year 2020. He said the exercise, which will allow the University to form a realistic vision for a better University, be-gan with the administration, but he will seek the student voice in the next four to six weeks.

Frank said students will be able to provide feedback for the plan on a UNM 2020 website.

“Don’t tell us so much what’s wrong, but tell us how you imag-ine the University,” he said. “And once we get that vision, we can come back and ask what we have to do to get there. What do we have to do by 2015 to get there in 2020?”

Frank said that by 2013, the University should be able to un-derstand what the vision may en-tail and discuss which aspects are � nancially realistic and which are not. He said the plan will allow the University to understand which steps are necessary in order to achieve the University’s goals for the future.

“You have to say ‘If that’s your goal then you have to do that,’” he said. “� en you have to go back when you get all of these things and say ‘Here are all these chal-lenges’ and you can’t do all of them, so you decide what are the highest challenges to achieve that goal.”

Center of campus lifeFrank said discussions among

members of the administration, ASUNM and GPSA have begun for a recreational center on campus. He said the University is in dire need of a “center of campus life” to ensure students are more in-volved with the University.

“We don’t have a center of campus life; campuses that have a center of campus life have beau-tiful rec centers and we’ve got an OK rec center, if you stretch the word ‘OK,’” he said. “We’d all have to come together, faculty, sta� and students, and build something where people can go in between classes for physical activity or just to sit and enjoy life and it’s really critical that we create a place that serves our students.”

Frank said that although John-son Gym is available for student use, the gym is only half of what he envisions the proposed center to be. He said the proposed center of campus life would be a wellness center for students that would in-clude Johnson Gym, the health and wellness center and a recre-ational center.

In fall 2011, the Board of Re-gents approved the University’s Consolidated Master Plan, a 10- to 15-year development plan that aims to help accommodate a pro-jected 10-year state population growth of more than 1 million people.

� e plan includes a proposed recreation center and increased on-campus housing for under-graduate and graduate students.

In spring 2011, 67 percent of students voted against an ASUNM ballot amendment that would have funded a recreation center by increasing student fees by more than $100 per semester.

At Saturday’s meeting GPSA Council members asked Frank how the University would fund the recreation center and expressed concern that student fees would increase.

Frank said the center is only a proposal that he believes will ben-e� t the University, but that the ad-ministration will seek student in-put before making any decisions. He said that the University could seek funding from resources other than student fees, such as a one-time allocation from the state.

Prioritizing costsCouncil members asked how

the administration plans to pri-oritize future costs, such as the possibility of building a new rec-reational center, and costs the

by Megan [email protected]

An $18.5 million grant will fund UNM student e� orts to make cellphone parts in larger quantities and at a lower cost.

� e National Science Foundation grant created the Nanomanufacturing Systems for Mobile Com-puting and Mobile Energy Technologies at the Uni-versity of Texas at Austin. UNM professor Olga Lav-rova said UT subcontracted UNM and the University of California, Berkeley to work on the project. UNM Center for High Technology Materials director Ste-ven Brueck will lead UNM’s participation in the program.

Brueck said the focus of the project is manufac-turing parts for cellphone computing, such as mem-ory and processing chips, more e� ciently and that the task is di� cult because the pieces are very small. He said the parts and materials the group will work with will be as small as 20 nanometers, which he said is the equivalent of 40 atoms; just a fraction of a cross-section of a single hair.

“We will have more computing capability,” he said. “But they are getting harder and harder to manufacture.”

Brueck said students will work to perfect

by Michelle [email protected]

A $6 million donation will help fund a University kidney research institute that will focus on end-stage renal disease, a health risk associated with diabetes and high blood pressure.

According to 2009 data from the New Mexico Department of Health, 10.6 percent of adults in New Mexico had diagnosed or undiagnosed diabe-tes and about 30 percent of adults in New Mexico had high blood pressure. According to the Centers for Disease Control, about one in three adults in the U.S. has high blood pressure and according to the American Diabetes Association, about 8 percent of adults in the U.S. are diabetic.

� e donation was awarded to the Department of Internal Medicine of the UNM Health Sciences Center by a nonpro� t dialysis � rm, Dialysis Clin-ic, Inc. � e donation will help build the UNM Kidney Research Institute, which will focus on prevention and treatment strategies in end-stage re-nal disease. � e DCI operates 11 di-alysis clinics in New Mexico.

According to the End Stage Re-nal Disease Network, more than 2,700 New Mexicans with end stage renal disease were living on dialysis in 2010. Dialysis arti� cially removes waste from the blood, when the kid-neys cannot. According to the net-work, about 403,000 people with end-stage renal disease are living on dialysis in the U.S.

Health Science Center Depart-ment of Internal Medicine chair Pope Moseley that the institute will allow researchers to better understand how to treat or prevent end-stage renal dis-ease for New Mexicans. He said the New Mexico population is unique in terms of health risks associated with diet or genetics, and that the institute will allow for research that specializes in helping New Mexicans.

According to the New Mexico De-partment of Health, Hispanics, Afri-can Americans and Native Americans are at a higher risk for kidney fail-ure due to a genetic risk for diabetes, which is one of the leading causes of chronic kidney disease. About 70 per-cent of chronic kidney disease is driv-en by diabetes or high blood pressure according to the Alabama Depart-ment of Public Health.

“� e hope is that we can � nd strategies that are focused on New Mexico’s unique populations to pre-vent the onset of kidney disease. We know that strategies that work in Boston don’t necessarily work in New Mexico,” Moseley said. “What we’re trying to do is develop a pro-gram that can really focus on the de-tection and prevention of kidney dis-ease to avoid some of the long-term complications.”

Moseley said that focusing on end-stage renal disease is appropri-ate for New Mexico and that within the next month, UNM will launch a nationwide search for a prominent researcher in kidney disease to direct the institute.

UNM partnerswith UT onnanoscience

Frank looks to students for vision UNM gets grant tofi ght renal diseaseUNM president to outline

plan for University in 2020

see Tech PAGE 3

see GPSA PAGE 3

AKI MATSURI

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo

Two-year-old Jen Janert dances a traditional Japanese dance during Aki Matsuri, an annual Japanese Fall Festival held at the National Hispanic Cultural Center on Sunday. See the full photo column on Page 2.

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 100212

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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboTu e s d a y, o c T o b e r 2 , 2 0 1 2

volume 117 issue 32Telephone: (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.

Editor-in-ChiefElizabeth Cleary Managing EditorDanielle RonkosNews EditorSvetlana OzdenAssistant News EditorArdee NapolitanoPhoto EditorAdria MalcolmAssistant Photo EditorJuan Labreche

Culture EditorNicole PerezAssistant Culture Editor Antonio SanchezSports EditorThomas Romero-SalasAssistant Sports EditorJ. R. OppenheimOpinion/Social Media EditorAlexandra SwanbergCopy ChiefAaron Wiltse

Design DirectorRobert LundinDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanJosh DolinStephanie KeanJohn TyczkowskiAdvertising ManagerRenee SchmittSales ManagerJeff BellClassified ManagerBrittany Flowers

Photo Column

Aki MatsuriThe Aki Matsuri Japanese Fall Festival featured

Japanese cultural traditions and art forms such as karate, taiko (or drumming groups) and Okinawan

folk dance. The event also had a cosplay (costume play) contest Japanese food.

Event organizer and president of the Japanese American Citizens League Steve Togami said Aki Matsuri has been a mainstay in Albuquerque for the last 15 years. He said the wide variety of events allows people to see various aspects of Japanese culture, from contemporary anime to shigin, which is a very old type of women’s a capella singing.

One of the booths was run by former and current UNM students who were recruiting volunteers and artists to work on a local anime convention called Con Jikan. Conven-tion chair Justin Brough said the students started the con-vention to bring together the Albuquerque anime/manga community.

“The problem with a lot of conventions that have hap-pened in Albuquerque before is that they’re touring conven-tions,” he said. “It’s not really community-oriented, they put on conventions as a way to make profit. In those cases the con suffers.”

Brough said that convention-goers can look forward to cosplay contests, an artist’s alley where people can sell origi-nal prints and even a maid café, where girls dressed in maids’ costumes serve guests and entertain them. The convention will take place in the SUB in March 2013.

Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo

Japanese exchange students Mayuko Tamura (left) and Yuki Inoue draw English

names in joyo kanji characters

~Megan Underwood

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 100212

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administration already plans to fund, such as increasing faculty salaries.

Frank said the main priority is to increase faculty salaries. He said the University underpays faculty mem-bers and that the problem has gone on for too long.

In June 2012, the Daily Lobo re-ported that Provost Chaouki Abdal-lah said the University was $8 mil-lion behind its peers in total faculty pay last year on average, and is $10

million on average behind its peers this year.

Frank said the administration is in the process of analyzing cours-es at UNM to better understand how many students the Univer-sity should enroll in order to gen-erate more funding to ensure that the University will run at its full potential.

He said some classes run below capacity and that those empty spac-es are opportunities to generate ad-

ditional funding for the University.“We’re doing that analysis right

now to say ‘How many students do we need to bring in to match our perfect size?’” he said. “And once you do that, then you can bring in international and out-of-state students and they really run on the margin. And those students on the margin pay full tuition and help subsidize in-state tuition and help the University run more cost e� ciently.”

cheaper and more e� cient ways to produce parts necessary for cellphone computing. He said that rather than process a single chip at a time, students aim to work on a process that would make hundreds of chips at a time on a large sheet, similar to the way a newspaper is printed.

He said that although the proj-ect will cut production costs, it also presents some difficulties because if the chips are made on a sheet that is processed through a machine, there’s more room for error, especially if the sheet stretches. He said that if even one transistor is slightly out of place, the chip is useless.

Lavrova, who is in charge of creating nano-models, said the project also aims to improve cell-phone battery life and � nd new manufacturing materials.

“Some of the new materials for these batteries are just being cre-ated right now,” she said. “But not everybody understands how they work, so we need better models.”

Lavrova said CHTM’s vast re-sources, such as advanced micro-scopes that can show things on an atomic scale, are what made UNM stand out from other universities that could have worked on the project.

“CHTM owns several of those,” she said. “� at’s one of the selection

criteria of why universities get to work on this or that project. � ey can’t say, ‘Oh, we’ll look at it through a magnifying glass.’”

� e bulk of work on the proj-ect will begin in January 2013, but Lavrova said students have already begun researching.

Brueck said it is important for science students at any level to get opportunities to work on real-world research projects. He said the best way for students to learn is to have access to hands-on projects.

“� e idea is to get students used to the way they’re going to be working once they get into indus-try — learning by doing,” he said.

Tech from PAGE 1

GPSA from PAGE 1

LookingLob

for a

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anonymous. The feature runs on Mondays.

Did you come across someone on campus who made an impression on you?Are you kicking yourself for not asking for a phone number?

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 100212

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

October 2, 2012

Page

4

Editor’s note: This column is another in a series of political pieces for the upcoming elec-tion. Last week, we invited readers to submit an approximately 650-word column to [email protected] (see “Kvetchers, come compose us columns” published Sept. 24.) The idea was to feature opposing viewpoints in the opinion section. Unfortunately, we have received no Re-publican submissions. We will continue to ac-cept columns, and encourage writers from all political persuasions to participate.

by Marjorie CrowDaily Lobo guest columnist

For those liberals out there who are dis-couraged about and disappointed in President Obama and don’t feel like voting this year, con-sider the alternative.

Presidential candidate Mitt Romney “earned” about $42.5 million in the last two years. That comes down to more than $408,000 a week, almost $82,000 for each of the five days in the week and more than $10,000 an hour. His vice-presidential candidate, Paul Ryan, married an heiress who is worth several mil-lion dollars.

They don’t understand and don’t care about people who must live paycheck to pay-check and who are not able to stock away large amounts of money for college for their children or their own retirement. They don’t care if you can’t afford your education or if you will spend the rest of your life paying for it at a low-paid, insecure job.

Romney, Ryan and like-minded Republi-cans’ (RRR) ideas of job programs are simple: give more money to the wealthy — who are well-known for paying themselves outrageous amounts while squeezing workers at the bot-tom out of unions, out of decent pay and ben-efits and out of jobs.

Governments at all levels have much bet-ter records of providing jobs with decent pay and benefits, and doing necessary work for all Americans. Public employees, including UNM faculty and staff members and student employ-ees, work very hard, many in low-paying jobs. Education is crucial to the economic growth of this country, but that apparently does not in-clude instructors and staff members.

RRR want to further cut the federal govern-ment — and, by implication, state, county and local governments — indiscriminately because Tea Partiers and extremist libertarians want to destroy government, while, of course, keeping all the government services they like and de-pend on. When you need emergency services after a disaster, such as in Joplin, Mo. after the tornado, you want all the government you can get, and they got it. The mayor appreciated it, although he didn’t otherwise like government.

Similarly, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the National Guard, FEMA, other federal and state and local agencies recently have respond-ed, at great expense, to wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes and floods. Under RRR, the govern-ment may have to answer, “We’re sorry, but we can’t afford to help you this year.”

That would be good if it also applied to mili-tary spending, but it doesn’t. RRR are going to be “tough” internationally and need a bigger military and more weapons, probably to aug-ment weakness in other areas.

I guess the plan is to lay off large numbers of government workers in good jobs and re-place them with lousy private-sector jobs created by the fat-cat friends of Romney and Ryan — if they feel like it, of course.

On his website, Romney praises historical labor unions, then vilifies them in the pres-ent. He supports his wealthy contributors, who want to destroy all unions and reinstate

Editor’s note: This is in response to the let-ter “Foreign policies based on hope leave U.S. weak,” published in the Sept. 17 issue of the Dai-ly Lobo. In the letter, reader Allen E. Weh called for a more realistic approach than operating on hope in this country, citing our foreign policy re-sponse to the recent murders of the U.S. ambas-sador and three other Americans in Libya.

by David Drezner Daily Lobo guest columnist

Recently, a reader referred to our current foreign policy as unrealistic, “passive” and “op-erating on hope.” Although the Islamists are an undeniably violent force in the Middle East, a continuation of the war on Islam as practiced by the last administration certainly is no sub-stitute for a rational, calm policy that seeks to bring balance to Mideast relations.

Although the incident in Libya is regrettable and terrible, what other course of action can be taken against a new government that clearly does not control all of its factions? Just who does the reader intend to punish, and how? Shall we send in a drone or two to randomly kill 30 or so Muslims in the name of stopping Islamism? The reader confuses Islamism with Muslims arrogantly and without cause. If someone con-demned all Americans for being anti-Islam just because a few radical-right Americans made and showed an anti-Islam movie, would they be correct in assuming all Americans were big-oted and simpleminded? Most certainly not.

It is always a problem to distinguish the proper course of action in the case of new coali-tion governments, some factions of which car-ry out anti-American acts, and some of which

wish to work with us. If we were to make the simple rule that any anti-American act by any people in any country be considered an act of war, as the reader suggests, we would be at war with most of the countries in the Middle East. But we are not, because we recognize the im-portance of separating national policies from the individual acts of a country’s citizens.

Moreover, there is an implicit double stan-dard here that must be recognized. Every day, our drones fly over Pakistani and Afghan terri-tory raining death on those we consider to be our enemies, regardless of national boundar-ies. We have invaded Afghanistan in the name of rendering it “terrorist-free.” Are we then the enemy of all Muslims, of Pakistan? Of precisely whom are we the enemies? We landed a mili-tary force 30 miles from Islamabad without the permission of the Pakistani government, killed people and captured others. We dumped a Muslim leader’s body in the ocean. Is this not an act of war, and does it not invite retribution?

I do not say that the act wasn’t justified in light of the terrorist acts committed against us, but it certainly raises the question of who is making war on whom, and its very mutual as-pect. Are U.S. actions always justified because we make them, while other people’s actions are always unjustified because they go against cur-rent U.S. policy? It is this kind of simplistic ar-rogance that has led to the hatred of the U.S. in Islamist eyes, and at least mistrust among less radicalized Muslims.

Nor did the reader address the terrible fact that the work of an American fundamental-ist Christian extremist designed to raise the ire of the Muslim population was the proximate cause of this riot. The burnings of the Quran by

other extremist Christian fundamentalists were the proximate causes of other riots. Were these acts hate speech, or were they legitimately rais-ing concerns? Wait. How does the burning of a religion’s holy book reflect any First Amend-ment related concern? Since when is there a right to religious intolerance, as long as Chris-tians do it? Do we have a right to burn books — an expression of a person’s First Amend-ment rights to speech — as a First Amendment right?

Clearly, there are hateful extremists on both sides, and as long as hatred continues to be ex-pressed on both sides by private and public policy, and people are killed on both sides in instant forms of retribution, the war will con-tinue and people will die.

It may be accurate to call our current for-eign policy muddled, but in a muddy and un-clear world, where clarity is a function of will-ing blindness and a series of prejudicial filters, at times a changing foreign policy for changing circumstances is required, one that shows for-bearance in the face of a confused and weak government. Such a policy removes the further giving of cause for hatred against us and allows for a nuanced response that may have elements of a much stronger private remonstrance, thus saving face for the governmental officials in-volved, allowing them to act in a nonhateful way toward us.

This kind of policy is commonly referred to as statesmanship, as opposed to brinksman-ship, the policy of our previous administration. That policy failed miserably. It is time to try something older, more tested and different. It can’t be any worse than simply expressing our hatred at every opportunity.

If elected, Romney will wage class war

Column

industrial-era total control over workers, who will make possible the American dream for their employers while sinking into debt and misery themselves with low pay, no ben-efits and no safety or other pesky regulations. How about reinstituting child labor or slav-ery? Maybe they could buy undocumented workers from Maricopa County, Ariz. Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the way black people were rail-roaded and sold in the South after the Civil War. Black slavery didn’t end in this country until the 1940s — see “Slavery By Another Name” by Douglas Blackmon.

The reason conservatives are fighting so hard to kill labor unions and the National Labor Relations Board is because those institutions do listen to and speak for working

Americans. Unions and government agencies are not perfect, but corporations, businesses and business organizations may be even less perfect. Yes, businesses are very organized in the extremely conservative U.S. Chamber of Commerce and many other alliances, yet they are very opposed to organized labor.

The rich have been doing very, very well lately, and if there is a class war, they started it and are vigorously fighting. You don’t start a class war by identifying it.

So please vote for Obama, Rep. Martin Heinrich, Michelle Lujan Grisham and the increase in the minimum wage in Albuquer-que, for the dignity of all New Mexicans and all Americans.

Column

Statesmanship beats brinksmanship

Editorial Board

Elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

danielle ronkosManaging editor

alexandra SwanbergOpinion editor

Svetlana ozdenNews editor

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 100212

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� ursday is National Taco Day, so to celebrate, Taco Ca-bana is handing out free tacos — today. Yeah, it makes no sense. Regardless, you can pick yours up from 5 to 8 p.m. � e closest restaurant is at 10210 Central Ave. N.E.

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WATER GARDENTHURSDAY

Apparently, people can experience themselves as “liv-ing machines” in this wastewater art garden. You will be-come an inseparable part of machine wilderness, so watch out. � e event is at the Alvarado Urban Farm at 101 Silver Ave. S.W. from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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Feeling stressed? Extra knots bogging you down? Are you not as � exible as you want to be? Now’s your chance, no more excuses. Sign up for a free week of yoga classes by Friday, and then use that week any time before Oct. 30. Participating studios are Midtown Sports & Wellness, Ho-listic Wellness Co-op, Albuquerque Ashtanga Yoga and

Kundun Yoga. You can sign up at YogaHealthFoundation.org/one_week_free_yoga, or follow the QR code.

UKULELE CLASSSATURDAY

Learn to play “Somewhere over the Rainbow” like a pro at Guitar Center Albuquerque. � e shop o� ers lessons at 10:15 a.m. at 6001 Menaul Blvd. N.E. Preregistration is required, so sign up by visiting abqonthecheap.com and clicking on the “Free Ukulele Lessons & More” listing. Or just follow the QR code. You will need to provide your own ukulele.

STAR PARTYSATURDAY

Have you been dreaming of superstardom? Well there’s no such thing — they’re called supernovas. You can learn all about them at the Albuquerque Astronomical Society and Albuquerque Open Space’s Star Party at the Open Space Visitor Center at 6500 Coors Blvd. N.W. from 6 to 10 p.m. � e party features laser-guided tours of the heavens, as well as talks on astronomy and asteroids.

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There is always an extreme gender discrepancy in theater, with the number of men titani-cally dwarfed by the number of women. Hint.

This can create a casting prob-lem, because so many stories are set in our rather male-dominated world. This is why it is so gratify-ing to see something as ballsy as an all-female cast in Mary Zim-merman’s “Metamorphoses.”

And not just any women. A lot of women.

A total of 16 women fill out the cast and portray more than

Scenes impart essence of Ovid50 characters of both genders from 10 different classical Greek myths vaguely strung together. The casting works fantastical-ly, giving the show a feeling of spouting Delphic oracles.

If you are an avid Ovid reader and fan of mythology, this should excite you. If you aren’t famil-iar with the stories, you should be excited to see something so classic and human and yet total-ly new. But ultimately, it doesn’t really matter — you should be excited because the show is re-ally damn good.

And of course, because it’s Greek, you get your token tick-ling of incest. But it’s classy in-cest. Really.

Shows at UNM directed by fac-ulty members always manage to be some the best theater in town, thanks to large budgets, experi-enced directors and armies upon armies of technical theater stu-dents separated by department, hungry for experience and edu-cation. Acting can unfortunate-ly be a bit of a pitfall, exhibiting the best and most talented of the department, as well as giving the young or inexperienced oppor-tunities to take risks in a com-fortable environment.

This is not the case in “Metamorphoses.”

There really are no weak links, in terms of acting. There is cer-tainly a degree of style and abil-ity throughout the entire group, with Jasmine Bernard and Alex Pina being some of the best. An-dee Schray is superb as a livid physical manifestation of Hun-ger and the perfect aloof wood nymph.

Some actors display more strength in physicality and movement than in the delivery of lines, and vice versa, with even fewer handling everything well, but Jessica Pabinquit does it all. Pabinquit begins the show with a powerful voice and presence and later gets a series of shatteringly beautiful moments as Eurydice, the wife of Orpheus.

None, however, is quite as good as Carly Moses. She exhib-its complete control of even the finest movements. She plays the best men by far, giving the trag-ic sea captain Ceyx undeniable masculinity without falling to stereotype. Her Charlie Chaplin-level understanding of physical comedy is a sight to behold. She additionally possesses the rare ability to make each and every one of her lines funny — even the throwaway ones. Moses will go far.

Director Joe Aberti has created

a show strung together through a series of tiny, profound moments. These moments are simple and elegant and thoroughly satisfying. The silhouette work is excellent, but some moments just sing louder than others: the wriggling hands sprouting from the river Styx, where each pair is distinctly different from the last; the billowy clothes of one woman or another being stripped away to bathe or for a lusty dream; a stoic, statuesque father as stiff and lifeless a fantasy as cruelty will allow. Even the shadow puppet show, probably the simplest story of all, is positively sublime.

The gods and devil are all in the details: Midas’ gold jump rope, the mirrors in the rippling water, Hermes’ binding funeral wrap, the haunting disquiet of Casey Mráz’s live and original music, a shared smell of apples. Each selection is subtle and re-flective of the audience. “Dreams are private myths,” you are told at one point, and verily, the play seems like a dream of your very own.

The real Greek tragedy of the situation is the short run-ning times of UNM’s produc-tions. With the opening week gone, there is only a single week-end left. So, really, you owe it to yourself to give this show a shot. If you don’t, it’s completely pos-sible the gods may do something shockingly brutal to you. They’re into that sort of thing.

Metamorphosesbased on the myths of Ovid written by Mary Zimmerman

Directed by Joe Alberti

UNM’s Experimental Theatre (Theatre X)

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

Sunday, 2 p.m. Runs through Oct. 7

Students and staff, $10Faculty and seniors, $12General admission $15

For tickets and reservations, call (505) 925-5858

visit unmtickets.com or follow the QR code.

Profound moments bring 10 Greek myths to life

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 100212

Tuesday, OcTOber 2, 2012/ Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 3, 2011

ACROSS1 What ice cream

does in the sun6 Mythical weeper

11 With it14 “Terrific!”15 Play-of-color gems16 Bambi’s aunt17 “Get a grip!”19 Albums kept in

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extremity30 Internet company32 Bear’s advice33 Screen partner35 Folded Mexican

snacks37 Crafts technique

for an old-fashioned look

42 More than fumed43 Trifled (with)45 Green eggs and

ham lover __-am48 Scrape, to a tot51 __ culpa52 Pizza’s outer

edge54 Scissors sound55 With competence56 Cardinal’s

headgear58 Film idol Greta60 Connector that

completes thephrase madefrom the starts ofthe three longestacross answers

61 Get the front ofone’s bike off theground

66 Bro67 Muse for

Browning68 Super Bowl

hoverer69 Opposite of NNW70 Spread widely71 Big name in foil

DOWN1 Brit. sports cars2 West ender?3 When

presidentialelections occur

4 Noshes in NuevoLaredo

5 Passengerpickup point

6 Reply to “Is itsoup?”

7 Wall St. headline8 Clumsy sort9 Radar screen

spot10 Colorado’s __

Park11 Badger at the

comedy club12 Ultimate goal13 Muted, as colors18 With 62-Down, at

a satisfactorylevel

22 Othello’slieutenant

23 Sot’s woe,briefly

24 Military prep org.26 Did something

about, as aninformant’s tip

27 Bread unit30 Ten: Pref.31 Former telecom

firm34 Overly ornate36 Aware of38 CIA Cold War

counterpart

39 Some summerbirths,astrologically

40 Like somegestures or logic

41 Cad44 Week segment45 Collage materials46 Convention sites47 Work clumsily

(through)49 “I’m so not

impressed” event

50 Exotic sushi fish53 Carton sealers55 “Does this ring

__?”57 Legal wrong59 McEntire of

country62 See 18-Down63 Put away at

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what I think”65 Clean air org.

Saturday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Janie Smulyan 10/3/11

(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 10/3/11

dailysudoku Solution to yesterday’s problem.

dailycrossword

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Year Zero

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 100212

Page 8 / Tuesday, OcTOber 2, 2012 New Mexico Daily loboclassifieds

AnnouncementsABQ INDOOR SOCCER. Home of thefastest game in town, close to campus.www.abqindoorsoccer.com

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Fun Food MusicFREE CONCERT. MUSIC Ministry KievOrchestra and Chorus presents sacredmasterpieces of choral music andUkrainian folk songs. Thursday, Octo-ber 4 at 7 PM Central United MethodistChurch, 201 University Blvd NE www.centraltolife.org

ServicesNEED CASH? WE Buy Junk Cars. 505-227-3877.

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QUIET MALE ROOMMATE to share4BDRM house. Girard and Silver.$310/mo. +utilites. Ken 604-6322.

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ROOMMATE WANTED TO share3BDRM house with male and femalecollege students $317/mo +utilities. Lo-cated near Constitution and Eubank.For details email [email protected]

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BLACK & WHITE bandana print SKULL-CANDY headphones (Snoop Dogg edi-tion) 4 sale! Barely used, no damage,excellent cond. Bought for $100, sellingfor $50. Julie, 505-804-9695.

2002 TOYOTA SEQUOIA for sale! Call/-Text 604-6637 or 908-5208.

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Vehicles For Sale1984 FORD F150 Baby blue paint job,many new parts. Runs well. Asking$1600 OBO. Email [email protected]

Jobs Off CampusGRUBB & ELLIS|NEW Mexico is seek-ing a FT entry level offi ce assistant toperform a multitude of tasks for a com-mercial real estate offi ce located in Up-town. Duties include daily back-up re-ceptionist, supply ordering, processingmail, basic photography, runner duties,etc. The position requires outstandingverbal and written communication skills,as well as Microsoft skills. Must have re-liable vehicle and proof of insurance.Background screening required, includ-ing drug test. Fax resume to 505-923-3843 or email [email protected].

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PEOPLE NEEDED FOR researchprojects. Must be 18 or older. All educa-tional levels accepted. Send e-mail [email protected]

JANITORS/UNM GAME DAY WORK at the Pitt. Great SupplementalJob! Schedule varies - Game days Basketball /Volleyball/Events $9.00/hr. Apply: 5827 4th St. NW, ABQEOE.

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

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READING TUTOR NEEDED in afterschool programs. PT, $10.50 hr. Mustbe available M-F, 2-6 pm. Must have reliable automobile to travelNE, NW and University areas & able tolift at least 35 lbs. Experi-ence with school-age chil-dren required. Apply online at www. campfi reabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

THE LIBRARY BAR & Grill is hiring!Looking for enthusiastic attractive peo-ple, eager to work in a fast-paced envi-ronment, with HUGE earning opportu-nity! Will train! Cocktail waitresses, bar-tenders, and security. Apply in personat 312 Central Ave SW.

ACTIVITY LEADERS AND Substitutesneeded for homework assistance andto facilitate educational activities in be-fore and after school programs. PT,Mon-Fri $10.50 hr. Minimum of 6months experience with school age chil-dren preferred. Apply online at www.campfi reabq.org or in person at 1613University Blvd NE.

SKILLED IN SOCIAL Media? Lookingfor someone savvy to work with Nation-ally Acclaimed Author and Therapist. Looking for assistance in blog updates,social networking including Facebook,vertical response, electronic fl yers andevents. [email protected]

TEACH TENNIS TO 10 year old boywith disability. $10/hr TBA. Call 843-9662.

SPRING 2013 ENGLISH Program In Ko-rea (EPIK). $1,600-2,500/month plushousing, airfare, medical insurance,paid vacation. Must have BA degreeDeadline: Sometime in November **thisdate is tentative and could change de-pending on circumstances**. Pleasevisit the website www.epik.go.k

ACTIVITY LEADERS AND substitutesneeded for homework assistance & tofacilitateeducational activities in before& after school programs. PT, $10.50/hr.Apply online at www.campfi reabq.org or in person at1613 University Blvd NE.

WEBSITE DEVELOPER - LDD Consult-ing, Inc. is looking for a website devel-oper. Knowledge of PHP, MySQL, Ajax,Wordpress and CSS. Understanding ofdynamic web content environment anddatabase architecture is important. Toapply email your resume with your edu-cation and work experience to [email protected]

$10 HOUR, PT-time days. Home carecompanion, NE heights. Shopping,cards, TV: [email protected].

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEP-TIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinarystudent preferred. Ponderosa AnimalClinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

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

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

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

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

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

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1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

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

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

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

2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride,

convenient freeway access, quiet community w/ pool,

covered parking & on-site laundry& on-site laundry& on-site laundry

MOVE-IN SPECIALS AVAILABLE!

268-86865700 Copper NE

[email protected]

3201 Aztec NEAlbuquerque

505-884-1909

Call Frank & Maryanne for the best rates in town!

GO L

OBOS

!

Call Frank & Maryanne Aztec Storage

Are you a Native American student artist?

The research team for the Native American Daily Experiences and Health Study is looking for art submissions to use on their fliers. The submissions should be your interpretation of health. Artists and their submissions will have an opportunity to be showcased at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Center for Health Policy!!

Deadline to submit is Oct 5th! First prize is $100, second prize is $60

and third prize is $30!

Email [email protected] your questions and submissions.

Seeking Behavioral Management SpecialistsResponsibilities: help develop, restore and maintain children’s

behavior; skill building for children and families; behavior management & general supervision of youth w/ emotional

problems and/or chemical dependency, work one-on-one w/ youth in their home or school enviornment including non-tradi-

tional settings and hours. High School Diploma is required.To apply obtain application at www.hogaresinc.orgSend resumes to Human Resources Hogares, Inc.,

PO Box 6485, ABQ, NM 87197 orfax (505) 342-5414

LOBO LIFE Events of the DayThings to do on campus today.

Dancing With The Dark10:00am - 4:00pmUNM Art Museum 203 Cornell Dr. NEThe fi rst exhibition about Joan Snyder’s adventurous approach to printmaking, a medium in which she has worked extensively for over forty-fi ve years. Recognized as one of the pioneering voices that championed feminism,

The Transformative Surface10:00am - 4:00pmUNM Art Museum 203 Cornell Dr. NEThe fi rst group exhibition of its kind at the UNM Art Museum to feature innovative new media, video, and

sound works of art by nine faculty artists from the departments of Art & Art History and Interdisci-plinary Film and Digital Media, and six guest artists from San Francisco and Santa Fe

From a Culture of Violence to a Culture of Piece- Transforming the Human Spirit9:00am – 5:00pmNational Museum of Nuclear Sci-ence & HistoryExhibit

Amazing Spider-Man8:00pm – 9:30pmSUB TheateMid Week Movies

Disney’s The Lion King7:30pm – 8:30pmPopejoy hal

Voter registration11:00am – :002pmOutdoor Space - Duck Pond SE Grass Triangle/Wood Fence

Monte’s Food Truck8:00am – 5:00pmOutdoor Space - Duck Pond Alumni Clock

Vector MarketingTue, October 2, 8am – 1pmWhereSUB Plaza Table

Conservative Republican Tables8:30am – 3:30pmSUB Mall Table

Bake Sale9:00am – 2:00pmSUB Plaza Table

Blood Drive9:00am – 5:00pmOutdoor Space - SUB Mall Between SUB & Mesa Vista Hall West

Disney Table11:00am – 4:00pmSUB Plaza Table

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar: 1.) Go to www.dailylobo.com 2.) If you are not already a registered user, sign up! It’s easy and free! 3.) Log in 4.) Click on Events Calendar in the left column. 5.) Add your event! 6.) Times must be entered in the format 10:00 in order to be captured.

Art & Music

Theater & Film

Theater & Films

Campus Events

Want an Event in Lobo Life?

* Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organization or department* Classes, class schedules, personal events or solicitations are not eligible.* Events must be of interest to the campus community.

1. Go to www.dailylobo.com2. Click on the “Events” link near the top of the page.3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page4. Type in the event information and submit!

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

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Jobs WantedVolunteers


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