nm daily lobo 032113

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Cone of shame see Page 15 March 21, 2013 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 thursday Inside the Daily Lobo GPSA debate see Page 2 volume 117 issue 121 72 | 42 TODAY All tied up see Page 10 by J.R. Oppenheim [email protected] @JROppenheim e New Mexico men’s basketball team takes on Harvard on ursday in the NCAA tournament in Salt Lake City. Seeded No. 3 in the West Region, UNM will tip off with the No. 14 seed Crimson at 7:50 p.m. e game will be televised on TNT. e Daily Lobo had a Q-and-A with Martin Kessler, the Harvard Crimson men’s basketball beat writer. Kessler is a senior sociology student at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. A former sports chair of the newspaper, he has been covering the men’s basketball team for four seasons. Daily Lobo: What are your thoughts on the season Harvard has had? Describe the strengths and weaknesses. Martin Kessler: e 2012-13 season has been a surprising success by J.R. Oppenheim [email protected] @JROppenheim By most evaluations, New Mexico’s 2012-13 season will be considered a success regardless of how the team’s NCAA tour- nament run turns out. The team won the MWC regular-season ti- tle for the fourth time in five sea- sons and its second consecutive MWC tournament crown. However, one burning ques- tion looms over the Lobos as they begin the NCAA Men’s Divi- sion I Basketball Championship. Will this be the year UNM finally breaks through to the Sweet 16? The Lobos have never made it that far in the tournament. Today, the second round of the NCAA begins with 64 teams battling in the Big Dance. No. 3 seed New Mexico plays one of the final games of the day when the Lobos take on No. 14 Harvard in Salt Lake City. Tipoff for to- night’s bout is 7:50 p.m. and will be broadcast on TNT. When teams get to this part of March, second chances run out. Win and advance, or lose and go home. e plan, junior guard Ken- dall Williams said, is to try to make it as far into the bracket as they can, not just into the Sweet 16. “We feel like we’re just getting started,” he said on Wednesday. “We’re going to take it game by game, starting with Harvard and try to take a run just like every- body else is.” Already a Lobo-crazy com- munity, Albuquerque reached a fever pitch of excitement since UNM won last week’s Mountain West basketball championship and received its No. 3 seed in the West Region, which was an- nounced during Sunday’s selec- tion show. Harvard holds a No. 14 as the Ivy League champion. While not common, No. 14 seeds beating No. 3 seeds is not unprecedented. In the last 27 years, it’s happened 16 times. Most recently, No. 14 seed Ohio pulled it off in 2010 when the Bobcats toppled No. 3 seed Georgetown. If New Mexico (29-5) wins tonight, it will take on either No. 6 seed Arizona or No. 11 seed Belmont, who also play today. Half of the 64 teams play today at locations nationwide and the other half follows Friday. The round of 32 is Saturday and Sunday. The Lobos have been named a Final Four favorite by some col- lege basketball experts. Both CBS sports analyst Doug Gottlieb and Sports Illustrated writer Seth Da- vis picked UNM to reach the na- tional semifinals. With the way it’s played the last month, UNM could be poised for a long run. New Mexico won nine of its last ten games, including three during the by J.R. Oppenheim [email protected] @JROppenheim UNM and Steve Alford have reached an agreement for a new 10-year contract that will keep the men’s basketball coach at the school through 2023, the Univer- sity announced Wednesday. With incentives and bonuses, Alford could make up to $2 mil- lion per year, nearly double what he made a year ago. Barring an early departure from UNM, he will become the longest-tenured coach in team history by the con- tract’s end. Alford has been winning conference championships and putting the team in the national spotlight since the University hired him to coach the Lobos six years ago. UNM begins play in the NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Championships tonight in Salt Lake City. As the No. 3 seed, the Lobos play No. 14 Harvard. “This is a commitment that I wanted to make more than any- thing else, because I found an in- stitution, I found an area of the country that I really, really like,” Alford said. “We’re extremely suc- cessful, and we think we can be even more successful in the fu- ture. I think that was more of the reason than anything else.” According to the contract terms the University released, the renewed contract begins April 1. After that date, Alford will receive a $240,000 increase in base salary. The UNM salary book lists Alford’s current base salary at $324,200, which would bring his yearly total to $564,200. That total could increase with $405,000 in new incentives. Alford would be paid extra if the Lobos win a Mountain West Conference regular-season or tournament championship, advance to the NCAA Sweet 16 or beyond, or defeat a top-25 team (capped at three per year and based on the opponent’s ranking at the time of the game). Information on the Albuquerque Journal website also lists $600,000 in other compensation, which includes media and community affairs Mountain West championships against Wyoming, San Diego State and UNLV. The lone loss during the past ten games came in the Mountain West regular- season finale, which Air Force won on a last-second shot. “It’s definitely a tough Lobos hot to trot to hammer Harvard Harvard and UNM sports reporters talk NCAA game by John Tyczkowski [email protected] UNM awarded a 10-year con- tract on Wednesday to men’s basket- ball head coach Steve Alford with a $240,000 salary increase, but some faculty are wondering about their own pay. “I find it regrettable that although both athletics and academics occupy the same physical space on the UNM campus, the rules that govern salaries and the performance needed to earn those salaries are not the same,” said Margo Milleret, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, in an email. “I applaud the coach for his success in building the Lobos’ basketball team. However, his salary now or in the fu- ture exists in a different plane of real- ity than my own as a professor.” According to Paul Krebs, UNM’s vice president for Athletics, Alford’s salary increase in the new contract will be financed from basketball revenues, not from student fees or state funds. According to surveys conducted by the office of the Provost, UNM’s average faculty salaries range from $7,000 to $21,000 less than those at peer universities for professors, associate professors and assistant professors. Steve Alford gets 10-year contract, $240k raise Faculty praise Alford but notice they didn’t get a raise see Alford PAGE 5 see Contract PAGE 3 see Harvard PAGE 5 Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo UNM’s Alex Kirk, left, and Chad Adams defend against a UNLV player during the MWC tournament final on Saturday at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nev. The Lobos carried their second consecutive tournament with the 63-56 victory. The win gave them an automatic berth into the NCAA tournament as the No. 3 seed. Their first game is against No. 14 Harvard today in Salt Lake City. Martin Kessler / Courtesy Photo see Q&A PAGE 3 Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo A UNM fan holds up cutout of men’s basketball head coach Steve Alford on Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. UNM announced Wednesday that Alford had been given a 10-year contract to continue to coach the Lobos and a $240,000 salary raise to come from basketball revenue.

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 032113

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Cone of shamesee Page 15

M a r c h 2 1 , 2 0 1 3The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

thursday

Inside theDaily Lobo

GPSAdebate

see Page 2volume 117 issue 121 72 | 42TODAY

All tied up

see Page 10

by J.R. [email protected]

@JROppenheim

� e New Mexico men’s basketball team takes on Harvard on � ursday in the NCAA tournament in Salt Lake City. Seeded No. 3 in the West Region, UNM will tip o� with the No. 14 seed Crimson at 7:50 p.m. � e game will be televised on TNT.

� e Daily Lobo had a Q-and-A with Martin Kessler, the Harvard Crimson men’s basketball beat writer. Kessler is a senior sociology student at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. A former sports chair of the newspaper, he has been covering the men’s basketball team for four seasons.

Daily Lobo: What are your thoughts on the season Harvard has had? Describe the strengths and weaknesses.

Martin Kessler: � e 2012-13 season has been a surprising success

by J.R. [email protected]

@JROppenheim

By most evaluations, New Mexico’s 2012-13 season will be considered a success regardless of how the team’s NCAA tour-nament run turns out. The team won the MWC regular-season ti-tle for the fourth time in five sea-sons and its second consecutive MWC tournament crown.

However, one burning ques-tion looms over the Lobos as they begin the NCAA Men’s Divi-sion I Basketball Championship. Will this be the year UNM finally breaks through to the Sweet 16? The Lobos have never made it that far in the tournament.

Today, the second round of the NCAA begins with 64 teams battling in the Big Dance. No. 3 seed New Mexico plays one of the final games of the day when the Lobos take on No. 14 Harvard in Salt Lake City. Tipoff for to-night’s bout is 7:50 p.m. and will be broadcast on TNT.

When teams get to this part of March, second chances run out. Win and advance, or lose and go home. � e plan, junior guard Ken-dall Williams said, is to try to make it as far into the bracket as they can, not just into the Sweet 16.

“We feel like we’re just getting started,” he said on Wednesday. “We’re going to take it game by game, starting with Harvard and

try to take a run just like every-body else is.”

Already a Lobo-crazy com-munity, Albuquerque reached a fever pitch of excitement since UNM won last week’s Mountain West basketball championship and received its No. 3 seed in the West Region, which was an-nounced during Sunday’s selec-tion show. Harvard holds a No. 14 as the Ivy League champion.

While not common, No. 14 seeds beating No. 3 seeds is not unprecedented. In the last 27 years, it’s happened 16 times. Most recently, No. 14 seed Ohio pulled it off in 2010 when the Bobcats toppled No. 3 seed Georgetown.

If New Mexico (29-5) wins tonight, it will take on either No. 6 seed Arizona or No. 11 seed Belmont, who also play today. Half of the 64 teams play today at locations nationwide and the other half follows Friday. The round of 32 is Saturday and Sunday.

The Lobos have been named a Final Four favorite by some col-lege basketball experts. Both CBS sports analyst Doug Gottlieb and Sports Illustrated writer Seth Da-vis picked UNM to reach the na-tional semifinals.

With the way it’s played the last month, UNM could be poised for a long run. New Mexico won nine of its last ten games, including three during the

by J.R. [email protected]

@JROppenheim

UNM and Steve Alford have reached an agreement for a new 10-year contract that will keep the men’s basketball coach at the school through 2023, the Univer-sity announced Wednesday.

With incentives and bonuses, Alford could make up to $2 mil-lion per year, nearly double what he made a year ago. Barring an early departure from UNM, he will become the longest-tenured coach in team history by the con-tract’s end.

Alford has been winning conference championships and putting the team in the national spotlight since the University hired him to coach the Lobos six years ago. UNM begins play in the NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Championships tonight in Salt Lake City. As the No. 3 seed, the Lobos play No. 14 Harvard.

“This is a commitment that I wanted to make more than any-thing else, because I found an in-stitution, I found an area of the country that I really, really like,” Alford said. “We’re extremely suc-cessful, and we think we can be even more successful in the fu-ture. I think that was more of the reason than anything else.”

According to the contract terms the University released, the

renewed contract begins April 1. After that date, Alford will receive a $240,000 increase in base salary. The UNM salary book lists Alford’s current base salary at $324,200, which would bring his yearly total to $564,200.

That total could increase with

$405,000 in new incentives. Alford would be paid extra if the Lobos win a Mountain West Conference regular-season or tournament championship, advance to the NCAA Sweet 16 or beyond, or defeat a top-25 team (capped at three per year and based on the

opponent’s ranking at the time of the game).

Information on the Albuquerque Journal website also lists $600,000 in other compensation, which includes media and community affairs

Mountain West championships against Wyoming, San Diego State and UNLV. The lone loss during the past ten games came in the Mountain West regular-season finale, which Air Force won on a last-second shot.

“It’s definitely a tough

Lobos hot to trot to hammer HarvardHarvard and UNM sportsreporters talk NCAA game

by John [email protected]

UNM awarded a 10-year con-tract on Wednesday to men’s basket-ball head coach Steve Alford with a $240,000 salary increase, but some faculty are wondering about their own pay.

“I � nd it regrettable that although both athletics and academics occupy the same physical space on the UNM campus, the rules that govern salaries and the performance needed to earn those salaries are not the same,” said Margo Milleret, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, in an email. “I applaud the coach for his success in building the Lobos’ basketball team. However, his salary now or in the fu-ture exists in a di� erent plane of real-ity than my own as a professor.”

According to Paul Krebs, UNM’s vice president for Athletics, Alford’s salary increase in the new contract will be � nanced from basketball revenues, not from student fees or state funds.

According to surveys conducted by the o� ce of the Provost, UNM’s average faculty salaries range from $7,000 to $21,000 less than those at peer universities for professors, associate professors and assistant professors.

Steve Alford gets 10-year contract, $240k raiseFaculty praise Alford butnotice they didn’t get a raise

see Alford PAGE 5 see Contract PAGE 3

see Harvard PAGE 5

Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo

UNM’s Alex Kirk, left, and Chad Adams defend against a UNLV player during the MWC tournament � nal on Saturday at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nev. The Lobos carried their second consecutive tournament with the 63-56 victory. The win gave them an automatic berth into the NCAA tournament as the No. 3 seed. Their � rst game is against No. 14 Harvard today in Salt Lake City.

Martin Kessler / Courtesy Photo

see Q&A PAGE 3

Juan Labreche/ @LabrecheMode / Daily Lobo

A UNM fan holds up cutout of men’s basketball head coach Steve Alford on Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. UNM announced Wednesday that Alford had been given a 10-year contract to continue to coach the Lobos and a $240,000 salary raise to come from basketball revenue.

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 032113

Follow Us...@dailylobo

Friend Us...facebook.com/ DailyLobo

Aquinas NewmanCenter

Palm Sunday MassesSaturday March 23rd 4:30pmSunday March 24th 8am, 9:30am, 11:15am, and 5pmProcession begins at the Dane Smith outdoor amphitheatreContact: Main Office at 247-1094

www.AquinasNM.org

1815 Las Lomas Rd NE

PAGETWONEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOTH U R S D AY, MA RC H 21, 2013

volume 117 issue 121Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published daily except Saturday, Sunday and school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $75 per academic year. E-mail [email protected] for more information on subscriptions.The New Mexico Daily Lobo is published by the Board of UNM Student Publications. The editorial opinions expressed in the New Mexico Daily Lobo are those of the respective writers and do not necessarily re�ect the views of the students, faculty, sta� and regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content should be made to the editor-in-chief. All content appearing in the New Mexico Daily Lobo and the Web site dailylobo.com may not be reproduced without the consent of the editor-in-chief. A single copy of the New Mexico Daily Lobo is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies is considered theft and may be prosecuted. Letter submission policy: The opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Letters and guest columns must be concisely written, signed by the author and include address and telephone. No names will be withheld.

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

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

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

by John [email protected]

Both candidates to be president of UNM’s Graduate and Profession-al Students Association agree that graduate students need more fund-ing, but their di�ering academic backgrounds made for di�erent ap-proaches at the forum on Wednes-day in the SUB atrium.

Priscila Poliana, an international student and master’s student in community and regional planning, said one of her strengths is that she attended UNM for her undergraduate degree, and is already well acquainted with student and administrative networks.

She said her connections would be helpful in securing funding for graduate students and responding to discrimination and harassment on campus against minority groups.

“We need to foster an environ-ment here where administrators and students respond quickly, and together, to various needs,” Poliana said.

Poliana’s platform focuses on grant funding for teaching assistant-ships and graduate assistantships.

“I look around and I see many of my peers underfunded,” Poliana said. “To that end, I’ve already be-gun to work with the o�ce of the provost, the o�ce of the president and (the o�ce of graduate studies) to bring more funding opportuni-ties for the next school year.”

Sharif Gias, a doctorate candidate in economics who previously taught at the University of Wisconsin, said his main concern also focused on obtaining su�cient funding for graduate research. He said he also wants to make it easier for grad

students to graduate sooner than they typically do at UNM, and bring in more money for the University to increase faculty retention. He did not have a speci�c plan as to how he would do these things.

“All these questions come to my mind, just being a graduate student,” Gias said. “Now I want the chance to do something about them.”

Gias said one of his platform’s focuses is cooperation between dif-ferent departments. He described a hypothetical National Science Foundation grant to build a road in Albuquerque and listed how it could involve multiple departments: engi-neering students would build the road, economics students would manage the costs, social sciences students would study how the road would impact the community, envi-ronmental sciences students would do a study on the environmental consequences of building the road and law students would deal with any legal challenges that might arise when building the road.

“�is shows how much human capital can be brought together in order to bene�t the University,” Gias said.

After each candidate presented their platform, there was a Q-and-A session. Amy Vesper of the Social Justice League asked about both candidates’ stances regarding the fact that Chick-�l-A was allowed to remain in the SUB after an 8-3 SUB Board vote Feb. 27.

On Feb. 20, the ASUNM Senate voted 15-3 in favor of a resolution that urged the University to replace Chick-�l-A with another restaurant, in the wake of public comments made by Chick-�l-A CEO Dan Cathy against same-sex marriage made in June and

July of 2012. ASUNM passed the resolution after conducting a survey in January that showed that 85 percent of those surveyed were in favor of keeping Chick-�l-A on campus, while 15 percent were in favor of removing it.

Poliana, a member of the SUB Board and one of the three who vot-ed to remove Chick-�l-A, said if she had to vote again, she would vote the same way.

“�is is about an agenda that has chosen to stand up for intolerance on a national level,” Poliana said. “I don’t take this lightly, students tell me they feel unsafe on campus.”

Gias said that while he sup-ports protecting underrepresented groups at UNM, he also supports a compromise position as opposed to ousting a business.

“We need to communicate be-tween students and administrators, and discuss the needs of both, and then �nd a solution that bene�ts both,” Gias said.

�e only other question asked at the forum was about how the can-didates would actually bring addi-tional funding to graduate students at the University.

Poliana restated her platform, that she would continue to work with the o�ce of the provost, the o�ce of the president and OGS to secure additional funding for teaching assistantships, graduate assistantships and grants.

Gias also restated his platform that students should work together with faculty to determine the best ways to receive additional funding for those three areas, because work-ing with faculty more closely would also help his goal of increasing fac-ulty retention.

TodayAn open-forum debate

between GPSA presidential candidates

focusing on campus diversity and the needs of minority groups on

campus.El Centro de La Raza conference room in

Mesa Vista HallNoon - 1 p.m.

FridayAn open-forum

debate between GPSA presidential

candidates discussing the importance of

increased integration between main and north campuses.Domenici Large

Auditorium on north campus

4 p.m. - 5 p.m.

SaturdayGeneral debate with GPSA presidential

candidates, with questions from a panel of GPSA Council

representatives. Domenici West

Room 30109 a.m.

GPSA presidential faceoff

Aaron Sweet / Daily LoboGraduate and Professional Student Association presidential candidates Sharif Gias, foreground, and Priscila Poliana speak Wednesday at the �rst of four debates leading up to the GPSA elections April 1-4.

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 032113

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news Thursday, March 21, 2013/ Page 3

for Harvard. The Crimson lost four of its five starters from last year’s team that reached the NCAA tournament and returned just two contributors. But two unproven underclassmen — rookie point guard Siyani Chambers and sophomore wing Wesley Saunders — stepped up to lead Harvard back to the tournament.

Listed at a generous 6 foot, 170 pounds, Chambers makes up for what he lacks in size with his quickness and court vision. At 6 feet 7 inches, the lengthy Saunders is Harvard’s top perimeter defender and best athlete. His jump shot is still a work in progress, but Saunders’ ability to get to the basket makes him the Crimson’s top offensive threat. Harvard surrounds the pair with shooters Laurent Rivard and Christian Webster and shot-blocker Kenyatta Smith in the post. Forward Steve Moundou-Missi has provided a spark off the bench.

CorrectionsErrors were made in the article “Soon, retail and food near The Pit,” published in Wednesday’s

Daily Lobo. The Lobo Development Corporation has been working on the south campus land project for one-and-a-half years, not six years. The approval was for a “form of ground

lease,” not a “release form.” Lastly, Fairmount Properties was selected as the developer by the University in January 2012, not January 2013. The errors were made in reporting.

According to the report from the office of the provost, the average sal-aries for professors, associate pro-fessors and assistant professors at UNM’s main campus are $103,000, $75,000 and $67,000, respectively.

By comparison, the same report shows the average salaries at peer institutions for professors, associate professors and assistant professors are $123,000, $85,000 and $75,000, respectively.

At the Board of Regents meet-ing March 11, Amy Neel, an associ-ate professor of speech and hearing sciences and president of the Fac-ulty Senate, said UNM faculty have received no pay raises in four years and increased health care costs and retirement payments have left them with lower effective pay each year.

At the same meeting, Neel also said she heard from the provost and some deans that more than a dozen faculty members have gotten offers from other universities in just the past few weeks, some involving pay increases of $10,000 to $30,000.

Faculty and regents reached an impasse after debate and no defi-nite action was taken on faculty pay raises.

“Like many faculty members, I am excited about the performance of the men’s basketball team and appreciate the job that Coach Alford is doing,” said Neel in an email. “I am confident that UNM administration and the Board of Regents will take requests for substantial increases in faculty and staff compensation seriously during the upcoming budget process because our mission

to improve student success, to be a world-class research institution, to provide outstanding health care and to improve economic development in New Mexico depend on the hard work of excellent faculty and staff members.”

The $5.9 billion state budget proposal submitted by the state Legislature for review by Gov. Susana Martinez includes a 1 percent pay increase for state employees, such as teachers. However, because the bill has yet to be signed, the increase is not guaranteed.

Comments on the Daily Lobo’s Facebook page were varied in their support of the coach’s pay increase.

Denise White expressed her sup-port for the pay increase saying “It’s well deserved!”

Tabatha Bennett said that the fact that university coaches are paid more than teachers is nothing new, and also supported the pay increase.

“Alford’s done a lot for the pro-gram, the school and the state; I’m glad we are working to keep him here,” Bennett said.

But Richard Vargas was critical of the coach’s new contract.

“It’s a fact that if you underpay the faculty, the good ones will go some-where else, and what UNM will at-tract is the bottom of the barrel. Stu-dents suffer,” Vargas said. “But hey, the Lobos are in the big dance. Who gives a rat’s ass?”

Nate Scott simply said Alford’s sal-ary and professors’ salaries couldn’t be compared to each other.

“They’re two totally different budgets,” Scott said.

Contract from page 1 Q&A from page 1

thenfollow the QR code to the Crimson article in which

Kessler interviews Oppenheim

To continue reading, go toDailyLobo.com/sections/sports

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 032113

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

March 21, 2013

Page

4

Editor’s note: This letter is in response to the column “Safety net strangles Ameri-ca’s future,” published in the Daily Lobo on March 7. In his column, David Bergeron ar-gues the social safety net is supporting peo-ple who don’t truly need it and that “we need to fundamentally rethink what we want or need from government.”

Editor,

I think at this propitious time it would prudent, in view of the looming deficit and the great insight shown in the recent piece about the safety net strangling the future, simply to euthanize all the boomers and the infirm who blight our future, especially the retiring teachers who cause us such difficul-ty by giving out inflated grades and who ex-emplify the educated idiots who have such a hard time with clear thinking and impose their delusions on all the youth in the name of education.

All these useless eaters impose such a drag on us all that maybe some of these folks might show a jot of kindness by simply offing themselves voluntarily in the name of the greater good.

This is one darned good reason we should not ban handguns, which might provide a simple, expedient exit for these hangers-on, especially educators who mostly just cause people pain by imposing their idiotic ideas on the young — especially those young peo-ple who have only gone through third grade and have a greater wisdom not informed by boring and stupid books that should be burned and not read anyway.

Jim BurbankUNM faculty by Peter Kindilien

Daily Lobo [email protected]

In rebuttal to those who have lamely attempted to flame me and others for our columns discussing the consequences and implications of continuing to pump carbon into the atmosphere, I offer the following.

If you are interested in gaining awareness of the issues involved and find yourself on a trip to Boulder, Colo., then you can visit the National Center for Atmospheric Research at the foot of the majestic Rocky Mountains. There is a nice, little museum there, inform-ing visitors about the state of climate and weather research. The exhibits include a film addressing the current research on global warming.

The National Center for Atmospheric Re-search has an excellent website, ncar.ucar.edu, which describes the center’s programs and the technological resources at its dispos-al. The center offers courses for running the latest and greatest climate-modeling soft-ware and lists job opportunities. So if you possess or obtain a scientific background and can contribute to our understanding of the earth’s climate, I'm sure the center would love to see your résumé. At the very least, you could learn to do your own research in an ef-fort to support your hypotheses and to dis-prove the misconceptions of all those experts who disagree with you. How about it?

If you are driving from here to Boulder, you will see the power plant just outside of Pueblo, Colo., and its long trail of smoke ris-ing into the atmosphere. Our pollution issues in New Mexico are caused in large part by emissions from plants that provide electric-ity for our businesses and our homes. And, of course, by all the vehicles we drive and many other human contrivances which combine to define our modern lifestyle. The smoke-stacks in Farmington, N.M., blanket the Four Corners region in smog, while pollution from China drifts across the Pacific, adding to the haze we create from our own sources. UNM offers physics and Earth sciences courses, in-cluding climatology, in which you can learn the fundamentals and gain access to a num-ber of avenues for relevant research.

A cultural source of information is the

new documentary film "Chasing Ice." James Balog, scientist and renowned National Geo-graphic wildlife photographer, used abso-lutely stunning, revolutionary time-lapse photography to capture the cataclysmic re-treat of glacial ice in a number of locations — including the Arctic, Iceland and Greenland — over the period of several years.

I had the opportunity to view the film in the very cool, historic Boulder Theater where Balog, a Boulder resident, was present. He has provided the most convincing visual evi-dence available that we now face the great-est threat to mankind or, as he called it, the greatest event in human history. The film is a magnificent accomplishment, a wonderful gift to mankind and one of the most depress-ing and distressing films you will ever see.

There is ample information coming out daily that demonstrates we are actively per-petrating climate change on a level that dwarfs all other natural causes. One excellent link for current articles that often deal with this topic is guardian.co.uk/environment/series/guardian-environment-network.

While governors in low-lying coastal re-gions struggle to keep their states afloat ec-onomically and warming, swelling oceans flood cities and bring in massive storms — which wreak havoc on communication, transportation, work production and human lives — the number of bigshot skeptics and climate change deniers is quietly shrinking.

There are plenty of highly regarded books accessible to the general public and numer-ous websites that address climate change from a vast array of angles and perspectives. But it is important to note the distinction between reputable, scientific sources and propaganda designed purely to confuse the general public and support the thinly veiled agenda sponsored by "dark money" to main-tain our dependence on fossil fuels.

The scientific community has established that there is a direct correlation between at-mospheric carbon content and global av-erage temperature. We know the levels that have caused changes in the climate system in the past, and we know we are reaching those levels now. The fact is, we can rebuild or re-structure our economies and even repopu-late the human race if we end up destroying most of ourselves through competition for

dwindling resources as we overrun the plan-et, overburden the environment and over-consume. But we have reached a crossroads in civilization where there is one thing we will no longer be able to do: reverse the trend of the accelerating global warming we have triggered. There are at least two sides to every story, but this is one that irrevocably leads in a catastrophic direction and there exists no rational, scientific argument to dispute that we are the cause.

The cost to humanity and most other forms of life will be devastating and there is nothing trivial, trite or amusing about the subject. It is not a competition to see who can devise the cleverest argument of denial, and there is nothing to gloat about for those who calmly evaluate all the available evidence and realize they are right — things really are this bad. The fact is, it is all rather horrible.

If readers have ideas of how we can best deal with the impending consequences, miti-gate the already disastrous repercussions and prevent making the situation much worse — that kind of input can be constructive.

But when people choose to just spout pure garbage, ignore all the facts, do zero re-search and offer no evidence whatsoever to support ridiculous assertions, they contrib-ute nothing. Rather than labeling people as "Al Gore lovers," parroting paid consultants from FOX News and writing drivel like "the Earth has actually been getting cooler since the 1950s," I recommend following one of the above-mentioned paths to personal enlightenment.

Within a few years, even the clueless wind-bags will realize they were not so clever after all. Unfortunately, it is their kind of thinking, or lack thereof, that advocates support of de-lusion in place of truth and obstructs every effort to regulate the energy industry and de-crease our toxic emissions.

History won't bother remembering these fools or the Tea Party they support, and that is most unfortunate.

They could at least trouble themselves to learn the difference between weather and climate before they attempt to feed us any more of their B.S. After all, that's the very first thing taught in any introductory course about climate.

Editor,

Due to recent changes in UNM Hospi-tal’s phone system, I can no longer reach my doctor directly. Does this perhaps put my life in danger? I believe so. The bu-reaucracy surrounding the hospital has al-ways been labyrinthine and is only getting worse. In light of this, I have filed a com-plaint with Disability Rights New Mexico. I could rant about the unfairness, etc., but that will only fall on deaf ears when it comes to policymakers.

Instead, I urge any other disabled read-ers who have found themselves in the same situation to call Disability Rights New Mexico here in Albuquerque at (505) 256-3100. If you aren’t one of the popu-lation for whom that office exists to as-sist but you have found yourself similar-ly cut off from contacting your physician, you can contact the state attorney gen-eral’s office at (505) 222-9000 or the New Mexico Medical Board at (505) 476-7219.

Aimee J. McNamaraDaily Lobo reader

Climate change deniers, open your eyesHaving difficulty calling your doctor? Report it.

Secure the future: Off profs, surplus boomers

Letters

CoLumn

editoriaL Board

elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

alexandra swanbergManaging editorOpinion editor

John tyczkowskiNews editor

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 032113

newsNew Mexico Daily lobo Thursday, March 21, 2013/ Page 5

The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board

is now Accepting Applications for

2013-2014 Daily Lobo EditorApply at: unmjobs.unm.edu

Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, March 29, 2013.

Term of Office: May 2013 through April 2014.

Requirements: To be selected as editor of the Daily Lobo, the candidate must be a student enrolled at the University of New Mexico, have been enrolled in 6 hours or more at UNM the current and preceding semester, and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student in a degree-granting program for 6 hours or more throughout the term of office. Some publication experience preferable.

For more information call 277-5656.

conference to play in,” junior guard Tony Snell said. “There are no guarantees that you will win a game because every team is great to beat any team. And as far as not getting recognition, that motivates us to play harder and try to win more championships.”

Snell took his game to another level at the conference tournament, netting 17.6 points per game and shooting 52 percent in an MVP performance. On Dan Patrick’s nationally syndicated radio show on Wednesday, Gottlieb called Snell a player people nationwide don’t know now but everyone will know in two weeks.

“He’s positive. He’s focused on what the team needs,” soph-omore center Alex Kirk said of Snell. “He’s never been someone

that comes out and has to talk so much about his game. He’s quiet and he plays with his game.”

Before New Mexico even con-siders a Final Four appearance, it has Harvard to contend with. The Ivy League champion has three NCAA tournament appearances in school history but is in the field for the second straight year. The Crimson (19-9) has never won an NCAA tournament game.

Harvard averages 68.9 points per game offensively, shoots 48.2 percent from the field, and sur-renders 63.9 per game. Guard/forward Wesley Saunders leads the Crimson offense with 16.5 points per game, with guard Si-yani Chambers averaging 12.9 per game and guard Laurent Ri-vard putting up 10.4 per game.

Winning the Ivy League with

an 11-3 record, Harvard had a nonconference slate that includ-ed wins against Rice, Boston Col-lege and California. The Crimson has lost to two NCAA tournament teams — Saint Mary’s and Mem-phis which, coincidentally, play each other in the second round.

Over the last four seasons, Harvard has the best Ivy League Conference record with a 45-11 mark. Harvard and New Mexico have never played each other.

“You know, just the couple days that we have been scouting them, they look like they have some good guards,” Williams said. “We’re going to have to contain their dribble penetration. They can shoot the ball really well and they play at a high level. So we’re going to have to match that.”

obligations, and $100,000 in retirement.

The new terms feature pen-alties if Alford leaves before the contract expires. If Alford departs prior to April 1, 2015, he must pay the University $1 million. That to-tal falls to $500,000 if he leaves af-ter the 2015 date but before April 1, 2017. Leaving after 2017 means Alford would pay $300,000.

The terms state the contract’s length will not fall below six years and there are no additional in-centive-based extensions earned. The terms specify Alford will not open salary discussions for a four-year period.

Another term of the agreement involves an additional salary pool of $65,000 for Alford’s assistant coaches and other staff, but any pay increase for those positions must follow the University’s hu-man relations policy and be ap-proved by Paul Krebs, UNM’s vice president for Athletics. The salary pool is the amount of money that can be divvied up between the as-sistant coaches and other staff.

“We will not be using stu-dent fees or state funds for the increases in this new contract,” Krebs said. “We will utilize rev-enue streams from basketball that will go toward funding this, as we understand the current economic climate on campus.”

In 2011-12, Alford made

$1,093,000, the most of any men’s basketball coach in the MWC, ac-cording to a USA Today database of college coaches’ salaries. San Diego State coach Steve Fisher made $802,950 that year, Colo-rado State’s Tim Miles earned $585,000 and UNLV’s Dave Rice made $450,000.

According to the website Celebrity Net Worth, the coach of the defending national champion Kentucky Wildcats John Calipari made $5.4 million last year with a base salary of $5 million and $400,000 in incentives. Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski made $4.7 million, while Louisville’s Rick Pitino made $4.8 million ($3.9 million in base salary and $912,000 in incentives).

During six years at the helm, Alford has led UNM to four MWC regular-season titles, including this season. He has a 155-51 re-cord as UNM’s head coach, and his Lobos won their second con-secutive MWC tournament cham-pionship last weekend.

During a 21-year coaching ca-reer that includes stops at Iowa, Southwest Missouri and Division III Manchster, Alford has a 434-229 win-loss record, a 59 percent win-ning percentage.

As a player, Alford won the 1987 NCAA title while playing for Indiana and legendary coach Bobby Knight. He sank a Final

Four-record seven 3-pointers in a win over Syracuse.

This season, Alford led the Lobos to a 29-win season, the second highest in school history. When UNM won the Mountain West basketball championship last week, the Lobos became the first team to win the league’s tour-nament in consecutive years.

“As a New Mexican and see-ing the coaches come through-out my lifetime, it’s definitely a great thing for the University and for the state because the success he has brought to the program, and the recognition has helped out the state a ton,” said sopho-more center Alex Kirk, a Los Ala-mos native.

While he’s boasted success on the court, Alford’s players do their job off the court, according to information from Athletics. Nine of the 10 seniors he’s had have graduated from the Univer-sity and his team has 11 consec-utive semesters with a 2.7 grade point average or higher.

“It’s a very special place and we feel like we’ve got it going in a positive direction,” Alford said. “To be signed in there long term was a commitment that I appre-ciate out of the school, and hope-fully they’re appreciative of my commitment as well.”

Alford from page 1

Harvard from page 1

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Page 8 / Thursday, March 21, 2013 New Mexico Daily lobothe haps

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Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 032113

[email protected] editor / Nicole Perez / @NicolePerezM The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Thursday,March 21, 2013

Page

10Culture editor / Nicole Perez / @NicolePerezM

LoboThe Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Culture

Many children dream of run-ning away to the circus,

but for members of the Albuquer-que Aerialist Collective, the circus is just downtown.

� e members of the collective gather in a warehouse on Fifth Street to practice and perfect various circus arts and acrobatics, performing grav-ity-defying stunts on the trapeze, aer-ial silks and the lyra, which is a steel hoop suspended from the ceiling.

“A lot of people think we do a � y-ing trapeze like you would see in a big-tent circus,” said Lauren Hawk, a founding member. “But we do a static trapeze where you do a lot of contor-tion and balancing work within the structure. � e fabrics are two ribbons hanging down from the ceiling and you climb around and hang upside

down and tie yourself in knots.”� e group came together after

members met each other through other workshops, events and a mu-tual interest in exploring circus arts. Several had met through circus workshops and intensives with Wise Fool New Mexico, a theater company in Santa Fe.

“We couldn’t � nd a place to do aer-ial fabrics in Albuquerque,” said Kris-ten Woods, another founding mem-ber of the group. “We really wanted a space where you could just go in and practice at any time.”

Woods and nine other aerialists found the space to do just that in the Factory on 5th Art Space and o� cially formed the collective in January 2012. Since then, the group has put on sev-eral performances and a slew of work-

shops and has more than doubled in membership. � e workshops the col-lective o� ers are open to everyone. � ese include trapeze and fabrics classes, which Hawk said are great for beginners, as well as classes for people who are more advanced. � e collective just started o� ering stilting classes and will have its � rst clowning class April 2.

� e interest in traditional circus arts and practices may seem obscure, but there is an undercurrent in many communities, Woods said.

“I feel like we’re really rede� ning what circus is right now because it’s not the big tent with the ringleader and the lion tamer and the clowns and the Dumbo-type scene,” Hawk said. “It’s very di� erent, but all the skills and the art that went into that

have stayed alive in a lot of di� erent communities just under the surface.”

Hawk and Woods said the pro-cess of growing and changing as a collective can be slow. At times, it’s as di� cult as acquiring the physical skills necessary to master the tricks and movements of aerial acrobatics, Hawk said.

“You watch newer people come in and struggle with the same things you used to struggle with. � ere are always those physical feats that you think you’ll never be able to accomplish, and then one day it clicks and you do it, and that can be the happiest moment ever,” she said.

Although the group is still � nding its direction and vision, Woods

AIRBORNE

AC

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ROBATI

S

see Airborne PAGE 11

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said all members are interested in participating, building a community for circus arts in Albuquerque and sharing and expanding the knowledge they already have. She said every member brings unique influences, aesthetics and abilities to the collective.

Woods said other circus art groups in Albuquerque include the UNM Juggling Club, Roustabout Arts, AirDance New Mexico and independent practitioners of acro-yoga, slacklining and other circus arts.

“Once I started networking, I realized there were all these fibers, but there was nothing weaving them together, and I think to some extent we’ve started doing that,” Woods said.

Hawk said the group’s members have a long way to go to keep making connections within the circus community and the greater Albuquerque community.

Membership is easy to obtain, she said, and anyone is welcome to come to workshops, monthly member meetings or the occasional, free, open training sessions to see how quickly the impossible can become a reality.

“The greatest difficulty can be realizing there are these seemingly impossible physical things you’re trying to do, but the most gratifying thing is starting to realize that none of them are impossible,” Hawk said.

For more information, “like” Albuquerque Aerialist Collective on

Facebook, visit

AlbuquerqueAerialistCollective.org, email

[email protected] or call (505) 206-0160

1715 Fifth St. N.W.

Airborne from pAge 10

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP OPPOSITE PAGE

PHOTO 1 UNM senior creative writing major Lauren Hawk, center, watches UNM alumnae Celestina Mancha and Diana Delgado practice a routine on aerial silks. The silks require upper body strength as well as flexibility.

PHOTO 2 Lauren Hawk rests during practice on a mat at the Factory on 5th Art Space. Aerial fabric artists will do drops from up to 12 feet high, where they rapidly fall toward the ground but are caught by a knot in the fabric.

PHOTO 3 Diana Delgado secures a hold with her feet during a practice at Factory on 5th Art Space. She is part of the Albuquerque Aerialist Collective, which does not participate in big-tent circuses, but focuses on individual artistry.

PHOTO 4 Lauren Hawk practices a hold with aerialist fabric on Wednesday. The Albuquerque Aerialist Collective tries to spread knowledge of circus arts in Albu-querque with weekly classes, as well as occasional performances. caught by a knot in the fabric.

PHOTO 5 Lauren Hawk, below, and Celestina Mancha rehearse aerial silks at the Factory on 5th Art Space on Wednesday. They are part of of the Albuquerque Aerial-ists Collective, which offers classes in a variety of circus arts including aerial fabrics.

STORY BY PHOTOS BY Celia McKinnon Juan Labreche

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 032113

Page 12 / Thursday, March 21, 2013 New Mexico Daily loboculture

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entails supervision of a volunteer staff.

Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or download an application at: pubboard.unm.edu/conception-southwest/

Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 5, 2013

Term of Office: Mid-May 2013 through Mid-May 2014

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

For more information call 277-5656.

by Annie [email protected]

I’ve never attended the famous mu-sic and film festival South by South-west in Austin, Texas, but because of its proximity to Albuquerque, some of the bands stopped by Sister Bar on their way out.

The Allah-Las headlined a show at Sister, a new Downtown bar, on Monday, and the bandmates described the mad-ness that ensues when Austin opens its doors to thousands of musicians, film-makers and fans from all over. The city’s population is said to triple during SXSW and many residents rent their homes out months in advance, because find-ing a hotel is next to impossible.

“Austin City Center turns into a giant amusement park,” said Matt Correia, the band’s drummer.

“It’s a lot of fun if you like crowds,” said lead guitarist Pedrum Siadatian “And likewise not a lot of fun if you don’t like crowds.”

The band played 15 shows over the course of six days and attended heaps more, including performances from Jacco Gardner, Night Beats, Black Lips, Gap Dream and even the Zombies.

Apparently, musicians get in to many of the shows for free, so pick up an instrument, record something, get booked and let’s suit up for next year’s SXSW. If we can’t make it, the good news is this festival tends to bring cool music through Albuquerque.

I felt blessed to catch this show on a whim and get a healthy amount of fun in for the day. The Allah-Las play

classic garage surf rock that sounds like the boys traveled in from the 1960s, rather than from modern-day Texas. They approach their music with careful attention to vintage sound, rock and roll roots and a deep surf-culture influence.

Lead singer Miles Michaud, bass-ist Spencer Dunham and Correia met in high school and have been surfing together since. They even take their surfboards on tour. Pedrum joined the group later after working with Spencer at Amoeba Music, one of the most ac-claimed record shops in the country.

The band has been playing together for four-and-a-half years and has created music the band members describe as sunny yet moody — and very danceable, in my experience. The band’s first album, “Allah-Las,” remains true to classic surf rock, but also demonstrates the depth of the band’s musical knowledge. The one instrumental track, “Ela Navega,” turns out to be obvious samba rock, right out of the Tropicalia movement of the ’70s in Brazil.

Audience member Tiana Acosta, who helped get the Allah-Las get booked at Sister, described the band’s sound as “psychey-surfey.” The band members hail from Los Angeles, and were returning there before starting their next U.S. tour.

You should check this band out on-line, or try to catch a show if it comes back through town. You can also listen to the band’s weekly podcasts on Rever-berationRadio.com, where band mem-bers present a great variety of music they enjoy, admire and hope to share. It is a good way to find out about less-er-known artists, upcoming genres and fresh sounds.

by Antonio [email protected]

People say there are some things they just don’t understand, but a group of local mythol-ogy buffs has found that many stories serve to explain the unexplainable in everyday life.

The Joseph Campbell Mythology RoundTable of Albuquerque is a local group that meets once a month to discuss mythology. Hosted by Ronnie Tabor, the group looks at mythology from around the world, from Greek and Roman to Native American and Celtic, before questioning common symbols. Tabor said the group often focuses on the similarities between myths from different cultures.

“Most of the myths that we work with have been from the Greek and the Roman, but if you read myths from all over the place, there’s a common thread trying to explain the unexplainable — what started the unexplainable, what started a nation,” Tabor said.

She said the group looks at myths through the lessons of Joseph Campbell, a literature scholar who helped promote the concepts of archetype and symbolism. Stories are always shifted and retold, and common symbols often leap from fiction to reality.

“To understand symbolism, it really does relate to the personal and what goes on now,” Tabor said. “It can tell you what’s go-ing on with yourself, people you know, how they relate, how they interact, what’s go-ing on politically and what’s happening in the world. Nothing is new; everything has been said over and over and over again.” Tabor’s journey into the realm of myths and sto-rytelling began after her aunt gave her a copy of “One Thousand and One Nights.” The collec-tion of short stories was her call to adventure. Tabor has been interested in myths and fantasy ever since.

Tabor, a practicing psychoanalyst for 35 years, said she has learned to incorporate her

knowledge of mythology into her career. This integration began after one of her mentors rec-ommended that she read Campbell’s “The Hero with a Thousand Faces.”

“She told us that if you read that, you will get an understanding of all the different psycho-psychologies and personality structures there are in the form of a myth,” Tabor said. “It’s kind of a way to look at the world in a symbolic form. I thought it was fascinating.”

Group member Shari Tarbet has taught multiple mythology classes. She taught mythology at Cibola High School from 1988 to 2005, then left to attend the Pacifica Graduate Institute in 2005 where she received her doctorate in mythology. Tarbet now teaches a reading course at Diné College’s branch campus in Crownpoint, N.M., and two mythology courses in UNM’s continuing education program, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.

Tarbet said mythology and its many symbols thrive in today’s pop culture. Just two examples are the hero quests common in films such as the original “Star Wars” trilogy and the Celtic shape-shifting in the recent Pixar film “Brave.” Tarbet said this prevalence of mythological symbols is evidence that people still look to sto-ries to explain their lives.

“People search for meaning in their lives, and not everybody can seek meaning in their lives from religious practice,” Tarbet said. “Clearly people are searching for meaning in their lives that they’re not getting from plac-es that for the last 2,000 years they’ve gotten.”

To join the Joseph Campbell Mythology RoundTable

of Albuquerque, sign up online at

meetup.com/mythology-59

The ‘Allah Las’ were at Sister? Ooh la la

Mythology buffs muse on human search for meaning

Band passes through after playing SXSW festival

Page 13: NM Daily Lobo 032113

Thursday, March 21, 2013/ Page 13New Mexico Daily lobo advertisement

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The University of New MexicoStudent Publications Board

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For more information call 277-5656.

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

Applications are available in Marron Hall Rm. 107 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or download an application at: pubboard.unm.edu/best-student-essays/

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by Alicia Chang The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Rusted piec-es of two Apollo-era rocket engines that helped boost astronauts to the moon have been fished out of the murky depths of the Atlantic, Ama-zon.com CEO Jeff Bezos and NASA said Wednesday.

A privately funded expedition led by Bezos raised the main engine parts during three weeks at sea and was headed back to Cape Canaveral, Fla., the launch pad for the manned lunar missions.

“We’ve seen an underwater won-derland — an incredible sculpture garden of twisted F-1 engines that tells the story of a fiery and violent end,” Bezos wrote in an online posting.

Last year, the Bezos team used sonar to spot the sunken engines resting nearly 3 miles deep in the Atlantic and 360 miles from Cape Canaveral. At the time, the Internet mogul said the artifacts were part of the Apollo 11 mission that gave the world “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Bezos now says it’s unclear which Apollo mission the recovered engines

belonged to because the serial num-bers were missing or hard to read on the corroded pieces. NASA is helping trace the hardware’s origin.

Apollo astronauts were launched aboard the mighty Saturn V rock-et during the 1960s and 1970s. Each rocket had a cluster of five engines, which produced about 7 1/2 million pounds of thrust. After liftoff, the en-gines — each weighing 18,000 pounds — fell to the ocean as designed, with no plans to retrieve them.

Bezos and his team sent underwa-ter robots to hoist the engines, which are NASA property. In a statement, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden called the recovery “a historic find.”

Bezos plans to restore the engine parts, which included a nozzle, tur-bine, thrust chamber and heat ex-changer. Amazon.com Inc. spokes-man Drew Herdener declined Wednesday to reveal the cost of the recovery or restoration.

NASA has previously said an en-gine would head for the Smithso-nian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum. If a second was re-covered, it would be displayed at the Museum of Flight in Seattle, where Amazon.com is based.

The ocean floor off Cape Canav-eral is strewn with jettisoned rockets and flight parts from missions since the beginning of the Space Age. What survived after plunging into the ocean is unknown.

In one of the more famous recoveries, a private company in

1999 hoisted Gus Grissom’s Mercury capsule that accidentally sank in the Atlantic after splashdown in 1961. The capsule is now featured at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center.

Besides running the online re-tailer, Bezos founded Blue Origin, one of the companies with a NASA

contract to develop a spaceship to carry astronauts to the International Space Station.

In a previous posting, Bezos said he was inspired by NASA as a child, and by recovering the engines “may-be we can inspire a few more youth to invent and explore.”

Bezos Expeditions / AP PhotoThis image shows a thrust chamber of an Apollo F-1 engine on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in March. An expedition led by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos pulled up two rocket engines, including this one, that helped boost Apollo astronauts to the moon. Bezos and NASA announced the recovery.

Expedition recovers rocket parts in ocean

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SPONSORTHE DAILY LOBOSUDOKU505.277.5656

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE MARCH 21, 2013

ACROSS1 __-minded6 Skating team

10 Strong desire,with “the”

14 Caught thismorning

15 “Look __ whenI’m talking toyou!”

16 Auth. of manysnarky blogcomments

17 “Scrubs” headnurse

18 Nurses19 “__ 911!”: police

series parody20 Hot sauce

ingredient23 Beret-sporting

revolutionary25 Operation

Overlord vessel,for short

26 Concertostandout

27 Vox populi30 Monstrous31 Off __:

sporadically32 NBAer who

tweeted “I’mabout to retire” in2011

33 Wrinkly toy34 Silver-tongued38 No later than41 British blame

game?43 Genre artist of

mid-18th-centuryEurope

45 Men’sdepartmentfixture

47 Vessel near thedesserts

48 Droop49 Stinger? (and

what’s literallyfound in 20-, 27-and 43-Across)

52 Produced fiction?53 Say and mean54 Slapstick sidekick57 “House,” in Inuit58 Suckling spot59 Favors, with

“toward”60 Fanfare61 Woody’s son62 “Tearin’ Up My

Heart” band

DOWN1 Compound

once used asaerosolpropellant: Abbr.

2 NPR’s “ScienceFriday” hostFlatow

3 Anatomicalcolumncomponent

4 Land in el agua5 Dry French wine6 Target in the end

zone7 System ending?8 Eliciting awe9 Plead in court,

say10 Whaling

weapon11 Bowler’s target12 Strengthens13 Sound from the

bull pen21 “The Nazarene”

author Sholem22 Belgian prime

minister Di Rupo23 Coast Guard

noncoms24 Jackman of “Les

Misérables”(2012)

28 Sloshed

29 São __33 Examine, as

produce35 “Game on!”36 Coconut

product?37 McEnroe rival39 Tar Heel St.40 Improvisational

piece41 Gideon Fell

creator JohnDickson __

42 Apt vehicle in apresidentialmotorcade?

43 Furniture wood44 __ Rico45 Dutch export46 Covent Garden

architect Jones50 Scaloppine meat51 Fútbol cheers55 Resting place56 “I didn’t mean to

do that” key

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Alex Bajcz 3/21/13

(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 3/21/13

dailysudoku Solution to yesterday’s problem.

dailycrosswordYear Zero

Level 1 2 3 4

Page 16: NM Daily Lobo 032113

Page 16 / Thursday, March 21, 2013 New Mexico Daily loboclassifieds

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FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: ma- ture, friendly student, shared with 2 fe- males. 3BDRM/2BA house 2.7 miles from UNM. $405/mo + 1/3utilities. Call/- Text Meagan 505-803-4994 /Samantha 505-553-3632.

SEEKING FEMALE LOBO village. Lease takeover. Room available imme- diately, March paid. Rent $519/mo, in- cludes utilities, wifi, furnished room. Possible incentive. Call/Text 505-488-1251.

ROOM FOR RENT, student preferred. 2 blocks from UNM. Mid-May through July and/or next year @ $400/mo +utili- ties.Call/Text 979-229-1107.

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to take over Lobo Village lease. $519/mo, utili- ties included except electric. Willing to pay -half of first month’s rent and app fee. If interested, please text/call 1-575-631-3915.

Condos

2BDRM, 1BA, 780 sqft. Off-street park- ing. $700/mo, includes utilities. $300dd. No smoking, no pets. 302-A Girard SE. 505-270-0891.

Duplexes

NEAR NOB HILL. Large 1BDRM; hard- wood floors, updated kitchen and bath- room, W/D, yard, off-street parking. $575/mo. 271-9686 home, 934-4331 mobile.

For Sale

NEED INEXPENSIVE RELIABLE trans- portation? Buy red 150cc Kymco scooter. Perfect condition, plus two hel- mets: $1200. No parking hassle, 75/mpg. Prof’s “car” for 8 years. [email protected]

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

Jobs Off CampusARE YOU PASSIONATE about run- ning? We are seeking one authentic and experienced sales specialist for our run department. We offer a fun place to work and a chance to learn and grow in the outdoor sports retail industry. Must be willing to work weekends. Please ap- ply in person at Sport Systems, 6915 Montgomery Blvd. N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87109 or submit your resume to [email protected]

CAREGIVERS TO WORK with adults with developmental disabilities: $9.00/hr + DOE. FT positions only. All positions require flexible schedules, being able to work weekends or awake-overnights and holidays. Exp. a plus but not neces- sary. Apply in person: Tue- Fri, 9am- 4pm, Providence Support Services, 2225 4th St. NW/ 898-9435. We require a valid NMDL, clean driving record, a re- liable vehicle + current vehicle insur- ance, passing a drug test + background check, and be 21 or older.

TENTH GRADE CHEMISTRY tutor wanted. Twice a week. Please call or email for more information. [email protected]

FARINA ALTO PIZZERIA is opening in the North East Heights! Hiring experi- enced servers, bussers, hosts & cooks. Apply online at farinaalto.com

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

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

FALL 2013 ENGLISH Program In Korea (EPIK). $1,600-2,500/month + housing, airfare, medical insurance, paid vaca- tion. Must have BA degree. Deadline: Sometime in May **this date is tentative and could change depending oncircumstances**. Please visit the web- site www.epik.go.kr

WANTED CUSTOMER SERVICE repre- sentatives. Pay $8.50/hr FT and PT job. Work available immediately. Submit re- sume and hours available to work to [email protected] / Call 505-260-2310.

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

USED CAR LOT and collision center looking for part time help. Good phone skills and great personality needed. Can work with school schedule in most cases. Looking for 3 times a week for 4 hours a day. Apply in person 1200 Lomas blvd NE.

FEMALE MODEL WANTED for North Valley artist. $12/hr. Need someone who is available a couple of mornings per week. Please call 897-0327 if you are interested. Dan.

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

Jobs On Campus

ATTENTION STUDENT ORGANIZA- TIONS. Poll workers needed for ASUNM Election on Wendesday, April 10th from 8:30am to 7:15pm. If inter- ested, please contact Alberto Jacome, ASUNM Executive Director of Elections Commission, at [email protected] or call 505-277-0413.

2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride,

convenient freeway access, quiet community w/ pool,

covered parking & on-site laundry

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

268-86865700 Copper NE

[email protected]

LARRY’S HATSBest hats for any occasion.

Bowlers • Fedoras • Top Hats Vintage Women’s Jewelry

3102 Central Ave. SE266-2095

College is expensive.Daily Lobo

classified ads are not.Place your ad today!

277-5656

CAMP COUNSELORClear Mind Summer Camp, a project of the Albuquerque Zen Center, is seeking boy counselors for our overnight camp on Sandia Mountain June 8-15.

Camp is in rustic setting and focuses on wildernessexperiences and personal growth.

Must have prior experience working with children ages 8-13. Pay is $350. Please send resume and references

by April 15 to Eva Thaddeus at [email protected]

7912 Pan American Fwy NE(Southeast Corner of I-25 & Paseo Del Norte)

Albuquerque | 505.798.9400 Mon-Sat 10am-8pm and Sun 12pm-6pm Locally Owned and Operated

SIGN UP FOR LESSONS NOW!Starter Guitars for $79.99

WE PAY CASH FORUSED INSTRUMENTS!MON-FRI 10-6SAT 10-5:30

www.marcsguitarcenter.com265-3315

2324 Central S.E.Accross from U.N.M.

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• 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.

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