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NM Daily Lobo 050511TRANSCRIPT
DAILY LOBOnew mexico
M a y 5 , 2 0 1 1 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895thursday
Inside theDaily Lobo
Question of the week
See page 2volume 115 issue 151 80 |53
TODAYWelcome
to weirdsville
See page 8
by Chelsea [email protected]
Beekeepers, � re� ghters, secu-rity personnel and Physical Plant Department technicians gathered Wednesday morning in the R park-ing lot to deal with an unusual prob-lem — a swarm of bees.
� e swarm gathered on a dark green truck parked near Coronado dorm. Zoe Economou and her hus-band Claude Stephenson — bee-keepers from the South Valley — were called to address the problem.
“Somebody found them on their truck, and they probably want to use their truck,” Economou said. “� ey’re swarming, probably trying to protect the queen bee. Wherever the queen bee goes, the rest follow.”
Residence Life security person-nel John Paiz said he was alert-ed about the problem at about 9 a.m., and caution tape was erected around the infested truck.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said.
Albuquerque Fire Department � re� ghters were on scene and brought a generator to power the vacuum cleaner needed to get rid of the bees.
Economou and Stephenson
by Elizabeth [email protected]
African American Student Services gathered out-side Mesa Vista Hall on Wednesday to protest what it said was a racist depiction of President Barack Obama in the Opinion section of Tuesday’s Daily Lobo.
AASS student employees Christina Foster and Kyran Worrell spoke to a crowd of about 30 people about the illustration, which parodied a scene in “The Lion King.” The original scene showed a mon-key, Rafiki, holding baby lion Simba over a cliff.
The political cartoon that appeared in the newspa-per depicted Obama as Rafiki — his face distorted to look more like the monkey in the film — holding Osa-ma bin Laden’s severed head in place of Simba.
Foster said that, historically, African-Americans have been depicted as monkeys to show that they are less than human. She said such a cartoon sends the wrong message to the community.
“This is a continual use of racial propaganda,” she said. “… And I stand here today to tell you that is not what we’re going to stand for. This racial propaganda was used to justify the use of slavery and to keep the institution of slavery alive in this nation.”
Foster said this is not the first time the Daily Lobo has been insensitive to ethnic groups in its reporting, and that something needs to change.
“Our goal is to educate that future journalistic contributions will be representative with what UNM should truly stand for, which is respect and diversity of its students and its community,” she said.
In an email to the Daily Lobo on Sept. 29, 2010, AASS Director Scott Carreathers said the newspaper’s coverage of the football team and head coach Mike Locksley was racially insensitive to the African-Amer-ican community.
He said a photo of Locksley printed in the Sept. 13
by Kara [email protected]
For most, people-watching is a way to enjoy a lazy afternoon, but for some UNM students, it’s a sub-ject to be studied.
� e archeology of walking is a course on the study of people-watching.
Dr. Troy Lovata, the founder and professor of the course, said it’s meant to get students out of the classroom and on the � eld.
“It’s really looking at all the ways people walk, use walking and ap-proach walking,” he said. “We’re us-ing walking as a research tool.”
Instead of using textbooks to study walking, the students gain information from outside sources, such as pilgrimages to Chimayo or studying trails along the Bosque.
English major Vittoria Totaro said a major portion of the class has been going outside and walking, while talking about ways to walk and
Students: Political cartoon is ‘racial propaganda’
Bee swarm removed from car on campus Class walks to observe people
Zach Gould / Daily LoboAfrican-American students rally outside Mesa Vista Hall on Wednesday to protest an illustration that appeared in Tuesday’s Daily Lobo. Read the Daily Lobo’s response to the criticism on Page 4.
see Cartoon page 3
Local beekeepers Zoe Economou, left, and Claude Stephenson were called to campus Wednesday after a swarm of bees set up shop in a student’s truck. The beekeepers take away the insects for free because of a bee shortage. They said bee infestations are common this time of year.
Junfu HanDaily Lobo
vacuumed the bees into a box with plans to take the bees back to their South Valley home.
“You can pretty much take the swarm and put it in a box, and if you have the queen they’ll all come with,” Economou said. “� ey don’t really care about you. � ey just care about the queen.”
UNM Physical Plant technician Felix Vallejos said the swarm was one of three this spring that have al-ready been removed, but he’s never seen bees swarm on a vehicle.
“� ey’ll swarm anywhere I guess,
Beekeepers use vacuum, box to transport bees
see Walking page 3
UNM Physical Plant technician Felix Vallejos
said the swarm was one of three this spring that have
already been removed, but he’s never seen bees
swarm on a vehicle.
but usually it’s on trees and shrubs,” he said.
Vallejos said Economou and Stephenson removed bees from UNM’s campus before, and they do it for free because of the state’s bee shortage.
Economou said she enjoys work-ing with bees and isn’t scared to get close to them.
“Really, it’s not terribly scary,” she said. “Nobody likes to get stung, but bee stings are really not bad at all, and I doubt these are killer bees.”
Fashion after midnightsee page 14
@
PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboThursday, May 5, 2011
volume 115 issue 151Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com
The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published daily except Saturday, Sunday and school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $75 per academic year. E-mail [email protected] for more information on subscriptions.The New Mexico Daily Lobo is published by the Board of UNM Student Publications. The editorial opinions expressed in the New Mexico Daily Lobo are those of the respective writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the students, faculty, staff and regents of the University of New Mexico. Inquiries concerning editorial content should be made to the editor-in-chief. All content appearing in the New Mexico Daily Lobo and the Web site dailylobo.com may not be reproduced without the consent of the editor-in-chief. A single copy of the New Mexico Daily Lobo is free from newsstands. Unauthorized removal of multiple copies is considered theft and may be prosecuted. Letter submission policy: The opinions expressed are those of the authors alone. Letters and guest columns must be concisely written, signed by the author and include address and telephone. No names will be withheld.
Printed by Signature
OffSet
Editor-in-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorIsaac Avilucea News EditorElizabeth ClearyStaff ReportersChelsea ErvenKallie Red-HorseHunter RileyAlexandra SwanbergOnline and Photo EditorJunfu Han
Assistant Photo EditorRobert Maes Culture EditorAndrew Beale Assistant Culture EditorGraham Gentz Sports EditorRyan TomariAssistant Sports EditorNathan Farmer Copy ChiefTricia RemarkOpinion EditorNathan New
Multimedia EditorKyle Morgan Design DirectorNathan NewProduction ManagerKevin KelseyAdvertising ManagerLeah MartinezSales ManagerNick ParsonsClassified ManagerDulce Romero
DAILY LOBOnew mexico
How do you feel abouT all of THe media HyPe surrounding osama bin laden’s deaTH?
“I have mixed feelings about it. I feel a little disgusted about how the media is metaphorically kind of holding his head up on a stake like a trophy. I am concerned about a serious matter like that being used as a media stunt. Despite other terrorist acts on us, we’ve certainly done our share of terrorist-like acts in the Middle East as well. I’m also fearful of any sort of ripples after this.”
“I guess it was a necessity, but I think people celebrating that fact is kind of gruesome. It’s not what should be done.”
“I think that a lot of people need to be careful about celebrating it because, in reality, it could be poking a stick in a beehive. So, in that sense, we need to be careful before anything happens. There are a lot of things that could go wrong, and a lot of people think it’s a conspiracy. So, in reality, we have to be careful with how we treat this death.”
“I think that it brought a lot of peace to a lot of people who lost family in the war against him. But, at the same time, it’s not something to be very happy about because it’s still a life. He was a human being. We all make mistakes, and I’m not defending him for what he did. Justice came to him, and he knew it was coming towards him.”
Jeremy Zimmer Freshman Fine Arts
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edition of the Daily Lobo was an example of this racial insensitivity. The photo was printed under the headline “Shouting Match.” Car-reathers said Locksley was not in-volved in a verbal altercation when the photo was taken, but the head-line suggested he was.
Worrell said racism and cul-tural insensitivity are problems throughout the UNM community.
“We are a minority within a mi-nority,” he said. “It is reflected not only through the student body, but also through faculty and staff that we are tired of this. Not only from the Daily Lobo, but from other en-tities in relation to the University of New Mexico. And I’m here to say we will not stop here. We are prepared to take further protestive action.”
understanding why people walk. “It’s really been great to get out-
side,” she said.� e course o� ers more than peo-
ple-watching and hiking, however. Lovata said it is also about how
people work and adapt to their sur-roundings. � e class studies sub-jects like art, in order to understand why people walk.
Students are working on a proj-ect that blends art with walking and chalked poetry at the Duck Pond, Lovata said.
“� e reasoning behind it was that the students were trying to disrupt everyday people walking around campus and direct them in a certain way,” he said. “� ey were trying to engage people and make them think why or how they were walking.”
Totaro said the inspiration be-hind the poetry trail was to see what people noticed while they were walking.
“We were aiming to interrupt people’s walking, while giving them something nice and pretty to read,” she said.
Student Rosemary Steinberg, who is in the class, said it was en-riching even though it doesn’t apply to her major.
“I just like to walk,” she said. “It’s given me an understanding about people and life more. It would be great for a psych major.”
It’s true that the course features more time outdoors than in a class-room setting, but Totaro said stu-dents still spend time doing reading assignments.
“We have to earn the right to walk,” she said.
.
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Union: Allow gay-straight alliance at Clovis High
CLOVIS — � e American Civil Lib-erties Union of New Mexico is asking Clovis Municipal Schools to approve a Gay-Straight Alliance club at Clovis High School before the school year ends May 24.
� e Clovis News Journal reports the ACLU says in a letter to Super-intendent Terry Myers that students have been waiting about two months for approval of the alliance.
� e letter, dated Monday, says un-reasonable delay in approving the club would single it out as not being treated equally.
� e school board voted April 26 to allow only clubs with ties to school curriculum to meet during the school day. Other clubs can meet at school before or after classes.
Myers says he will be able to act on clubs once the district � nishes review-ing its policy on use of facilities.
Albuquerque authorities arrested a homeless man for failing to notify them that he moved out of the dump-ster he listed as his address.
KOB-TV reports Charles Mader is a convicted sex o� ender and is required
to give the Bernalillo County Sheri� ’s Department a physical address.
Detectives say Mader violated his sex o� ender registration requirement after moving out of the trash bin and failing to report the move within 10 days.
On Monday, deputies found Mad-er at a homeless shelter and arrested him.
Mader told KOB he wasn’t famil-iar with some of the registration rules. Bernalillo County authorities say they’ve told Mader what the rules are repeatedly.
Sheri� ’s o� cials say Mader could face up to three years in jail for failing to register for a third time
Residents living near Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque are ex-pressing skepticism over the cleanup of millions of gallons of spilled jet fuel.
Members of the Air Force met with residents Tuesday evening and the talks centered on the ongoing e� orts to determine the extent of the con-tamination and the best way of clean-ing it up.
� e Albuquerque Journal reports some audience members voiced con-cerns over long-term health e� ects and how e� ectively the various agen-cies in charge of the spill can work together.
Cartoon from PAGE 1
Walking from PAGE 1
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Homeless sex o� ender arrested after moving
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[email protected] editor / Nathan New The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Thursday
May 5, 2011
Page
4
Editor,
I am a part-time UNM faculty member. I teach PENP 134 and 135 (beginning and
intermediate Kung-Fu classes) on UNM campus, and I was annoyed by the April 26 article “Want An Easy A? Take These,” by Nicole Perez.
The fact that most of the article is completely inaccurate isn’t the most disturbing part. It’s that the author, Nicole Perez, would promote getting an “easy A” by simply taking these courses, without any regard for the knowledge or benefits that the student will miss out on.
Is that what attending UNM is all about? Is GPA supposed to be what students are attending UNM for? What about their education? What about programs that offer something that will actually enhance their lives?
Shouldn’t Perez be telling the students to avoid these classes like the plague? Why is she advocating for students to be bored, uninspired, lethargic, or unhappy?
I would have been more excited to hear about classes at UNM in a much different way. As a former NMSU student, it would have been nice to know back then what courses were recommended for being unique, exciting, and/or interesting.
Therefore, I’m offering some alternative articles for Perez to write about:
”More bang for your buck!”: an article about classes that offer the most information for what you’re paying for them. These are the classes that cover as much as possible in the semester, and do it well. This is a class that offers a well-balanced overview and not necessarily the details that higher courses entail.
This is a class that might cause someone to change their major and delve into this new area instead!
“Balancing GPA and education”: an article about classes that might require minimal efforts on the student’s part, but at the same time, offers them useful information that will help them in other areas of their lives. Perhaps this is something that reduces stress or gives them much-needed exercise (yoga, martial arts, swimming, running).
This is the class where student can actually use some of the techniques they were taught. And they would be useful when finals roll around and stress levels are high.
”Ready to have a blast?”: classes that students have actually enjoyed so much that they would recommend to anyone and everyone. Perhaps this class and subject matter was just so positive that the student left each class period feeling happier and more fulfilled than when they walked in!
“The top 10 most memorable classes for undergraduates”: self-explanatory.
“The top 10 textbooks that I would never sell back!”: These books from a UNM course contain such great information the student will keep them for their own personal library.
I believe that the University is here to educate the next generation of citizens, to provide them with knowledge and experience to better prepare them for life, and to make them valuable assets to their community.
Simply telling students to take classes for an easy A not only robs the student of a valuable education, but also discourages good work ethic, promotes laziness and makes a mockery of the University and the education that the students try to take pride in and pay a lot of money for.
Abram TamezUNM faculty
Students miss out on benefits by focusing on an easy A
Letter
editOriaL
Letter submissiOn pOLicy
n Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo office in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.
editOriaL bOard
Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief
Isaac AviluceaManaging editor
Nathan NewOpinion editor
Elizabeth ClearyNews editor
Over the past two days, the Daily Lobo has received numerous complaints about a cartoon that ran in our Opinion section on Tuesday.
The political cartoon alluded to a memorable scene from the Disney movie, “The Lion King,” in which Rafiki announces Simba’s birth. Except in this case, President Barack Obama was cast as Rafiki, and in place of Simba was Osama bin Laden’s severed head.
Regrettably, this cartoon offended the African-American community — along with many others — who interpreted Obama’s representation as racist. For this oversight, I sincerely apologize.
To clear the record, I approved publication of the cartoon.
It was not published with the intent to perpetuate stereotypes, or infer African-American students are in any way inferior.
Someone in my position should be more culturally sensitive, and I and the staff plan to remedy the situation.
I already talked with African-American students and African American Students Services. Furthermore, the Daily Lobo is in talks concerning sensitivity training for the staff with African-American groups on campus.
In addition, we will continue to keep our doors, as well as the Opinion section, open for anyone who wishes to participate in the discourse.
That said, I would be remiss if I didn’t also take this chance to defend the paper for the less–than-glamorous attention we’ve received.
First, it should be noted that the Daily Lobo hires students from all walks of life. Anyone who walks through our door gets a chance to write.
It must be made clear that we are not barring African-Americans from joining our staff, but few have applied, save for one freelance reporter who writes regularly.
We want that to change, and so, again, we are asking that minority students consider writing for the Daily Lobo. You don’t have to be a journalism major, and you don’t need previous experience writing for a paper. If you want to write and are willing to work hard, come in and we will teach you.
Second, the Daily Lobo has, in the past, strived to work with African-American student organizations. Our previous editor, Pat Lohmann, worked with the organizations to educate our reporters about cultural sensitivity. He set a date with the group and mandated that every staffer attend.
Unfortunately, no one from African American Student Services showed up. We are actively trying to set another meeting, but I want to make it clear that the Daily Lobo has not ignored the organization.
In fact, we pioneered a column unique to New Mexico, The Afro-American Experience, specifically to help illustrate the challenges and problems African-Americans encounter. No other paper in the state has ever done this, and we are not trying to pat ourselves on the back, but would like to remind people about the efforts we have taken to highlight difficulties unique to African-Americans in this state.
Third, we must make it clear that we did not run the cartoon with the intent to be racist. We saw the cartoon as an interpretation of Osama bin Laden’s death
and the American celebration along with it. We saw the cartoon as a symbol of the twisted nature of American pride and thought it would provoke interesting, not racist, discussion. Since we can only speculate as to the intent of the cartoon, I contacted the artist, Hajo de Reijer.
“It wasn’t my intention to be racist. And it will never be,” he said. “U.S. President Barack Obama tweaked Donald Trump at the annual White House correspondents’ dinner over the fuss he made over his place of birth. Obama showed the opening scene from the movie ‘Lion King,’ showing baby Simba being born to his Lion King father.”
De Reijer said his cartoon was simply a reflection of a current event. In full disclosure, De Reijer is from the Netherlands and is not necessarily attuned to the racial undertones of such a depiction of Obama in America.
We bring this up not to justify the cartoon’s content, but to try to foster understanding of our editorial decision to run it.
In short, we would like to use this opportunity to again apologize to the African-American community, as well as anyone else offended by the cartoon. We will continue to strive to be culturally sensitive in the present and future, and we encourage all students on the campus to express their voice through our paper.
We understand the severity of the situation, and rather than brushing it aside, we would like to learn from it so this oversight won’t happen again.
Thank for your time and consideration, Daily Lobo readers, and good luck in finals.
Sincerely, Christopher Quintana
Editor-in-Chief
‘Lion King’ cartoon merits apology
We will continue to strive to be culturally sensitive in the
present and future.
THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2011 / PAGE 5NEWSNEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO
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by Cristian SalazarAssociated Press
NEW YORK — Victor Wald and Harry Ramos did not know each other until Sept. 11, but they died together trying to flee down a stair-well of the World Trade Center.
Their names will be next to each other’s on the national me-morial at ground zero, one of hun-dreds of arrangements that em-phasize victims’ connections, not in alphabetical order.
The National September 11 Memorial & Museum on Thurs-day announced the final arrange-ment of the nearly 3,000 names around the waterfall-filled pools formed in the footprints of where the original World Trade Center towers stood.
Michael Arad, the memori-al architect, said that stories of the individuals’ lives will inevi-tably emerge from the names’ arrangement.
“I think those individual stories will communicate very powerfully to generations to come,” he said.
The announcement may not satisfy all survivors, especially giv-en the complexity of the arrange-ment of the names. The memorial planners said they had mailed let-ters to more than 3,500 next-of-kin to tell them the location of vic-tims’ names. They also announced a web application to locate them.
The application will be running on handheld devices, tablet com-puters and electronic kiosks on the plaza of the memorial when it opens in September, the tenth an-niversary of the attacks.
Listed on the memorial will be the names of the 2,976 people killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, at-tacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania; and the six people who died in the Feb. 26, 1993, bombing of the World Trade Center. The 9/11 victims are grouped on the memorial ac-cording to which flight they were on, whether they were first re-
sponders, worked at the Pentagon or were in one of the trade center towers.
Family, co-workers at compa-nies located inside the trade cen-ter and first responders asked that certain victims’ names be placed together, and the memorial’s de-signers worked to accommodate them.
Arad said he was trying to bal-ance the need to make the memo-rial significant both for the vic-tims’ families and for the rest of the world.
“I wanted to find a way to reach out to the families who lost loved ones and find a way for their voic-es to be part of the memorial,” he said. “It’s a memorial about indi-vidual loss and collective grief.”
Donald James McIntyre, a 38-year-old Port Authority police of-ficer who died as he tried to make his way to the 84th floor of the south tower, where his 35-year-old cousin John Anthony Sherry worked, are listed side by side.
One of the most contentious debates around the “Reflecting Absence” memorial has centered on how the names would be list-ed. Initially, the names were to be listed below ground, but survivors objected. After much debate, it was decided that the names would appear not in alphabetical order, but where the victims had died.
Brigitte Sion, a professor of re-ligion at New York University who has studied memorials worldwide, said listing names is essential to the 9/11 memorial, because of the
AP Photo
The National September 11 Memorial & Museum monument bears the names of those who perished at the site in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The arrangement of nearly 3,000 names around two waterfall-� lled pools is based on the victims’ personal connections.
Links connect memorial names
Are you graphically gifted?
The Daily Lobo is accepting applications for Designers.
Visit Unmjobs.unm.edu to fi ll out an application.
“The need to create a memorial that has names is a surrogate
for a cemetery.”~Brigitte Sion
NYU Professor
nature of the terror attacks.“The need to create a memori-
al that has names is a surrogate for a cemetery,” Sion said, adding that many bodies of 9/11 victims have yet to be found for proper burial. “There’s no other place to mourn, there’s no other place to have a connection with the victims ex-cept there.”
More than 40 percent of the victims in New York have no iden-tifiable remains, but authorities hope to identify thousands more with DNA technology.
Page 6 / Thursday, May 5, 2011 news New Mexico Daily lobo
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new mexicoDAILY LOBO
by Marcus WohlsenAssociated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — The images are bloody, grotesque and convinc-ing: Osama bin Laden lies dead, the left side of his head blasted away. But the pictures are fakes.
Doctored photos purporting to show bin Laden’s corpse rocketed around the world on television, on-line via social media and in print almost as soon as his death was announced.
The pictures have spread without regard for their origin or whether the images are real. Meanwhile, scam-mers have piggybacked on the popu-larity of the images and spiked sup-posed online links with computer viruses.
Newsrooms and the public have been left in the tough spot of decid-ing what to believe when software has made doctoring photographs easier than ever. And the hunger for visual evidence of bin Laden’s death may only grow now that President Barack Obama has said the govern-ment’s photos will remain classified.
“I don’t think society tolerates the invisible anymore,” said Fred Ritchin, a professor of photogra-phy at New York University who has written about digital technology un-dermining trust in the veracity of photographs. “Everything has to be imaged.”
The photos on the Internet did not come from the operation that killed bin Laden, according to a se-nior defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the mission was classified.
Still, the appetite for images
Fake Osama pictures surface Doctored images spread with attached viruses
remains. In perhaps the most widely distributed photo, a bloodied bin Laden appears to be missing his left eye, and he is grimacing as if he died in pain. The White House says bin Laden was shot above his left eye.
Reuters reported on its pho-tography blog that the mouth, ear and beard in the picture exactly matched a photo the news agency had snapped of bin Laden at a news conference in 1998. The upper half of the face appears to be from a differ-ent corpse.
Another photo released on the website liveleak.com shows bin Lad-en lying on his back with a wound over one eye as a soldier with an American flag insignia on his shoul-der stands over the body. The photo is in green and black, as if taken with a night vision lens.
The website has since retracted the photo, which liveleak.com indi-cated was made with a photo of bin Laden digitally stitched into a still from the 2001 movie Black Hawk Down.
Another picture, by far the most gruesome, shows an extremely bloody face that resembles bin Lad-en with most of the skull missing and brain visible.
The spread of fake photos and the ease of making them have forced news organizations to be more vigi-lant than ever.
“The challenge here is these tech-niques are quite sophisticated,” said Santiago Lyon, director of photog-raphy for The Associated Press. “A good Photoshop forger ... can make it very difficult at first glance to de-tect whether an image has been ma-nipulated or not.”
Experienced photo editors can often spot telltale inconsistencies such as shifts in color, contrast or light source that signal a fake, Lyon said.
For the most newsworthy photos that also raise suspicions, the AP has access to software that can analyze photos down to the level of the pixel, the basic building block of all digital images.
At least as important as the im-age itself is vetting the credibility of its source, Lyon said.
The AP did not escape from the lightning spread of doctored pho-tos. The news service pulled from its wires a total of six photos — one of a Pakistani television broadcast, three of an Afghan television broadcast and two of a Bulgarian newspaper — that included the doctored images of bin Laden’s corpse.
The AP made the decision not to accompany this story with any photos claiming to show a dead bin Laden to avoid any appearance of vouching for their authenticity.
The photos have caused head-aches for more than just news organizations.
Viruses are being spread by links on Facebook pages, which have be-come home to a brisk trade in con-spiracy theories.
While some politicians have crit-icized Obama’s decision not to re-lease the actual photos, visitors to a Facebook page called “Osama Bin Laden NOT DEAD” claim the doc-tored images themselves are evi-dence of a cover-up.
Some commentators on the page, which as of Wednesday had more than 1,300 fans, claimed without evi-dence that the U.S. government itself released the doctored photos. They claimed the faked photos were proof the Obama administration had fabri-cated the news of bin Laden’s death.
“The immediate assumption is that you can fabricate any image,” Ritchin said. “The photograph itself doesn’t have the legitimacy that it used to have in our society.”
Thursday, May 5, 2011 / Page 7newsNew Mexico Daily lobo
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CAMPUS EVENTSReturning Women Students Walk-in HoursStarts at: 9:00amLocation: Women’s Resource Center, 1160 Mesa Vista HallThinking about returning to school? Have some questions about how to get started? Come by the WRC and get some answers. Parenting Support Walk-in HoursStarts at: 12:00pmLocation: Women’s Resource CenterDo you experience trouble balancing the demands of being a parent and course work? Is scheduling classes or childcare a nightmare for you? Do you need someone to talk with? SGI Buddhist ClubStarts at: 2:00pmLocation: SUB,Isleta Room
Come join us to our weekly buddhist meeting on campus. Chanting, discus-sion and small refeshments will be provided. Healthy Relationship ForumStarts at: 2:30pmLocation: Women’s Resource Center The Forum is a space to explore the nature of healthy romantic relationships in college and beyond, with an emphasis on expectations, conflict resolution, and communication.Wise and Wonderful Older WomenStarts at: 5:30pmLocation: Women’s Resource Center Topics include how to handle and combat age-ist attitudes and behavior in work, academics, and health care and caring settings, how to access help finding jobs or continuing educa-tion, and many more.
Cinco de Mayo: Fiesta MexicanaStarts at: 6:00pmLocation: SUB, Ballroom The annual Miss Indian UNM pageant is held every year for female contestants to compete for the Miss Indian UNM title. Miss Indian UNM serves as an ambassador for the Native American community at UNM.Changeling the LostStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: Popejoy HallCinco de Mayo celebrates the Mexican Army’s victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla. Fiesta Mexicana depicts the historic event through choreography.
COMMUNITY EVENTSCinco de Mayo Space FlightStarts at: 6:30pmLocation: Challenger Learning Center
Come join us for a simulated space mission! Team up with other community members to rendezvous with a comet. Cinco de Mayo themed drinks and snacks included. $20 per person / age 21 only.
LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar
for May 5, 2011Planning your day has never been easier!
Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:
1. Go to www.dailylobo.com2. Click on “Events” link near the
top of the page.3. Click on “Submit an Event
Listing” on the right side of the page.
4. Type in the event information and submit!
Future events may be previewed at
www.dailylobo.com
Please limit your desription to 25 words (although you may type in more, your description will be edit-ed to 25 words. To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will apear with the title, time, location and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.
by Kathy MathesonThe Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Are you the “owner” of a dog or cat? Maybe you should consider yourself a “human caregiver” instead.
And Fido and Fluffy? Perhaps they should be “companion animals,” not just “pets.”
Such vocabulary shifts will help elevate the discourse about other species and, in turn, improve our treatment of them, according to the new Journal on Animal Ethics.
The foreword in the peer-re-viewed academic publication, which was first published last month, even suggests getting rid of terms like “crit-ters,” “beasts” and “wild animals,” along with phrases such as “drunk as a skunk” and “eat like a pig.”
“We do need to examine our lan-
guage about animals because a lot of it is derogatory in the sense that it belittles them and our relations with them,” journal co-editor Andrew Lin-zey said.
Linzey, a theologian, heads the Centre for Animal Ethics at the Uni-versity of Oxford in England. The journal, to be published twice year-ly, is the first scholarly periodical to have the words “animal ethics” in the title, according to its publisher, the University of Illinois Press.
It’s not surprising that research-ers are re-examining their language as animal treatment becomes more of a social issue, said James Serpell, a professor of animal welfare at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Veterinary Medicine.
But Serpell doesn’t necessarily agree with the recommended termi-nology, which he said could be taken to “absurd” extremes.
“Relabeling pets ‘companion ani-mals’ could be misleading as well,” Serpell said. “The fish in the orna-mental fish tank aren’t really any-one’s companion.”
More important for respecting animals is how they are perceived and treated in the legal system, said Susan Cosby, CEO of the Pennsylva-nia Society for the Prevention of Cru-elty to Animals.
“Currently animals are consid-ered property regardless of what term we use to describe them,” Cosby said in a statement Wednesday.
Linzey declined further comment because of previous media coverage
that he said inaccurately caricatured the issue as political correctness run amok. He stressed the preferred lan-guage does not stem from a desire to avoid “insulting” pets.
“Obviously, animals cannot be insulted in the way in which people can be,” he wrote in an email to The Associated Press.
Journal co-editor Priscilla Cohn, a philosophy professor emerita at Penn State-Abington near Philadel-phia, noted in an email that the dis-cussion has implications for humans as well.
Cruelty to animals has been linked with anti-social and abusive behavior in people, she wrote, while overcrowding animals on factory farms has repercussions for both hu-man health and the environment.
Cohn also said researchers con-tinue to uncover fascinating insights
into the animal kingdom, including communication among elephants and the social structure of wolves, which “are not the blood-thirsty wild beasts that many people imagine.”
“In other words, there has been an explosion of knowledge about animals that should make us consid-er them in a new light and perhaps change the manner in which we treat them,” wrote Cohn, who has six cats and a dog.
In California, The Humane So-ciety of the United States is backing legislation to update language in old state animal-control laws. The bill would replace “pound” with “shel-ter” and “destroy” with “euthanize,” changes that better reflect current views on animal welfare.
“Those words matter,” said Jenni-fer Fearing, the society’s senior state director.
The linguistic debate, which Ser-pell said has been covered previously in various academic journals, stems from animals being in a gray area: they are sentient creatures — more than objects or property — but less than fully human.
Yet he acknowledged that inher-ently derogatory or disparaging lan-guage “perhaps makes it easier for us to justify exploiting them.”
Still, Serpell sees nothing wrong with the word “pet,” which the fourth edition of Webster’s New World Col-lege Dictionary defines as “an animal that is tamed or domesticated and kept as a companion or treated with fondness.”
Journal: ‘Pet’ is unfit language
In California, The Humane Society of the United States is backing legislation to update language
in old state animal-control laws.
[email protected] / Ext. 131Culture editor / Andrew Beale The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
ThursdayMay 5, 2011
Page
8Culture editor / Andrew Beale
LoboThe Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
Culture
by Nicole [email protected]
Six intricately carved horses pull a miniature painted wagon past metic-ulously constructed old-time refresh-ment stands — all beneath a brilliant circus canopy.
� e outside walls are adorned with vintage signs sporting ads like “Pen-nzoil – Safe Lubrication,” “Beware of Dog,” “Coca Cola,” and “Panhandle 10 miles, Conway 19.”
Welcome to Tinkertown Museum, a zany collection of trinkets and art nes-tled in the sleepy East Mountains. � e history of the museum is just as assort-ed as the exterior, said Carla Ward, wid-ow of the late Ross Ward — the master-mind behind the Tinkertown project. She said that Ross began creating parts of the museum when he was bored in the Army. � e project continued from there.
“We started building a roadside at-traction that we most wanted to vis-it ourselves,” Ward said. “We tried to make it as interesting as possible.”
Ward said Ross left home at 18 and started painting carnival rides. He was exposed to the nomadic life at a young age and to the surrealistic environ-ment of circuses and carnivals. � ese elements in� uenced his later work, the Tinkertown Museum, which took more than 30 years to complete.
“Ross would be in winter carnival quarters, and they would be throwing stu� away, like some old arcade ma-chines, and he’d just haul them home and � x them,” Ward said. “� e motto of the museum is, ‘We did all this while you were watching TV.’”
� roughout the museum, detailed � gurines peer out from behind the glass as country classics by Willie Nelson and Gene Autry play in the background. In-tricate scenes of Western towns and cir-cuses are detailed with small, worn-out notes, adding a humorous commen-tary. Vintage jukeboxes and arcades beg for quarters, while sword collec-tions and a rattlesnake longer than a pair of outstretched arms � ll in extra space.
� e walls are made of clear and col-ored glass bottles held together with ce-
ment, and the occasional rusted wagon wheel serves as a makeshift window. “For 10 years, we just collected bottles from the sides of roads, and then from our friends and neighbors,” Ward said. “� ere are about 53,000 bottles in the museum.”
It only costs $3 to tour the place, and the museum attracts around 20,000 vis-itors per year from all over the world.
“A lot of people come down think-ing it’s just for kids, and they come in and they’re like, ‘Well, this isn’t really for kids at all. It’s really much more for adults,’” she said.
Ward said the museum gets plenty of business from word of mouth, the website, brochures and guidebooks that recommend it.
Visitors to the museum are often as-tounded and leave in awe.
Such was the case with Timothy Mennel from Chicago.
“� ere are a few places scattered around the country that are kind of like this,” he said. “But this is obviously the mother ship. � e detail is really in-credible. It’s like walking around inside someone’s brain — you can see him
thinking as he’s putting these things together.”
Ross made most of the stu� in the museum, although he bought some of the pieces overseas. � e Western scenes were assembled using parts of old sew-ing machines, linoleum samples, parts of an antique fan, plus many other ran-dom and interesting objects. A quote at the bottom of one of the scenes says:
“� is whole collection relates: everything is ev-erything else. Ideas are everywhere — pick them like � owers.”
Tinkertown is not simply a col-lection of zany an-tiques and folk art;
it is the meaning of life. “Our message is that if you believe
isomething enough, if you dream it, you can make it happen,” Ward said.
Ross died of Alzheimer’s disease nine years ago. He was 62. Although he passed away, he still o� ers profound advice through the medium of Tinker-town. A plaque on the wall reads:
“Live juicy. Dream of gypsy wagons. Find snails mak-ing love. Drink sunsets. Draw out your feelings. Mar-ry yourself. Dry your clothes in the sun. Eat mangoes naked. Stop wor-rying. Now. If not now, when?”
TINKERTOWN MUSEUM
121 Sandia Crest RoadSandia Park, N.M. 87047
Through October 31st 9 a.m.-6 p.m., 7 days a week
Adults $3, Seniors (62+) $2.50, Children (4-16) $1
Tinkertown: a dream on earth
ored glass bottles held together with ce- someone’s brain — you can see him Adults $3, Seniors (62+) $2.50, Children (4-16) $1
Junfu Han / Daily LoboCarla Ward, Ross Ward’s widow, stands behind walls consisting of more than 23,000 colored and clear glass bottles that were collected from neighbors and o� roadsides.
Junfu Han / Daily LoboA clown peers from behind the glass of the interior doll room.
Junfu Han / Daily LoboThis intricate miniature circus was created by Ross Ward over a period of 10 years. Items like this can be viewed at Tinkertown, a museum with a collection of oddities.
“A museum is a place where one should lose one’s head”
~Renzo Piano
Thursday, May 5, 2011 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo the haps
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Thursday, May 5, 2011 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo the haps
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The Copper LoungeCLOSED
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7:30pmJazz a La Carte opens Casablanca in
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The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
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FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
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Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee Ad for daily specials
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Tiki Tuesdays!* *Cellshade* *TBA*
*$4 Tiki Drinks All Night*
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$1 off all drinks (excluding beer)
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Low Life w/ DJ Caterwaul - 9pmAll pints $2.50 9pm-12am
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Draft, $3 Skyy, Well & Long Island Tea DJ Automatic & Drummer Camilio
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WEdnesday
Korean BBBQ/ Sushi SakeOpen 11:30-2:30, 5-9:30
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
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FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
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The Blue HornetsDoors at 7pm / All Ages
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Page 12 / Thursday, May 5, 2011 New Mexico Daily loboculture
July 18-29, 2011Monday through Friday 8:10 a.m. to 12:40 p.m.Anthropology Room 163
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by Jes MartinDaily Lobo Guest Columnist
It was Saturday afternoon. I was chillin’ on the couch at a
friend’s place, watching a James Bond spoof flick. My phone rang, and I was delighted to see that I was receiving a call from a beloved old friend.
He asked if I wanted to go to Santa Fe with him to see a movie. I agreed before he even uttered the movie’s title — he’s that cool.
We were going to see a docu-mentary, “I Am,” by Tom Shadyac, the man who directed “Ace Ventura” and “Liar Liar.”
The smashing success of these films netted him millions in a few short years. He lived large, as Holly-wood stars do. He bought mansions, sports cars and priceless artifacts from all over the world. Probably a shit-ton of cocaine, too, though that wasn’t mentioned in the film.
Shadyac’s decadent lifestyle came to a sudden halt when he crashed his bike and nearly died.
His brush with death forced him to confront that the life he was living, while filled with material wealth, was empty. He was unhappy, and money and possessions couldn’t change that. He sold his mansion,
by Andrew [email protected]
Since the end of June 2010, the Sustainability Studies program has been on its last leg, but grants gave it the cash infusion it needs to stay afloat and provided extra funding to start summer programs.
Bruce Milne, the founder and di-rector of the program, said the W.K. Kellogg foundation provided the pro-gram with two grants totaling more than $1.6 million, which will allow the program to continue its work for the foreseeable future.
“It’s been a critical thing for Kel-logg to provide this funding at this time, because as of June 31, 2010, we were completely out of money,” he said.
The USDA also gave the Sustain-
ability Studies program $290,000 to be used for travel grants and stipends for minority students to take part in Sustainability Studies’ summer pro-gram, pay for faculty salaries and hire a graduate assistant for a year and a half.
Terry Horger, the program coor-dinator for Sustainability Studies,
said the program relied on the Col-lege of Arts & Sciences to pay its fac-ulty salaries after June 2010, except for Milne’s salary, which is paid by the Biology department. She said de-spite receiving help from Arts & Sci-ences, the program had no funding for some necessities.
“We didn’t have any money to spend on things like office supplies, or if we needed computer software,” she said. “I mean, we had little pock-ets of money from some other, very small accounts that we had. So we were kind of limping along until we got these start-up funds from the Kel-logg foundation.”
The Kellogg money, which was invested in the stock market through the UNM Foundation, will pay divi-dends and help keep the program go-
Sustainability scrapes by Don’t buy more stuff; be joyous
see Sustainability page 13 see I Am page 13
“We didn’t have any money to spend on things
like office supplies, or if we needed computer
software.”~Terry Horger
Program Coordinator
Thursday, May 5, 2011 / Page 13New Mexico Daily lobo culture
CSWReception this
Friday, May 6 @ 2pmMarron Hall
UNMʼs 2011 Literary Magazine is here!
conceptionssouthwest
EL CENTRO DE LA RAZA CORDIALLY INVITES YOU:
19TH ANNUAL RAZA GRADUATION
MAY 6TH 2011
5:30 PM
UNM SUB BALLROOMS
GRADUATES WHO QUALIFY ARE:
FALL 2010,
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WE ARE EXTREMELY PROUD AND WOULD LIKE TO RECOGNIZE STUDENTS’ ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN COMPANY OF
FAMILY AND FRIENDS!
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT EL CENTRO DE LA RAZA:
(505) 277-5020
moved into a modest mobile home in a trailer park, and began in ear-nest a quest to find meaning in his life.
Meanwhile, we arrived at the theater a few minutes late, and to my surprise, the room was absolute-ly packed. I hadn’t seen a theater so full since I went to see “Star Wars: Episode I” (um, maybe that’s a sign that I don’t go out to see Hollywood blockbusters often enough).
As I settled into my seat, I sensed that I was in for more than what the typical Hollywood flick has to offer: visual feats, bone-crunching sound effects and steamy lesbian love scenes. And I was absolutely correct.
The film began by questioning why we, as Americans, are so ob-sessed with the idea of stuff. We’re always drooling over sports cars, di-amond rings, decadent feasts in ro-mantically lit restaurants, etc.
This phenomenon, dubbed “con-spicuous consumption” by econo-mists, is a plague. Tom Shadyac re-ferred to this obsession as a mental illness. An illness, he said, that he is still struggling to recover from.
Scientific studies have been done on the relationship between happi-ness and how much stuff you have. The studies found that having more stuff can’t make you happier if you use it to replace the fact that your life lacks the things that really matter: friendship, family, love, and finding purpose and meaning in your life.
Steve Alley, a phenomenal teach-er in UNM’s psychology department, said in class one day, “Life is all about little-j — joy.” This resonated with me so much that I wrote it on a sticky note and stuck it to the wall above my desk.
I need reminding of this simple fact on a daily basis. We all do. “I Am” recapitulated this sentiment in my mind.
After exploring our unhealthy preoccupation with “stuff,” the film beseeched its viewers to reach out to one another, to build communities, strengthen our relationships with one another and take the time to ap-preciate the common humanity that ties us together.
OK, I’ll say it: This sounds like a bunch of new-age hippie bullshit.
But it made me feel warm and fuzzy anyway. The powerful emo-tional impact of this part of the film was achieved through vivid imagery and well-placed testimony from reli-
gious and cultural leaders, including the Dalai Lama, Howard Zinn and Nelson Mandela.
Toward the end of the film, the screen suddenly went black, and a single word appeared: Love. And I’ll be darned; my whole body crawled with goose bumps for a split sec-ond, as I felt a rush of emotion at the thought of all the love I’m blessed to have in my life.
Sappy? Undeniably. But I knew that having love in your
life is what really matters. I can only hope that others can find the same kind of innate satisfaction that comes with intimate relationships (romantic or otherwise) with our fellow human beings. Bull’s-eye. The film had hit its mark.
As the house lights undimmed, I was again struck by the crowd of peo-ple around me. The feeling of com-munity and compassion was tangible. I was gettin’ some hella-good vibes, man.
And then — the director himself stepped out onto the stage in front of the screen.
The room erupted into vigorous applause. Instantly, I sensed that this man embodied a mystical evangeli-cal preacher, a motivational speaker, a person who has the gift to inspire oth-ers to change their lives for the better. Yes, he has appeared on “Oprah.”
The long hair, the comfy-in-his-own-bones posture, his informal and relaxed way of speaking, his palpable charisma — it was dynamite.
He gave off a total “hipster preach-er” vibe (check out Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros for another phe-nomenal hipster preacher). He spoke with ease and confidence, maneuver-ing gracefully through a 20-minute Q&A session.
At the end of it, I was certain that this man would make a rockin’ cult leader. I was witnessing what I hoped was a grassroots movement in the making.
“I Am” is a moving, passionate, vivid, breathtaking film with a power-ful message. You should definitely go see it. Bring your friends. Even though it’s totally, like, mainstream and stuff. Guaranteed you’ll emerge from the theater arm in arm with your com-rades, thankful to have them in your life.
Who knows? Maybe you’ll even embrace a complete stranger in a moment of sheer “little-j — joy.”
ing from year to year, Milne said. The USDA money, on the other hand, is being used to start a summer field-school program.
“I’ve had this dream since I started the Sustainability Studies program to have a summer field school,” he said. “If you think about New Mexico, it’s a go-to place for people all around the world. They want to come to see ev-erything from the Earthships to the Taos Pueblo ... There’s a huge con-trast in architecture, but nonetheless they share a lot of principles of living in collaboration with the Earth.”
The program will take students to parts of the state to see local farm-ing techniques that contribute to the supply of food in New Mexico, Milne said.
“You have all these kinds of at-tractions in New Mexico, and then to go with that, in the last few years, our mission has been to be part of the development of the local food system, or foodshed, as we call it,” he said. “A foodshed is some area where food is grown, and then it’s collected — usually locally — and it goes into the mouths of people.”
Milne said food and farm-ing techniques are important to the local economy and the global environment.
“In the United States, most people are eating food that’s only about two percent locally produced, and 98 per-cent of it is shipped in from far away — 1,500 miles, 2,000 miles away,” he
said. “By being local, it’s better for the economy, better for the environment in terms of shipping.”
Milne said students participating in the program will work with Milne and instructors Mark Stone, from the Civil Engineering department, and Enrique Lamadrid, from the Spanish and Portuguese department.
He said the students will produce multimedia projects that Milne hopes will eventually form the basis for on-line courses in sustainability.
The students will also learn valu-able information about food produc-tion that will help them build careers in local food production, Milne said.
“It’s how do we start to help stu-dents see career paths into becoming part of the foodshed,” he said. “And that’s everything from working on farms and ranches, or owning farms and ranches to owning food-process-ing facilities ... to being involved with grower’s markets, being involved with school lunch programs.”
Milne said food is an impor-tant part of New Mexico’s cultural heritage.
“The beautiful thing about food is that it integrates everything: land, wa-ter, economy, health, nutrition, jobs and culture in the heritage we have in New Mexico of traditional agriculture in pueblos and in the Hispanic farm-ing communities,” he said. “All of that is valuable to us in the sense of being part of the diversity and capability of the local food system.”
Sustainability from page 12
I Am from page 12
PAGE 14 / THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2011 NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOCULTURE
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day,
Dece
mbe
r 15
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
TR 8:
00–9
:15 p.
m.
Tues
day,
Dece
mbe
r 15
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
M 4:0
0–6:3
0 p.m
. Mo
nday
, Dec
embe
r 14
5:30–
7:30 p
.m.
M 4:0
0–6:3
0 Mo
nday
, Dec
embe
r 14
5:30–
7:30 p
.m.
M 4:1
5-6:4
5p.m
. Mo
nday
, Dec
embe
r 14
5:30-
7:30 p
.m.
T 4:00
–6:30
p.m
. Tu
esda
y, De
cem
ber 1
5 5:3
0–7:3
0 p.m
.T 4
:15–6
:45
Tues
day,
Dece
mbe
r 15
5:30–
7:30 p
.m.
W 4:
00–6
:30 p.
m.
Wedn
esda
y, De
cem
ber 1
6 5:3
0–7:3
0 p.m
.W
4:15
–6:45
p.m
. We
dnes
day,
Dece
mbe
r 16
5:30–
7:30 p
.m.
R 4:00
–6:30
p.m
. Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
7 5:3
0–7:3
0 p.m
.R 4
:15–6
:45 p.
m.
Thur
sday
, Dec
embe
r 17
5:30–
7:30 p
.m.
M, 5:
30 or
7:00
p.m
. or l
ater
Mo
nday
, Dec
embe
r 14
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
T, 5:3
0 or 7
:00 p.
m. o
r lat
er
Tues
day,
Dece
mbe
r 15
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
W, 5:
30 or
7:00
p.m
. or l
ater
We
dnes
day,
Dece
mbe
r 16
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
R, 5:3
0 or 7
:00 p.
m. o
r lat
er
Thur
sday
, Dec
embe
r 17
7:45–
9:45 p
.m.
SAT 8
:00–1
0:45 a
.m.**
Sa
turd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
9 7:3
0–9:3
0 a.m
.SA
T 11:0
0 a.m
.–1:45
p.m
.**
Satu
rday
, Dec
embe
r 19
10:00
a.m
.–12:0
0 p.m
.*F
oreig
n Lan
guag
es an
d Lite
ratur
es; S
panis
h and
Portu
gues
e Lan
guag
es an
d Lite
ratur
es—
all se
ction
s of c
ourse
s num
bered
below
300.
**Sa
turd
ay on
ly co
urse
s mee
t on t
he la
st Sa
turd
ay of
the s
emes
ter f
or th
eir ex
am, n
ot th
e Sat
urda
y beg
inni
ng Fi
nals
Week
.
Final Examination Schedule, May 9-14, 2011 Please use the listing below to determine the fi nal examination time for your class. In a combined lecture-laboratory course, class time listed is the fi rst lecture section. examination in the laboratory portion of the course may be given during the last week of class preceding the examination week or during examination week at the time period listed on this schedule for your class.
SCHE
DULE
OF C
LASS
ES
FALL
2010
35
Final
Exam
inat
ion
Sche
dule
, Dec
embe
r 13-
18, 2
010
Plea
se u
se th
e lis
ting
belo
w to
det
erm
ine
the
final
exam
inat
ion
time
for y
our c
lass
. In a
com
bine
d le
ctur
e-la
bora
tory
cour
se, c
lass
tim
e lis
ted
is th
e fir
st le
ctur
e se
ctio
n. E
xam
inat
ion
in th
e la
bora
tory
por
tion
of th
e co
urse
may
be
give
n du
ring
the
last
wee
k of
cla
ss p
rece
ding
the
exam
inat
ion
wee
k or
dur
ing
exam
inat
ion
wee
k at
the
time
perio
d lis
ted
on th
is sc
hedu
le fo
r you
r cla
ss.
Stud
ents
hav
ing
conf
licts
with
this
exam
inat
ion
sche
dule
mus
t not
ify th
e ap
prop
riate
inst
ruct
or b
efor
e Fr
iday
, Nov
embe
r 12,
201
0. A
ny
stud
ent h
avin
g m
ore
than
thre
e ex
amin
atio
ns sc
hedu
led
in a
ny o
ne d
ay m
ay n
otify
the
inst
ruct
or o
f the
last
exa
min
atio
n lis
ted.
If n
otifi
ed
befo
re N
ovem
ber 1
2, 2
010,
the
inst
ruct
or sh
all m
ake
arra
ngem
ents
to g
ive
a sp
ecia
l exa
min
atio
n. C
onfli
cts a
risin
g as
a re
sult
of sc
hedu
ling
outs
ide
of a
ppro
ved
stan
dard
mee
ting
times
mus
t be
reso
lved
by
the
inst
ruct
or o
f the
non
-sta
ndar
d se
ctio
n. C
hang
es in
this
exam
inat
ion
sche
dule
are
not
per
mitt
ed e
xcep
t by
form
al a
ppro
val o
f the
inst
ruct
or’s
Colle
ge D
ean.
NOT
ES ·
Spec
ial E
xam
s are
show
n sc
hedu
led
for a
ll se
ctio
ns o
f the
cour
se a
t the
tim
e an
d da
te li
sted
bel
ow. · E
xam
s are
sche
dule
d in
the
regu
lar m
eetin
g ro
om u
nles
s spe
cifie
d by
the
inst
ruct
or. ·
Shor
t/non
-trad
ition
al c
ours
es m
ust m
eet i
n on
e of
the
exam
tim
e pe
riods
bel
ow th
at a
re n
ot in
use
(see
Frid
ay
even
ing
5:30
or 7
:45
p.m
.). S
PECI
AL N
OTE:
Inst
ruct
or o
f Rec
ord
— P
leas
e co
ntac
t the
Offi
ce o
f the
Reg
istra
r-Sch
edul
ing
Offi
ce if
you
will
be
usin
g on
e of
thes
e Fr
iday
eve
ning
tim
e f
ram
es to
mak
e su
re th
e bu
ildin
g/ro
oms w
ill b
e op
en.
IF Y
OUR
CLA
SS IS
: YO
UR F
INAL
WIL
L BE
ON:
AT
THI
S TI
ME:
BIO
L 20
1, 2
02, M
E 30
6 Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
6 12
:30–
2:30
p.m
.F
Lang
& L
it, S
pan
& Po
rt <3
00*
Mon
day,
Dece
mbe
r 13
12:3
0–2:
30 p
.m.
F La
ng &
Lit,
Spa
n &
Port<
300*
M
onda
y, De
cem
ber 1
3 3:
00–5
:00
p.m
.M
ATH
120,
162
, 180
, STA
T 14
5 M
onda
y, De
cem
ber 1
3 7:
30–9
:30
a.m
.M
ATH
121,
150
, 163
, IS–M
100
M
onda
y, De
cem
ber 1
3 10
:00
a.m
.–12
:00
p.m
.
IF Y
OUR
CLA
SS M
EETS
: YO
UR F
INAL
WIL
L BE
ON:
AT
THI
S TI
ME:
MW
F 8:
00–8
:50
a.m
. W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
12:3
0–2:
30 p
.m.
MW
F 9:
00–9
:50
a.m
. W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
7:30
–9:3
0 a.
m.
MW
F 10
:00–
10:5
0 a.
m.
Frid
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
7 7:
30–9
:30
a.m
.M
WF
11:0
0–11
:50
a.m
. W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
10:0
0 a.
m.–
12:0
0 p.
m.
MW
F 12
:00–
12:5
0 p.
m.
Frid
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
7 10
:00
a.m
.–12
:00
p.m
.M
WF
1:00
–1:5
0 p.
m.
Frid
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
7 12
:30–
2:30
p.m
.M
WF
2:00
–2:5
0 p.
m.
Wed
nesd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
5 3:
00–5
:00
p.m
.M
WF
3:00
–3:5
0 p.
m.
Frid
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
7 3:
00–5
:00
p.m
.M
WF
4:00
–4:5
0 p.
m.
Mon
day,
Dece
mbe
r 13
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
MW
12:
30-1
:15
p.m
. Fr
iday
, Dec
embe
r 17
12:3
0–2:
30 p
.m.
MW
2:0
0–3:
15 p
.m.
Wed
nesd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
5 3:
00–5
:00
p.m
.M
W 4
:00–
5:15
p.m
. M
onda
y, D
ecem
ber 1
3 5:
30–7
:30
p.m
.M
W 5
:00–
6:15
p.m
. M
onda
y, D
ecem
ber 1
3 5:
30–7
:30
p.m
.M
W 5
:30–
6:45
p.m
. W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
MW
6:3
0–7:
45 p
.m.
Wed
nesd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
5 7:
45–9
:45
p.m
.M
W 7
:00–
8:15
p.m
. M
onda
y, D
ecem
ber 1
3 7:
45–9
:45
p.m
.TR
8:0
0–9:
15 a
.m.
Thur
sday
, Dec
embe
r 16
7:30
–9:3
0 a.
m.
TR 9
:30–
10:4
5 a.
m.
Tues
day,
Dece
mbe
r 14
7:30
–9:3
0 a.
m.
TR 1
1:00
a.m
.–12
:15
p.m
. Tu
esda
y, De
cem
ber 1
4 12
:30–
2:30
p.m
.TR
12:
30–1
:45
p.m
. Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
6 10
:00
a.m
.–12
:00
p.m
.TR
2:0
0–3:
15 p
.m.
Tues
day,
Dece
mbe
r 14
10:0
0 a.
m.–
12:0
0 p.
m.
TR 3
:30–
4:45
p.m
. Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
6 3:
00–5
:00
p.m
.TR
4:0
0–5:
15 p
.m.
Tues
day,
Dec
embe
r 14
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
TR 5
:00–
6:15
p.m
. Tu
esda
y, D
ecem
ber 1
4 5:
30–7
:30
p.m
.TR
5:3
0–6:
45 p
.m.
Thur
sday
, Dec
embe
r 16
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
TR 6
:30–
7:45
p.m
. Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
6 7:
45–9
:45
p.m
.TR
7:0
0–8:
15 p
.m.
Tues
day,
Dec
embe
r 14
7:45
–9:4
5 p.
m.
M 4
:00–
6:30
p.m
. M
onda
y, D
ecem
ber 1
3 5:
30–7
:30
p.m
.T
4:00
–6:3
0 p.
m.
Tues
day,
Dec
embe
r 14
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
W 4
:00–
6:30
p.m
. W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
5:30
–7:3
0 p.
m.
R 4:
00–6
:30
p.m
. Th
ursd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
6 5:
30–7
:30
p.m
.M
5:3
0 or
7:0
0 p.
m. o
r lat
er
Mon
day,
Dec
embe
r 13
7:45
–9:4
5 p.
m.
T 5:
30 o
r 7:0
0 p.
m. o
r lat
er
Tues
day,
Dec
embe
r 14
7:45
–9:4
5 p.
m.
W 5
:30
or 7
:00
p.m
. or l
ater
W
edne
sday
, Dec
embe
r 15
7:45
–9:4
5 p.
m.
R 5:
30 o
r 7:0
0 p.
m. o
r lat
er
Thur
sday
, Dec
embe
r 16
7:45
–9:4
5 p.
m.
SAT
8:00
–10:
45 a
.m.**
Sa
turd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
8 7:
30–9
:30
a.m
.SA
T 11
:00
a.m
.–1:
45 p
.m.**
Sa
turd
ay, D
ecem
ber 1
8 10
:00
a.m
.–12
:00
p.m
.
*For
eign
Lan
guag
es a
nd L
itera
ture
s; Sp
anish
and
Por
tugu
ese
Lang
uage
s and
Lite
ratu
res—
all s
ectio
ns o
f cou
rses
num
bere
d be
low
300
. **
Satu
rday
onl
y co
urse
s mee
t on
the
last
Sat
urda
y of
the
sem
este
r for
thei
r exa
m, n
ot th
e Sa
turd
ay b
egin
ning
Fin
als W
eek.
Pants: No idea (Present), FreeShoes: Big 5, $50Hat: PresentShirt: Free with job
Nick Olson is just a student getting by — his fashions dictated by his employ-ment at the educational intuition he at-tends. Smooth earth tones speak won-ders for a man needing to blend in with the autonomy and monotony of mov-able stair operation, the smart choice for any UNM employee.
Fashion Q&Aby Graham Gentz and Andrew Beale
After Midnight
Shoes: Walmart, $7Pants: Dumpster, FreeShirt: Traded, FreePlaid Jacket: Sham
Christmas Gift
Rick Storey’s new passions come from a life of self-education. He loves UNM, praising its quality of learning and the bene� ts of New Mexican teaching. Also referred to as “Uncle Rick,” his fashion choic-es are simple, but elegant in their versatility.
Nick Olson, Economics, Fifth Year
“It’s whatever’s on the top of the drawer.”
“I can wear it for a month and not have to wash it, and still look
halfway decent if I have to go see the president of the college or the police
chief.”
Rick Storey, Age 63 After Midnight
Thursday, May 5, 2011 / Page 15New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features
YOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSCOULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!
SPONSORTHE DAILY LOBO
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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
FOR RELEASE MAY 5, 2011
ACROSS1 Some graphic
works8 It often involves
x’s15 Of words16 One doing a lot of
riding17 “Don’t tell a soul!”19 Phishing targets:
Abbr.20 Handbill21 Nothing special22 Wroclaw’s region24 Refillable candy25 Equilibrium29 34-Down degree31 Spout nonsense38 Carl’s
sweetheart, in“Up”
39 Double-slashcontainer
40 Deteriorate slowly41 Moonlight, say44 Black and __:
two-beer drink45 Pugilism venues46 “The Island of the
Day Before”author
49 Event with aqueen
53 Entre __55 Tanager homes56 Impatient sounds60 Instantly ... or
how this puzzle’sother threelongest answerscame about?
63 Cape user64 Ex claim65 Suffering terribly66 “Listen to Your
Heart” pop duo
DOWN1 Horned game2 “Cheers” actor
Roger3 Paddy animals4 Inside information5 Here, in Haiti6 Cajun entrée7 __ in the
conversation
8 Range along theRing of Fire
9 Wolf’s activity10 Lux. neighbor11 Breyers
alternative12 It barely gets
beyond the infield13 Conserve, in a
way14 __ con pollo18 Science educator
Bill22 Display of links23 Really25 Worry26 “The Handmaid’s
__”: Atwoodnovel
27 __ puttanesca:with a spicytomato sauce
28 Avoid30 Mezzo Marilyn32 Capek play33 Refinable rock34 Like z: Abbr.35 When two hands
meet?36 Author Buchanan37 Dates
42 With no end insight
43 His co-pilot was aWookiee
46 As a friend, inMarseilles
47 Trig function48 “__ sight!”50 Elbridge __,
governor famousfor redistricting
51 Peruvian pronoun
52 How some stocksare sold
54 Woolly rug56 Far from
titillating57 Recorded on film58 Key figure in
epistemology59 Eyelid nuisance61 Japanese capital
of yore62 Quandary
Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Julian Lim 5/5/11
(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 5/5/11
Dilbert dailycrossword
dailysudoku level: 1 2 3 4 solution to yesterday’s problem
Page 16 / Thursday, May 5, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo
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STRESSED ABOUT JOB? School? Life? Call Agora. 277-3013. www.agoracares.com.
Looking for YouWOMEN NEEDED FOR co-ed recre- ational outdoor soccer team on Monday evenings during the summer. Contact [email protected] for info.
ServicesMOVING? S&H HUALING. You call, we haul! Want friendly help? Student dis- counts. Call Devin/ Nick 304-4324. Free Estimates call today!
BIRTHRIGHT CARES. FREE pregnancy tests, help. 262-2235.
TUTORING - ALL AGES, most subjects. Experienced Ph.D. 265-7799.
AZTEC STORAGE ABSOLUTELY the BEST PRICE.All size units.24 Hour video surveillance.On site manager.10 minutes from University.3rd month free.884-1909.3201 Aztec Road NE.
EXPERIENCED TUTOR EXCELLENT communicator. Multiple degrees, All ages. Chemistry, Math, and Writing. 505-205-9317.
GRADUATION PARTIES!!! JC’S NEW YORK PIZZA DEPT.
515-1318.
STATE FARM INSURANCE Near UNM. Student Discounts. 232-2886. www.mikevolk.net
DETAIL-ORIENTED HOUSEKEEPING. cooking, pet care, gardening, more. 505-205-9317.
PAPER DUE? FORMER UNM instruc- tor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254-9615. MasterCard/ VISA.
NEED CASH? WE Buy Junk Cars. 907- 6479.
MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and [email protected], 401-8139.
ABORTION AND COUNSELING ser- vices. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242-7512.
RELAX AND REJUVENATE! May/June Special: $25 for a One hour Full Body Swedish Massage. Contact Info: Kristin Cunnar, LMT No. 6160 to schedule an appointment call: (505)414-7604. Lo- cated inside Professional Office Build- ing.
Health and WellnessMEDICAL MARIJUANA CARDScannabisprogram.com
PTSD PSYCHIATRISTS AVAILABLEPTSDpsychiatrists.com
Apartments
APARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com
UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1BDRM $515. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets al- lowed. Move in special! 573-7839.
LARGE, CLEAN, GATED, 1BDRM. No pets. Move in special. $575/mo in- cludes utilities. 209 Columbia SE. 255- 2685, 268-0525.
CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE, 1BDRM $575; utilities included. 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. 262-0433.
CLOSE UNM/ DOWNTOWN. 1BDRM $340/mo +utils. Singles. 266-4505.
TAKE OVER LEASE. 2BDRM 1BA, 10 min to campus or shuttle. Avail June 1st. Dennis: 505-503-6689 after 6PM.
1BDRM, UNM AREA, 600sqft. Off street parking. W/D on site. Newly renovated. $645/mo. 255-2995.
UNM/CNM STUDIOS, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Con- sultant: 243-2229.
1700 COAL SE. 2BDRM, remodeled, W/D, $750/mo +utilities, $300dd. No pets please. 453-9745.
HALF-BLOCK TO UNM. 1BDRM. Walk- in closet. Parking. $525 +util. No dogs. 256-0580.
2 BLOCKS FROM UNM. 2BDRM Apart- ment. $700/mo includes utilities. 505- 670-5497.
AFFORDABLE PRICE, STUDENT/FAC- ULTY discount. Gated Community, Salt Water Pool, pets welcomed. 15 minutes UNM. Sage Canyon Apartments 505- 344-5466.
STUDIOS 1 BLOCK UNM, Free utilities, Refrigerated Air. $455/mo. 246-2038. 1515 Copper NE. www.kachina-properties.com
1BDRM W/ WASHER. Old Town area. Older, clean. $475/mo plus security. 507-5599.
NOTICE: 1BDRM CONDO. Laundry facil- ity, 1.5 miles from UNM. $550/mo, in- cludes utilities. Eagle’s Nest Condo- miniuims, 2800 Vail SE, Girard/ Gibson area. 293-1065.
WWW.UNMRENTALS.COMAwesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, court- yards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. Month to month option. 843- 9642. Open 7 days/week.
NEED HOUSING? PLACE YOUR AD HERE!
277-5656
DuplexesFOR RENT 1BDRM apartment, within walking distance UNM HSC Hospital. Security doors, built-in desk, bookcase, off-street parking. NO pets. Ideal for one person. $735/mo. includes utilities. 505-615-8144.
Houses For RentBLOCKS FROM UNM and Hyder park. Upscale neighborhood, LG 4BR/ 3BA, w/ private access studio, split level, walkout basement, remodeled, garage, carport, pet friendly. Super energy effi- cient. $2350/mo. Sublease OK. DD waivable. Available mid-May. (970)316- 1953.
LOUISIANA/ CONSTITUTION. 1,800 sqft. 3 or 4BDRMS with hardwood floors. 2BA’s.
$1,200.00/mo + DD +Utilities (water/ trash is paid). Pet negotiable with addi- tional DD. For more info and pics email: [email protected]
Available June 1 or sooner.
3BDRM 1.5BA Campus/ Girard. Many amenities. $1290/mo. Utilities paid. No smoking. Available June. burqueno.com
Rooms For RentSEEKING RESPONSIBLE STUDENT to share spacious home with undergradu- ate students. 2 blocks from UNM. Near Spruce Park. $400/mo includes utilities, laundry privileges. Available [email protected]
CYCLIST/ RUNNERS DELIGHT! Room in peaceful happy home. Fabulous downtown location, walk to grocer, farm- ers market, cafes! Spacious, historic home for mature, fairly quiet, clean, up- beat person. Share with outdoorsy, con- siderate, healthy housemate. No smok- ing, drugs, partying. 3 miles to UNM. Loaded with amenities! $425/mo + shared utilities (extra study/storage room optional). 269-0894.
FRESH LIGHT BDRM, semi-furnished, private BA, garden, hardwood floors, off-street parking. Comfortable home in a safe, well-situated historic neighbor-hood, 8 minutes to UNM North Cam-pus. NS please. Ideal for serious grad student, female preferred. Studio/Stor-age workspace available. $350/mo, inc. Wi-Fi, W/D. Avail June or July/Aug start. 341-3042.
AZTEC STORAGEABSOLUTELY the BEST PRICE on storages.All size units.24 Hour video surveillance.On site manager.10 minutes from University.3rd month free.884-1909.3201 Aztec Road NE.
ROOMMATE WANTED IN 3BDRM 2BA Co-ed house with dogs. $300/mo +utili- ties. Must be a student. 1BDRM is fur- nished. 505-382-8821.
MINI-SPA, MINI-farm, Near UNM, Peaceful, Fun, Studious, Good Loca- tion. Female and/or LGBTQ student pre- ferred, pets ok, laundry, gym. NS/drugs. $415/mo. 459-2071.
ROOMS FOR SERIOUS students, fe- males preferred, fully furnished housein Spruce Park. 5 minute walk to Zim- merman. Water, WIFI, Yard,Cleaning service provided. Call 610- 1142.
NEAR NORTH CAMPUS, $355/mo, fully furnished, high speed Internet, 1/4 utili- ties. Pictures available. Gated commu- nity. Access I-40 & I-25. 505-232-9309. [email protected]
NOB HILL ROOM, unfurnished. 2 min- uets from UNM. Oak floors, yard with garden, non-smoking, internet, W/D, kitchen, wi-fi. $375/mo + 1/3 utils. 280- 3470.
For Sale7’X16’ ENCLOSED CARGO Trailer. Easy to hook up & tow. Side & Rear ramp doors. Just moved, not needed. Protect/Secure your load. $4,000 obo. 385-3422.
PAINTBALL GUN + Gear. Three air tanks, two masks, barrel cleaner, + paintballs. Semi-auto Spyder. $100 obo. 915-491-1902.
FurnitureCOMPLETE FURNISHINGS FOR 1BDRM Apt! 20+ pieces! $1000 OBO for everything! Smoke/pet-free home. 701-866-5160.
CHEAP PRICES! QUEEN size bed, two seat sofa, computer desk, 3 lamps, four chair folding black table, toaster. ALL MUST SALE. Call (509)339-3506.
Vehicles For Sale2008 DIAMO SCOOTER under 4,000 miles. Good condition. 150cc. $850. Or- ange and white. Call 980-6984 if inter- ested.
2009 TOYOTA TACOMA, 4x4, Access Cab, 4cyl, 5 speed Manual, 23 MPG.$21,500. 505-353-1143.
2008 NISSAN ROGUE AWD. Looks and runs great. 42K miles, gets 28 mpg, effi- cient SUV. $15,600. 505-217-5722.
Child CareABC PRESCHOOL NOW has 4 conve- nient locations to choose from. We offer summer care for ages 6 weeks - 12 years. CYFD Accepted. Call 980-4579.
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER. COL- LEGE student w/ car. Infants +older. References available. Email: [email protected]
Jobs Off CampusTEACH ENGLISH IN Korea!2011 Teach and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government.●$1,300/month (15hrs/week) plus air- fares, housing, medical insuranceMust have completed two years of un- dergraduate.Last day to apply: 6/29/11Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr2011 English Program In Korea (EPIK)●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, air- fare, medical insurance, paid vacationMust have BA degreeLast day to apply: 6/29/11Please visit the website www.epik.go.krJai - (213)[email protected]
EARLY BIRD LAWN service now hiring for PT mowing jobs. Able to work w/ some student schedules. Call Bob at 294-2945 for information.
MR. POWDRELLS BBQ is hiring for cashier/ bussers. Please Apply in per- son 11301 Central NE, Mon-Sat, 1-4pm. Experience is appreciated.
!BARTENDER TRAINING! Bartending Academy, 3724 Eubank NE, www. newmexicobartending.com 292-4180.
WRITER/ LOCAL EDUCATIONAL ESL publisher seeks FT entry-level writer. Email resume/ cover letter to: [email protected]
EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.AdCarDriver.com
COME JOIN THE #1 RECRUITING FIRM IN LED AND LIGHTING! We have an immediate PT to FT opening with our Executive Recruiting Team in a professional, fast-paced, yet casual en- vironment in a very pleasant, conve- nient location in the NE Heights! We’re looking for people with an outstanding work ethic, perseverance, professional image and 2-5 years’ experience in dealing with clients/customers (either on the phone or in-person). Strong ver- bal communication skills & self-confi- dence are essential as are computer and time management skills and atten- tion to detail. Business/HR/Marketing/Fi- nance major a plus. To apply for this po- sition, please follow these important steps: 1. Please call 271-5356 and leave a message (1 min or less) explain- ing why you should be the newest mem- ber of our team; 2. Email resume to [email protected] Please Note: Re- sumes sent without leaving a voicemail cannot be considered.
BIOMET ORTHOPEDICS NM is seeking salaried entry level sales representative with higher level sales potential. Recent grad with charisma who is self-motivat-ed. Send resume to [email protected]
SMALL LAW FIRM is seeking to fill PT office support/courier position. Must be dependable and have good computer, phone and organizational skills. Must have dependable transportation, auto- mobile insurance, and a good driving record. For consideration, please for- ward resume to: Office Manager, P. O. Box 1578, Alb., NM 87103-1578, fax to 505-247-8125, or e-mail to [email protected]
MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE. THIS position requires excellent communica- tion skills, reliable transportation, and a positive attitude. Earn $10-$15/hr w/o selling involved. Call 881-2142ext.112 and ask for Amalia.
WANTED: EGG DONORS, Would you be interested in giving the Gift of Life to an Infertile couple? We are a local Infer- tility Clinic looking for healthy women between the ages of 21-33 who are non- smoking and have a normal BMI, and are interested in anonymous egg dona- tion. The experience is emotionally re- warding and you will be financially com- pensated for your time. All donations are strictly confidential. Interested candi- dates please contact Myra at The Cen- ter for Reproductive Medicine of NM at 505-224-7429.
STUDENTS/ TEACHERS NEEDED. Manage Fireworks Tent TNT Fireworks for 4th of July! 505-341-0474. [email protected]
VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEP- TIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary student preferred. Ponderosa Animal Clinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.
WE ARE LOOKING for a Cashier/ Food Runner, Pizza Cook, in a Fun, some- times Fast Paced Environment. Re- quirements: Hard Working, Great Atti- tude, People Person, and have or be able to get Alcohol Certification. CALL: 999-1949.
!!!BARTENDING!!!: UP TO $300/day. No experience necessary, training avail- able. 1-800-965-6520ext.100.
Jobs On CampusUPWARD BOUND TEACHERS wanted. June 13-24, 2011, 4 hrs per day. Sub- jects: HS Science and Art History. 366- 2521.
VolunteersVOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR Pet Adop- tion Event, May 21-22 in Abq. [email protected] or Call 505-470- 1278.
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LARRY’S HATSBEST HATS FOR ANY OCCASION
HIKE - TRAVEL - WEDDINGCUFFLINKS AND ACCESSORIES
3102 Central Ave SE 266-2095
Lovelace Respiratory Research InstituteCuring Respiratory Disease
Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute is a dynamic non-profit biomedical research and professional services institute, with positions in Scientific and support areas. To learn more about these opportunities and LRRI, visit www.lrri.org.
JOB #S211 – Research Technologist in BiochemistryJOB #S1611- Animal Resources TechnicianJOB #S3311 – Technical SupervisorJOB #S511 – Postdoctoral Fellowships & Associate Research ScientistsJOB #S4111- Veterinary TechnicianJOB #S2011- Facilities Operations ManagerJOB #S3811- Maintenance Worker IIJOB #S3611- Research Technologist
We provide excellent benefits and a competitive salary. To apply, please include the Job # and e-mail your resume to [email protected], or Fax to 505-348-4966, or mail to: HR Office, Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute, 2425 Ridgecrest Drive SE, Albuquerque, NM 87108. Visit our web page at www.LRRI.org. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer, M/F/D/V.
Joyce Lloyd VeterinaryAnimal Shot Clinic - May 8@ Clark’s Pet Emporium - 2-4pm
4914 Lomas Boulevard Northeast
$2 OFFwith thisCOUPON!
New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union is one of the state’s largest Credit Unions, with assets of over 1 billion,17 work locations statewide and over 120,000 members. We have been voted one of the best places to work in New Mexico in multiple years, offering a competitive benefit and compensation package and a great working environment.
Our Mission Statement:New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union is the trusted financial resource for our members, servicing them as the financial institution of yesterday with all the convenience, technology and accessibility of today and tomorrow.
Currently we are searching for Part Time Tellers to join our Credit Union. Teller Primary Responsibilities: Provide exceptional customer service while processing financial trans-actions, maintaining and balancing a cash drawer, and cross selling Credit Union products and services to fit our member needs.
The ideal candidate will have six months prior teller experience or other cash handling experience. High school diploma or GED. Basic computer skills, proficient in written and verbal communication and superior customer service skills.
We are searching for candidates who can work part-time flexible schedules Monday through Saturday.
If you are looking for a fast paced working environment that encourages personal development, career op-portunities and the chance to give back to the community, we want you! Come be a part of The Power of WE®.
NMEFCU Offers:Competitive Health, Dental and Vision InsurancePaid Time Off (PTO)Paid Holiday Time Off401 (k)Retirement ProgramTuition Reimbursement
To complete an online application, visit our careers page at www.nmefcu.org , fax to (505) 998-2685. Apply in person in Albuquerque at 4100 Pan American Freeway NE, Bldg. C. EOE
We’re still making mortgage, equity and auto loans with fast, local processing. Speak with a personal loan representative anytime 24/7, apply securely online, or visit either of our UNM branch offices.
14 locations including UNM SUB and 1801 Lomas NE (east of University)
888-8920 • www.nmefcu.org
Member NCUA • Equal Opportunity Lender
The Power to Lend a Hand
WILD WILBUR’SSTORAGE
• Super Low Prices• Excellent Security883-1749University & Menaul Area
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