nm daily lobo 10 30 2014

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D AILY L OBO new mexico October 30, 2014 | Volume 119 | Issue 52 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 THURSDAY By Moriah Carty With eerie sounds and low lighting, the New Mexico Philharmonic brought some spooky holiday fun to its recent concert. e New Mexico Philharmonic brought Breaking Boo to Popejoy on Saturday night, when concert- goers and musicians alike were given the opportunity to dress up in their Halloween costumes. Jan Zimmerman, who has been a volunteer for Popejoy for 18 years, said she has seen the struggle to maintain interest in classical music. e costumes helped add some ex- citement to the show and cater to a broader audience, she said. “e philharmonic has tried a number of new things to try and hold on to its existing audience and to solve the problem all symphonies have, which is attracting a younger audience,” Zimmerman said. e New Mexico Philharmonic used to be the New Mexico Orchestra, but it went bankrupt about three years ago, she said. e philharmonic has been working to reclaim interest among the younger generations. e Breaking Boo concert was part of that effort, she said. Also, the New Mexico Philharmonic holds a “pops” concert once every month, which entails music from popular movies or top artists. e pops attempt to bring popu- lar music into a classical music en- vironment, she said. ere were more children and younger people at the Breaking Boo event than there typically are at oth- er pops events, Zimmerman said. Chris Rancier, New Mexico Phil- harmonic executive assistant, was one of the viola players for Breaking Boo, and she said it was exciting and difficult to play in her costume. “You had to be careful how you planned your costumes so you could still play,” Rancier said. “We musicians can be really quite creative.” Being Halloween-themed, it seemed natural to encourage attendees to dress up for the occasion, she said. The orchestra decided to followed suit. e event also held a costume contest at intersession. e contest was an effort to make the concert more exciting for families, she said. Before the concert, Jeremiah Bitsui, who played a minor role in the television series “Breaking Bad,” narrated “e Nightmare before Christmas,” giving the concert the name Breaking Boo, Rancier said. e narration by Bitsui was another effort to attract a larger audience. “We are happy to work hard to get our audience back,” she said. Kanan Mammadli / Daily Lobo While wearing a plague doctor mask, Roger Thomas watches the New Mexico Philharmonic during the Breaking Boo event on Saturday evening at Popejoy Hall. Concertgoers at the Halloween-themed event were encouraged to dress up in their costumes and participate in a contest at intersession. By Ryan Lotz Local businesses and private citizens are pitching in to find the person or people who killed a rare animal at the city zoo. In addition to a large cash re- ward, local restaurant Pizza 9 has announced that it is offering free pizza for up to a year to the person who can lead police to those re- sponsible for killing “Jasper,” one of ABQ BioPark’s Tasmanian devils. Zookeepers found Jasper dead in his exhibit on the morn- ing of Oct. 15. Jasper was prob- ably bludgeoned to death with a large piece of asphalt, said the Albuquerque Mayor’s Chief of Staff Gilbert Montano. “I think that it’s a horrific inci- dent,” Montano said. “It’s tragic, upsetting, and we shouldn’t have to tolerate it.” Coupled with Pizza 9’s reward, the cash reward for finding Jasper’s killer currently stands at $10,000. The BioPark Society and the Albuquerque Metro Crime Stoppers, as well as Corrales resident Laurel Westman, have chipped in money in hopes of finding the person responsible for the murdered marsupial, Montano said. Along with the rewards, the BioPark is looking to step up security around the park in response to the incident, Montano said. It remains unclear how the perpetrator or perpetrators gained access to the Tasmanian devil exhibit without being detected or identified by security cameras around the zoo. “We are going to be taking more security measures and we are go- ing to be redoing the whole moni- toring system,” Montano said. Jasper was one of four Tasmanian devils that the BioPark received in December 2013. e Albuquerque zoo is one of only two zoos in the country to feature a Tasmanian devil exhibit. e zoo has no plans for replacing Jasper yet, but hopes that upgraded security will act as a deterrent of any more criminal activity, Montano said. Tasmanian devils were official- ly placed on the endangered spe- cies list in 2008. Now only found on the island of Tasmania, just south of Australia, these nocturnal, car- nivorous marsupials are currently threatened by loss of habitat, com- petition for resources with other animals such as the red fox, and Devil Facial Tumor Disease, he said. Devil Facial Tumor Disease, or DFTD, is a cancer that affects only Tasmanian devils, causing large lesions to grow on their faces and often the rest of their bodies. According to the BioPark’s website, the zoo is looking to offer a safe, healthy and disease-free environment for these animals to Phantoms of the Philharmonic Project targets rural patients AP Photo / Raymond Watt / ABQ BioPark This April 30 photo provided by ABQ BioPark shows a male marsupial, known by keepers as “Jasper,” who was one of four Tasmanian devils introduced to Zoo visitors last December. Keepers found Jasper dead in his outdoor enclosure on Wednesday, Oct. 15. By Lena Guidi In 2003, the wait to see Dr. Sanjeev Arora for Hepatitis C treatment was eight months long. At the time, the clinic at UNM Hospital where Arora worked was one of only two in New Mexico that offered treatment for the dis- ease. Arora said he realized that untreated Hepatitis C was not just causing patients to develop liver cancers and cirrhosis — it was killing them. Hepatitis C, one of the lead- ing chronic infections that lead to death in the United States, is cur- able, but patients must undergo 12 to 18 rounds of difficult treat- ment. This, along with high costs, made this treatment unattainable for many New Mexicans, Arora said. “There were 28,000 patients who had this disease in New Mexico at that time, and less than 5 percent of them had been treated,” Arora said. Marsupial’s killing remains a mystery see Breaking Boo page 3 see Arora page 3 see Zoo page 3 Sergio Jiménez / Daily Lobo / @SXfoto Project ECHO founder Dr. Sanjeev Arora New Mexico Philharmonic, audience get into Halloween spirit

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Daily lobonew mexico

O c t o b e r 3 0 , 2 0 1 4 | V o l u m e 1 1 9 | I s s u e 5 2The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

thursday

By Moriah Carty

With eerie sounds and low lighting, the New Mexico Philharmonic brought some spooky holiday fun to its recent concert.

The New Mexico Philharmonic brought Breaking Boo to Popejoy on Saturday night, when concert-goers and musicians alike were given the opportunity to dress up in their Halloween costumes.

Jan Zimmerman, who has been a volunteer for Popejoy for 18 years, said she has seen the struggle to maintain interest in classical music. The costumes helped add some ex-citement to the show and cater to a broader audience, she said.

“The philharmonic has tried a number of new things to try and hold on to its existing audience and to solve the problem all symphonies have, which is attracting a younger audience,” Zimmerman said.

The New Mexico Philharmonic used to be the New Mexico Orchestra, but it went bankrupt about three years ago, she said. The philharmonic has been working to reclaim interest among the younger generations.

The Breaking Boo concert was part of that effort, she said. Also, the New Mexico Philharmonic holds a “pops” concert once every month, which entails music from popular movies or top artists.

The pops attempt to bring popu-lar music into a classical music en-vironment, she said.

There were more children and younger people at the Breaking Boo event than there typically are at oth-er pops events, Zimmerman said.

Chris Rancier, New Mexico Phil-harmonic executive assistant, was one of the viola players for Breaking Boo, and she said it was exciting and difficult to play in her costume.

“You had to be careful how you planned your costumes so you could still play,” Rancier said. “We musicians can be really quite creative.”

Being Halloween-themed, it seemed natural to encourage

attendees to dress up for the occasion, she said. The orchestra decided to followed suit.

The event also held a costume contest at intersession. The contest was an effort to make the concert more exciting for families, she said.

Before the concert, Jeremiah Bitsui, who played a minor role in the television series “Breaking Bad,” narrated “The Nightmare before Christmas,” giving the concert the name Breaking Boo, Rancier said. The narration by Bitsui was another effort to attract a larger audience.

“We are happy to work hard to get our audience back,” she said.

Kanan Mammadli / Daily LoboWhile wearing a plague doctor mask, roger thomas watches the New Mexico Philharmonic during the Breaking Boo event on saturday evening at Popejoy hall. Concertgoers at the halloween-themed event were encouraged to dress up in their costumes and participate in a contest at intersession.

By Ryan Lotz

Local businesses and private citizens are pitching in to find the person or people who killed a rare animal at the city zoo.

In addition to a large cash re-ward, local restaurant Pizza 9 has announced that it is offering free pizza for up to a year to the person who can lead police to those re-sponsible for killing “Jasper,” one of ABQ BioPark’s Tasmanian devils.

Zookeepers found Jasper dead in his exhibit on the morn-ing of Oct. 15. Jasper was prob-ably bludgeoned to death with a large piece of asphalt, said the Albuquerque Mayor’s Chief of Staff Gilbert Montano.

“I think that it’s a horrific inci-dent,” Montano said. “It’s tragic, upsetting, and we shouldn’t have to tolerate it.”

Coupled with Pizza 9’s reward, the cash reward for finding Jasper’s killer currently stands at

$10,000. The BioPark Society and the Albuquerque Metro Crime Stoppers, as well as Corrales resident Laurel Westman, have chipped in money in hopes of finding the person responsible for the murdered marsupial, Montano said.

Along with the rewards, the BioPark is looking to step up security around the park in response to the incident, Montano said. It remains unclear how the perpetrator or perpetrators gained access to the Tasmanian devil exhibit without being detected or identified by security cameras around the zoo.

“We are going to be taking more security measures and we are go-ing to be redoing the whole moni-toring system,” Montano said.

Jasper was one of four Tasmanian devils that the BioPark received in December 2013. The Albuquerque zoo is one of only two zoos in the country to feature

a Tasmanian devil exhibit. The zoo has no plans for replacing Jasper yet, but hopes that upgraded security will act as a deterrent of any more criminal activity, Montano said.

Tasmanian devils were official-ly placed on the endangered spe-cies list in 2008. Now only found on the island of Tasmania, just south of Australia, these nocturnal, car-nivorous marsupials are currently threatened by loss of habitat, com-petition for resources with other animals such as the red fox, and Devil Facial Tumor Disease, he said. Devil Facial Tumor Disease, or DFTD, is a cancer that affects only Tasmanian devils, causing large lesions to grow on their faces and often the rest of their bodies.

According to the BioPark’s website, the zoo is looking to offer a safe, healthy and disease-free environment for these animals to

Phantoms of the Philharmonic

Project targets rural patients

aP Photo / Raymond Watt / ABQ BioPark

this april 30 photo provided by aBQ BioPark shows a male marsupial, known by keepers as “Jasper,” who was one of four tasmanian devils introduced to Zoo visitors last december. Keepers found Jasper dead in his outdoor enclosure on Wednesday, Oct. 15.

By Lena Guidi

In 2003, the wait to see Dr. Sanjeev Arora for Hepatitis C treatment was eight months long.

At the time, the clinic at UNM Hospital where Arora worked was one of only two in New Mexico that offered treatment for the dis-ease. Arora said he realized that untreated Hepatitis C was not just causing patients to develop liver cancers and cirrhosis — it was killing them.

Hepatitis C, one of the lead-ing chronic infections that lead to death in the United States, is cur-able, but patients must undergo 12 to 18 rounds of difficult treat-ment. This, along with high costs, made this treatment unattainable for many New Mexicans, Arora said.

“There were 28,000 patients who had this disease in New Mexico at that time, and less than 5 percent of them had been treated,” Arora said.

Marsupial’s killing remains a mysterysee Breaking Boo page 3 see arora page 3

see Zoo page 3

sergio Jiménez / Daily Lobo / @SXfoto

Project EChO founder dr. sanjeev arora

New Mexico Philharmonic, audience get into Halloween spirit

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

NEWSLOBO PAGE TWO T h u r s d a y , O c t o b e r 3 0 , 2 0 1 4

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-ChiefJyllian Roach

Managing EditorJ.R. Oppenheim

News EditorsJonathan Baca

Assistant News EditorSayyed Shah

News ReporterDaniel Montaño

Tomas LujanMatt Reisen

Photo EditorSergio Jiménez

Assistant Photo EditorWilliam Aranda

Staff PhotographerDi Linh HoangCopy ChiefsCraig Dubyk

Leanne LuceroCopy Editors

Dawn CatanachIan Myers

Sports EditorThomas Romero-Salas

Sports ReporterLiam Cary-Eaves

Culture EditorLauren Marvin

Assistant Culture EditorMoriah Carty

Design DirectorsJonathan Gamboa

Sarah LynasDesign AssistantsCatherine Farmer

Casey PurcellaWeekly Howl Producer

Michael Sol WarrenAdvertising Manager

Zach PavlikSales Manager

Sammy ChumpolpakdeeCampus Representative

Paul TalleyAdvertising Representatives

Heather FiskNicole Grundhoffer

Corey NewsomeClassified ManagerHannah Dowdy-Sue

Classifieds RepresentativesChase Dunnahoo

Nikki GarciaAdvertising Design

Jessi Swartz

Volume 119 Issue 52Telephone: (505) 277-7527

Fax: (505) [email protected]

[email protected]

Volume 119 Issue 52Halloween Blood Drive

ASUNM Community Experience is hosting a Halloween Blood Drive in part-nership with United Blood Services. Ac-cording to UNM, the Bloodmobile will be at the statue area near the SUB today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Walk-ins and appointments are welcome inside Ballroom C at the SUB.

For more information, contact ASUNM Community Experience or [email protected].

Auditions set for Lobo’s Got Talent

Audition applications are now be-ing accepted through Wednesday for the seventh annual Lobo’s Got Talent con-test. According to UNM, the first 32 acts to submit an application and register for an audition time will be guaranteed audi-tion spots.

Applications can be dropped off at room 1018 at the SUB. Auditions will be held Nov. 10 and 11. Judges will choose 12 to 14 acts from the auditions to perform in the Lobo’s Got Talent finals. Perfor-mances will be judged on showmanship, quality of act, creativity/artistic interpre-tation and overall performance.

� e contest will be held Nov. 14. � e � rst-place winner receives $500, second place $350, third place $150 and a people’s choice award winner will receive $100.

All students are invited to participate. For an application and more information visit http://sac.unm.edu/images/temp-files/November/LGT_Rules_2014.pdf or call (505) 277-4706.

Science chats and brewery taps� e monthly seminar series Science on

Tap will feature mechanical engineering professor Peter Vorobie� this month with a discussion on “From Ripples and Spills to Supernovae.” According to its blog, Science on Tap is an event to eat, drink and talk about science at a local brewery.

According to UNM, Vorobieff ’s primary research interests are in the area of fundamental hydrodynamic instability studies, renewable energy and advanced experimental techniques. He also serves as associate editor of American Society of Mechanical Engineers’ Journal of Fluids Engineering.

The event will be held at Chama River Brewing Company.

For more information and future events visit scienceontapnm.blogspot.com.

A $1.7 million grant for UNM Children’s Campus

The U.S. Department of Education awarded the UNM childcare center Chil-dren’s Campus a four-year, $1.7 million grant. According to UNM, the center will receive $427,000 annually from the Child Care Access Means Parents in School grant. The Children’s Campus provides early childhood education and care for UNM student, staff and faculty parents.

The grant allows the center to offer free or reduced childcare to Pell-eligible student-parents while they are in class.

For more information visit childcare.unm.edu.

Sarah Belle Brown Community Service Awards announced

The Office of the President has an-nounced the 2014 Sarah Belle Brown Community Service Award winners. Ac-cording to UNM, this year’s recipients in-clude student award winner Priscila Poli-ana, faculty award winner Dr. Arti Prasad and staff award winner Ashley Taylor.

“These outstanding individuals ex-emplify UNM’s commitment to commu-nity service,” President Bob Frank said. “They have gone above and beyond to help those in need and inspire change for the best.”

Poliana, an urban and regional planning graduate student, is the current project

planner for the STEM UP Cooperative where she has helped minority and economically disadvantaged students participate in science, technology, mathematics and engineering programs. As former GPSA president, Poliana increased transparency in fees and tuition costs and helped enact a tuition freeze in 2013-14. As a member and co-founder of the Brazil Club, she helped facilitate the inclusion of international students in the greater UNM community.

Prasad, the division chief of the Department of Internal Medicine and executive medical director for the Center for Life, has served on the medical advisory board of the Cancer Services of New Mexico since early 2000. She volunteers her time twice a year at the Family Cancer Retreat giving lectures to cancer patients, families and caregivers. Prasad also gives public service lectures to People Living through Cancer, Lymphoma and Leukemia Society, Nancy Floyd Haworth Foundation Educational Seminar and a variety of private, public and non-pro� t organizations.

Taylor, a senior academic advisor at the Anderson School of Management is a volunteer at Crossroads for Women, an Albuquerque organization that provides support for women who are homeless, suffer from mental illness and/or are ad-dicted to drugs. She has organized sup-plies and clothing drives and plans events for the organization. Every year, Taylor prefers to spend her birthday performing random acts of kindness for others.

� e Sarah Belle Brown awards have been endowed by former Anderson School of Management Dean Doug and his wife Sarah Brown to recognize the vol-unteer service work done by members of the UNM community. � e faculty and sta� recipients each receive $1,500, and the student recipient receives a $1,000 scholarship.

~ Compiled by Erika Eddy

CAMPUS BRIEFS

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Thursday, OcTOber 30, 2014/ Page 3New Mexico Daily lobo news

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Arora from page 1

reproduce and eventually be rein-troduced to the wild.

“We are trying to create a safe haven at our zoo with the hopes to breed these animals,” Montano said. “Since these animals are endangered, this is a significant concern.”

Since Jasper’s death, activi-ties at the BioPark — such as this year’s Zoo Boo, which occurred last Saturday — have resumed as usual. The 26th Annual Zoo Boo, an event where families can safe-ly go trick-or-treating throughout the zoo from exhibit to exhibit, brought some joy to the zoo af-ter the incident involving Jasper, Montano said.

Some Albuquerque residents are still concerned about the need for justice and how the incident has affected the Duke City’s repu-tation. The Tasmanian devil inci-dent has attracted attention from news agencies such as ABC, NBC and The New York Times.

“The fact that a person wants to kill an endangered species is just an ignorant person, really,” said UNM psychology major Jessica del Valle, who spends time at the BioPark doing research on gorillas for her gorilla research lab. “When we finally get a new animal and someone kills it, what are we sup-posed to think?”

The cash reward and the reward from Pizza 9 are still being offered. Anyone with tips or leads on Jasper’s murder is asked to contact Albuquerque Metro Crime Stoppers online at www.crimestoppersnm.com, by texting “APD” and the tip to 274637, or by calling (505) 843-STOP. Donations for Tasmanian devil disease research are also accepted online at http://www.tassiedevil.com.au.

Ryan Lotz is a freelance reporter with the Daily Lobo. He can be contacted at [email protected] or on Twitter @Lotz_DailyLobo.

Kanan Mammadli / daily Lobo

Byron Herrington conducts the New Mexico Philharmonic during Breaking Boo on Saturday evening at Popejoy Hall. The orchestra played Halloween-themed music while wearing Halloween costumes throughout the event.

He said that underserved com-munities in poor and rural areas were suffering — and dying — from Hepatitis C more often than other populations.

Arora said his frustration with the lack of access to treatment led him to create the Extension for Community Healthcare Out-comes, or Project ECHO.

Project ECHO began with three experts from UNMH, including Arora, who is a gastroenterologist and liver specialist, a pharmacist and a psychiatrist. Arora said they used teleconferencing technology to give primary care providers in underserved areas the expertise they needed to treat chronic dis-eases such as Hepatitis C.

“At the heart of ECHO is some-thing called a ‘knowledge network,’ where all these primary care cliniccians join us every Wednesday af-ternoon on an interactive video network,” he said.

One at a time, the practitio-ners presented individual cases to the specialists and each other.

“What we found is, over the course of the year, they became amazing experts,” Arora said. Project ECHO established 21 “centers of excellence” around the state. General and nurse practitioners around New Mexico now had the training to help

patients in their communities that could not make 12 to 18 trips to Albuquerque for injections.

It was not the first time Arora felt compelled to save lives. He said he created Project ECHO for the same reason he went into medicine in the first place.

“I was interested in a career where I could help a lot of peo-ple,” Arora said.

He attended medical school in India, and received medical training at SUNY Buffalo and Tufts University before becoming a liver specialist at UNMH. He said it was during this training that he learned a method that would become a fundamental part of Project ECHO: case-based learning.

“I would see a patient, present them to my professor, and they would help me manage the pa-tient,” Arora said.

He said he relied not only on the medical training principle when developing Project ECHO, but on W. Edwards Deming’s business management ideas of quality control.

“Many decades ago, W. Edwards Deming said that if you want to improve the quality of care, you want to reduce variation in practice,” Arora said.

This model of increasing quality by standardization is a

key principle of Project ECHO, he said.

In 2011, these quality prin-ciples were put to the test when The New England Journal of Med-icine studied the effectiveness of Hepatitis C virus treatments at ECHO sites compared with those at UNM Hospital.

“We found that treatment for HCV infection delivered with the use of the ECHO model was asso-ciated with high rates of cure,” the study stated.

The researchers attributed the model’s success to its communi-ty-based, personalized approach to chronic disease treatment. They found that disparities in Hepatitis C treatment were large-ly the result of geographical limi-tations to health care access.

“Treatment with the use of the ECHO model overcomes this barrier by bringing to the rural clinician the expertise and clinical resources that may not otherwise be available, thus positively affecting the outcomes,” the study stated.

These positive results have not gone unnoticed. Harvard, the University of Washington and the University of Chicago are among several institutions that have im-plemented the ECHO model in their own communities, Arora said.

“We have 43 separate hubs in the world right now connected to thousands of clinics for 26 differ-ent diseases,” Arora said.

He said that the recent imple-mentation of the Affordable Care Act has increased the need for chronic disease treatment proj-ects like ECHO.

“What has happened is that with the ACA, many more poor patients have received health in-surance through Medicaid health plans,” he said.

Many of these patients come from the same communities that the ECHO Project was established to help in the first place. Arora said he hopes the project will con-tinue to expand and revolutionize health care.

With millions of Americans from underserved communities entering an already overcrowded health care system, he said Project ECHO might have the potential to do just that.

“Our goal is to touch one billion lives by 2025, and we want to change the way health care is practiced all over the world,” Arora said.

Lena Guidi is a freelance reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at [email protected], or on Twitter @DailyLobo.

Breaking Boo from page 1 Zoo from page 1

“We are going to be taking more security

measures and we are going to be

redoing the whole

monitoring system.”

Gilbert Montano,Mayor’s chief of staff

Zimmerman said it was enjoyable to see all of the children dressed in costumes as well as the musicians.

“What keeps me coming back is seeing the patrons and see them coming back,” she said.

Augustus Bervig, a sophomore earth and planetary sciences major, said the Breaking Boo concert was different than most.

“I’ve been to many concerts, but this one is more lively,” Bervig said. “With all the costumes, it’s a better place to interact with peo-ple and have fun outside of just listening to music.”

Bervig dressed up as a carnival person, a costume he pieced to-gether for the event, he said.

He said he enjoyed the concert because it allowed the musicians to dress up as well. The music was well-chosen too, he said.

Moriah Carty is the assistant culture editor for the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter @MoriahCarty

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

news

Opinion Editor / [email protected]

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895L O b O O p I N I O NThursday, October 30, 2014

4

Editor,

On Nov. 4, we have the opportunity to elect our next state auditor. It may not be the sexiest office or the most publicized. Needless to say, it is imperative that we elect a candidate who is above reproach, a candidate whom we can trust to ensure that taxpayer dollars are pro-tected from waste and fraud.

In reviewing the record and background of the two candidates running for state audi-tor, I came across some really frightening facts about candidate Robert Aragon. Three find-ings scare the delights out of me.

First, he has had no less than 12 tax liens and warrants from both the state Taxation and Revenue Department and the IRS. These in-cluded failure to pay CRS quarterly payments, PIT payments and employee payroll taxes.

Second, as an attorney Aragon has been sued four times by his clients for legal malpractice. Allegations included professional negligence, breach of fiduciary trust, attorney deceit, breach of contract, unfair practices and negligent misrepresentation. Three of these cases ended up with out-of-court settlements.

Third, he has accepted his largest cam-paign contributions from a Texas couple who are convicted felons. Their offenses: tax eva-sion and embezzlement. An important ques-tion might be: Did Aragon know that the two of them were convicted felons when he accepted their campaign contributions? He may argue otherwise, but it appears Aragon is listed as the attorney of record for one of the parties and the case pre-dates the contributions by six months.

Aragon is seeking the state auditor position. Can we really trust someone with this history to protect our tax dollars? As you go to the polls to vote for this often-overlooked state office, ask yourself this question: do you really want the fox guarding the hen house?

Jeffrey PaulDaily Lobo reader

State auditor candidate is scarily unscrupulous

Letter

Shootings alter Canada’s course

Letter submission poLicy

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

Jyllian roachEditor-in-chief

J.r. oppenheimManaging editor

Jonathan bacaNews editor

coLumn

By Joe Gandelman

TORONTO, Canada — The live TV cov-erage on CBCNN brought back memories of another assassination: the assassination of JFK. A funeral procession punctuated by drumbeats and bagpipes. Only this time, a country’s grief focused on Corporal Nathan Cirillo; only this time, the haunting image of a child that’ll be reproduced forever was Cirillo’s 5-year-old son Marcus, bravely walk-ing in the parade, his life changed forever.

Just as Canada’s course has changed forever.When Michael Zehalf-Bibeau killed the

unarmed 24-year-old Cirillo standing guard at the National War Memorial, and then stormed Parliament Hill, it was in what police conclude was an “ideological and political” act the second of two sucker punches from radical Islam. Two days earlier, a sympathizer of the terrorist group ISIS ran over and killed Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent in the province of Quebec.

Pundits in Toronto’s superb local news-papers and on airwaves talk of a “loss of inno-cence” for the 147-year-old country, a claim that’s as inaccurate as saying 9/11 was a “loss of innocence” for the U.S., or that the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks that took 164 lives were a “loss of innocence” for India. But was it an event that will set in motion transformations? Yes.

The Globe and Mail columnist Lawrence Martin notes that the twin murders’ timing will strengthen Prime Minister Stephen Harper: “It may be short in duration, but patriotism is

overflowing in this land right now,” he writes. “In times like these, people want a strong man. Security becomes a top-drawer issue. It all plays perfectly to the politics of Mr. Harper, who is being lauded for his handling of this crisis.”

He points out that it seemed like only yes-terday when Harper’s decision to have Canada join the air battle against ISIS, and his warnings that Canada was a terrorist target, were being ig-nored or pooh-poohed.

Meanwhile, Canadian ambassador to the United States Gary Doer has been trying to put out a media firestorm in his assigned country. Pundits on Fox News and other ideologues are vastly inflating the number of Canadians fighting with ISIS to bolster their claims that Canada is a bee’s nest of Muslim terrorism and a danger to the U.S. They inaccurately suggest the two killers of Cirillo and Vincent could easily have crossed into the United States.

“But neither had a passport. What part of that don’t you get?” Doer told The National Post. “Part of my job is to say, ‘You shouldn’t be pointing fingers, you should be looking in the mirror if you have a problem.’”

Good luck with that, Mr. Ambassador. If America is the land of the free, it’s also now the home of predictable and tiresomely trite po-litical ideologues. For instance, in a blog post Republican Mike Huckabee simply couldn’t control himself, and had to point at Parliament sergeant-at-arms Kevin Vickers’ shooting of Zehalf-Bibeau to slam gun control.

“So if you’re keeping score, once again: a would-be mass murderer who might have

wiped out half the Canadian government was not stopped by sharpened flagpoles. He was stopped by a good guy with a gun,” Huckabee the Hack wrote.

The Conservative government here is now looking into ways to handle and contain its citi-zens who back, support or join terrorist groups. It will likely seek additions to the pending “Pro-tection of Canada from Terrorists Act,” which would be the first major national security revi-sion since 1984. Today, citizens of the United States’ biggest customer are having a conversa-tion about checks and balances while consider-ing giving police broader powers.

“The strongest counterattack we can make upon the Islamic State … will be to make certain that the Canada of yesterday will continue unchanged for, if necessary, the next several decades,” Toronto Star col-umnist Richard Gwyn wrote. “It’s as consid-erable a challenge as we’ve ever faced. If we do it right, we’ll be leading the world.”

Canada’s nickname is “True North, Strong and Free.” It’ll be struggling to keep that nick-name as it moves further into what promises to be a brutal, ultra-violent, terrorism-plagued 21st century as it responds to its wake-up call.

Copyright 2014 Joe Gandelman, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. Joe Gandelman is a veteran journalist who wrote for newspapers overseas and in the United States. He is Editor-in-Chief of The Moderate Voice, an Internet hub for independents, centrists and moderates.

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Thursday, OcTOber 30, 2014/ Page 5halloween hapsNew MexicO daily lObO

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Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

PAGE 6 / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOHALLOWEEN HAPS

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Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Thursday, OcTOber 30, 2014/ Page 7halloween haps

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Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

PAGE 8 / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBONEWSCULTURE

By Jonathan Baca

The Duke City is more than 300 years old, full of history and legend. One of the oddest and most enduring of these legends is the tragic tale of 6-year-old Bobby Darnall, who believers say still haunts the halls of Albuquerque’s oldest performing arts center, the downtown KiMo Theatre.

On Friday, Halloween night, the city is hosting a sold-out tour of the KiMo, during which they will discuss the history of the theater and of little Bobby’s death. It will be the first chance the public has ever had to go backstage and see the legendary shrine that has been built and maintained by superstitious performers; people still give offerings of doughnuts, toys and notes to Bobby’s ghost in an attempt to keep him from causing mischief, said Joan Gallegos, tour guide and social media specialist for the city’s Cultural Services department.

“It’s really popular, the myth and stories about the ghosts of the KiMo. It’s something people love to talk about and it’s just part of our collective culture in Albuquerque,” Gallegos said. “I’ve known many people who claim that they’ve felt things when they walked into the theater, that they felt a presence. I’m not one who has. But we’ve had people come in, whether they knew about the

ghost or not, who have made a comment offhand that they’ve sensed something in the room — that they’re not alone.”

According to an article from the Albuquerque Journal archives, on Aug. 2, 1951 Robert Darnall was sitting in the theater balcony watching a movie with his friends when he got scared and ran down to the lobby. Just as he got down the stairs, a water heater suddenly exploded, injuring seven people and hurling Bobby into the wall, killing him.

� e tragedy shook the community, and when the theater reopened, crews often brought doughnuts to eat while they worked and left any leftovers as an o� ering to the dead child, said Larry Parker, KiMo � eatre general manager.

“If there were any doughnuts left they would just leave them somewhere backstage, and then mysteriously by the next day they would disappear,” Parker said. “Therefore Bobby must love doughnuts, and people have been doing it ever since.”

Eventually, performers and crews began tying these doughnuts to strings and hanging them on the wall, until Christmas of 1974, when the director of a performance told his crew to take down the old pas-tries hanging backstage.

According to the story, that night’s performance was a disaster, with actors falling down and drop-

ping lines, light bulbs exploding — total chaos, according to an article from the Alibi archives.

“By the mid-’80s there had been several performing artist groups that had complained of things happening backstage or during performances that they couldn’t quite explain,” Parker said. “So the belief became that Bobby perhaps was being the mischievous spirit that was caus-ing things in certain productions to go wrong.”

The next night, when the crew replaced the doughnuts, things went back to normal, and the cast had a perfect show.

Gallegos said she has been aware of the story since she per-formed in a musical at the KiMo as child.

“As a child performer I re-member being creeped out, and I remember leaving a doughnut when I was a kid,” she said. “I think our shows went off without a hitch because we did that.”

The only known sighting of Bobby’s ghost happened more recently, during an extensive renovation of the theater, Gallegos said. Two businessmen who had never heard of little Bobby came inside, hoping to book some shows. When a city employee approached them, they said they had just seen a young boy sitting up in the balcony. The worker searched the whole building and found no one — in fact, all the doors were locked, she said.

“They had no idea how or why a child could’ve gotten up there,” Gallegos said.

Just three weeks ago, Parker said he experienced something he could not explain. Sitting in his office on a Sunday afternoon, the door suddenly swung shut and locked him in. Although the lock was on his side of the door, he could not get it to open and had to call a locksmith to get him

out, he said.“I can’t explain it, it’s just one

of those things,” he said.Gallegos said she is excited to

be a part of the tour because it is a chance to share the unique past of the city in a fun and en-gaging way.

“The KiMo Theater is a piece of history,” she said. “We have those gems all over Albuquerque, and this is one that we’re finally opening up to the general public.”

Parker said it is these kinds of stories that keep the KiMo alive and interesting to the public, and that the tour is important for ed-ucating people about the history and heritage of the theater and the city.

“The KiMo has been on this corner, educating this community since 1927. This building is one of the few in downtown Albuquerque that is still doing what it was originally designed and opened to do 87 years later,” Parker said. “And all theaters need to have a resident ghost.”

Doughnuts have become such an important part of the legend that local bakery Rebel Donut is sponsoring the tour, giving out commemorative Bobby Darnall doughnuts to every tour-goer, Gallegos said.

Jonathan Baca is the news edi-tor for the Daily Lobo. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter @JonGabrielB

Hauntings, doughnuts at historic theater

“If there were any

doughnuts left they

would just leave

them somewhere

backstage, and then

mysteriously by the

next day they would

disappear,”

Larry Parker,

KiMo Theatre manager.

Tour goes backstage in iconic downtown building

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Thursday, OcTOber 30, 2014/ Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo culture

By Mateo Rocha

Temperatures drop as the fall season progresses, leaving a sense of frigidness that gets stronger day after day at UNM.

It’s a climate ripe for the supernatural.

Every place has its stories, and UNM is no exception. With All Hallows’ Eve approaching, there may be spirits that are coming out to play. Perhaps it is illusion; perhaps the only spirits causing mischief are those that choose to share their stories.

Two locations on campus report the presence of supernatural happenings: Coronado Residence Hall and Zimmerman Library.

Coronado Residence HallSophomore Augustus Pedrotty,

a Coronado hall resident advisor, said he fulfills his duty by walking rounds in the building to make sure everything is okay.

Coronado has been a large traditional residence hall for 56 years and holds an obscure past of happenings largely unknown to its current residents, he said.

Walking the halls during the dead of night has proven creepy and some-times unexplainable, he said.

“Normally, the third floor is nice and quiet,” Pedrotty said. “It is just this little hall at the top of the build-ing, but every now and then you just get that one audible noise coming from that room.”

Two more RAs have confirmed

this occurrence and are slowly getting weary of the unexplained sound, Pedrotty said.

“It is a slow, scratching sound, and once you open the door to the room there is only the same, gnarly-looking tub,” he said.

No resident has been seen making use of service room number three, and even more peculiar is that this room is one-of-a-kind at Coronado — the only one that holds an old, unused, handicap-accessible bath tub, Pedrotty said.

“The huge irony in this is that the bathtub is not actually on any floor that is handicap-accessible; it’s on the third floor,” Pedrotty said.

To this day service room #3 re-mains an anomaly, he said.

Zimmerman stack towersIn 2006 the library staff was

tasked with inspecting all nine floors of one of Zimmerman’s book stack towers, former UNM librarian Teresa Marquez said.

“All librarians and staff were as-signed security duties,” she said. “I had to make sure that no one was there, and that no fires were starting up.”

While checking the fourth and fifth floors, steady footsteps seemed to be approaching her, said Marquez.

“I looked back and saw nothing, so I started walking around looking for who had walked up behind me,” she said. “I thought it was somebody coming up the stairs to meet me — and no, there wasn’t anyone there.”

It is commonly discussed that a ghost wanders the library towers, a supernatural type of presence believed to be the first librarian of Zimmerman, she said.

“Some time ago a mechanic in Zimmerman’s boiler room reported having seen a woman appear in his office, and as he followed her toward the door she just went right through,” Marquez said. “The librarian may have appeared to the mechanic, just how she appeared to me. If that is what they say it is, it sure as hell fright-ened me.”

Mateo Rocha is a freelance reporter for the Daily Lobo. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twit-ter @DailyLobo

Ghosts on campus and where to find them

By Skylar Griego

There are myriad reasons to love Halloween. Candy, costumes and creepiness bombard us with the spirit of the season.

There’s also an abundance of reasons to get scared on Halloween. Jenna Crabb, career services director, said she loves to

be freaked out by what she calls “psychological thrillers.”

1. “Pet Sematary” by Stephen King

“This book kind of freaked me out. The idea of pets coming back freaks me out … You get a greater feel for the love of the pets. That really appeals to the idea that we don’t want them to ever leave us. When they came back it was joyous until that beloved pet turned into something horrible.”

2. “Red Dragon” by Thomas Harris

“This was book one of the ‘Silence of the Lambs’ series. It’s a psychological thriller, and that’s my counseling side coming out … It has Hannibal Lecter in it. It’s about a guy who is insane and takes up with this picture of a red dragon that he gets tattooed on his back. It’s very freaky.”

3. “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley

“She is brilliant. I love the descriptions and the images that she writes about in terms of (Frankenstein’s monster) actually being a caring oaf, but (also) a destructive big guy that has been brought back to life — that master-servant dichotomy of good and evil. I had to read it for a class and I just couldn’t put it down (because) it was so good.”

4. “Helter Skelter” by Vincent Bugliosi and Curt

Gentry

“It’s about the Charles Manson killers. [Bugliosi] was the prosecu-tor of the case. On the first page it says, ‘The story which you are about to read will scare the hell out of you.’ It’s the idea of this cult be-lieving that they can break in and

kill a bunch of people based on the word of the one person who told them to. It’s a scary look into Charles Manson.”

5. “Whispers” by Dean Koontz

“I like his books anyway be-cause most of them are freaky. They’re psychological. This one is about people dying and coming back from the dead. You see the killer is facing demons as well, and he comes back to life. I’ve always wanted to work with serial kill-ers, in terms of counseling or ana-lyzing. But, there have been times when I had to put [the book] down and think some good thoughts be-fore going to sleep.”

Skylar Griego is a freelance reporter for the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at [email protected] or on Twit-ter @DailyLobo.

FiVe &

WHy What Lobos love to read

with

Jenna crabb

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

PAGE 10 / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBONEWSCULTURE

By Graham Gentz

Editor’s note: � e writer portrayed a zombie at “Quarantine: Collapse,” an interactive haunted house in Albuquerque. � is is a � ctitious account.

� ere is an undying dark here.The wind curls over the corn,

a hissing sea of empty, black air.� e moon gleams baleful,

white light across the � ow of au-tumn leaves.

Distant coyotes howl in one di-rection, then another, then another.

Or else it’s the sound of an-other person being caught and dragged down into the corn to be devoured.

If anything, I welcome the dancing glare of the � ashlights of the people passing by. � e light lets you know exactly where to go.

I don’t know how long I’ve been like this. Maybe forever. My mind is ever wrapped in a wet blanket I cannot seem to remove.

Mostly I sit. Or stand. � ere’s nothing really to do, but I don’t mind. I sway in the breeze. I utter groans from the pieces that are left of my throat.

I think I died. Maybe we’re all dead. It seems like Hell, a bit. Mostly I feel lost. But hungry. Al-ways, always hungry.

People pass through the maze. I can’t imagine why. We’re ev-erywhere, hidden and waiting amongst the endless murk stalks and blackness. Even the ones that barely crawl can claw along the damp dirt to snatch at passing feet.

There is a muttering of hushed speech. A group of them, all huddled together for warmth,

following the little wisp of light they hold for comfort.

I see them. � ey do not see me.I lurch stiffly, my throat rat-

tling with a moan. I swing my limbs through the corn, crinkling fallen leaves with my feet. I jerk forward, my movements reflec-tive, staggering closer and closer.

They notice me and shriek, flinging themselves past and shoving those in front of them to run faster.

I wobble after them, my mouth hanging open. � ose that wait in the corn will hear the cry and come too — to see, and to eat.

Soon we will be everywhere.Around the bend there is an

abandoned RV. � ey struggle with the lock. � ey wail and yelp, look-ing over their shoulders to see me twitching closer. � ey rip the RV open and rush inside, slamming the door behind them for cover.

One doesn’t quite make it.He screams, eyes flashing with

emotion I don’t, nor care to, un-derstand. Instead, I yank his body across the flat of the door and take that first savory bite, sinking my teeth in as deeply as my jaw will allow.

All of the flesh must be eaten. I cannot stop myself, even if I want to. Amidst the screaming, I cram and split and snarl and tear at it, ever more, ever deeper. Gnashing and frothing with bile and flakes of my own body barely kept together, I wrench apart as much as their body will allow, extracting whatever remaining flesh that I can.

In the end, the rest escape, stumbling panicked deeper into the corn. But it hardly matters.

� ere will be more.We are everywhere.‘Til then, I’ll sit. Or stand.

And wait.

Hungry. Always hungry.

Graham Gentz is a theater and movie reviewer for the Daily Lobo.

He can be reached at culture@dailylobo,com or on Twitter @DailyLobo

Inside the mangled mind of a hungry zombie

Diana Cervantes / Daily Lobo

Patrick Gozur, a volunteer with the Rio Grande Community Farm, applies zombie makeup on Tuesday night for the farm’s haunted maze “Quarantine: Collapse.” Gozur is one of hundreds of people volunteering as zombies for the event. “Quarantine: Collapse” has its last offi cial fright night on Nov. 1.

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

Thursday, OcTOber 30, 2014/ Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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

FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 30, 2014

ACROSS1 Crawled, perhaps5 Broadway show

whose titlewoman can “coaxthe blues right outof the horn”

9 Renege, with “out”12 Andalusian

appetizer13 Accord competitor15 Hole starter16 Postal service18 __-pitch19 Kanakaredes of

“CSI: NY”20 Plastered22 Curled-lip look23 Brigades, e.g.25 The tar, in

Spanish27 Anonymous John28 “The Black Cat”

author31 __ moss32 Mountains

dividing Europeand Asia

35 With 37-Across,sentenceopenings, andwhat the ends of16-, 23-, 47-, and57-Across can bewhen rearranged

37 See 35-Across40 Hop follower41 Modest dress42 NASCAR __43 Lion or tiger45 Exercises begun

in a supineposition

47 “You made yourpoint”

50 “... if you want to__ man’scharacter, givehim power”:Lincoln

54 Part of 56-Across55 Eats pretzels, say56 Google hit57 Form small

teams at school60 What “I” may

indicate61 Common soccer

score62 Only63 June honorees64 Blind component65 Breyers

competitor

DOWN1 Restrains2 Like Madame

Tussauds figures3 Traditional

temptation4 “Manhattan”

Oscar nomineeHemingway

5 Galaxy gp.6 Source of 20s,

briefly7 Harmful gas8 One of the Brontës9 Dishonorably

dismissed10 Bird that’s probably

not wise andcertainly not old

11 Trudges13 Fit __ fiddle14 One way to think17 Mesmerized21 Porcine sniffer23 Kazakhstan

border sea24 Collecting Soc.

Sec.26 Arthur who won a

Tony for 5-Across28 IBM 5150s, e.g.29 Furniture wood30 Inner circles, in

astronomy models33 Coach Parseghian

34 ’60s hallucinogen36 Old Bristol-Myers

toothpaste37 Beer choice38 College email

ending39 Extreme summit41 Former space

station44 “Solve __

decimal places”45 Reddish-brown

horse

46 Bagel choice47 Eat loudly48 Main artery49 Mars pair51 Drew back52 NFL analyst

Bradshaw53 Beasts of burden55 St. Louis-to-

Chicago dir.58 Place to see

RVs59 NFL mistake

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Jerry Edelstein 10/30/14

©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 10/30/14

dailysudoku Solution to yesterday’s puzzle

dailycrossword

Level 1 2 3 4

PhD

Year Zero

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 10 30 2014

PAGE 12 / THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOCLASSIFIEDS

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New Mexico Daily loboPage 8 / Wednesday, OctOber 23, 2013 classifieds

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

GUITAR/ VOICE LESSONS $15Professional Singer/ Songwriter 17 years experience offering lessons, Any Age Any Genre, First lesson’s free! 505- 720-7959.

GETTING MARRIED? WWW.David MartinezPhotography.com

?BACKPACK BUSTED? ABQ Luggage & Zipper Repair. 1405-A San Mateo NE. 256-7220.

MATH TUTORING 237-8236.

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

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

Health and Wellness

STRESSED? IZAZEN.ORG

HAVE YOU HEARD of that Crazy Wrap thing? Tone, tighten and firm in as little as 45 minutes!! Simple and affordable! Call Daniella today! 505-850-3121.

ApartmentsLARGE, CLEAN 1BDRM $495/mo+utili- ties and 2BDRM $695/mo+utilites. No pets. 1505 Girard NE. 304-5853.

FREE UNM PARKING. Large, clean 1BDRM. No pets. $500/mo + electricity. 4125 Lead SE. 850-9749.

NORTH CAMPUS. LARGE, clean 1BDRM, 1505 Girard NE. $500/mo +util- ities. No pets. 304-5853.

BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean 1BDRM ($595/mo), 2BDRM ($850/mo) includes utilities. No pets. 255-2685 / 268-0525.

FREE UNM PARKING. Large, clean, 1BDRM. No pets. $460/mo +electricity 980-5812.

NEAR UNM/ DOWNTOWN. Affordable 1 bedroom apartments. $400- $575/mo +utilities. Off street parking. Singles. 266-4505.

$600 MOVES YOU in near UNM/ NOB Hill. 2BDRM, 1BA like new. Quiet area, on-site manager, storage, laundry, park- ing. Pets okay, no dogs. 137 Manzano St NE, $680/mo. 505-610-2050.

LARGE 1BDRM, HARDWOOD floors, quiet, secure, 3-unit, owner-managed. W/D Hookup, storage, off-street. Near Nob Hill, UNM KAFB, hospitals. $550/mo +utilities $400dd. 1 year lease. Cats okay. Owner/broker.Call/ text 350-8698.

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

2BDRMS UTILITIES INCLUDED. 3 blocks UNM. kachina-properties.com 246-2038.

1BDRM, 3 BLOCKS from UNM, Presby- terian. Hardwood floors, beamed wood ceiling, new windows. 118 Sycamore. $575/mo+utilities+DD, cats okay. NS, off-street parking. Available November 1 Call 505-550-1579.

Houses For Rent2BDRM, 1BA 1400 Gold SE. Fenced, covered parking, $750/mo. 699-0836.

Houses for Sale

HANDY TO UNM lovely remodeled 5BDRM home with two living areas. Coldwell Banker Legacy 8281000. Sandy DeNovellis 269-8697.

Rooms For RentHOUSE TO SHARE. Female roommate wanted. Westside $500/mo. No pets. 505-720-3274.

LOOKING FOR A female to take over Lobo Village lease in January. Last month’s rent already paid.If interested please contact me at 505-592-6472.

SINGLE ROOM FOR rent. 2BDRM House $375mo+utlities, biking distance to UNM , ridgecrest area west of San Mateo. 505-620-4457.

ROOM AVAILABLE FOR male to take over lease at Lobo Village. Great loca- tion near pool, gym, and clubhouse. Fully furnished, free Wi-Fi. Flexible move-in date. 280-9256.

SEEKING MALE ROOMATE to share 3BDRM house. $450/mo. Includes utili- ties and split cable and internet. $250 deposit. 10 minutes from UNM. 505- 919-8057.

3 FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north campus. $350/mo $410/mo, $420/mo +1/4utilities. High speed Internet. Pic- tures available. Gated community. Ac- cess I-40 & I-25. [email protected]

ROOMMATE WANTED. 3BDRM 1.5BA. Near UNM. Share with 2 awesome roo- mates. Utilities, internet, and cable in- cluded. W/D. NP. $435/mo. End of November, early December. 505-974- 7476.

22 YEAR OLD male seeking roommate for 2BDRM house. $400/mo plus utili- ties. Biking distance to UNM. 505-620- 4457.

FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED to take over lease. Room for rent in Casas Del Rio. $529/mo. Utilities included. If inter- ested please contact 505-258-1369 or 505-818-9872.

Bikes/Cycles2012 PCC SPEEDO 50cc. Less than 1200 miles, great shape. $750 OBO.Call Tom at 505-273-1091.

Computer StuffCUSTOM SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT! We can create or modify software for you! C++, Python, Java, or web soft- ware running on Php, Drupal or Word- press. [email protected] 505-750- 1169.

For SaleDOGS FOR SALE Two cocker spaniel poodle mixes black, white. Both a year old, sisters. Well behaved/trained and looking for a friendly home. $200 505- 489-1106.

ADJUSTABLE HOSPITAL BED Twin size with two massage units. $175 cash. Jazzy battery-powered mobility chair. Works good. With seatlift $175obo cash 505-440-9815.

ONE SHOWER WHEELCHAIR 300lbs limit. $25 cash only. 505-440-9815.

Jobs Off Campus

PT WORK NEAR campus. Flexible hrs. for technically-minded person with ba- sic woodworking, carpentry, and/ or con- struction experience. Good hourly pay. 301-6658.

CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST Church, Albuquerque, NM, is seeking a part time Multi-Media Director to create, develop and implement multi-media pre- sentations and be responsible for their production in three worship services. The Director of Multi-Media Ministry will also coordinate a ministry team to in- clude training and volunteer supervision for lighting, video screen projection as well as environmental projection, and sound.We are seeking a technically skilled, organized and highly relational leader to join our staff team as Media Director. Experience in the following a plus: Pro-Presenter, Media Shout, Envi- ronmental Projection software, Lighting, iOS and PC operating, systems. Inter- ested parties should submit resumes to [email protected]

AIR FORCE NOW Accepting Prior Ser- vice Applications! If you have separated from any branch of the Armed Forces you may be eligible to re-enlist or com- mission into the Air Force. To find out if you qualify, visit www.airforce.com and locate a recruiter or call (505) 872-9564.

CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED Must be available everyday, Monday through Friday. 8:30AM - 3:30PM Montessori experience helpful, will train. Need students in early childhood education program or have 45 hour CDC class. Send info to: 11216 Phoenix Ave NE Abq NM 87112, ad [email protected] or 299-3200.

SOCIAL BRAND INTERN. Searching for punctual, detail oriented socialite. Paid PT position. Professionalism is a must. Email resume to [email protected]

DANCERS WANTED AS entertainers for parties. Nights, weekends. Same day pay. 505-489-8066. Privatedancersn [email protected]

SPRING 2014 TEACH and Learn in Ko- rea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government $1,300-400/month (15hrs/week) + airfares, housing, medi- cal insurance Must have completed two years of undergraduate. Last day to ap- ply: 11/30/13 Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr Questions: Jai - jai.ke [email protected] (213)386-3112 ex.201.

Visit us at dailylobo.com

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

VolunteersBICYCLE VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITYBoth the City of Albuquerque’s Esper- anza Community Bicycle shop and the Bicycle Recycle Program are looking for people with bike mechanical skills, or who are willing to learn mechanical skill to volunteer at the Esperanza Com- munity Bike shop. The Bicycle Recycle program needs volunteers during week- days and Esperanza could use volun- teers weekday nights and Sundays. Please contact Tomas Kujat at [email protected] or Chuck Malagodi at [email protected] 505- 768-2453.

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

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

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

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

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

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230

1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

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

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

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

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CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

Campaign JobsHelp protect the Right

to ChooseGrassroots Campaigns is now hiring field

staff to talk to voters in Albuquerque about protecting the right to choose.

Full and Part-time Positions Available $9 to $11 per hour

(No fundraising required)

Call Jordan at (505) 369-8133

UNM Art Musuem’s 50th Anniversary Exhibitons10:00am-4:00pmUNM Art MuseumThe UNM Art Museum’s Permanent Collection at Fifty Years

The Lymbs12:00-1:00pmCornell/SUB MallNoontime Concert

Raymond Jonson to Kiki Smith10:00am-4:00pmUNM Art MuseumNew exhibit at the UNM art museum, on view in the main gallery.

UNM Wind Symphony7:30-8:30pmPopejoy HallWorks by McTee, Wilsion, Hindemith, Barber and Gorb. Richard White, Tuba Soloist. Adults $8, Youth (0-18) $6, Seniors $4.

Coffee and Tea Time9:30-11:00amLGBTQ Resource Center, 608 Buena Vista

Flu Shot Clinics10:00-2:00pmSUB AtriumUNM Student Health & Counseling will offer free flu shots for UNM students, staff and faculty (anyone 18 and older).

Mortar Board10:00am-1:00pmSUB MallInformation Table

CLS Bible Study8:30-9:20amLaw School Room 2503Meeting

Mid Week Movie Series4:00-6:00pm & 7:00-9:00pmSUB TheaterDespicable Me 2UNM Students $2; Faculty/Staff $2.50, Public $3.

LAII Lecture Series12:00-1:00pmLatin American and Iberian InstituteRonda Brulotte presents: “Oaxacan Mezcal and the Making of a Transnational Prestige.”

UFO Speaker Stanton Friedman7:00-9:00pmSUB Ballroom CNuclear Physicist/Lecturer Stanton T. Friedman is the original civilian investigator of the Roswell, New Mexico UFO incident.

Cultures of Exile: Conversations on Language & the Arts

9:30am-6:30pmHighlighting those cultures traditionally ignored, this conference aims at giving voice to the voiceless through poetry readings

Lobos for Israel7:00-9:00pmMitchell HallBarak Raz presents the most recent spokesperson for the Israeli discusses his experiences and challenges while serving in the Israeli Defense Force.

Email events to: [email protected]

Preview events at dailylobo.com

LOBO LIFE Campus Calendar of Events

Lectures & ReadingsArts & Music

Theater & FilmsCampus Events Current Exhibits Want an Event in Lobo Life?

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

* Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organi- zation or department* Classes, class schedules, personal events or solicita- tions are not eligible.* Events must be of interest to the campus commu- nity.* Events must not require pre-registration.

Student Groups & Gov.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

LARRY’S HATSBest hats for any occasion.

Bowlers • Fedoras • Top Hats Vintage Women’s Jewelry

3102 Central Ave. SE266-2095

SIGN UP FOR LESSONS NOW!Starter Guitars for $79.99

WE PAY CASH FORUSED INSTRUMENTS!

www.marcsguitarcenter.com

265-33152324 Central S.E.Accross from U.N.M.

Starter Guitarsfor $79.99

WE PAY CASH FOR USED INSTRUMENTS!

SIGN UP FOR LESSONS NOW!

Your community store since 1978

MON-FRI 10-6 SAT 10-5:30

www.marcsguitarcenter.com

G U I T A R C E N T E R

505-255-37845511 Central NEAlbuquerque, NM

10% off with student I.D.

Coffee and Tea Time9:30-11:00amLGBTQ Resource Center

Teaching Artist Invitational11:00am-4:00pmMasley Hall, Room 105These presentations feature the work of art educators who are teaching in the greater Albuquerque area’s K-12 classrooms.

Food for Thought11:00-2:00pmCornell MallFood trucks from the Albuquerque Area will be taking over Cornell Mall to help raise money for the Graduate Summer Scholarship fund.

Face Off: Horror Make-Up Demonstration & Student Contest5:30-7:30pmSUB AtriumGraham Schofield will be here on Thursday October 30th for a horror make-up demonstration!

Noon Time & Halloween Speaker6:00-10:00pmSUB Ballroom A&B

Meeting of the Minds12:00-1:00pmUniversity Art MuseumDavid Maisel: Black Maps, Led by Associate Professor of Photography Patrick Manning, Department of Art and Art History.

Octuba Studio Solo5:00-6:00pmKeller HallFeaturing students of Richard White.

Jeffrey Piper, Trumpet7:30-8:30pmKeller HallUNM Music Faculty Recital.

Recent Energy Engineering Projects at UNMBegins at 11:00amUNM Centennial Engineering Center - Stamm Room 1044Guest speaker: Don Swick, UNM PPD Engineer.

Neuroscience Seminar Series12:00-1:00pmBMSB Room 303James Cavanagh, Ph.D. Department of Psychology,

UNM presents: “The ghost in the machine: Combining E-phs and performance modeling to reveal latent cognitive states.”

Dissertation DefenseBegins at 2:00pmSimpson Room, 135Christine Romero-DeBell, Education presents: “Sex, Violence and the Female Sex Offender.”

Biology Seminar Series3:30-4:30pmCastetter 100Margaret Werner-Washburne, Regents’ Professor presents: “Heading Towards a Cliff: STEM Students and the Need for Better Mentoring.”

UNM Department of Anthropology Colloquium Series4:00-5:30pmHibben Center 105Michael H. Agar, UNM Department of Anthropology presents: “From Rich Points to Leverage Points and Back Again: How Research, Application and Practice Work Together.”

Mid Week Movie3:30-5:30pm

SUB TheaterNow Showing: Lucy

ASUNM Southwest Film Center7:00-9:00pmSUB TheaterNow Showing: Nightmare on Elm Street

Scrap Presents: The Monkey’s Paw7:30 & 9:30pmThe Experimental Theater

Fall 2014 Workshops10:00am-12:00pmSUB Santa Ana A&B

Lobo Toastmasters11:45-1:00pmSUB Mirage/ThunderbirdLobo Toastmasters will help you improve your communication and leadership skills, while having fun doing it.

Orthodox Christian Fellowship12:30-2:00pmSUB Sandia

Mortar Board Meeting4:30-5:30pmSUB Mirage/Thunderbird

Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship6:00-10:00pmSUB Acoma A&B

Cru Weekly Meeting6:00-9:00pmSUB Santa Ana A&B

UNM Voices of Inspiration Choir6:00-9:00pmSUB Sandia

Engineers Without Borders Meeting6:00-8:30pmSUB Fiesta A&B

Golden Key Info Meeting6:00-7:00pmSUB Luminaria

A Cappella Club7:00-9:00pmSUB Alumni

Young Americans for Liberty Meeting6:30-8:00pmSUB Isleta

Nourish International Ventures Committee Meeting7:00-8:00pmSUB Mirage/Thunderbird

LOBO LIFE campus calendar of Events

Workshops

Campus Events Arts & Music

Lectures & Readings

Theater & Films

Student Groups & Gov.