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Thursday, March 30, 2017 | Vo l u m e 1 2 1 | I s s u e 5 4

Brooks wins ASUNM presidential election

Nick Fojud / Daily Lobo / @NFojud

Noah Brooks, right, holds Sally Midani and Noah Michelsohn while hearing the election results for the ASUNM presidential race on Wednesday, March 29, 2017 at the UNM SUB. Brooks beat Gabe Gallegos by 40 votes to become the 2017-2018 ASUNM president.

By Brendon Gray @notgraybrendon In what the ASUNM Elections Commission called a record voter turnout, UNM junior Noah Brooks was elected president of the Associated Students of UNM for the 2017-2018 school year. Brooks, who currently serves on ASUNM Senate, garnered 757 votes, just 40 over runner-up Gabe Gallegos, current directors of communications for ASUNM. Brooks’ running mate, Sally Midani, was elected the vice president with 804 votes. The two ran on a platform focused on combating sexual assault on campus, streamlining the advisement process and providing free transportation to athletic events for students. A record-breaking 2,400 undergraduate students made it to the polls, the highest student turnout since the spring elections of 2014, when 2,303 students voted. “I’m going to jump right in,” Brooks said, “I’m going to make sure everything that we have and everything we do is for the students.” Brooks praised his campaign

Nick Fojud / Daily Lobo / @NFojud

ASUNM Director of Communications Gabe Gallegos embraces a friend during his loss against Noah Brooks for ASUNM president on Wednesday, March 29, 2017 at the UNM SUB.

team and dozens of volunteers that helped him along the way. Midani, a former ASUNM senator, said the election was the toughest she’d participated in, and she felt blessed the student body believed in her. “It did feel good to know there were a handful of really motivated, qualified people up against us,” Midani said. “I respect those individuals so much.”

On the Daily Lobo website Cartron: Men’s Tennis to begin conference play this weekend Sanchez: Crime Briefs

Presidential candidates Justin Cooper and Elena Garcia received 493 votes and 436 votes, respectively. Vice presidential candidates Sydnie O’Connell, Michael Landgraf, and Jonathan Sanchez earned 662, 458 and 435 votes respectively. Though disappointed with the results, runner-up Gallegos said he was proud of the campaign he and his team ran, making sure to

praise the victors. “I can’t speak highly enough of Noah and Sally,” Gallegos said. “They’ll do an incredible job next year and lead our students.” Shortly after the election, Brooks and Midani’s slate — One UNM — tweeted their thoughts on the win, saying “we could not be more humbled” about their dual victory. “The outreach and support that we have felt over the last few weeks was more than we could have ever dreamed of,” the tweet read. “We can’t wait to get to work and truly make this university ONE UNM.” Every Lobo — the slate that Gallegos and O’Connell belonged to — tweeted their congratulations to Brooks and Midani on the win, stating, “We will always believe in the power of #EveryLobo to be the change.” The election marked the first since ASUNM passed legislation in the fall splitting presidential/ vice presidential elections from senatorial elections, which will be held in a few weeks. It was Brooks and Midani who authored that legislation. At the time, the Daily Lobo reported on their hopes that the change to

President Noah Brooks Gabe Gallegos Justin Cooper Elena Garcia

757 717 493 426

Vice President Sally Midani Sydnie O’Connell Michael Landgraf Jonathan Sanchez

804 662 458 435

ASUNM election structure would lead to higher voter turnout, which has been stagnating in recent semesters. The legislation has paid off so far, and senatorial elections will take place in a few weeks. Brendon Gray is a news reporter for the Daily Lobo. He can be reached at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @notgraybrendon.

Gray: Abdallah discusses budget, immigration, free speech in latest town hall Gonzalez: Exodus of Men’s Basketball players continues Narvaiz: UNM Baseball stays hot against NMSU


LOBO PAGE TWO

Thursday, March 30, 2017

UNM rural medicine ranks third nationwide By Elizabeth Sanchez @Beth_A_Sanchez UNM’s School of Medicine Rural Medicine Program and Primary Care Curriculum are some of the strongest in the United States, according to the upcoming issue of U.S. News & World Report’s “America’s Best Graduate Schools for 2018.” The Rural Medicine Program stands at third place and the Primary Care Curriculum is at number 18. The magazine also ranks the College of Nursing Midwifery Program at seventh nationwide. For Executive Vice Dean of the UNM School of Medicine Martha Cole McGrew, this news was not much of a surprise. The UNM School of Medicine was created to provide New Mexico with doctors, and those values are still upheld today, McGrew said. With a medical student curriculum, including work with doctors throughout rural areas of the state and often with an emphasis on underserved communities, roughly 50 percent of this year’s graduating class of UNM medical students chose residencies in primary care. Last year, UNM’s Primary Care Curriculum was ranked 45th, but McGrew said that was more of a “one-year thing.” There has been a greater emphasis on the office of community faculty, while state funding has helped students specialize and the alumni office has assisted students in training, she said. This curriculum gives students the opportunity to work with underserved communities

with primary care doctors at clinics like One Hope Clinic, she said. Martin Jurado, an incoming medical student at the UNM School of Medicine, is also a research technician within Project ECHO, a UNM program that supports primary care team members practicing in rural and underserved areas both statewide and nationwide. “The Primary Care Curriculum and Rural Medicine Program follow a problem-based learning method that incorporates small group learning and early clinical exposure,” Jurado said. “Also, the UNM Rural and Urban Underserved Program was designed specifically for medical students that are interested in serving underserved population groups in New Mexico. I am sure that these teaching styles and programs are contributors to the high rankings UNM has achieved.” Jurado said 32 out of 33 counties in New Mexico are considered medically underserved, and 12 of those 33 counties are considered rural. Thus, the University developed these programs, allowing students to experience diverse patients and healthcare challenges firsthand. Fabiha Sabin, a senior medical lab science major, said she sees these programs as excellent opportunities for real world experiences, and she hopes to apply to UNM’s Primary Care Program herself. Sabin said U.S. News & World Report’s rankings recognize UNM’s “special flavor” at a national level. “I’m excited to hear that UNM ranks so high…It would help students to think more about applying,” she said, especially if they are from New Mexico.

Courtesy / UNM Health Scinece Center Recbecca Gustaf

Being a part of the UNM School of Medicine helps New Mexico residents feel connected to their communities and return to their hometowns to pursue careers, Sabin said. With the strong support of UNM School of Medicine Dean Paul Roth and others, the program has flourished, McGrew said. The doctors who teach and work at the medical center do not do it for money, but rather because they care, she said. Thus, students see role models that “walk the walk.” McGrew feels the program can

improve by continuing to find ways to honor our rural and community instructors as well as providing more opportunities for students to work in rural, underserved communities. These rankings increase the value and attraction of UNM, Jurado said. This can draw more students, while federal funding for research is more likely to be set aside for these programs, creating primary providers who can improve healthcare across the state and nation, he said. For McGrew, the higher UNM is ranked, the more attention is

drawn to its programs. Students recognize that one of the School of Medicine’s primary goals is to create medical professionals for our state and ensure the goal is being met. “If they want to make a difference in the world and they want to be a doctor, then the University of New Mexico School of Medicine is the place to come,” she said. Elizabeth Sanchez is a reporter for the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Beth_A_Sanchez.

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Thursday, March 30, 2017 / Page 3

UNM develops new diabetes care @Cathy_Daily Two UNM researchers are taking a community-based approach to studying diabetes self-management for low income Hispanic patients, and they have a $2.3 million grant to fund their research. Janet Page-Reeves, lead researcher on the study, said the pair previously worked on a smaller project where they concluded that there are many people in Albuquerque’s Latino community with diabetes, and there is a high rate of people who go undiagnosed. Page-Reeves said the survey found that, out of 100 participants, 59 tested positive for diabetes or prediabetes but only 26 knew about their condition. The study’s community lead, Lidia Regino, took that information and turned it into a program, which is in its fifth year. One Hope Centro de Vida Health Center offers a fivepart class where patients learn about diabetes management from pharmacy or medical students and then meet with medical providers to discuss their individual management plan, she said. “Over time, Lidia had identified that she felt their work at the clinic was having really...amazing results. They were seeing people change their behavior, they felt like it was really working,” Page-Reeves said. So the pair decided to study the program’s success with a scientific approach, she said. Their hypothesis is that a culturally and contextually situated health promotion program will be more successful for individual patients, Page-Reeves said. “If you have diabetes and I tell you, ‘You should join a gym,’ but you are low income, that’s not going to happen,” she said. “If I tell you to walk in your neighborhood, but you live in a neighborhood where that’s not safe, that’s not going to happen.” What people are told to do for their health has to fit with their capacity, Page-Reeves said, and that’s

the contextual piece. “The cultural piece is taking into consideration the things that are important to people in their lives, and not just telling them, ‘Oh, stop eating tortillas,’” she said. “That’s also just not going to happen.” Both researchers are comparing UNMH’s diabetes management program with the program at One Hope. Both are good programs, Page-Reeves said, but the pair just wants to discover what works best for which people. The study will run for three years and will include 240 patients. The researchers were awarded the grant money in November 2016, started gathering data in February and have finally worked out all of the bugs and are ready to tackle the project, Page-Reeves said. Each patient is being asked to identify a person who is a “social support,” who will also participate in the study. This person will give researchers information about the patient, and about the relationship between patient and social support, she said. The grant comes from the PatientCentered Outcomes Research Institute, an organization created by the Affordable Care Act that does research on patient-centered issues of health, Page-Reeves said. “To get funding from (PCORI) you have to engage patients in the process of doing the research, and you also have to choose two different things that have already been proven to work and you have to compare them,” she said. Patient engagement began with the design of their research, as the two enlisted the help of a board, comprised of diabetes patients drawn from the population they’re studying, to help create the research question itself. They also hired their three data collectors from the population of study, Page-Reeves said. “They actually got trained to do phlebotomy, because one of the components of this project is to draw blood,” Regino said. “We decided that it was important that the same person that was meeting with

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the patients was the same person that actually drew the blood.” Training the data collectors was one of the challenges in designing the study, as they needed to learn behavioral health first aid and have access to a secure UNM database to enter information, she said. But hiring data collectors from the community will make it easier for patients to connect with them and ensure that staff interact patiently and respectfully with patients. “We’ve had reports of places here in Albuquerque where people don’t receive that sort of respect when they go in,” she said. “This is a hard population to reach and connect with, because these are people that a lot of times don’t have good medical care, and they may not go to appointments.” Language is another challenge for the researchers, as they believe information needs to be delivered in a person’s preferred language, Regino said. Data collectors also need to be bilingual. “It was quite challenging to design the redcap data collecting tool because everything had to be done in Spanish as well. When we meet with the community participants, we have to take that into account,” she said. “It was quite challenging, but it’s doable because we are doing it.” Since research can take a long time to deliver results, Regino said that patients involved in the study need to remain invested in the meantime. So in their meetings with patients, researchers also include information about diabetes and how patients can take care of themselves. “This project is innovative because we are doing such an intensively community-engaged approach,” PageReeves said. “But it’s also innovative because using the communityengaged approach, our community advisors had such an impact on the design that we proposed.” Cathy Cook is a news reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Cathy_Daily.

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Conceptions Southwest 2017-2018 Editor UNM’s Student Art and Literature Magazine

By Cathy Cook

Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Monday, April 10, 2017.

Term of Office:

Mid-May 2017 through Mid-May 2018.

Requirements:

•This position requires approximately 10 hours per week and entails supervision of a volunteer staff. •Completed at least 18 hours of credit at UNM or have been enrolled as a full time student at UNM the preceding semester •Cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. •The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student throughout the term of office and be a UNM student for the full term. •Some publication experience preferable.

For more information call 277-5656 or email Daven Quelle at daven.quelle@dailylobo.com


LOBO OPINION

4

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Opinion Editor / opinion@dailylobo.com

LETTERS Medical residents are overworked and overstaffed Editor, Your report “UNMH residents face 24hour shifts” (Daily Lobo, 3/27/17) does not mention a big reason for resident stress: the shortage of residents at any given hour in a hospital. This makes many residents overloaded, and likely to cause medical errors. One way hospitals are trying to increase the number of residents on hand is by extending the shift length. This is going to result in greater fatigue, and therefore more medical errors.

Trump’s abortion policies resemble Nazi Germany Editor, The Republicans’ failed American Health Care Act would have effectively dismantled all insurance coverage for abortion; eliminated requirements of essential services to be covered under Medicaid; and defunded Planned Parenthood, a move opposed by 75 percent of Americans. It was reported in January that the U.S. abortion rate is now at the lowest level it’s been Since Roe v. Wade. That is probably due to both expanding contraception coverage, and also the GOP’s “War on Women.” In Israel, abortions are both legal and free. They are covered under insurance. So, why make it harder here especially since we’re buddies with Israel and give them tons of money? The right to a safe and legal abortion is not a religious issue, it’s a human rights issue. As long as the Republican Party continues to use religious beliefs to oppress American women, they are just as guilty of human rights violations as extremists who use Islam to

Unfortunately, the dangerous machismo accruing from some sort of initiation rite by working long hours for freshly-minted MDs in hospitals is just going to get some of them to push themselves even further and not “self-assess” and “ask for help” if understandably fatigued. Other residents may just want to do a single 28-hour shift for their own and family’s convenience in how much time they get to continuously spend for home life, etc. Hospitals too are this way going more with their own convenience, claiming more “efficiency”. All this at the expense of patient safety. Arun Ahuja UNM student

commit atrocities against women and girls. Medicaid currently funds 70 percent of births in the failed state of New Mexico! Republicans have currently added a manager’s amendment to the AHCA allowing states to revoke Medicaid coverage from new mothers who haven’t found a job within two months after giving birth. When’s the last time you heard a PRO-LIFE Trump Republican call for higher wages, paid maternity leave, sick leave, universal child care, expanding the Marxist socialist safety net? On February 28, 1933 the right-wing Fascist Nazi regime banned birth control organizations on the grounds that they were Marxist! In January 1941 the Nazis categorically banned the production and distribution of contraceptives. According to “Weimar and Nazi Germany - Continuities and Discontinuities,” Panikos Panayi writes, “The pronatalist imperatives of the Nazi regime could not be met with the prevailing climate in German society of relatively easy access to birth control advice and contraceptives, and with the effects of the relaxation of the abortion laws during the Weimar era. The birth control centers, marriage and counseling centers set up during the Weimar Republic, were

shut down by the new Nazi Government or absorbed into the public health offices. This suited the political aims as well as the pronatalist ambitions of the Nazi regime.” Josef Goebbels had put it in more homely terms in 1929, “The mission of the woman is to be beautiful and to bring children into the world. The female bird pretties herself for her mate and hatches the eggs for him. In exchange the mate takes care of gathering the food, and stands guard and wards off the enemy.” On March 30, 2016, President Trump stated there had to be, some form of punishment for women if abortion becomes illegal. Abortion legislation had been incorporated into the German Penal Code on January 1, 1872 in the form that a pregnant woman who purposely caused herself to abort was subject to imprisonment for up to five years. In “Students Against Tyranny - The Resistance of the White Rose,” Inge Scholl writes, “The Nazis tended to view the German woman, despite the concealing verbiage of ‘motherhood’ essentially as a unit of reproduction. Consequently, to prevent the obstacles that the Weimar Republic had allegedly placed in the way of conception and childbirth the Nazis enforced anti

abortion legislation zealously. Between 1934 and 1938 there was a 50 % increase in convictions. They also closed birth control clinics and placed every obstacle in the way of the propagation and distribution of contraceptive devices, practices, and knowledge. These policies were supported and endorsed by the Catholic Church in Germany. The battle for births had, like all Nazi campaigns, an ominously negative side. Only appropriate women, the truly Aryan (White) were encouraged and expected to have offspring prolifically. The fear was Jews, gypsies, the disabled, those suffering from hereditary illnesses, the presumed a-socials would breed and thus degrade the German bloodstock.” “You cannot rebuild your civilization with somebody else’s babies. You’ve got to keep your birth rate up, and that you need to teach your children your values,” King said, paraphrasing remarks he said he’s delivered to audiences in Europe. “In doing so, you can grow your population, you can strengthen your culture, and you can strengthen your way of life.” - Republican United States Representative Steve King Brian Fejer UNM Alumnus

RETRACTION: On Thursday, March 23, the Daily Lobo published a letter titled “Trump will improve women’s situations, pressures.” However, it soon came to our attention that the letter was a hoax. Sandy Timmerman, the alleged author of the letter, informed us she did not in fact submit it to the Daily Lobo. The letter has since been retracted, and the Daily Lobo sincerely apologizes for the error. We pledge to work to improve our opinion content vetting process to prevent similar incidents in the future..

PhD

Volume 121 Issue 54 Editor-in-Chief David Lynch Managing Editor Jonathan Baca News Editor Matthew Reisen

EDITORIAL BOARD David Lynch Editor-in-chief

Jonathan Baca

Matthew Reisen

Managing editor

News editor

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.

Sports Editor Robert Maler Culture Editor Fin Martinez

Advertising Manager Tyler Narvaez Campus Representative Paul Talley Advertising Representatives Evan Deery Anna Franklin Nichole Harwood Ryan Margaf Nikole McKibben

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Telephone: (505) 277-7527 Fax: (505) 277-7530 news@dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com

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Copy Editors Sam Butler Leanne Lucero

Classified Manager Hannah Dowdy-Sue Classified Representatives Naiyma Martin Setasha Sizemore Lobo Life Coordinator Hannah Dowdy-Sue Advertising Design Amy Byres

The New Mexico Daily Lobo is an independent student newspaper published on Monday and Thursday except school holidays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer session. Subscription rate is $75 per academic year. E-mail accounting@dailylobo.com 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.


@DailyLobo

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Thursday, March 30, 2017 / Page 5

Dance-a-thon raises money for children’s hospitals By Nichole Harwood @Nolidoli1 The fourth annual LoboTHON will be coming to the UNM Johnson Center on April 1 to help raise money for the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals around the nation and UNM Children’s Hospital. LoboTHON is both an event and an organization that hosts events year-round, and the upcoming dance marathon lasts for 13.1 hours and is described as “a party with a purpose.” The idea of LoboTHON was created by UNM alumni Jenna Hagengruber and Kyle Stepp back in the 2013-2014 school year, said Jessica Marrello, executive director of LoboTHON. The very first LoboTHON committee had 14 members in total. The committee has grown substantially since then, with 38 members this year, she said. “LoboTHON was started in honor of Kyle Stepp’s nine best friends who he met while receiving treatment for stage IV bone cancer at the UNM Children’s Hospital,” Marrello said. “Unfortunately, these nine friends passed away, and LoboTHON was started to continue their legacy.” The dance marathon can be found in over 270 colleges and universities all across the country, all raising money for their local Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, she said. There is a ton of planning that goes into this event, since LoboTHON is the largest student-run philanthropy event at UNM, striving to involve every Lobo in the UNM community, Marrello said. “We create strategies to recruit participants or ‘dancers’ and to inspire them to rally around and raise money for our cause,” Marrello said. “Participating in any of our events and contributing to our cause

makes you part of the LoboTHON family, and we are always looking for ways to involve as many Lobos as we can in order to create a community within our organization.” Setting up the event involves working with numerous areas of the University, such as the Student Activities Center, ASUNM, the Dean of Students Office, Office of Student Affairs and the Student Government Accounting Office, Marrello said. LoboTHON additionally coordinates with Miracle Families, which are families who have been impacted by the UNM Children’s Hospital, so they can share their stories with the students, she said. “Students will also be able to hang out with the Miracle Kids all day, and it’s so incredible to see students connect them to the cause,” Marrello said. “The Miracle Kids absolutely love the dance marathon, and members strive to make this a day full of fun, completely dedicated to the kids and their families.” The event serves to simply let the Miracle Kids be kids, so they can forget for a day about their treatment and time in the hospital, she said. To set up for the event, members work with the staff of Johnson Gym and the Physical Plant Department to ensure that all of the electricity for the stage, lighting and sound is set to go, as well as the booking of entertainment and catering for the dance marathon, Morello said. “There are so many moving parts and this year’s Internal Executive Director Sarah Putnam, as well as the Event Operations Director Jordan Torres, have done an absolutely phenomenal job,” she said. Members of LoboTHON communicate with numerous businesses and areas of the University as well as with participants to give them ideas and creative tips for fundraising, as well

Courtesy / Lobothon

as incentives for raising a certain amount, Morello said. “We also try to think of creative ways we can raise money within the event, while simultaneously giving dancers the best experience possible,” Morello said. “Cheesy as it may sound, teamwork makes the dream work, and our event could not be successful or even possible without combining the efforts of the LoboTHON committee, the University and the Albuquerque community.”The current fundraising goal for this year’s LoboTHON is $50,000, she said. Participants in the dance marathon will come to the event and attempt to stand for the entire 13.1 hours. For those who can’t, there is a variety of fun activities during the event, such as Zumba, Bubble Soccer and a Rave Power Hour, Morello said.

The event also involves asking friends and family for donations to the UNM Children’s Hospital, she said. One requirement that has been changed from past years is implementing a $5 registration fee that goes directly to the hospital, she said. “Since we provide two free meals and tons of free entertainment, we felt that this $5 donation was a reasonable amount in exchange for an amazing event,” Morello said. Having the event at UNM makes it convenient for students to attend, she said. “We are extremely fortunate to have our hospital so close to campus, as we can see the change we are able to make right across the street,” Morello said. LoboTHON gives local businesses the chance to show their philanthropic side, as

well as the services they can offer to UNM students, she said. “We try to involve the Albuquerque community and make it a mutually beneficial relationship with all of the businesses we work with,” Morello said. “This year we have seen a lot of UNM Alumni stepping up to support us which is also wonderful.” Those interested in registering for the event can register at events.dancemarathon.com.“If we’re going to reach our goal of $50,000, we need every Lobo on board. This event is amazing and there is no experience like it — you won’t want to miss it,” she said. Nichole Harwood is a reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Nolidoli1.

HAPS The Entertainment Guide

Thursday

Truman Health Services Free and confidential Rapid HIV Testing 12:30-5pm 801 Encino Place NE, Suite B-6 www.unmtruman.com Imbibe Throwback With Flo 10pm 1/2 Price Drinks all night Holiday Bowl $3 Thursdays!!! $3 Shoes $3 Games $3 Pints $3 Food Specials Karaoke On The Lanes From 9:30pm to 2am! Big O Tires Find a location closest to you! 6519 Menaul Blvd NE Hours: 7am-6pm 1141 Juan Tabo NE Hours: 7am-6pm 3808 Isleta Blvd SE Hours: 8am-6pm 24th Annual Cesar Chavez Day www.cesarchaveznm.org

Calvary Albuquerque 6:30pm, Calvary Nob Hill in Lobo Theater This outreach engages skeptics through short TED Talk-style discussions, followed by live Q & A. Through intellectual discussion, we hope to reach those who question Christianity.

SnagAToke.com Your online smoke shop headquarters! go to www.snagatoke.com and use promo code Lobo420 for 10% off entire cart and receive free shipping! Outpost Performance Space Bobby-Bradford Vinny Golia Quartet 7:30 pm Trumpet-woodwind avant masters. Student discounts and rush tickets available outpostspace.org Passion for Fashion Squeeze Your Penny Shop Passion for Fashion 50% All Clothing with Coupon! Open from 11AM-5PM (505) 255-1227 1623 San Pedro NE Albuquerque

THUR

BOBBY BRADFORD-

MAR VINNY GOLIA QUARTET

30

Trumpet-Woodwind Avant Masters

7:30PM

FRI

MAR

31

ROUST THE HOUSE Teen performance night

A Women’s Night Feature in honor of Women & Creativity month

7:30PM

SAT

ABQ GRAND SLAM POETRY

APR SLAM CHAMPIONSHIP

1

7:30PM

SUN

DAVID MURRAY-KAHIL

APR EL’ ZABAR DUO

9

Saxophone & Percussion 7:30PM Modern Music Masters

STUDENT DISCOUNT & RUSH TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR ALL SHOWS AT OUTPOST

210 Yale SE 505.268.0044 www.outpostspace.org


HAPS dailylobo.com

PAGE 6 / THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017

Friday

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

The Entertainment Guide Outpost Performance Space 7:30pm, Roust the House Teen Performance Night A women’s night feature in honor of Women and Creativity Mmonth Student discounts and rush tickets available outpostspace.org

Imbibe Happy Hour all night: $3 Well & $5 Premium Frisky Fridays for the ladies: $5 Goose Martinis & Cosmos, $5 Sofia’s DJ 10p

Passion for Fashion Resale Thrift Boutique Squeeze Your Penny Shop Passion for Fashion 50% All Clothing with Coupon! Open from 11AM-5PM (505) 255-1227 1623 San Pedro NE Albuquerque

Holiday Bowl 1 hour - $11/person 2 hours - $14/person From 9:30pm-2:00am Stop by to see why we are the best spot to bowl!

SnagAToke.com Your online smoke shop headquarters! go to www.snagatoke.com and use promo code Lobo420 for 10% off entire cart and receive free shipping! 24th Annual Cesar Chavez Day www.cesarchaveznm.org The Daily Lobo From 12-2pm at the Duck Pound. Make your political statement be heard and voice your opinion. Give thoughtful responses to issues and questions in current politics

Truman Health Services Free HIV testing and free pizza SRC Commons Building Between 11am and noon 272-1312 www.unmtruman.com Big O Tires Find a location closest to you! 6519 Menaul Blvd NE Hours: 7am-6pm 1141 Juan Tabo NE Hours: 7am-6pm 3808 Isleta Blvd SE Hours: 8am-6pm Southwest Film Center Get A Job 6 & 8pm, SUB Basement Theater (enter through the south doors) Public $5; Faculty & Staff $4 Students $3 Cash and LoboCash only

Saturday Imbibe Happy Hour till 7pm DJ 10p Passion for Fashion Resale Thrift Boutique Squeeze Your Penny Shop Passion for Fashion 50% All Clothing with Coupon! Open from 9AM-1PM (505) 255-1227 1623 San Pedro NE Outpost Performance Space Student discounts and rush tickets available outpostspace.org 24th Annual Cesar Chavez Day Saturday April 1, 2017 9:00AM Naming Ceremony at Dolores Huerta Gateway Park 10:30 AM March Begins at Gateway Park (Isleta Blvd & Bridge SW) Noon to 3:30PM Festival at NHCC (4th & Bridge SW) Kid’s Corner, Food, and Preformances (505)-385-2773 www.cesarchaveznm.org

24th Annual César Chávez Day! SATURDAY APRIL 1, 2017

9:00 AM—Naming ceremony @ Dolores Huerta Gateway Park 10:30 AM—March begins @ Gateway Park (Isleta Blvd & Bridge SW) Noon to 3:30 PM—Festival at NHCC (4th & Bridge SW) kid’s corner, food, cultural performances, exhibits...

Free Concert by Kiko Villamizar & Calle 66 Honored guest: Dolores Huerta! 505-385-2773 www.cesarchaveznm.org

Southwest Film Center Get A Job 6 & 8pm, SUB Basement Theater (enter through the south doors) Public $5; Faculty & Staff $4 Students $3 Cash and LoboCash only

SnagAToke.com Your online smoke shop headquarters! go to www.snagatoke.com and use promo code Lobo420 for 10% off entire cart and receive free shipping!

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The Entertainment Guide

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The Daily Lobo is seeking measured, thoughtful responses to issues and questions in current politics. Interested in debating an opposing view? We challenge you to present your position with appropriate conduct.

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PAGE 8 / THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017

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Oboist hopes to inspire joy

Courtesy / Lisa White

By Ariel Lutnesky @Ariellunesky

DAILY LOBO new mexico

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Become the 2017-2018 Editor Requirements: •Must be a student enrolled at the University of New Mexico, •Enrolled in 6 credit hours or more at UNM for current and preceding semester. •Have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester.

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For more information call 277-5656 or email Daven Quelle at daven.quelle@dailylobo.com

In our childhood many of us were handed a recorder that enabled us to learn how to play music. Hardly any of us stuck to it, however, and some of us used it as a springboard to other types of instruments, like the flute or the oboe. That’s exactly what Lisa White did. “When I was 13, a teacher suggested that I take up the oboe, and not knowing the oboe from a bar of soap, I said yes,” said White, a graduate student studying music. It was a suitable decision. White said that each instrument’s players have a personality type, and she fits that of the oboe’s: Diligent, hardworking and stubborn. In high school, White played in the Johannesburg Youth Orchestra and the National Youth Wind Band, both in South Africa. She said that she really enjoyed playing in an ensemble, so when it came time to pick a college after high school, she knew music would guide her decision. White’s father, an engineer, pushed for her to apply for an engineering degree, too. She struggled a bit in that field, and one of her teachers tried to help her not be discouraged. “I’m not discouraged,” White said she told them. “I’m relieved I’m not going to study engineering and can go and study music.” White ended up going to the University of Cape Town to pursue her musical career. It was there that

she met a UNM professor who was there to perform one of his concerts and give a master class. He encouraged White to apply to UNM for graduate school. “I really liked his teaching style, so when I was making applications to grad school, that was really a big encouragement. Knowing him made it a lot easier to travel overseas than to go to somewhere where I didn’t know anybody and knew nothing about,” White said. “Coming here, I didn’t know anybody other than him. But at least that was one person.” White said that it was hard to deal with the homesickness, but being a musician helped her to find people. “Coming here as a musician, you automatically get plugged into a community because you’re playing in ensembles,” White said. “You’re already making friends with the people that you’re playing with.” Moving here finally allowed White to find music’s true purpose, too, she said. “Obviously, I like music and I want to perform, and that was the first reason, but why? What is the reason for that?” White said. “I had to come all the way here to discover that, which was exciting. I realized that the point of music for me is to play for people so that they can experience wonder; they can experience joy. That’s my goal as a musician — to perform in such a way that it makes people alive.” White said she loves the people here and the high standards that the UNM Music Department has. “One of the nice things about

being a grad student is that you get more freedom to choose the repertoire that you’d like to pursue,” White said. “All of the repertoire that I’m playing (in my upcoming concert) has been sort of an exploration.” Throughout her musical education, White said she has learned that music always has two sides. “When you think about music, when you approach music, learn about music, you’re constantly holding two things in balance,” White said. “You’re aiming for perfection, so that’s one side, but the other side is not being a perfectionist. (There’s) the challenge between pushing yourself and not burning out and doing music that you want to play.” As for White’s future plans, she’s not sure exactly what she will do. She said she would like to play in an orchestra, but the prospect of freelance teaching the oboe back in Cape Town or staying in academia would be an acceptable outcome as well. White said her artistic goal is to explore more of the South African oboe repertoire. Not many people play it, according to White. For now, White said her upcoming recital will contain many pieces that are exotic, and all from the 20th century. White’s concert will be on Thursday evening at from 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in Keller Hall. Ariel Lutnesky is a freelance reporter for the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at culture@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Ariellunesky.

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Athletics symposium tackles problems in college sports By Cathy Cook @Cathy_Daily College athletes from different sports teamed up Monday at the Second Symposium on College Athletics to discuss ideas of equity and fairness both on and off the field. The symposium was sponsored by the Lobo Scholars Program, which brings together the Honors College and athletics department to support students and student athletes. It featured 15 presentations on topics ranging from the challenges created by club sport structure to the societal pros and cons of football. Ryan Swanson, a UNM professor and one of the Lobo Scholars Program directors, said that this year’s symposium was shorter than last year’s because presentations were limited to only seven minutes — but he still thought the event began good conversations. The symposium was broken into five parts: athletics today, stories you might not know, ethical questions, new ideas, and a vision for the future. Two presentations that got the most audience response discussed whether or not student athletes should be paid. Currently, student athletes are not allowed to receive pay and benefits given to employees due to NCAA rules, but do receive compensation through things like scholarships. Attorney and UNM professor Amelia Nelson examined the question from the perspective of First Amendment rights and argued that college athletics are headed to

a system where athletes could receive royalties based on the use of their name or image. The question of whether and how to pay college athletes is complicated, she said. “With the seven minute presentation it leaves so much (out), it’s like flying across the tip of an iceberg,” she said. “The bottom line is, when it comes down to student athletes and how much work they perform day in and day out, so much of their work goes to the benefit of the educational system and the member institution.” Nelson, who is researching antitrust laws and the First Amendment, said there is a lot of money generated by college athletics that athletes never see. Many member institutions do not receive the revenue either, because it gets filtered out into different businesses and up to the NCAA. “When you look at EA Sports or something like that where they have the name, the image, and the likeness of one of these famous athletes that ends up going pro, they make millions of dollars off that. That individual athlete is never paid for it, because (being paid) makes them ineligible for the sport they play,” she said. This particular issue has prompted the filing of many lawsuits, Nelson said, and the need to discuss the issue is long overdue. Derek Sokoloff, a Student Success Manager in athletics, and Kene Okonkwo, a UNM junior and student athlete, also presented on the question of paying student athletes. They examined the history of the NCAA’s rules and the time commitment and academic requirements for student athletes.

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Former UNM basketball player Devine Williams sits during an athletic symposium UNM held on Monday, March 27, 2017 at the SUB. The event included assistant coaches and past athletes from UNM talking about the athletic department and what it is to be an athlete at the University.

If the University were to break up the amount of money generated by athletics, UNM would have to come up with about $15 million dollars in order to pay 86 athletes on scholarship, a calculation based on the amount of money the NCAA makes off each student athlete. A lot of money comes from T.V. contracts, Sokoloff said, which UNM has firsthand experience with after their ESPN game this year brought in $2.5 million. “Academically speaking, there’s a lot of things that our athletes miss out on,” he said. “In the current system put in place by the NCAA, I do believe that student athletes deserve some kind of compensation due to the fact that the majority of students are exploited.” Regenerating money into the athletic department or programs sponsored by the athletic depart-

ment could benefit the athletes, Sokoloff said, even if student athletes were not directly paid. “I remember when I went to an A&M game when Johnny Manziel was playing,” Okonkwo said. “Texas A&M had two jerseys, they didn’t have Manziel of course, but they were selling two jerseys and they were running for $60 and everyone knew whose jersey that was.” Another recurring theme was the importance of supporting black student athletes. Graduate student Devon Williams presented on mentoring black student athletes at the African American Cultural Center on campus. He pointed to his own experience of mentorship in athletics but not academics, and argued that student athletes are pushed towards degrees instead of careers.

Trajuan Briggs, a graduate assistant in athletics, presented on black student athlete graduation rates and the microaggressions black student athletes face. He argued that schools need to help athletes better adapt to college. Identity crisis is a big issue that people do not recognize on college campuses, Briggs said. “You can’t have your student athletes adapt to only being athletes,” he said. “I believe that we need to evaluate what the term ‘student athlete’ truly should be and not what it was created for. That would make a lot of people take pride in who’s in their classroom, and whose classroom they’re actually in.” Student athletes need to be taken more seriously in the classroom, he added. “I think, not only UNM, but people across the country need to have more black faculty in different departments — more than your African American classes that are usually not taken seriously,” Briggs said. The event closed with a presentation by Finnie Coleman, chair of the UNM Athletic Council, encouraging athletes to create new traditions that will connect the student body to athletics long after they graduate. “Student athletes need to demonstrate for the rest of the student body how to dream out loud and move forward to try and achieve those dreams,” he said. Cathy Cook is a news reporter at the Daily Lobo. She can be reached at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @Cathy_Daily.

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PAGE 10 / THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

SWFC PREVIEW

Film about post-college blues to play in SUB By Fin Martinez @FinMartinez On Friday, the ASUNM Southwest Film Center will be screening 2016’s “Get a Job.” This film is directed by Dylan Kidd, whose credits include 2002’s “Roger Dodger,” 2004’s “P.S.,” and two episodes of the cult Adult Swim series “Children’s Hospital.” The film tells the story of Will Davis (Miles Teller), a recent college graduate, who is eagerly setting foot into the real world of video production only to find that the

position he was originally supposed to have was cut by the production company due to downsizing. Desperate for work and money, Will and his girlfriend, Jillian (Anna Kendrick), begin taking hasty jobs and other odd work to survive and achieve their dreams. It goes without saying the film is an optimistic one. This film has been widely panned by critics and suffered through five long years of production, and was considered to be dead on arrival by the time of its release. “Get a Job” had a limited release, which would explain its lack of notoriety.

As for who would like this film, it would be unfair to recommend it due to its reputation. It’s good for having on in the background, if nothing else. It’s a film for the sake of being a film, and if it’s a film you want, it’s a film you’ll get with this feature. “Get a Job” will be playing at the SUB theater on Friday and Saturday at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m., and on Sunday at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Fin Martinez is the culture editor for the Daily Lobo. He can be reached at culture@dailylobo. com or on Twitter @FinMartinez.

Courtesy / CBS Films

Lobo Life campus calendar of events Thursday-Sunday, March 30-April 2, 2017

Current Exhibits Cross Currents: China Exports and the World Responds 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology In the early 1700s the Chinese reorganized their porcelain production to cater to Western demand. This exhibition highlights that history and its impact on cultural dynamics spanning hundreds of years and featuring dozens of ceramics from around the world in exploring this phenomenon. Earth, Fire and Life: Six Thousand Years of Chinese Ceramics 10:00am-4:00pm, Tuesday-Saturday Maxwell Museum of Anthropology Exhibition of historic and contemporary Chinese ceramics from ancient times to the 21st century, where culture, political discourse and aesthetics combine. The Art of Indigenous Scholarship 8:00am-2:00am Monday-Thursday 8:00am-9:00pm Friday 10:00am-6:00pm Saturday 12:00pm-2:00am Sunday Zimmerman Library, Herzstein Latin American Gallery Celebrating the contributions of indigenous faculty at UNM. Stories from the Camera Tuesday-Friday: 10:00am-4:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-8:00pm University Art Museum An exhibition about pictures and the stories they have inspired. Drawn from the UNM Art Museum’s extensive photography collection. Land and Water: Recent Acquistions of the University Art Museum Tuesday-Friday: 10:00am-4:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-8:00pm University Art Museum An exhibition of three New Mexican artists—Basia Irland, Alan Paine Radebaugh, and Zachariah Reike, focus on the environment. A Painter’s Hand: The Monotypes of Adolph Gottlieb Tuesday-Friday: 10:00am-4:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-8:00pm University Art Museum This exhibition features Adolph Gottlieb’s little-known monotypes that he worked on between the summer of 1973 and February 1974. An intimate suite of works created within the last 9 months of the artist’s life, these monotypes are a summation of Gottlieb’s 50year career as a painter. Recording Southern New Mexico: The Botanical Drawings of Edward Skeats Tuesday-Friday: 10:00am-4:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-8:00pm Van Deren Coke Gallery, University

Art Museum Exhibit features collection of botanical watercolors by Edward Miall Skeats, a chemist, geologist, and engineer. Curated by Joyce Szabo, Ph.D., Guest Curator, University of New Mexico Art Museum, and Professor, Department of Art and Art History, University of New Mexico.

This event is an informal opportunity to get to know the LAII staff and faculty, and to meet other undergraduate and graduate students who are in the Latin American Studies program, who are thinking about joining the program, or who just have an interest in Latin America. Nachos will be served for lunch.

Vestiges 10:00am-4:00pm Wednesday and Friday CFA Downtown Studio CFA Downtown Exhibition features Marcie Rose Brewer’s “Vestiges,” an installation which transforms everyday objects into contemporary metaphors through the use of visual language that interconnects with traditional Cherokee artistic forms.

Food Not Bombs! 12:00-1:00pm In Front of UNM Bookstore Free lunch in front of the UNM Bookstore. Every Thursday at noon. Everyone is welcome.

Jessica Penrod BFA Exhibition Tuesday-Friday: 10:00am-4:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-8:00pm John Sommers Art Gallery

Thursday Campus Events

SeedBroadcast SWAP at Re|Source 8:00am-5:00pm UNM George Pearl Hall Rainosek Gallery SWAP is a community-based, interactive, grow kit for openpollinated seed and resource sharing and for uplifting the Culture in agri-Culture through art and storytelling. Bring saved seeds to share, pick up seeds, take what you need, and be sure to leave some for others. Biology Department - 26th Annual Research Days 9:30am-5:00pm Castetter Hall, First Floor This event features presentations of student research and the celebration of discovery and education in the biological sciences. At 3:30pm in Castetter 100 there will be a departmental presentation by Michael Andersen, UNM Biology Assistant Professor as part of the days events. College Assistance Migrant Program (CAMP) Fifth Annual Farm Worker Awareness Week 11:00am-2:00pm SUB Plaza Atrium The event, hosted by CAMPerinos is dedicated to bringing awareness to issues many of our Southwest farmworkers face, as well as honoring local farmers, and agricultural advocates including Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta. LAII Open House – Nacho Usual Thursday 11:30am-1:30pm LAII Conference Room

Kristina Jacobsen Book Event 3:00-5:00pm UNM Bookstore Based on 2 ½ years of singing and playing with Navajo county western bands, her book, The Sound of Navajo Country: Music, Language and Diné Belonging, examines cultural intimacy and generational nostalgia on the Navajo (Diné).

Lectures & Readings Pathology Seminar Series 8:00am-9:00am Fitz Hall, room 303 Eric J. Warm, MD,FACP, Richard W. & Sue P. Vilter Professor of Medicine; program director, Internal Medicine, University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center present “Resident Assessment - Bust Work or High Value?” OSE Seminar Series Spring 2017 11:00am-12:00pm CHTM Room 103 Dr.Igor Savukov, Los Alamos National Laboratory, presents “Not Enough Information Yet for Lecture Name!” Career Diversity for Historians Discussion on Graduate School 12:00-1:00pm Mesa Vista Hall History Common Room Dr. Mylynka K. Cardona of the Texas General Land Office, presents “Going Alt-Ac: How Graduate School Prepares You for a Job ‘On the Outside’.” Dr. Cardona will share her thoughts and advice on how her graduate training prepared her to serve as the map curator for the Texas General Land Office. Neuroscience Seminar Series 12:00-1:00pm Fitz Hall, Room 303 Nathan Pentkowski, PhD, Department of Psychology, presents “5-HT1B Receptors and Psychostimulant Addiction: A Novel Therapeutic Approach?” Pediatric Grand Rounds 12:00-1:00pm

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

BBR Pavilion, Room 1500 Presentation by research consultant Rachel Sebastian, MA. Internal Medicine Grand Rounds 12:30-1:30pm North Campus, Domenici Center Auditorium Judith Tallman, HIM director of Education, presents “DOIM Documentation Best Practice (ICD - 10 Update).” El Centro De La Raza Immigration Series 12:30-1:30pm Mesa Vista Hall, Room 1153 El Centro presents a lecture on immigration, “Laws & Policies.” CQuIC Seminar Series 3:30-4:30pm Physics & Astronomy, Room 190 Michael J. Biercuk, University of Sydney, presents “Breaking Bad: Quantum Verification in Correlated Noise Environments.” Biology Department - 26th Annual Research Days Lecture 3:30-4:30pm Castetter Hall, Room 100 Michael Andersen, UNM, presents “The Avian Tree of Life in the Phylogenomics Era.” Paws for Poison Prevention 5:00-6:00pm The Lawn in Front of Domenici Center In honor of the New Mexico Poison and Drug Information Center’s 40th anniversary at the College of Pharmacy, students at the college have organized this special event to bring awareness to potential poisons for our pets.

Theater & Film Passengers - Mid Week Movie Series 3:30-5:30pm SUB Theater A spacecraft traveling to a distant colony planet and transporting thousands of people has a malfunction in its sleep chambers. As a result, two passengers are awakened 90 years early. $3/ $2.50/ $2.

Art & Music 2017 John Donald Robb Composers’ Symposium: Lecture Concert 9:30-10:45am Keller Hall Lecture concert presented by Moshe Shulman. Junior Trumpet Recital 6:00-7:30pm Keller Hall Featuring Ariel White, attend.

free

to

UNM ARTS Lab Visiting Expert Series: NoiseFold Performance 6:00-7:30pm University ARTS Lab The staging and premiere of a new live cinema and sound work titled, “The Ten Thousand Things”. Admission is free and open to the public. Graduate Oboe Recital 8:00-9:30pm Keller Hall Featuring Lisa White, free to attend.

Sports & Recreation Intramural Archery Doubles Event 7:00-8:00pm Johnson Center, South Gym Jitterbugs Anonymous! 8:30-10:30pm Johnson Gym, Aerobics Room B553 Learn how to swing dance.

Student Groups & Gov’t Genomics Journal Club 9:00-10:00am CTRC 240 Immunology Journal Club Meeting 9:30-10:30am Fitz Hall, Room 389 Albuquerque Christian Impact 9:30-10:30am SUB Alumni Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Journal Club 12:00-1:00pm Biomedical Research Facility, Room 218 Cell and Molecular Basis of Disease (CMBD) Club 12:00-1:00pm Fitz Hall, Room 303 Soka Gakkai International Buddhist Association Meeting 3:30-4:30pm SUB Amigo Cardiovascular Physiology Journal Club 4:00-5:00pm Fitz Hall, Room 205 Albuquerque Christian Impact 4:00-5:30pm SUB Mirage/ Thunderbird Advanced Lobo Leaders Meeting 4:00-10:00pm SUB Cherry/ Silver ASUNM Emerging Lobo Leaders Meeting 5:00-6:30pm SUB Trail/ Spirit Campus Crusade for Christ Weekly Meeting 6:00-9:00pm SUB Santa Ana A & B

Campus Calendar continued on page 11

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crossword

Mikhail Squared (Level 1) By Eddie Wyckoff

White to move and mate in 2, from Mikhail Chigorin vs. Mikhail Davidov, St. Petersburg, 1874. Mikhail is a popular name in Russia. Solution to last puzzle: 1.c7 Rd6+ [For best defense, Black should prepare for a losing (but complicated) queen vs. rook endgame immediately, e.g.: 1...Rd3 2.c8Q Kb2] 2.Kb5 Rd5+ 3.Kb4 Rd4+ 4.Kb3 Rd3+ 5.Kc2 Rd4 [It is still better to enter into a KQKR ending, e.g.: 5...Rf3 6.c8Q Rf2+ 7.Kd1 Rf1+ 8.Ke2 Rb1] 6.c8R [6.c8Q?? Rc4+ 7.Qxc4 stalemate] 6...Ra4 7.Kb3 which wins the Ra4 or mates. Want to learn how to read this? Visit www.learnchess.info/n Suggestions? Comments? lobochesspuzzle@gmail.com

sudoku

Level 1 2 3 4 March 27th issue puzzle solved

ACROSS 1 They broke their 108-year World Series drought in 2016 5 Medical picture 9 Gives out 14 Lustrous gem 15 “Bloom County” reporter 16 Very small 17 Dean’s list honorees 19 Pasture sound 20 Add to the pot 21 Electronic sci-fi antagonist 23 “!Dios __!” 24 Cannes cup 25 Thiamine and riboflavin 28 FBI operative 29 Number before vier 31 Spring bloomer 32 Flip (through) 34 Son of Zeus and Hera 36 In tune 37 Two-variable marketing experiment 40 Diving bird 43 Way out yonder 44 Inscribe 48 After morays, say 50 Mined matter 52 Mexican gold 53 First novel in Willa Cather’s Great Plains trilogy 55 Apartment sign 57 Go bad 58 Under the weather 59 Javier __, first Spanish actor to win an Oscar 60 “Good __!” 62 Classification suggested by the beginning of 17-, 25-, 37- and 53Across 65 Not always helpful reply to “Who’s there?” 66 Like bad fried food 67 Shed tools 68 Early fur trader 69 Ties the knot 70 Joint possession word

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

By Neville Fogarty

DOWN 1 Like beachfront property 2 Steal the spotlight from 3 Cuban dictator overthrown by Castro 4 Nasty remarks 5 Marvel Comics mutants 6 __ Tin Tin 7 PC key 8 Super Mario World dinosaur 9 Decorate elaborately 10 End of a general’s URL 11 Low-fat frozen dessert 12 Many a new hire 13 “If you will” 18 Fizzled out 22 __ crossroads 25 First interracial coed college in the South 26 Tries to win 27 Canine ailment 30 Chinese zodiac animal 33 One-named Italian male model

3/30/17 4/12/17 March 27th issue puzzle solved Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

35 “The Fault in Our __”: 2014 film 38 Nickname for a 2000s tabloid item 39 Anger 40 Black Sea republic 41 Police paperwork 42 High-and-mighty sort 45 “Just like I said” 46 Climbing plant

3/30/17 4/12/17

47 Disordered yet appealing person 49 Salon application 51 Dutch town 54 Nudge 56 Weed B Gon maker 59 School restroom sign 61 Confessional rock genre 63 Fabrication 64 Not up-to-date

Lobo Life campus calendar of events Thursday-Sunday, March 30-April 2, 2017

Campus Calendar continued from pg 10 Lobo Toastmasters Meeting 6:30-7:30pm SUB Trailblazer/ Spirit Students for Life UNM Meeting 6:30-8:00pm SUB Thunderbird/Mirage Intervarsity Christian Meeting 6:30-10:00pm SUB Acoma A & B

Fellowship

Bernie Sanders @ UNM Meeting for Young Progressives Demanding Action 7:00-8:00pm SUB Luminaria UNM Dream Team Meeting 7:00-9:00pm SUB Fiesta A & B Muslim Student Association Iyad Burnat Talk 7:00-9:00pm SUB Lobo A & B Sprechtisch Meeting 7:30-10:00pm 108 Vassar Dr SE

Campus Events Biology Department - 26th Annual Research Days 9:30am-8:00pm Castetter Hall, First Floor This event features presentations of student research and the celebration of discovery and education in the biological sciences. At 3:30pm in Castetter 100 there will be a keynote lecture by Dr. Jonathan T. Overpeck as part of the day’s events. UNM School of Architecture and Planning Open House 2:00-5:00pm George Pearl Hall The School of Architecture and Planning is the only professional school in the state of New Mexico that offers masters and bachelors degrees in architecture, community and regional planning and landscape architecture. The school also offers graduate certificates in historic preservation and regionalism, as well as in urban innovation.

Lectures & Readings

Meetings CL Neuroradiology Conference 2:00-3:00pm Family Medicine Center, Room 420 Journal With The Resource Center 4:00-5:00pm WRC Group Room

friday

Women’s

Surgery Grand Rounds 7:00-8:00am Fitz Hall, Room 203 David Hoang, MD, chief resident, General Surgery, presents “Health Disparities.” Dermatology Grand Rounds 8:00-9:00am UNM Dermatology Clinic, 1021 Medical Arts NE This Dermatology Grand Rounds will be a clinical cases study session.

OB/GYN Grand Rounds 8:00-9:00am North Campus, Domenici Center, Room B116 Katrina Robinson, MD., presents “Surviving Cancer: It takes more than Effective Treatments.” Cell and Molecular Basis of Disease (CMBD) Seminar Series 12:00-1:00pm North Campus, Domenici Center Auditorium Renato J. Aguilera, PhD, professor of biology at the University of California at Berkeley, presents ““From the Study of DNases to AntiCancer Drug Discovery.” LAII PhD Fellows Colloquium 12:00-1:30pm UNM LAII, Conference Room The first LAII PhD Fellows Colloquium highlights the research initiatives of current LAII PhD Fellows, a distinction conferred upon meritorious UNM doctoral students whose research focuses on Latin America or Iberia. Generative VR Arts Lecture 1:00-2:00pm University ARTS Lab This media-rich lecture details collaborative methods and the development of a custom modular software system built in MAX/MSP/ Jitter and illustrate the multiple ways this software can be used. Following the lecture interested participants are invited to take a walk in one of the virtual reality worlds currently in development for a larger hybrid installation combining VR and interactive projection. Crazy Paper: A Book Arts Open House 2:00-3:00pm Zimmerman Library Frank Waters Room 105

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

Book arts (or artists’ books) take the traditional format of the book into the realm of conceptual art, expanding our ideas about how books communicate information and ideas. Join Michael Taylor, Public Services Librarian, for an exploration of examples of book arts from UNM’s Center for Southwest Research & Special Collections. Earth and Planetary Sciences Colloquium Series 3:00-4:00pm Northrop Hall, Room 122 Ed Young, UCLA, presents “Rare isotopologues of Methane, Nitrogen, and Oxygen -advances afforded by high mass resolution gas-source mass spectrometry.” Biology Department - 26th Annual Research Days Lecture 3:15-4:20pm Science & Math Learning Center, Room 102 Dr. Jonathan T. Overpeck, UA, presents “New Perspectives on Future Climate Change Risk and Ecosystem Change.” UNM Philosophy Department Lecture 3:30-5:30pm Mitchell Hall, Room 102 Dr. Samantha Matherne, UC Santa Cruz, present “Aesthetic Autonomy and Norms of Exposure.” Physics and Astronomy Colloquium 4:00-5:00pm Dane Smith Hall, Room 125 Maria Spiropulu, CalTech, presents “The Higgs and beyond: connections and puzzles in particle physics.” Spiropulu will discuss the profound implications of the Higgs boson properties and whether and how the Higgs may be connected to deep questions on the nature of the mass of the neutrinos, dark matter and dark energy.

Theater & Film Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater A young man and his girlfriend hilariously grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college. Brain Candy Live 8:00-9:30pm Popejoy Hall Adam Savage and Michael Stevens lead an interactive, handson, experience in this performance of Brain Candy Live. Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 8:00-10:00pm SUB Theater A young man and his girlfriend hilariously grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college.

Sports & Recreation UNM Men’s Tennis vs. Fresno State 4:00-6:00pm UNM Tennis Complex UNM Women’s Colorado State 5:00-7:00pm Lobo Softball Field

Softball

vs.

UNM Men’s Baseball vs. Fresno State 6:30-8:30pm Santa Ana Star Field

Campus Calendar continued on pg 12

Preview events on the Daily Lobo Mobile app or www.dailylobo.com


dailylobo.com

PAGE 12 / THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 2017

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

DAILY LOBO CLASSIFIEDS CLASSIFIED RATES

classifieds@dailylobo.com www.dailylobo.com 505-277-5656

Looking for You

CLASSIFIED INDEX Announcements Announcements Auditions Fun, Food, Music Garage Sales Health & Wellness Legal Notices Looking for You Lost and Found Services Travel Want to Buy Your Space

For Sale

Audio & Video Bikes & Cycles Computer Stuff Pets For Sale Furniture Textbooks Vehicles for Sale

Employment Child Care Jobs Jobs off Campus Jobs on Campus Internships Jobs Wanted Volunteers Work Study Jobs

Come to Marron Hall and show your UNM ID or send your ad from your UNM email and recieve FREE classifieds in Your Space, Rooms for Rent, and For Sale category. Limitations apply. Student groups recieve a reduced rate of 20¢ per word per issue in the Announcements category.

noB hill 2BDrM apartment with garage. $875/mo +gas/ electric. La Entrada: 505‑924‑1031.

sTuDios w/ Free utilities. Move-in spe-

cial. 1 block from UNM. 1515 Copper NE. $465495/mo. 246-2038. www.kachina‑properties.com

romantic friendship: Ph.D. engineering GPA 3.967 / 4.0 romantic, respectful. Hobbies: botanical prints drawing, cardio workout, Albuquerque and San Francisco area based email usa_ca_2000@yahoo.com or text 1‑650‑426‑8572.

partments. $595-$675 +utilities. Free on-site laundry. Mesa Grande Place (Nob Hill). Call Sky Management, 332‑2722. www.skyabq.com

Services

Rooms For Rent

TuToring ‑ all ages, most subjects.

FeMale rooMMaTe wanTeD, prefer

Experienced Ph.D. 265‑7799.

MaTh & science Tutor. 347‑849‑0400. aBorTion anD counseling Services.

Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242‑7512.

PaPer Due? ForMer UNM instructor, Ph.D., English, published, can help. 254‑9615. MasterCard/ VISA. MaTheMaTics TuToring. 505‑400‑4852. MaTheMaTics, sTaTisTics TuTor.

Billy Brown PhD. College and HS. 505-401-8139, welbert53@aol.com

Apartments www.unMrenTals.coM

Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, courtyards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843‑9642. Open 6 days/week. FroM $475/Mo +utilities. 2BDRM from $550/mo +utilities. No pets. 3425 Smith SE. Tony Olmi laentradareality.com 924‑1031.

1BDrM

aTTracTive sTuDios anD 1BDRMs.

One block south of UNM. Call for details. 268‑0525.

PAYMENT INFORMATION

Pre-payment by cash, check, money order, Visa, MasterCard, American Express or Discover is required.

CLASSIFIED DEADLINE

cnM sTuDios, 1BDRM, 2BDRMS, 3BDRMS, and 4BDRMS. William H. Cornelius, real estate consultant: www.corneliusmgmt.com 243‑2229.

Man seeking woMan for dating and

ON THE WEB

Rates include both print and online editions of the Daily Lobo.

PLACING YOUR AD

Phone: 505-277-5656 Fax: 505-277-7530 Email: classifieds@dailylobo.com In person: Room 107 in Marron Hall. Web: www.dailylobo.com Mail: UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131

1 p.m.. business day before publication.

unM/

Housing Apartments Condos Duplexes Houses for Rent Houses for Sale Housing Wanted Office Space Rooms for Rent Sublets

STUDENT ADVERTISING

7 days of online advertising, and 2 days of print, for $1 per word per week. Graphics can be added to print and online publications for $24.99 per week. Special effects are charged additionally per line: bold, italics, centering, blank lines, larger font, etc. Color is available for $1 per line per day. Logos can be included with text: Black & white is $5 per day. Color is $10 per day.

newly reMoDleD 1 and 2BDRM ap-

For Sale

looking For a woman to live in our

coachella weekenD one! 2 WRIST-

BANDS AND SHUTTLE PASSES FOR SALE! Serious Inquiries only please! Contact Monica @ 505‑399‑9300 for more info.

Child Care caregiver FeMale For 8-year-old

twin boys. Ideal for students in prenursing, OT, Speech. Light cleaning. Minimum wage through private company. 505‑710‑9017.

sTaFF neeDeD For summer and afterschool programs. $10.50/hr. Minimum age 18 with diploma or equivalent. Experience working with children and reliable transportation required. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org

takeover at Lobo Village. Female room. $519/month, May 1 – July 31, 2017. Please email vanannea@unm. edu for more information. resPonsiBle

FrienDly FeMale health sciences student wanted to share house (private upstairs quarters) to provide a little help for our mom. Weekly housekeeping provided. Must love dogs. Beautiful home in NE Heights. Garage. Secure location. Call Kathy at 505‑220‑9758 between 10am & 6pm. looking For lease take-over at Lobo

Village. Male only, $519/mo., through August 22, 2017. Very pleasant roommates. Contact tq343@unm.edu for more info.

Computer Stuff

veTerinary assisTanT/ recePTion‑ isT/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinary stu-

dent preferred. Ponderosa Clinic: 881-8990/ 881‑8551.

retail experinece a plus. Apply only in person. Beeps 3500 central se. No phone calls.

We can create or modify software for you! C++, Python, Java, or web software running on Php, Drupal or Wordpress. 505‑750‑1169.

aniMal lover? iF so, send us an

email to pawsinaction@gmail.com PT pet sitter/ dog walker position. Required: computer, smart phone, valid driver’s license, overnight sitting. Looking to hire? Tap into UNM’s hardworking student population and advertise with the Daily Lobo! Call 277‑5656.

Write Right with SYNERGY Editing: academic, technical, personal, creative, essay, thesis, dissertation • Letters, Memos and Reports • Grant Writing and Proposals • Copy for Websites and Marketing

505-256-7287 Hourly, Page, Project Rates Get SYNERGY GetSynergy505@gmail.com andreson@synergyltd.com looking For a convenient, fun and

fast paced environment to earn some extra $$ just minutes from South Lot? Fresquez Companies, Inc., owner and operator of Macs Steak in the Rough, operator of Village Inn Rio Rancho, and operator of nine airport restaurants, has over 30 positions to fill quickly! Airport restaurant positions are just minutes from South Lot! Positions include: Supervisors, Kitchen Manager, Assistant Manager, Bartenders, Servers, Hosts, Cashiers, Baker & Cooks. Join us for our company job fair on Tuesday March 28th from 2pm-5pm. We will conduct on the spot interviews and conditional job offers to those who qualify! For more information call us at 505‑884‑7484. Dress to impress!

BEFORE CLASS

Register for the course prior to first day of class. Class is $50.00. Download American Red Cross CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE Lifeguard Manual. rescue mask for $15.00. 2017 CLASSES Purchase Go to www.redcross.org for class materials.

1ST DAY WWW.CABQ.GOV/AQUATICS

2017 LIFEGUARD CLASS SCHEDULE

part-time nanny/ mentor/ role model/ companion for 20 year old female twins (special needs). Knowledge of sign language helpful. Send letter of interest to Eddie Ray at Po BoX 3176 albuquerque, nM 87190

Bring swimsuit & towel. Swim 300 yards continuously. Free & Breast stoke only .Perform 10lb brick retrieval in under 1:40 secs. 2 minute water tread. Legs only.

SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION

West Mesa | 836-8718 April 3-13 Mon-Thurs 4pm-8pm Sandia | 291-6279 April 4-20 Tues-Thurs 4pm-8pm

wanTeD young FeMale student for

cusToM soFTware DeveloPMenT!

Animal

PerManenT PT PosTion. Customer/

Jobs Off Campus

college/ young working adult. $300/mo. +utilities. Eubank and Morris. 4BDRM/ 2BA, backyard, driveway. NP. Near neighborhood Walmart. Contact Chelcie Ospino: 505‑249‑9727.

sTarTing May 1, looking for lease

Talin MarkeT is hiring for cashiers and stockers. Flexible scheduling. Apply in-store or online at talinmarket.com

guesthouse and help with the care of my 2 daughters, age 7 and 13. Must be good driver. Hours: 6:30am-8:30am 12 times a month and 6pm-9pm the same 12 days. One or 2 weekends per month for Saturday and Sunday afternoons. Breakfast and dinner, wifi, utilities and guest house off the garden. $150/wk and possibly vehicle. Call 505‑670‑1034.

Highland | 258-2096 April 10-20 Mon, Tues, Thurs 4pm-8pm

Be punctual and attend ALL class dates Pass all in-water lifeguard skills and activities Demonstrate competency in First Aid, CPR, Lifeguard skills. Pass both written tests with an 80% or higher.

UPON COMPLETION

You will receive an American Red Cross Universal Certificate for Lifeguarding/ First Aid/CPR/AED valid for 2 years

SIGNING UP

Please sign up at the pool where the class will be held; if we dont have enough participants before the first day of class, the class may be cancelled. So sign up early!

LOBO LIFEThursday-Sunday, CampusMarch Calendar of Events 30-April 2, 2017 Campus Calendar continued from pg 11

Student Groups & Gov’t Neuroscience Journal Club 9:00-10:00am Fitz Hall, Room 243 ENABL Meeting 12:30-1:30pm SUB Luminaria Secular Student Alliance Meeting 2:00-4:00pm SUB Cherry/ Silver Chinese Christian Campus Fellowship Bible Study 6:00-9:30pm SUB Fiesta A & B, Trail/ Spirit UNM Juggling Club 7:00-11:00pm SUB Plaza Atrium League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) 7:30-8:45pm SUB Cherry/ Silver LULAC Council advances the economic condition, educational attainment, political influence, health, housing and civil rights of the Latino population of Albuquerque and the surrounding area.

SATURDAY

A young man and his girlfriend grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college.

UNM Men’s Baseball vs. Fresno State 2:00-4:00pm Santa Ana Star Field

Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater A young man and his girlfriend grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college.

Student Groups & Gov’t

Art & Music Suzuki Lab School Recital 12:00-1:30pm Keller Hall Noon Recital featuring students studying in the String Lab School under the direction of the UNM Pedagogy Intern Teachers. Free to attend. New Mexcio Philharmonic Sci-Fi Spectacular Concert 8:00-9:30pm Popejoy Hall The New Mexcio Philharmonic presents music from Star Wars, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, and beyond.

Sports & Recreation

Theater & Film

Track & Field Don Kirby Tailwind Invitational 8:00am-5:00pm Albuquerque Convention Center

Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater

UNM Women’s Softball vs. Colorado State 1:00-3:00pm Lobo Softball Field

The National Society of Leadership and Success Speaker Broadcast 11:30am-1:30pm SUB Lobo A & B Anime Club Meeting 4:00-7:00pm SUB Acoma A&B

SUNDAY Theater & Film

Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater A young man and his girlfriend grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college. Imparables 5:00-7:00pm Popejoy Hall Imparables is a Mexican comedy event starring Adrian Uribe and Omar Chaparro. They feature all their characters including el Vitor and La Licenciada Pamela Juanjo, Poncho Aurelio and Ranchero Chilo, Carmelo and Yahairo among others, full of jokes, occurrences, sketches, and various choreographic arrangements.

To submit a calendar listing, email calendar@dailylobo.com

Get a Job - ASUNM Southwest Film Center 6:00-8:00pm SUB Theater A young man and his girlfriend grapple to find desirable employment after graduating college.

Art & Music 50th Anniversary of the Keller Hall Organ Music Faculty Performance 4:00-5:30pm Keller Hall Concert Organist, Dr. Maxine Thevénot performs with Dr. Eric Lau, saxophone, and Dr. John Marchiando, trumpet, in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the Keller Hall Organ. $15. Guest Artist Saxophone Recital 7:30-9:00pm Keller Hall Christopher Creviston, ASU, is internationally recognized as a performer and clinician. Creviston has been featured with some of the world’s top orchestras and wind ensembles, including the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, and National Symphony. $12 / $10 / $5.

Sports & Recreation UNM Men’s Baseball vs. Fresno State 12:00-2:00pm Santa Ana Star Field UNM Women’s Colorado State

Softball

vs.

12:00-2:00pm Lobo Softball Field

Student Groups & Gov’t Chess Club Chess Tournament 9:00am-5:00pm SUB Ballroom A,B & C

League

World Affairs Delegation Model UN Meeting 3:30-5:30pm SUB Trail/Spirit Lutheran Church Missouri Synod Meeting (LCMSU) 5:00-6:00pm SUB Isleta

Want an Event in Lobo Life? 1. Go to www.dailylobo.com 2. Click on the “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! * Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organization or department * Classes, class schedules, personal events or solicitations are not eligible. * Events must be of interest to the campus community. * Events must not require pre-registration.

Preview events on the Daily Lobo Mobile app or www.dailylobo.com


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