NM Daily Lobo 102313

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DAILY LOBO new mexico

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Off the road see Page 4

BRINGING BALKAN TO BURQUE

wednesday October 23, 2013

Law group accused of money mischief by Ardee Napolitano news@dailylobo.com @ArdeeTheJourno

William Aranda / Daily Lobo Randy Edmunds chats with the other members of Goddess of Arno on Monday afternoon. Edmunds plays guitar for the Balkan dance group. See full story Page 5.

Council nixes UNM poll spot by Chloe Henson

assistant-news@dailylobo.com @ChloeHenson5 Albuquerque’s City Council struck down an amendment that would have installed a permanent voting location at UNM at a meeting Monday night. City Councilor Rey Garduño proposed the amendment after speaking to residents in the city’s District 6, which houses the University, who voiced support for an on-campus location. According to the amendment, City Clerk Amy Bailey would have been directed by the City Council to “identify a suitable voting location on the University of New Mexico campus.” Bailey voiced concern over the additional effort it would take to place a voting location at UNM before the Nov. 19 special election. “I understand the argument,” she said. “If we were having the conversation nine months ago, I would have said, ‘No problem, plenty of time, we can figure it out.’ But at this point there are so many things out of our control in a limited time frame. It really concerns me, adding at the last minute.” The council voted down the amendment after a debate over the practicality of adding the location to the campus. According to the Albuquerque Journal, the amendment failed with 5-3 vote. Democratic City Councilors Garduño, Ken Sanchez and Isaac Benton voted in favor of adding the location, while Republican councilors Dan Lewis, Roxanna Meyers, Janice Arnold-Jones, Trudy Jones and Don Harris voted against the amendment. Bailey said among the factors she was concerned about were availability of space, communicating the location to voters and training people to work at the voting location. She said if the council instructed her to find a location, she would “put

Inside the

Daily Lobo volume 118

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forth all her resources” to prepare the voting center, but would not be able to guarantee results. “If you are telling me to do this, I am going to have to basically replan all of the work that we have, to dedicate all of my time, pretty much, to finding this place wherever it may be, which I will do if compelled,” she said. Councilor Jones also expressed concern over the lateness of the change. “To tie the clerk’s hands, by saying it must be on campus when we do not control that vicinity, it could put us in a real bind with our election that we’ve committed to have,” Jones said. But Jones said a location close to the campus would be suitable for students at UNM. “These are young people,” she said. “If they can get to campus, they can get within a block of the campus, because very few live on the campus.” After his amendment was shot down, Garduño voiced his disappointment. “We’re voting to essentially disenfranchise a society who wants to vote,” he said. “And that’s young people.”

Garduño said he would accept part of the blame for not identifying the lack of a voting location at UNM earlier. But he claimed he had addressed the situation in the past. “This is nothing new. I’ve been talking about this for quite a while,” he said. “I’ll take half the blame, if that’s what people want for not having seen it at the very outset that it wasn’t on there.” Councilor Janice Arnold-Jones suggested providing absentee ballots to students to make voting easier. “Since there seems to be some overwhelming hurdles, there might be some extra thing that could be done at the Student Union Building to make absentee applications available and know that they are there, because that would solve much of this,” she said. According to the city of Albuquerque website, applications for absentee ballots can be printed online to be sent into the Office of the City Clerk. Once obtained, absentee ballots can be either hand delivered to the office or mailed in for $1.12 by 7 p.m. on Nov. 19, according to the site.

Britney King / Daily Lobo Members of Albuquerque’s City Council read through the meeting agenda Monday night. The council did not approve an amendment that would have installed a permanent voting location at UNM.

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Promotion problems

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UNM is investigating the Student Bar Association chapter for creating an unauthorized, off-campus bank account and misuse of the money therein, which came from University funds and from law student fees. According to a statement issued by UNM Tuesday afternoon, the University has notified various campus departments, including police, about the incident. “UNM is investigating expenditures made in this unauthorized account to determine if any violations of law or policy have occurred,” the statement read. “A meticulous review by UNM’s Internal Audit Department is currently ongoing. UNM police department has been notified of the audit and will review the findings to determine if further action should be taken.” The issue about the SBA’s funds arose after UNM Law School student Christopher Dodd filed a public records request asking for “any document indicating the approximate total dollar amount believed to have gone missing from the UNM School of Law Student Bar Association’s bank accounts” and obtained a list of bank statements Monday. The bank account was created by the SBA with the New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union.

The statements, which showed the account’s transactions from April 2012, included expenditures at various stores, such as a $200.83 expenditure at Tiffany’s in San Francisco, a $146.74 expenditure at a Hyatt Hotel and repeated expenditures at Zen Nail Spa totalling $118. The statements also showed repeated transactions in bars, such as a $66.89 total bill at Zinc Wine Bar, and in coffee shops, such as a $51.01 bill at a Satellite. Utility and insurance transactions, including repeated expenditures at Qwest totalling $250.83 and a $202.70 expenditure at Geico, were present. Cash withdrawals, the single largest of which was $303.21, were also listed in the statements. In an email sent Monday, Dodd said he let the student body of the law school know about the document. “I felt that as the issue concerns our money, every student is entitled to see the records,” he said. According to the statement, UNM is also ready to involve state officials into the investigation. “As it required by law and University policy, UNM has also notified the (New Mexico) State Auditor of a possible misuse of funds and will send the results of the internal investigation to that office when it is completed,” according to the statement. “University Counsel and UNM

see Audit PAGE 3

Scientist: ‘we got some strange, early results’ UNM-NMSU team probes breast cancer gene by Stephanie Hoover news@dailylobo.com @stephchoover

As Breast Cancer Awareness Month kicks in, UNM scientist Eric Prossnitz and NMSU scientist Jeffrey Arterburn continue their ongoing fight against the disease. Prossnitz and Arterburn have been working together for about 10 years studying a new type of estrogen receptor, which would show potential ways to treat and diagnose breast cancer. “We studied and helped characterized … GPR30, which is a completely different type of estrogen receptor than the nuclear estrogen receptor that’s such an important characteristic for the diagnosis of what’s the best treatment of a breast cancer,” Arterburn said. Prossnitz, a professor of cell biology and physiology, and Arterburn, a regents professor of chemistry and biochemistry, have been working on uncovering this receptor with a team comprising members from both universities. The receptor could also be used to identify the presence of certain lung and endometrial cancers.

The two started studying the GPR30 receptor as a side project after Prossnitz learned about the receptor at a department presentation in 2002, he said. He said initial funding came from the Cowboys for Research Foundation and NMSU’s Tough Enough to Wear Pink campaign. He said some initial oddities especially piqued his interest. “We got some strange, early results that were sort of bizarre,” Prossnitz said. “It had to do with where the receptor was mostly expressed in the cell and so forth.” This inspired the researchers to continue with their research and start applying for grants, Prossnitz said. Grants have come from the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute. They have also received financial support of about $200,000 from foundations connected to UNM, he said. Prossnitz estimates that overall, his team has received just under $5 million from various sources to fund the research. Arterburn said the first thing doctors want to know when a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer is if it is estrogen receptor positive – that there are detectable levels of estrogen receptor protein in a tumor, which encourages the tumor to grow. And

see Cancer PAGE 2

TODAY

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PAGETWO WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2013

Cancer

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the duo hopes that a drug they are currently developing would counter the natural hormone estrogen and prevent growth, Arterburn said. “We’ve been working on this other estrogen receptor, GPR30, that actually can deactivate it by some of the drugs that are meant to block the action of the nuclear receptor,” he said. “And so in combination with a program of screening small molecules, we have identified molecules that are selective for specific estrogen receptor types. We’re actively working on new leads as part of drug discovery efforts to try to develop more selective agents that will be able to control the action of estrogen in cancer.” Prossnitz said women who need treatment for breast cancer take the drug Tamoxifen for up to five years to inhibit estrogen receptors. But the drug stimulates GPR30 and, consequently, cancer cells. This can cause mutations and can make the cancer resistant to Tamoxifen, he said. “In that case, the antagonist inhibitor that we’ve discovered could be used in some way on those resistant cancers,” Prossnitz said. “Either you could use right away in combination with Tamoxifen, or you could use it later when it’s resistant to Tamoxifen.”

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But all of this information is still speculative, and they need to do further research in animal models, he said. They are currently into their first year of a five-year grant to study how the receptor GPR30 works in mice, Prossnitz said. He said that if the experiments go well, his team can start looking for support from drug companies. “We’re actively working on new leads as part of drug discovery efforts to try to develop more selective agents that will be able to control the action of estrogen in cancer,” Arterburn said. However, to start doing human clinical trials and get their findings approved would cost a drug company around $1.3 billion, Arterburn said. He said very few molecules are able to advance to real drugs that are approved by the Food and Drug Association. But Prossnitz remains hopeful that their research will be able to move forward. “Our hope is that through the development, especially of these compounds, that they could be used either in the treatment of cancers, potentially preventatively or once the cancer is diagnosed,” he said.

issue 46

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

Editor-in-Chief Antonio Sanchez Managing Editor John Tyczkowski News Editor Ardee Napolitano Assistant News Editor Chloe Henson Photo Editor Aaron Sweet Assistant Photo Editor Sergio Jiménez

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

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Bike reported stolen near Bandelier Hall On Oct. 17, a UNMPD officer was dispatched in reference to a bike theft. Upon arrival, the victim told the officer that he locked his bike on a rack near Bandelier Hall that morning, according to the report. The report states when the victim returned a little past noon, he said his bike wasn’t there. Instead, it was reportedly replaced by a maroon Suteki bicycle, which was placed in the exact same spot where the man parked his bike. According to the report, the Suteki bike was not locked into the rack. According to the report, the victim rode the replacement bike to the police department where he reported the incident. Police were unable to find any witnesses or suspects, and UNMPD kept the new bike for safekeeping.

Cops: student leaves his stuff, it gets stolen On Oct. 17, a student reported at UNMPD of a theft of his property. According to the report, the victim Copy Chief Aaron Wiltse Culture Editor Jyllian Roach Assistant Culture Editor Fiona-Maria Featherston Sports Editor Thomas Romero-Salas Assistant Sports Editor J. R. Oppenheim Opinion Editor John Tyczkowski Social Media Editor J. R. Oppenheim

RIME BRIEFS

was at the Zimmerman Library earlier that morning, and he left his belongings unattended. The report states that someone went through his belongings and stole his valuables. According to the report, stolen items included an iPad, the victim’s wallet, identification cards and a refillable Starbucks card. Police are not able to identify any suspect or witnesses at this time.

UNMPD: Bike parked on Cornell stolen On Oct. 18, a woman reported to UNMPD that her bike had been stolen earlier that day. According to the report, the victim parked her bike along Cornell Drive, and when she came back later that day, she was unable to find it. The woman stated no one “had permission to take the bike,” according to the report. But the woman was unable to provide police with the bke’s serial number and did not know the make of her bike. Police obtained a written statement from the woman about the theft.

Design Director Connor Coleman Design Assistants Erica Aragon Josh Dolin Beatrice Verillo Advertising Manager Brittany McDaniel Sales Manager Sammy Chumpolpakdee Classified Manager Brittany McDaniel

Report: Patient had drugs at UNMH On Oct. 20, police was dispatched to UNM Hospital in reference to a patient in possession of illegal drugs. According to the report, an officer was able to obtain a black case containing drug paraphernalia from the hospital’s nursing staff. The report states the case contained “a spoon with burnt residue, a blue cylinder tube, a small pair of pliers as well as an empty syringe.” According to the report, hospital staff told police that the suspect would stay at UNMH for at least four weeks. The report states the officer warned the patient not to use drugs in hospital property to avoid legal trouble, and the patient said he understood. UNMPD seized the contents of the case. According to the report, police placed the empty syringe in a sharps container and destroyed the remaining paraphernalia. Police did not take any enforcement action regarding the incident, and no further action has been taken by UNMPD at this time. ~ Ardee Napolitano @ArdeeTheJourno

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 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.

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

theater review

Wednesday, October 23, 2013/ Page 3

MTS’s ‘Sweeney Todd’ deadly by Graham Gentz

culture@dailylobo.com

Even if you’re not a screaming Goth girl or if you somehow missed the Tim Burton adaptation, you can still walk into “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” and probably know what you’re in for. The Musical Theater Southwest’s production is mercilessly long, totaling around three hours. Maybe it’s heresy, but can’t we cut some of these songs? The “Ballad of Sweeney Todd” is reprised seven bloody times, in case you are struck with memory loss or an existential crisis and you forgot what you were doing. This particular production is not a spectacle by any stretch. There are minimalist choices made in staging and set, particularly in the noticeable lack of conspicuous gore. The seating design is atrocious, with three or four rows completely blocked from the action. If you find yourself seated in the dead zone, you’ll also find yourself missing jokes and craning awkwardly up for sights of gore and special effects whenever some poor bugger gets his throat slit. The singing is difficult to hear and much of the accents and acting is cringe-worthy. The most confusing performance is that of Sweeney Todd himself, portrayed by TJ Bowlin. Bowlin’s movements have an awkward stiffness, and he produces more bizarre, nonverbal noises and flat deliveries than an anime dub. The wigs are amusingly bad and the personal microphones are huge, plastered oddly about

Audit

from page 1

Communications staff will continue to work to comply with requests for information as efficiently and transparently as possible without jeopardizing the integrity of the ongoing investigation.” The University closed the SBA bank account immediately after its discovery, according to the statement. SBA Board President Daniel Apodaca said in an email statement forwarded to the Daily Lobo Tuesday that he admitted that the association mishandled funds last school year. But he said none of the current

the actor’s faces — the strangest of which is found on Lowell Burton, whose mic protrudes from the back of his shirt, snakes through his hair, and comes to rest daintily and conspicuously on his forehead. The most complex character, as well as the star performance, is Mrs. Lovett, the meat pie lady, portrayed incredibly by Kari Reese. She is a fabulous performer, from her humor to her singing to her acting. The second character to exhibit any depth is Tobias Ragg, played by Derrick Medrano, the orphan boy brought in by Lovett and Todd. Medrano displays the ability to produce a solid performance, sing well, and top it off with a fine accent. His scene with Mrs. Lovett is twinged with a fascinating sexual tension. Brian Clifton as Beadle Bamford and Esther Moses as the Beggar Woman do much with smaller roles, each standing out spectacularly. The characters of “Sweeney Todd” are not an invention of now-ancientyet-still-kicking musical composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim, but rather a spoof of Victorian melodramas and penny dreadfuls. The concept is largely the same: Sweeney Todd is a barber who slits people’s throats with straight razors and pops them down a hole to the ground level of the building where his female accomplice bakes the people into meat pies and serves them to the public. Can’t be any worse than KFC. Sondheim’s Todd is a more sympathetic mass murderer. He returns to London after years of false imprisonment to seek revenge on the

unambiguously evil Judge Turpin who locked Todd away so that he could rape Todd’s wife. Somehow in this rightfully righteous vengeance, the plot stops along the way to enter into a mass-murdering pie production scheme. Why exactly? Cause he’s just all up and crazy. Simply, the show drags. It is not without moments of brightening interest. It is largely, however, a lumbering beast croaking out the occasional semblances of musicality. But sometimes the little bird sitting in the creature’s mouth that cleans its teeth perks up from its duties and tweets along in delightful and refreshing harmony. The comically verbose director’s note in the program reveals much love and passion for the work and that is largely what it feels like: a breathy, adolescent love letter.

board members were involved in the alleged misuse of funds. “An investigation has revealed that a member of the 2012-2013 Executive Board may have misappropriated those funds by using them in ways not approved by the Board,” he said. “No member of the current SBA Board is suspected of malfeasance in this matter or had any insight as to the actions of the former board member.” Apodaca said that at the moment, SBA has an annual budget of $3,519.53. He said the association has also cancelled its Halloween

party as “an act of ‘tightening the belt,’ as it were, to ensure that student funds are being spent in ways that best benefit the students.” SBA will release the results of UNM’s investigation “as soon as possible,” Apodaca said in the statement. He said the organization’s current board will strive to make their operations more transparent to the University community. “The current board is making every effort to provide transparency with this issue and is making strides to make sure that this sort of issue never happens again,” he said.

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LoboOpinion

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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Opinion Editor/ John Tyczkowski/ @JCTyczkowski

opinion@dailylobo.com

Letters

Vote ‘no’ on abortion restriction measure Editor,

My life has been dedicated to the practice of medicine and working to ensure the health of my community. I have been a physician since 1978, completing my residency in 1981 at Bernalillo County Medical Center, now University of New Mexico Hospital. I practiced in Hawaii where I went to medical school, and here in New Mexico where I did my residency in family medicine. Over my career, I have had a private practice and served as medical director of the women’s prison in Hawaii and the Penitentiary Men’s Facility in Santa Fe. I have also been medical director at Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, a clinician at the First Choice Community Health Centers and at the New Mexico Department of Health. As a physician, I encourage you to vote against attempts to limit women’s access to health care, including access to safe and legal abortion. This must remain the decision of the woman with the advice of her physician and the support of her family if she so chooses. Women have always had to make hard decisions for the sake of their families. Every pregnancy is different; women must have access to all that they need to make the right decision for themselves and for their families. This is not a place for government intrusion or intervention. This current assault on our rights is based on no medical data. The misinformation being given to our communities is meant to sway emotionally, but is not based in sound clinical practice. Supporters of the proposed Albuquerque ballot measure make liberal use of misinformation and disinformation in an attempt to sway voters and further their agenda of blocking access to safe and legal abortions. Despite what these misguided groups would have you believe, currently when a woman makes the complex decision to have an abortion, she will receive the best, safest and most appropriate procedure for her condition. We in the medical community would have it no other way. In my many positions over the years, I have seen many women struggle in our city. Childbearing is the most personal of situations. I have two sons, each of whom is beyond dear to me. Having and raising children requires enormous faith, trust and support. It is an enormous job. I have seen courage, faith and family support. I have not seen the need for government intrusion in this personal, private matter. Overwhelmingly, the medical community trusts women to support their families and their children. We must continue to trust women as the best judges for themselves. A “NO” vote on Nov. 19 is a vote for respect. It is a vote to honor women in their capacity to decide what is right for each of them: to carry a child or to end a pregnancy. The government should not interfere by putting unconscionable and unconstitutional limitations on access to safe and legal abortions. We must not prevent New Mexico physicians from giving their patients the best possible care. Sandra F. Penn MD, FAAFP

Editorial Board Antonio Sanchez Editor-in-chief

John Tyczkowski Managing editor Opinion editor

Ardee Napolitano News editor

Regulation the cause of stagnant economies Editor,

In his column on Monday, Joe Wagner stands courageously on his moral high ground, criticizes name calling, and declares he won’t be “bullied into compliance with… boogey-man idioms.” He then proceeds to explain that there’s no such thing as an honest rich person and that the wealthy are the direct cause of crime, death, starvation, genocide and war. His main argument can be summed up as: “Anyone who disagrees with me just hates poor people and wants them to all to die slowly.” As evidence of his claim that the rich are the primary source of all societal ills, he offers up 10,000 years of history, which he claims show the rich stay rich and the poor stay poor. Well, that’s mostly true, but only if you ignore the last few decades. According to

Ordinance would keep viable fetuses protected Editor,

For the sake of the people of Albuquerque, who deserve to know the truth about the upcoming election to ban late term abortion, let’s set the record straight. There is no question that when a woman becomes pregnant unexpectedly she deserves love, compassion and help. But it is time to start considering if abortion is truly the help she needs. It is time to start considering that women deserve better than abortion and that we need to start addressing the problems that lead to women getting abortions, rather than concentrating on eliminating her unborn child. In light of the upcoming special election in November, for the Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Ordinance, pro-life advocates have been challenged by proabortion activist, Dolores Huerta, that the ordinance in unconstitutional due the ruling of Roe v. Wade. The ordinance would restrict abortion in Albuquerque after a woman is 5 months along in her pregnancy. I am hoping to address this concern by reviewing the ruling of a more recent U.S. Supreme Court decision from 1992, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey. In Casey, the Supreme Court upheld

Letters

United Nations studies, the number of people living on a dollar a day has decreased by half in the past fifteen years. This year, the Penn World Tables, created by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, found that wealth across the globe has increased substantially in the past couple generations. This does not mean that poverty has been eradicated. But this rise in wealth is unprecedented in human history. And this is at a time when economies across the globe, on average, have become more liberated, meaning that markets are freer than they’ve ever been in most of 10,000 years of human history. According to reports by the Heritage Foundation, some of the most regulated economies in the world are found in Africa, and the continent as a whole has also received about $1 trillion in humanitarian aid since 1970. And yet, the countries that compose the continent remain some of the poorest in the world. In Africa, you can see the result in some of the “progressive” policies that Wagner

advocates being carried out with some of the worst results on the planet. And if one needs an example closer to home, just look to Detroit. In fact, if one looks at recent history, we find plenty of evidence to oppose Wagner’s “destroy the rich” approach to solving the world’s problems. If Wagner sincerely cares about the poor as much as he claims in his emotional column, he would do well to sincerely listen to the arguments of people like myself who advocate economic liberty, which is sometimes labeled with the “boogey-man idiom” capitalism. It’s not some master plan by the wealthy to protect their interests at the expense of the poor. Like Wagner, we do care about the poor and want to see everyone prosper. Unlike Wagner, however, we’re more interested in advancing real solutions than failed ideologies.

the Roe v. Wade decision that the state cannot ban most abortions; however, it established that the state does have the authority to regulate abortions in order to protect the health of the mother as well as the life of the fetus. In addition, the state does have the power to restrict abortions of viable fetuses. This precedent is crucial when dealing with the upcoming election because the Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Ordinance will only restrict abortion after 5 months, which is considered post-viability. Since the state has the authority to restrict abortions of viable fetuses, the ordinance does not interfere with the ruling of Roe v. Wade, therefore it is not unconstitutional. Huerta also mentioned that the attorney general would have to take the ordinance to court in the event that it passed and had to be implemented, which would cause tax payers money. She failed to mention that Albuquerque citizens are already paying for abortions through Medicaid that can cost up to $16,000. What Mrs. Huerta does not acknowledge is that if the ordinance passes, it will be because the citizens of Albuquerque want it to pass. It is the citizens who get to decide if they are willing to let abortions continue past 5 months of pregnancy when an unborn child is capable of feeling pain. Why is Mrs. Huerta trying to take away the rights of Albuquerque voters? Don’t the citizens of Albuquerque have the right to refuse to pay for a woman’s abortion,

especially when it violates their conscience? If Dolores Huerta is truly fighting for women, then she should be fighting to help women in unplanned pregnancy succeed in life without resorting to killing their unborn child. We should all be seeking to help these women reach their dreams. When a woman decides to have an abortion for any reason, it is because we have failed her. Fortunately, it does not have to be that way because there are free organizations willing to help pregnant women in need such as Project Defending Life, Students for Life UNM, Birthright, CareNet, and Catholic Charities. Our city has an opportunity to provide real solutions for its citizens in the upcoming election. Now is the time for everyone to step up to the plate and offer women the help and respect they deserve.

Kevin Killough UNM alumnus

Samantha Serrano President of UNM Students for Life

Letter submission policy

n Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo office in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo. com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely reflect the views of the author and do not reflect the opinions of Lobo employees.


culture

New Mexico Daily Lobo

Wednesday, October 23, 2013/ Page 5

Band brings Balkan beats by William Aranda

culture@dailylobo.com

Balkan folk group Goddess of Arno was created as a homage to band member Beth Cohen’s dog, Brigit, and the street she lives on. Based in southeast Albuquerque, the seven-member dance group blends traditional Balkan music with modern instruments. Group members include Cohen on violin and guitar, Barbara Friedman on electric bass, Leanne Mennin on percussion, Randy Edmunds on guitar, Jamie Cohen-Edmunds on alto saxophone and Cherrymae Golston on vocals. All members perform vocals as well. Their live performances include traditional music from countries in the southern Balkans, such as Bulgaria, Macedonia, Greece and Albania, and dance that maintains the folk traditions of those countries. “I just like this particular type of music better than almost any other,” Friedman said. “I love doing it, I love dancing to it, I love playing it and singing it.” Friedman, Cohen and Edmunds said they have many influences. Those influences include MacedonianRomani vocalist Esma Redzepova, Turkish-Bulgarian Roma saxophonist Yuri Yunakov and Merita Halili. Friedman said dancing is an important element, both to their music and to the individual lives of the band members. “If there’s a song that I don’t play on or don’t sing on, I go dance,” Friedman said.

William Aranda/ Daily Lobo From left, Barbara Friedman, Beth Cohen and Patsy Gregory sit and eat lunch at Cohen’s house Monday afternoon. Friedman and Cohen are members of the Balkan dance group Goddess of Arno while Gregory leads the dances that take place during their live performances. Dancer Patsy Gregory helps teach everybody dances and sings and and lead the dancing of Goddess of plays music … it’s a really fun thing, Arno’s live shows. She said she began there’s a lot of energy.” dancing as a freshman in high school Cohen-Edmunds, who has been after watching her friend’s folk dance in the band since 2006, said she loves group in Los Alamos. to get to play music with her mom, “I really like dances that use the Cohen, and her dad, Edmunds. feet a lot and so that was the start of “To me it’s this,” she said, “hanging my journey from then through now out with my family and playing music and many other things,” Gregory said. and having fun.” “I just kept doing it.” Goddess of Arno originally formed Cohen said Goddess of Arno in the mid 1990s as a side project, has performed at Low Spirits, Sun- when Friedman and Cohen were shine Theatre, and various dance members of the Svirka Women’s Balparties throughout Albuquerque kan Chorus, she said. and Santa Fe. Practicing outside of the choir “I love the dance parties,” Ed- group soon led to the formation of munds said, “I think that’s the best the band. Barbara Basinger, who … I mean it’s all about creating a has since left the band, and Mennin community. It’s like having a little joined Friedman and Cohen soon neighborhood get-together and see Balkan page 6

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New Mexico Daily Lobo

Pho 79 a savory bargain by Steve “Mo” Fye

culture@dailylobo.com @UncaMo There are so many Vietnamese food joints in town that one wonders what it takes to differentiate and make a name in the genre. The answer is simple: superior food at reasonable prices. And the food at Pho 79 is indeed superior. Pho 79 sits in an unassuming location: a former motel restaurant on Candelaria Road, just east of I-25. The place has been mostly remodeled, but there are obvious cues to its past as a diner. Owner Tuan Nguyen opened Pho (pronounced “fuh”) 79 in April after having done nearly all the remodeling himself, he said. He had worked at a number of other Vietnamese restaurants in Albuquerque prior to this venture, and the evidence is in the food. The menu includes the usual Vietnamese fare, but everything is made with such care and attention to detail and the service so friendly, that customers are bound to become regulars immediately. The menu is all the more appealing to students since the most expensive dishes on the menu are less than $7. We began with the ubiquitous shrimp spring rolls and pork egg rolls. The spring rolls were good and came with a delicious peanut sauce, but the egg rolls were even better, full of seasoned ground pork, not just cabbage with a sprinkling of pork like most restaurants serve. The pho (#6 Deluxe Beef Noodle Soup at $6.95) was a great example of Vietnamese soup. The broth was rich, but not overpowering; the meats were tender and tasty. Each meat had its own texture from the tender, chewy cooked beef tendon to the savory, well-done steak and

Balkan

from page 5

after and become known as the Goddess of Arno. “We started getting into the Roma music and I really think that lent itself to the smaller group,” Cohen said, “And it lent itself to the instrumentation that we had at the time.” This original lineup released its first, and so far only, album called “Balkan Dance Party!” in 2002. The

Aaron Sweet/ Daily Lobo sliced simmered meatballs. The pho comes in only one size: big. Take home the leftovers for later. Another terrific dish was the Bun, a common regional dish of rice vermicelli and salad, topped with cooked meats. The #17 Combination Bowl ($6.95) came with grilled chicken, beef, pork and a sliced egg roll. Pho 79 also offers stir-fried noodle dishes with egg noodles or broad rice noodles. The #34 stirfried noodles with shrimp was a huge plate of noodles with a generous amount of shrimp, carrots, zucchini, broccoli and onions. The sauce was savory and delicious and even better with a squirt or two of Sriracha sauce, bottles of which are at every table. The crown of the meal went to the Crispy Noodle Combination Special. Thin rice noodles were formed into a basket and fried, then filled with stir-fried vegetables, pork, chicken, shrimp and beef. The entire construction was served in a pool of rich savory sauce that softened the crispy noodles near the bottom, presenting a great mix

of flavors and textures. There are also fried rice dishes, several vegetarian options and a great selection of beverages. The Young Coconut came with the top sliced off and a straw. The fresh coconut water was refreshing and delicious, and there was a spoon to scoop out the thin layer of young, gelatinous coconut meat. Since I dined with a couple of regulars, Nguyen brought them a new drink he is considering as a menu addition. The ginger tea, blended with green tea and powdered milk was tasty, smooth and had just a zing from the fresh ginger. Also available is Vietnamese coffee with condensed milk, served hot or iced.

album won the New Mexico Music Industry Coalition award for Best Instrumental Performance that same year. “It’s a sampler of the things we love,” Friedman said, who is proud of the album. “Many of them we still do, but we do them in a different, you know, arrangement.” Although they have talked about it,

the members of Goddess of Arno currently have no plans for a new album.

Pho 79 2007 Candelaria Road NE Sunday-Tuesday: 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday: 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday: 10 a.m. - 9:30 p.m. 883-3747.

Goddess of Arno Saturday 7 to 10 p.m. Winning Coffee, 111 Harvard NE $5 at the door, kids 12 and under are free


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ROOM AVAILABLE FOR male to take over lease at Lobo Village. Great location 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 utilities and split cable and internet. $250 deposit. 10 minutes from UNM. 505919-8057. 3 FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north campus. $350/mo $410/mo, $420/mo +1/4utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated community. Access I-40 & I-25. tkuni@unm.edu ROOMMATE WANTED. 3BDRM 1.5BA. Near UNM. Share with 2 awesome roomates. Utilities, internet, and cable included. W/D. NP. $435/mo. End of November, early December. 505-9747476. 22 YEAR OLD male seeking roommate for 2BDRM house. $400/mo plus utilities. Biking distance to UNM. 505-6204457. FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED to take over lease. Room for rent in Casas Del Rio. $529/mo. Utilities included. If interested please contact 505-258-1369 or 505-818-9872.

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Jobs Off Campus PT WORK NEAR campus. Flexible hrs. for technically-minded person with basic woodworking, carpentry, and/ or construction 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 presentations and be responsible for their production in three worship services. The Director of Multi-Media Ministry will also coordinate a ministry team to include 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, Environmental Projection software, Lighting, iOS and PC operating, systems. Interested parties should submit resumes to info@centraltolife.org AIR FORCE NOW Accepting Prior Service Applications! If you have separated from any branch of the Armed Forces you may be eligible to re-enlist or commission 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 min@academymontessorischool.org or 299-3200.

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Raymond Jonson to Kiki Smith 10:00am-4:00pm UNM Art Museum New exhibit at the UNM art museum, on view in the main gallery. UNM Wind Symphony 7:30-8:30pm Popejoy Hall Works by McTee, Wilsion, Hindemith, Barber and Gorb. Richard White, Tuba Soloist. Adults $8, Youth (0-18) $6, Seniors $4.

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SPRING 2014 TEACH and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government $1,300-400/month (15hrs/week) + airfares, housing, medical insurance Must have completed two years of undergraduate. Last day to apply: 11/30/13 Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr Questions: Jai - jai.ke cla@gmail.com (213)386-3112 ex.201.

Volunteers BICYCLE VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY Both the City of Albuquerque’s Esperanza 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 Community Bike shop. The Bicycle Recycle program needs volunteers during weekdays and Esperanza could use volunteers weekday nights and Sundays. Please contact Tomas Kujat at kujat.tomas@gmail.com or Chuck Malagodi at cmalagodi@cabq.gov 505768-2453.

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