NM Daily Lobo 082412

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friday D AILY L OBO new mexico Angryphant see page 4 August 24, 2012 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 Inside the Daily Lobo He’s the man See page 8 volume 117 issue 6 88 | 63 TODAY Who is the true No. 2? See page 11 LOBO SPOTLIGHT by Svetlana Ozden [email protected] On Aug. 27, construction will begin on a $9 million collaborative-learning building that studies show will help students better retain information they have learned in class. The Collaborative Teaching and Learning Building, the second phase of the College of Education building plan that began November 2009, will open in fall 2013 and include six classrooms. The new building will include one classroom designed in the Student Centered Active Learning Environment for Undergraduate Programs, or “SCALE UP,” classroom style, which focuses on the needs of students by promoting more student-to- student interaction instead of student-teacher interaction. The project is funded by about $6 million in General Obligations bonds, taxpayer money, and about $3 million in UNM bonds. UNM bonds are issued by the Universi- ty and, in the past, were paid back in part by student facility fees. The new building will be located Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo Flashing lights lit up the corner of Redondo Drive near the intersection of University Boulevard and Central Avenue Thursday afternoon after a motorcycle hit a pedestrian. UNMPD Sgt. Gilbert Lujan said a UNM graduate student came around the corner on Redondo Drive on his motorcycle and grazed a pedestrian, UNM student Samantha Allen. Lujan said the motorcyclist swerved and had to lay down his bike in order to avoid hitting Allen. Both students sustained minor injuries and were allowed to walk away from the scene. Lujan said that in his three years at UNMPD, he has never responded to an accident in the area, despite the blind corner. near the social sciences building, Anderson School of Management, Technology and Education Center and Travelstead Hall. Studies from other universities around the U.S., such as the University of Pittsburgh, Florida State University and Penn State University, show that students’ success rates improved in courses taught in the new SCALE-UP classroom style. Some of the courses that show increased success rates include physics, biology, math and engineering. At Clemson University, about 44 percent of students dropped or failed an introductory calculus course prior to fall 2006. That rate dropped to 22 percent after the class was taught using the SCALE- UP model. The SCALE-UP classroom will be on the third floor of the Collaborative Teaching and Learning Building and can hold up to 126 students. It will include computers or laptops at each of the 14 round tables, each of which seats nine students, and an instructor station in the center of the classroom. UNM President Robert Frank, who implemented the same classroom design at Kent State University, said the new classroom style has grown out of the online- class community, where students often work together and discuss projects and assignments. He said that allowing students to engage with each other promotes more active learning and improves student success rates. “We know active learners have better retention of learning ma- terial, and so that change is very positive in my view and most edu- cators’ views,” he said. Frank said the change in class- room styles is being incorporated in schools around the world and that the University will continue to move toward updated class- room styles but will keep some traditional classroom designs. “This is sort of like the indus- trial revolution of higher educa- tion,” he said. “It’s a whole big change of how we do everything. It’s a very exciting time.” College of Education adminis- trator Diane Gwinn said the class will be split into three subgroups at each table and that projects will be broken up into three parts. She said students will work together on their portion of in-class proj- ects, collaborate with the rest of the group and then present their findings, questions or comments to whole class. Gwinn said this style will allow students to work together while the classroom instructor works individually with each of the groups. She said this teaching style has proven to help students better retain class material. “Studies have found that students help teach each other than better than the old ‘sage-on- the-stage’ concept,” she said. CAMPUS COLLISION Altered room design promotes interactive learning see Classroom PAGE 5 by Hannah Stangebye [email protected] e commanding officer of the largest naval station in the world is a former Lobo. Capt. David A. Culler Jr. became commanding officer of Naval Station Norfolk, in Norfolk, Va., on Aug. 2. Culler said the naval station houses 63 warships and about 180 aircraft. “Our mission (at Norfolk) is to support the U.S. Atlantic Fleet,” he said. “As commanding offi- cer, I make sure everything works effectively and efficiently every single day.” Culler said he is a second- generation naval pilot, following in his father’s footsteps, and that his father’s naval career is what initially brought Culler to New Mexico. He said he lived in New Mexico as a child while his father worked for the Navy squadron stationed at Kirtland Air Force Base. Culler always knew he wanted to be a pilot, and that he would have to work hard to become one. He attended Cleveland Middle School, Del Norte High School and UNM, where he moved into Laguna/DeVargas Hall with four of his closest friends. “You can imagine, we did not exactly do as much studying as we should have,” Culler said. “I felt like I was sort of digging my way out the whole time, but by the time I gradu- ated, I ended up doing pretty well.” Culler said the best times he had at UNM were spent on Johnson field, where he and his friends would play football on fall nights. “e fall weather in New Mexico has to be one of my fondest memo- ries of my time at UNM,” he said. Alumnus fills high-ranking Navy position see Spotlight PAGE 2 Capt David A. Culler Jr. Student Pod (seats nine) Teacher’s Desk

description

NM Daily Lobo 082412

Transcript of NM Daily Lobo 082412

Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 082412

fridayDAILY LOBOnew mexico

Angryphantsee page 4

Au g u s t 2 4 , 2 0 1 2The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

Inside theDaily Lobo

He’s the man

See page 8volume 117 issue 6 88 | 63

TODAYWho is

the true No. 2?

See page 11

LOBO S P O T L I G H T

by Svetlana [email protected]

On Aug. 27, construction will begin on a $9 million collaborative-learning building that studies show will help students better retain information they have learned in class.

The Collaborative Teaching and Learning Building, the second

phase of the College of Education building plan that began November 2009, will open in fall 2013 and include six classrooms. The new building will include one classroom designed in the Student Centered Active Learning Environment for Undergraduate Programs, or “SCALE UP,” classroom style, which focuses on the needs of students by

promoting more student-to-student interaction instead of student-teacher interaction.

The project is funded by about $6 million in General Obligations bonds, taxpayer money, and about $3 million in UNM bonds. UNM bonds are issued by the Universi-ty and, in the past, were paid back in part by student facility fees. The new building will be located

Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo

Flashing lights lit up the corner of Redondo Drive near the intersection of University Boulevard and Central Avenue Thursday afternoon after a motorcycle hit a pedestrian. UNMPD Sgt. Gilbert Lujan said a UNM graduate student came around the corner on Redondo Drive on his motorcycle and grazed a pedestrian, UNM student Samantha Allen. Lujan said the motorcyclist swerved and had to lay down his bike in order to avoid hitting Allen. Both students sustained minor injuries and were allowed to walk away from the scene. Lujan said that in his three years at UNMPD, he has never responded to an accident in the area, despite the blind corner.

near the social sciences building, Anderson School of Management, Technology and Education Center and Travelstead Hall.

Studies from other universities around the U.S., such as the University of Pittsburgh, Florida State University and Penn State University, show that students’ success rates improved in courses taught in the new SCALE-UP classroom style. Some of the courses that show increased success rates include physics, biology, math and engineering.

At Clemson University, about 44 percent of students dropped or failed an introductory calculus course prior to fall 2006. That rate dropped to 22 percent after the class was taught using the SCALE-UP model.

The SCALE-UP classroom will be on the third floor of the Collaborative Teaching and Learning Building and can hold up to 126 students. It will include computers or laptops at each of the 14 round tables, each of which seats nine students, and an instructor station in the center of the classroom.

UNM President Robert Frank, who implemented the same classroom design at Kent State University, said the new classroom style has grown out of the online-class community, where students often work together and discuss projects and assignments. He said that allowing students to engage with each other promotes more

active learning and improves student success rates.

“We know active learners have better retention of learning ma-terial, and so that change is very positive in my view and most edu-cators’ views,” he said.

Frank said the change in class-room styles is being incorporated in schools around the world and that the University will continue to move toward updated class-room styles but will keep some traditional classroom designs.

“This is sort of like the indus-trial revolution of higher educa-tion,” he said. “It’s a whole big change of how we do everything. It’s a very exciting time.”

College of Education adminis-trator Diane Gwinn said the class will be split into three subgroups at each table and that projects will be broken up into three parts. She said students will work together on their portion of in-class proj-ects, collaborate with the rest of the group and then present their findings, questions or comments to whole class.

Gwinn said this style will allow students to work together while the classroom instructor works individually with each of the groups. She said this teaching style has proven to help students better retain class material.

“Studies have found that students help teach each other than better than the old ‘sage-on-the-stage’ concept,” she said.

CAMPUS COLLISION

Altered room design promotes interactive learning

see Classroom PAGE 5

by Hannah [email protected]

� e commanding o� cer of the largest naval station in the world is a former Lobo.

Capt. David A. Culler Jr. became commanding officer of Naval Station Norfolk, in Norfolk, Va., on Aug. 2. Culler said the naval station houses 63 warships and about 180 aircraft.

“Our mission (at Norfolk) is to support the U.S. Atlantic Fleet,” he said. “As commanding offi-cer, I make sure everything works effectively and efficiently every single day.”

Culler said he is a second-generation naval pilot, following in his father’s footsteps, and that his father’s naval career is what initially brought Culler to New Mexico. He said he lived in New Mexico as a child while his father worked for the Navy squadron stationed at Kirtland Air Force Base.

Culler always knew he wanted to be a pilot, and that he would have to work hard to become one. He attended Cleveland Middle School, Del Norte High School and UNM, where he moved into Laguna/DeVargas Hall with four of his closest friends.

“You can imagine, we did not exactly do as much studying as we should have,” Culler said. “I felt like I was sort of digging my way out the whole time, but by the time I gradu-ated, I ended up doing pretty well.”

Culler said the best times he had at UNM were spent on Johnson � eld, where he and his friends would play football on fall nights.

“� e fall weather in New Mexico has to be one of my fondest memo-ries of my time at UNM,” he said.

Alumnus f ills high-ranking Navy position

see Spotlight PAGE 2

Capt David A. Culler Jr.

Legend: Student Pod (seats nine) Teacher’s Desk

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Student Health & Counseling (SHAC)

IInn rreessppoonnssee ttoo ssttuuddeenntt iinnppuutt **

MMoonn..--FFrrii..,, 99::0000 AAMM--55::3300 PPMMLast appointment of the day is at 5:30 PM.

Effective Monday, August 13, 2012 * Based on Spring 2012 Student Health Survey Results Thank you to everyone who participated in the survey!

Main Campus (E of SUB) Services Available to All UNM Students

(505) 277-3136 shac.unm.edu

volume 117 issue 6Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

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

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Editor-in-ChiefElizabeth Cleary Managing EditorDanielle RonkosNews EditorSvetlana OzdenAssistant News EditorHannah StangebyePhoto EditorAdria MalcolmAssistant Photo EditorJuan Labreche

Culture EditorNicole PerezAssistant Culture Editor Antonio SanchezSports EditorThomas Romero-SalasOpinion/Social Media EditorAlexandra SwanbergCopy ChiefAaron Wiltse

Design DirectorRobert LundinDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanJosh DolinStephanie KeanAdvertising ManagerRenee SchmittSales ManagerJeff BellClassified ManagerBrittany Flowers

PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboF r i d a y, a u g u s t 2 4 , 2 0 1 2

by Hannah [email protected]

Dean of the UNM School of Law Kevin Washburn has been nominated by President Obama to be the assistant secretary for the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs.

Washburn’s position is the highest position in the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He said his responsibilities include serving as the chief ambassador on behalf of the federal government and president to more than 565 American Indian tribes in the U.S., which amounts to more than 4 million people.

“It is in some ways a diplomatic role; in some ways it is like being governor of a small to medium-sized state,” he said.

Washburn said he believes he was appointed to the position based on his knowledge and experience in American Indian law.

“For a time, I was the only American Indian to be a dean of any law school in the country. I have written a lot of on the subject of Indian law,” Washburn said. “I am perceived and recognized as someone who understands Indian law and policy.”

In announcing Washburn’s nom-ination, Obama said that Washburn has “demonstrated knowledge and dedication throughout his career.”

Washburn, who is a member of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, has been the UNM law school dean since June 2009. He previously taught at law schools at the University of Arizona

and the University of Minnesota and was a visiting professor at Harvard Law School. From 2000 to 2002, Washburn

was general counsel for the National Indian Gaming commission and an assistant U.S. attorney in New Mexico from 1997 to 2000.

If his nomination is confirmed by the Senate, Washburn will take a leave from UNM and travel to D.C for the job. But he said UNM President Robert Frank and Provost Chaouki Abdallah have assured him he will have a position at UNM when he returns.

The length of Washburn’s term is undetermined, but the outcome of November elections will play a role.

“If the president became unhappy with me, he could tell me to leave at anytime,” Washburn said. “If I am confirmed before the election and Obama wins, he would keep me on through some portion

of his next term. If Romney wins, I won’t be going anywhere, I will just stay here, unless I have been confirmed before the election. In that case, I would already be out there, but I would relinquish the job on January 20 (2013).”

While he’s honored by the appointment, Washburn said he’s become close with law school faculty and students, which makes the idea of leaving difficult.

“It is hard to leave here; this law school is a special place. The facul-ty are my friends, the student are my friends,” Washburn said. “We are a small law school, where the faculty and I get to be intimately close with our students. It was a difficult deci-sion to go.”

UNM law dean nominated for Indian Affairs post

A woman reported to UNMPD on Aug. 15 that when she checked out of UNMH and was given back her belongings, several items were missing. According to the police report, she was missing checks, her debit card and a cell phone. She said she was sure she had the items with her when she was brought to the hospital two days prior. The woman told police that hospital employees said she must have dropped the items before she got to the hospital. This case is considered closed, pend-ing further leads, according to the report.

On Aug. 15. UNMPD responded to a disturbance outside the Communication and Journalism building. According to the police report, Crystal Lopez was outside the

C and J building when she became involved in an argument with Colleen Tsosi. Lopez said the argument escalated, at which point Tsosi struck Lopez on the side of the head and kicked her, according to the report. When police found Tsosi wandering around the building, she admitted the argument took place, but denied hitting Lopez. The report says Tsosi was told to leave campus and not return, and the case is considered closed.

On Aug. 15, Miguel Tafoya reported that an individual experiencing homeless-ness opened his unlocked pick-up truck in search of a cigarette lighter. According to the police report, Tafoya caught the man and told him to stay on site while he called UNMPD, at which point the man left the site. Nothing was taken from the vehicle.

~Compiled by Alexandra Swanberg

unm crime briefs

Police respond to fightoutside C&J, report says

Report: belongings notall returned at UNMH

Police: Man ordered towait for police does not

“It is hard to leave here; this law school

is a special place. The faculty are my

friends, the students are my friends.”~Kevin Washburn

UNM law school dean

Spotlight from page 1Culler, who graduated from UNM in 1987

with a bachelor’s degree in political science, ap-plied for the naval aviation program after grad-uation. He said that although he chose to get a college degree before attending aviator officer candidate school, a college degree isn’t the only way to get into the Navy’s flight school program.

Following officer school, Culler attended flight school, where he earned his Naval Flight Officer wings of gold, which certified him as a naval aviator. He then went on to fly in several squadrons before commanding his own squad-ron in 2005.

“Getting my wings of gold when I finished flight school was a proud time … it is not an easy program,” Culler said. “I think at the time, 40 percent of the people were getting washed out. The first time you actually go out there and land on an aircraft carrier at night — that rattles a lot of people.”

Culler said commanding his own squadron was one of the highlights of his career.

“My proudest moment was probably being (commanding officer) of my own squadron and we went out on a seven-month deployment,” Culler said. “We deployed in both the theaters for Iraq and Afghanistan, flying off of an aircraft carrier but we were supporting a lot of the

missions on the ground.”Culler said leaving his wife and two sons at

home was the greatest challenge he has had to overcome in his career.

“It was pretty rough when I was leaving a lot,” he said. “You are in and out for about two years training, and then you actually go away (on de-ployment) for six to eight months.”

Culler said UNM still holds a special meaning for him because he made a lot of lifelong friends while he attended the University.

“I am actually still in touch with my best friend (from UNM) today. And we just met back at UNM last year for a Lobo game, we had a little reunion,” he said.

Culler said being commanding officer of the largest naval station in the world is a dream come true.

“Your dreams may seem really far away, but if you work hard every day and you are dedicat-ed to your dream, you can certainly accomplish it,” Culler said. “Just never quit.”

The “Lobo Spotlight” series showcases current and former Lobo faculty, staff and students who do remarkable things. If you think you or some-one you know deserves to be in the spotlight, send an email to [email protected].

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 082412

New Mexico Daily lobo

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Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 082412

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

August 24th, 2012

Page

4

Editor,

Congresswoman Heather Wilson refused to co-sponsor a resolution concerning a rare disease disproportionately affecting Hispanics that has a 400-year history in New Mexico.

I am a 17th generation Hispanic whose ancestors came with Juan de Oñate in 1598. One of these ancestors brought with them an illness now identified as cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM/cavernous angioma). I, along with many New Mexico Hispanics in all counties of the state, have this illness today. My mother and a 9-year-old cousin lost their lives to this disease before being diagnosed correctly.

In 2008, then-Congressman Tom Udall championed House Resolution 1193, calling for increased awareness of and education and research on cavernous angiomas. I was shocked beyond belief that when asked to co-sponsor this resolution, then-Congresswoman Heather Wilson refused, even though this resolution did not have any dollars attached to it. If she is this unconcerned and uncaring about the Hispanics of New Mexico, what would she do for us in the U.S. Senate?

Joyce GonzalesDaily Lobo reader

Welcome or welcome back to UNM!Allow me to introduce myself. I am your

friendly neighborhood medical columnist, and a doctor at the friendly neighborhood health center known as Student Health and Counseling (SHAC). I write a weekly column for the Daily Lobo.

If you have a question you’d like me to answer or a topic you’d like me to address, please email me at [email protected]. I’ll consider anything obliquely or directly related to health. Past top-ics have ranged from herpes to hookahs, weight loss to woe. I have been doing this column for five years and am always looking for new material, so go ahead and ask that weird or burning question that has been bugging you. If I use your question, you will not be named in the article. Your ano-nymity is safe with me.

I’d also like to introduce you to SHAC, your health center. We hope you will come see us for all your health needs. There have been some changes around here, and we think it’s all for the better.

Mission. Our goal is to help you stay as healthy as possible so you can succeed in school.

Services. We offer general medical and men-

tal health services, lab, x-ray, pharmacy, physical therapy, acupuncture, massage, women’s health, men’s health, immunizations, travel health and health education. We also have specialty clinics in dermatology, podiatry, sports medicine and psychiatry. We are equal opportunity providers and LGBTQ safe. A few of us speak Spanish.

Hours. SHAC hours have changed by popular demand, based on feedback from students in our spring 2012 online survey. We now open at 9 a.m. Monday through Friday. The last appointment of the day is at 5:30 p.m., and doors are locked at 5:40 p.m. We are located across the mall east of the Student Union Building.

Getting Care. Call (505) 277-3136. Almost all of our patients are now seen by appoint-ment. No more waiting in long lines for the walk-in clinic or allergy clinic. Instead, you will have your very own time slot. Call and you will be given an appointment either the same day or another day soon. For the best same-day ac-cess, call early in the day. If you happen to be in the neighborhood, you can stop in and make an appointment in person. If you have an urgent problem, just come in. A nurse will evaluate you and decide if you need to be seen right away. If

you have a dire emergency, please call 911.Payment. You do not need to have insurance

to be seen at SHAC. Any student is eligible. There will be a charge for your visit, starting at $15 for a basic medical visit and going up for specialty clinics. There also may be charges for services like lab tests, x-rays and medications. However, any charges you incur at SHAC can be billed to your regular bursar account, so if you are sick or injured and low on cash, get help now and pay later. We do accept most of the major insurance plans, including Presbyterian, Lovelace, United Healthcare, BCBS, Aetna and TriCare. We also offer a special student insurance plan. Check our website for details and links at shac.unm.edu

That covers the basics. If you have questions, check our website, give us a call or stop by. Have a healthy and happy semester.

Peggy Spencer is a student-health physician. She is also the co-author of the book “50 ways to leave your 40s.” Email your questions directly to her at [email protected]. All questions will be considered anonymous, and all questioners will remain anonymous.

Editor,

I was a board member of the UNM Parent Association (PA) for two years and was briefly the president of the association until resigning the position on Aug. 1. The recent reporting on the controversy between UNM and the PA necessitates clarification.

Due to the passage of time and a change in the division that the PA reported to, the PA’s by-laws needed to be amended and UNM was assisting in this endeavor. UNM expressly stated it did not want to be involved in the election process of any board or executive member.

Moreover, UNM provided administrative and financial support that assisted the PA in raising funds for student scholarships. Instead of accepting and embracing UNM’s strong support, there were members of the board who chose a constant path of conflict and dissension. The narrow and negative view of a few, not the UNM administration, has jeopardized the ongoing

existence of the PA and all the good it has accomplished and would have achieved.

David GarrettDaily Lobo reader

Editor’s note: This letter is in response to “Wrestling with war,” a photo published in the Wednesday issue of the Daily Lobo. The photo shows a 2008 alumna protesting the U.S. military and ROTC as part of a demonstration assembled by Food Not Bombs, Answer Coalition and (un)Occupy Albuquerque.

Editor,

Welcome Back Days features many campus organizations that followed UNM policy to get a permit to participate. Those groups affiliat-ed with the individual in the Wednesday front page photo titled “Wrestling with war” didn’t think the policy applied to them. They handed out food, which not only violates UNM policy,

Editor,

Congressman Paul Ryan had a proposal in 2010 that if you took Gov. Romney’s tax returns and applied the changes that Ryan wanted to make to the tax system, Romney would pay less than 1 percent on his taxes. A far cry from the measly 13 percent he claims. If this in itself isn’t a red flag, then black is white. One can’t help but conclude that the reason Romney will not show his tax returns is that he’d have to re-veal the funds hidden abroad.

Zev GuberDaily Lobo reader

Editor,

Is it just me, or do others in the UNM community remember Smith Plaza in front of Zimmerman Library being used by student and campus organizations in the first week of previous academic years? Instead, this week, I see these groups relegated to a relatively marginal area, wedged between the library and the Duck Pond.

I may be dating myself here, but I know that my father went to a college whose central plaza most days was clogged with student protesters against a senseless and drawn-out war the United States was mired in. That may be a bit much to ask from the current generation of college students, but what about a table from the entomology club?

Instead, incoming students are greeted by a daily crucible of aggressive corporate hawksters peddling exploitative plans for the students’ electronic devices. What are we telling freshmen this University is about? Is it a University of the students, by the students, for the students — or a University brought to you by your friends Verizon, Xfinity, and CenturyLink from up there in Scholes Hall?

William MaxwellUNM student

Dr. Peg’s PrescriptionColumn

Editorial Board

Elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

danielle ronkosManaging editor

alexandra SwanbergOpinion editor

Svetlana ozdenNews editor

Resolve to make this new school year a healthy one!

Rare disease apparently not worth Wilson’s regard

Smith Plaza wasn’t always a corporate flea market

Groups that follow rules should make front page Ryan’s proposed tax plan

would save Romney millions

Parent Association board, not UNM, creates conflict

lEttErS

lEttErSbut health department policy as well, and they also were unaffiliated with the University. Per-haps a better representative photo might have been to feature the many ROTC groups that “wrestling” was protesting.

Carolyn GonzalesUNM staff member

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.

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 082412

NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO NEWS FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 2012/ PAGE 5

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Gwinn said that although only one of the classrooms utilizes the SCALE-UP design, each of the classrooms will have furniture that can be moved easily so teachers can rearrange the classroom according to their teaching styles. She said choosing the classroom designs began in summer 2011 and was a collaborative effort between faculty from Arts and Sciences, Anderson School of Management and the College of Education.

“We spent the summer of 2011, at least weekly and sometimes more, to do all of the design and come up with what most of the faculty really thought we need for the next 40 to 50 years,” she said. “I’m really excited about it.”

Gwinn said faculty members found it necessary to build a new building because many of the classrooms on campus are out-dated and don’t work with the new teaching styles that most fac-ulty members are looking to use in their classes.

“Some of the classrooms have chairs that are bolted to the floor,” she said. “A lot of the classrooms

need to be updated and we had this money and it was time to build one more building on campus that would allow for new concepts of teaching.”

The building will be used for a wide range of classes, but the College of Education will have

scheduling priority between 4 and 10 p.m. This helps accommodate graduate students, who are teachers during the day and take classes during the evening in order to complete their master’s degrees or Ph.D.s, Gwinn said.

Courtesy photoThis artist’s rendering shows the new Collaborative Teaching and Learning Building, which will open fall 2013, will include six classrooms and can seat up to 347 students. One of the classrooms will follow the SCALE-UP design that will allow for more student-to-student interaction and is expected to improve student success rates.

Classroom from PAGE 1

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by Kristi Eaton The Associated Press

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — The planned auction of nearly 2,000 acres of land in South Dakota’s pic-turesque Black Hills that is consid-ered sacred by American Indian tribes has been cancelled, though it wasn’t immediately clear why.

Brock Auction Company planned to auction five tracts of land owned by local residents Leonard and Margaret Reynolds on Saturday. But a message on the auction house’s website Thursday said it has been cancelled at the land owners’ direction.

The auction house and Margaret Reynolds declined comment, and tribal officials were left wondering what had happened.

“There are a lot of things we don’t know at this point,” Rosebud Sioux Tribe spokesman Alfred Walking Bull said. “If there was a change of heart, we’re definitely thankful for that. We’re hoping for the best. We can take a breath right now.”

Tribes of the Great Sioux Nation consider the site key to their creation story and are trying to purchase the land, which they call Pe’ Sla, because they fear new owners would develop it. The property, which spans about 1,942 acres of pristine prairie grass, is the only sacred site on private land currently outside Sioux control.

The Rosebud Sioux, whose res-ervation is among the closest to the land, has allocated $1.3 million to-ward trying purchasing the prop-erty, though tribal officials fear the selling price could be between $6 million and $10 million.

Walking Bull said he wasn’t aware of the cancelled auction until contacted Thursday by The

Sacred land no longer for sale

Bernie Hunhoff / AP Photo

This 2007 photo provided by South Dakota Magazine shows Reynolds Prairie in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Nearly 2,000 acres of the ranch, including a sacred site known as Pe Sla to a band of Native American tribes, had been slated for auction this Saturday. The auction has been canceled for unknown reasons.

Associated Press. Rosebud Sioux President Rodney Bordeaux also said he didn’t have details, saying: “I don’t know anything more than you do.”

Organizers of a website that has collected more than $250,000 from 5,000 donors to help purchase the land said they also were unaware of why the auction was cancelled.

Sara Jumping Eagle, a member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe who started the site with her husband, Chase Iron Eyes of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, said they are trying to gather more information but are continuing to raise money since the property is still publicly listed.

Roughly 20 tribes make up the Great Sioux Nation, which was fragmented when American Indians were pushed to reservations. The tribes now span several states including Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas

and Minnesota, and Canada, and members hold ceremonies and rituals on the South Dakota land.

A United Nations fact finder had urged the federal government, and local and state officials in South Dakota to consult with American Indians ahead of the auction. U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs spokeswoman Nedra Darling said Thursday she also was unaware that the auction had been cancelled and declined comment.

The tribes believe the Sioux people were created from the Black Hills. According to part of their spiritual tradition, Pe’ Sla is where the Morning Star fell to Earth, killing seven beings that killed seven women. The Morning Star placed the souls of the women into the night sky as “The Seven Sisters,” also known as the Pleiades constellation.

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Friday, august 24, 2012/ Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo news

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Ariel Schalit / AP photo

American tourist Ella uses an iPad while riding a Wi-Fi-outfitted donkey led by her brother Aaron, in Kfar Kedem, a biblical reenactment park in the village of Hoshaya in the Galilee, northern Israel on Wednesday.

Marla Brose / AP photoVeterinarians and zoo keepers got their first look at a 6- or 8-month-old gray seal, the newest resident at the Rio Grande Zoo on Wednesday. The seal was brought to Albuquerque’s zoo from New Jersey, where it was rescued in March by the Marine Mammal Stranding Center.

by Elinor Zuckerman The Associated Press

HOSHAYA, Israel — It was nothing like this 3,000 years ago.

An Israeli attraction meant to im-merse tourists in an authentic, an-cient biblical experience has outfit-ted its donkeys with wireless routers.

At the historical park of Kfar Kedem in northern Israel, visi-tors decked out in biblical robes and headdresses ride donkeys through the rolling hills of the Galilee, learning how people lived in Old Testament times.

Now they can also surf the web while touring the land of the Bi-ble on one of the oldest forms of transportation. A device slung around the donkey’s neck like a feedbag is actually a Wi-Fi router.

The park’s manager, Menachem Goldberg, said Wednesday he hopes the melding of old and new will connect the younger generation to ancient Galilee life while allowing them to share, tweet and snap the experience instantly to friends. He played down the notion that 21st-century tourists have grown addicted to being online at all times.

“You take some pictures, you want to change your picture on Facebook — you can do it,” Goldberg said.

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — FedEx has delivered an unusual package to Albuquerque: a partially para-lyzed wild grey seal.

The seal was brought to Albu-querque’s zoo Wednesday night from New Jersey, where it was rescued in March by the Marine Mammal Stranding Center.

Zoo veterinarian Ralph Zimmerman says experts don’t know what happed to the seal, although he does have a big scar on the back of his head. He says the seal has developed a lot of strength in his upper body and front flippers, so he will be functional in the zoo’s 350,000-gallon seal and sea lion pool. But he says he never would survived in the wild.

Israel has Wi-Fi on its asses

Visitor Peter Scherr accessed the Internet while touring the Galilee hills to do some donkey fact-finding with his family.

“It has been used as a work-ing animal for 5,000 years,” said the New York native, reading from a Wikipedia page on his iPad. “There are more than 40 million donkeys in the world. That’s a lot of donkeys!”

Scherr visited the park with his wife and children, all dressed in

traditional garb. The family could easily have been mistaken for shepherds from a bygone age — were it not for their Camelbacks, iPads and smartphones.

The wireless donkey tour has been running for less than a week, but it is already a hit with visitors.

“I don’t miss any news,” Scherr said. “I send pictures back to my family while I’m having fun on the donkeys.”

Seal makes ABQ his homeThe 100-pound, 6- to 8-month-

old seal is in quarantine for about a month.

The zoo says it will hold a con-test to name for him.

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Page 8 / Friday, august 24, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

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sudokuin the lobo features

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

by Thomas [email protected]

First-year head coach Bob Davie will instill a new tradition for the Lobo football team this year.

The policy will be called “New Mexico Man,” and it celebrates a walk-on player every game week. The designated player will wear a special patch, carry the New Mexico state flag at home games and before the game against New Mexico State

and will start on special teams for that specific contest.

Davie said he hopes the ritual will highlight the walk-on program and what it means to the Lobos. The walk-on program allows students to try out for the team with hopes of one day earning a scholarship. On Wednesday, about 20 prospective students participated in drills to show off their skills to the coaching staff.

“The walk-on program everywhere

I’ve been has been really important to us, but I’ve never been to a place where the walk-on program is more important than it is here,” Davie said. “There are a lot of good high school football players here in New Mexico. I see how important the walk-on program is and I wanted a way to honor those walk-ons.”

Davie was an assistant coach at Texas A&M for nine years as linebacker and defensive

football

A New Mexico Man’s walk

Adria Malcolm / Daily LoboSophomore wide receiver Jeric Magnant (87) runs through drills on Wednesday. Magnant was chosen as the first-ever “New Mexico Man” for his exemplary work ethic as a walk-on player.

see Football page 13

New ritual highlights importance of walk-on players

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Friday, august 24, 2012/ Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo advertisement

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Best Student Essays, UNM’s premiere non-fiction magazine, has openings for volunteer staff members:

Positions are open to all undergraduate and graduate students. For more information and to apply, contact Editor-in-Cheif Elizabeth Thayer at [email protected]. Applications are available in Marron Hall, room 107.

Deadline: August 29th, 2012

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Season debuts new friends, foes

by Thomas [email protected]

The Lobo women’s soccer team will vie for its first win of the season when it takes on Iowa State this Friday.

On Sunday, Texas Tech defeated the Lobos 2-0, while last Friday the Lobos tied TCU 1-1 with no overtime due to a

lightning storm. UNM is currently 0-1-1; this marks the first time since 2008 the Lobos haven’t won one of their first two games.

“I think it’s a matter of building; we’re playing against some of the top programs in the country, in every aspect,” said assistant coach Jorge Vela. “They are tremendous programs and highly ranked, big conferences. The idea is to play

some of the best possible teams in the country.”

Last season, the Lobos started slowly with a 3-4-2 record before winning nine of 11 games to finish the year.

Vela said the goal is to build momentum in the latter half of the season.

by Thomas [email protected]

The UNM volleyball team will have to overcome injuries, a lack of depth and new players in its opening tournament of the season today.

The Lobos have sustained two key affronts with the loss of freshman Ashley Kelsey to a knee injury and freshman Sara Stelzer due to a head injury. The team has only six returning letter-winners from last season and has added seven new players to the squad.

Head coach Jeff Nelson said the losses are a setback, but the team still has the talent to win.

“I think that we got the right mix to be really successful,” Nelson said. “We just got to take on that attribute that we’re going be a solidified smaller group and be tough and be a good group together.”

The injuries may shake the starting lineup, but junior Lexi Ross isn’t worried about that at all.

“I feel great,” Ross said, “We have so much diversity on our team with people being able to play different positions and do it well that any combination that he (Nelson) puts out there, we’re going to do really well.”

Kelsey suffered her injury in last weekend’s alumnae game.

Senior Jordan Russell said it was difficult to watch.

“It’s definitely hard to see one of your teammates go down, especially a freshman who has such a promising career here,” Russell said.

Last weekend proved to the team it still had some kinks to work out, but Russell said the Lobos have spent practices successfully troubleshooting.

“We had a good talk before practice today, just kind of balancing out how we managed ourselves,” she said at Tuesday’s practice. “I think the girls realized that they can play at this level; it may be faster, but it’s still volleyball.”

UNM hosts the Sheraton Airport/LA Boxing Lobo Classic this weekend and will face Southern University and Duquesne University for the first time in the team’s history. The Jaguars return seven players from their previous year’s squad, while the Dukes return nine.

Nelson said both teams are a mystery to UNM and the team won’t know what it’s up against until the game. However, with Nelson in charge, the Lobos haven’t lost an opening game since its 2006 match against NMSU.

“We don’t know a lot about them because it’s the first week,”

he said. “We’re kind of looking at their stats from last year and trying to see where they’re at. Southern is a little more of an unknown. It’s the one time of the year where we don’t have videos and stat programs; it’s just based on what they did last year.”

If the Lobos intend to compete with the Dukes and Jaguars, Nelson said sophomore Chantale Riddle has to be playing her best right from the beginning.

“The one thing we saw at the end of the match was that Chantale was crazy good,” he said. “I told her earlier this week that’s who she is going to have to be, that’s how she’s going to have to advertise herself. It’s not coasting to see how we do, she’s going to have to go out and get after it, because with her pure talent and athleticism she’s right up there.”

volleyball

women’s soccer

0-1-1 team looks to balance tally

see Soccer page 12

VolleyballUNM vs. Southern

3 p.m.

UNM vs. Duquesne 7:30 p.m.

Today in Johnson gym

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Friday, august 24, 2012/ Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo sports

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Season kicks off with No. 2 rank

by J.R. [email protected]

The UNM men’s soccer team will face off against UCLA in a battle between two of the top-ranked schools in the country.

College Soccer News ranks UNM as the No. 2 men’s team in the nation, while the National Soccer Coaches As-sociation of America picked UCLA as No. 2 and the Lobos sixth.

UNM comes off a 2011 season with 47 goals scored and is returning with 89 percent of that firepower, but UCLA shut out its opponents eight consecu-tive times a year ago and has a College Soccer News preseason All-American in senior defender Matt Wiet.

Today’s season-opening matchup between the Lobos and Bruins should kick off the Pac-12 Network’s soccer broadcasting schedule with a bang, but Lobo head coach Jeremy Fishbein said he is concerned with one thing: his program.

“It’s probably going to come down to who makes the fewest mistakes and maybe a player doing something special; it’s all you can ask for,” said

Fishbein, entering his 11th season as head coach. “Our focus is on us right now, rather than our opponent, and we believe if we play to our potential and make good decisions, that we’ll be successful in the game.”

The UNM-UCLA men’s game will be the second game of a soccer doubleheader broadcast for the new Pac-12 Network, following the Gonzaga-Washington contest.

“For the younger guys, it’s going to be fun and exciting and probably create some nerves,” said senior forward Blake Smith, referring to the broadcast of the game. “For everybody else, we’re not even going to notice it.”

Smith and senior Devon Sandoval return after a 2011 campaign in which they combined for 18 of the Lobos’ 47 goals. Smith led the way with 10 goals, helping propel UNM to an 18-0-4 sea-son and a spot in the College Cup round of 16.

“We are looking forward to the challenge of playing New Mexico on Friday night,” said UCLA coach Jorge Salcedo. “They are a great program and are coming off a tremendous 2011 season. They are returning a lot of starters from last year’s team and it

should be a great matchup and a great early season test for our players.”

The Lobos will need some of that scoring prowess against the Bruins, who held 12 opponents scoreless and played from Oct. 28 to Dec. 3 last year without surrendering a goal.

“This is going to be about as good of a college match as you’re going to get,” Salcedo said. “For this to be our first of-ficial game, it’s going to be important that we come out with intensity.”

Fishbein said the most important thing the team takes from the game is how well it plays.

“You know, it’s the first game of the season — you can’t read into it and you can’t react either way,” Fishbein said. “You can’t be too high if you win and you can’t be too low if you don’t get a result. Right now, it’s focusing on being our best, preparing, being fresh, being excited and having everybody ready to go at kickoff.”

Juan Labreche / Daily LoboUNM senior Blake Smith runs formations in preseason practice. The Lobo men’s soccer team is ranked the No. 2 team in the nation by College Soccer News, and faces off tonight against UCLA, which is ranked No. 2 by the National Coaches Association of America.

men’s soccer

Men’s soccervs. UCLA

Tonight, 8 p.m.

on the Pac-12 Network.

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Page 12 / Friday, august 24, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE SPORTSMANSHIP INITIATIVE

August 13, 2012 Dear Fellow Students: The Mountain West Conference Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) believes the most important aspects of sport are good ethics and positive sportsmanship. We are very pleased the Conference continues its initiative to enhance this philosophy. We need your assistance to make this effort a success. The SAAC believes that, in order for an institution to convey a message of good ethics and positive sportsmanship, it must have the involvement and participation of everyone involved with athletics on campus. This includes, but is not limited to, the President, athletics administrators, coaches, student-athletes and you – the students/fans. It is our behavior that will shape the perception of our institutions and teams by the public, the media and our opponents. Good ethics and positive sportsmanship are philosophies that must be displayed both on and off the playing field. We must take a leadership role to compete at the highest levels, always endeavoring to win, but doing so with grace, class, dignity and respect. Please join us in supporting the Conference’s Sportsmanship Initiative. Such an effort will help make the Mountain West Conference one of the premier athletic conferences in the country, and represent our institutions well. Cordially, The Mountain West Conference 2012-13 Student-Athlete Advisory Committee

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“For us, it’s not about the short term, it’s about the long term,” he said. “If we’re 100 percent right now, we might be burnt out or not ready by the time conference comes.”

Senior Sinead Fleming said the Lobos want to face the upper tier of competition to be prepared for the conference season.

“Our nonconference schedule is really tough and I think it’s purposely designed that way; it’s been that way for the past couple of years,” Fleming said. “In my opinion and the other girls’ opinions, the score doesn’t really matter — we’re trying to fight through different trials and tribulations.”

The Lobos have scored only one goal thus far and have played scoreless first halves back to back for the first time since 2010. UNM

isn’t getting any shots off, either; the first two games averaged six shots per game down from last season’s 15.3 clip.

Vela said the offense hasn’t picked up because the players let their nerves get the best of them.

“Just the belief; it was a situation that we were tentative and tight during the game,” he said. “We (need to) loosen up and do what we’re capable of.”

UNM is on a three-week road trip, and Fleming said the experience is very beneficial.

“I think it’s important to have a different schedule like that and not necessarily be spoiled with so many home games, because you realize the feel of different fields and different teams and the atmosphere that they’re bringing

from the stands,” she said. “It toughens us up.”

Senior Rachel Montoya said she does like the travel, but can’t wait for a homecoming.

“Sometimes it makes playing at home that much better, once we get back from playing all these road trips,” she said.

It may be the first-ever meeting between the Lobos and the Cyclones, but Vela said the team will be able to tackle its third straight Big-12 adversary.

“They are a good, confident team and again they’re another Big-12 opponent, so they’re a physical, intense type team,” Vela said. “I know we’re going to be more prepared than we were last time.”

Soccer from page 10

Juan Labreche / Daily LoboUNM senior Rachel Montoya battles for position with TCU midfielder Makenzie Koch. The Lobos take on Iowa State in Lincoln, Neb. today.

Page 13: NM Daily Lobo 082412

FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 2012/ PAGE 13NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO SPORTS

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coordinator, and he said walk-ons helped build up the program.

“I coached at Texas A&M, where we had the home of the 12th man, and it was a walk-on kicko� team that united our fan base and our team,” he said.

� e � rst-ever “New Mexico Man” has already been named: sophomore wide receiver Jeric Magnant, who was born in Rhinebeck, N.Y. However, Magnant is no stranger to the Land of Enchantment, as he graduated from Rio Rancho high school in 2011

and was First Team All-State his senior year of high school.

Magnant said he was happy to be chosen as the inaugural “New Mexico Man.”

“I feel really honored,” Magnant said. “I grew up here in New Mexico; I’ve lived here almost my whole life. Another reason I feel honored is because of coach Davie, he just brings a lot of respect to the program himself. Everybody I know respects him and I respect him a lot. It sounds like a great tradition to me,

something that I’d like to keep going here.”

As of Tuesday, Magnant has been given a scholarship and is no longer a walk-on. Magnant said Davie is one of the reasons he is pushing himself more than ever.

“It felt great for me because a lot of people think I just got a scholarship because I work hard, which is true,” he said. “But coach Davie, he makes it so easy to work hard, he makes me love the game of football again.”

Davie said Magnant exempli� es

a player who works hard and takes advantage of every opportunity.

“He’s not a walk-on, he’s the true example of coming to New Mexico, getting out here on the � eld and what taking advantage of your opportunities can lead to.”

Magnant, a wide-out, worked his way up the depth chart and runs � rst team in practice. Magnant said it doesn’t matter to him whether he’s in the starting lineup.

“We have three seniors right now and they pretty much start,” he said.

“When one of them needs a rest or happen to get injured then I just go in. I don’t know if it’s starting or not; I’m not too into whether I’m going in the � rst play or not.”

Football from PAGE 8

California advances to Little League championshipby Genaro C. Armas

The Associated Press

Hance Smith’s eyes widened in the dugout as he watched Quinton Gago send a homer well over the left-� eld fence.

� e boys from Petaluma, Calif., are packing quite the punch from the plate at the Little League World Series.

Smith hit two homers, including a � rst-inning grand slam, and California pounded out 12 hits in an 11-1, � ve-inning victory over San Antonio on � ursday night to reach the U.S. championship game.

California will play Goodlettsville, Tenn., on Saturday.

Smith, 13, is trying to remember to keep his hands out in front of his body before every at-bat.

“With that thought in mind, I keep going to the plate,” the power-hitting shortstop said. “It’s been working out so far.”

Smith � nished 3 for 3 with � ve RBIs, and Gago had two hits and two RBIs.

Starter Danny Marzo, already a California hero for hitting a game-ending homer this week, came up big on the mound with 11 strikeouts in � ve innings.

He was gracious on the mound, too, after Texas’ Jordan Cardenas went deep in the third. � e 12-year-old Marzo greeted Cardenas with a high-� ve with his glove hand as Cardenas jogged down the third-base line.

Earlier, Aguadulce, Panama, edged Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, 2-1 to advance to the international � nal against Japan.

California didn’t have quite as di� cult a time against Texas, the game ending in the bottom of the � fth due to Little League’s 10-run rule.

“Runs early help,” said California manager Brad Smith, Hance’s proud father. “It gives con� dence to our pitcher and just makes everything a little easier.”

� e Petaluma boys managed just two hits o� Texas pitching in the decisive six-run � rst — but both balls landed over the out� eld fence.

California loaded the bases on three walks. A wild pitch brought home the � rst run, and the bases were loaded again after Austin Paretti reached � rst on a dropped third strike.

Smith then hit a 2-2 pitch that just cleared the wall in left-center 225 feet away.

“Petaluma! Petaluma!” shouted California’s fans.

Two pitches later, Quinton Gago went deep, too, and left no doubt about his shot. It easily cleared the wall in left and landed amongst fans perched on the grassy hill beyond the out� eld.

It was such an impressive shot that even Smith stopped to admire the blast from the dugout as the ball carried under the night sky.

But Smith wasn’t done himself.Another homer to left in the

third earned the 13-year-old slugger another set of pats on the helmet from happy teammates who greeted him at the plate.

And to think, Smith has been borrowing teammate Andrew White’s bat.

He may not ever give it back the

way he’s hitting.Marzo allowed just two hits and a

walk, and retired the last seven batters he faced.

California has a chance to avenge its only loss in South Williamsport — a 9-6 defeat to the Tennessee crew from Goodlettsville on Sunday. Texas was eliminated.

Texas manager Jack Wideman Jr. gathered his players in a circle in left � eld after the game for one � nal team meeting as the players’ families and friends waited in the stands.

“We ran up against a great team ... One through 12, every one of them can put the ball in play,” Wideman said. “� ey were just smashing the ball.”

Football season-opener

vs. Southern

Sept. 13 p.m.

University Stadium

Page 14: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Page 14 / Friday, august 24, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

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by David Stringer The Associated Press

This year’s Paralympics are expected to draw their largest ever live television audience — except in the United States, where events will receive only minimal coverage and won’t be screened as they happen, prompting anger from some fans and campaigners.

While viewers in countries including Brazil, China, Britain and Australia will enjoy several hours of coverage per day, U.S. audiences must contend with 5 1/2 hours of programming — some of which will air only after the 11-day competition in London has concluded on Sept. 9.

That has left some equality campaigners complaining that Paralympic athletes, who include military veterans, aren’t being treated as equal to their able-bodied teammates.

Several online petitions are seeking to persuade major U.S. networks to screen Paralympic sports, amid an apparent surge in interest fueled by high-profile athletes like South Africa’s Oscar Pistorius, a double amputee known as the “Blade Runner” who competed in the men’s 400 meters and 4x400 relay at the Olympics.

The International Paralympic Committee predicts that, adding together viewers on each of the 11 days of competition, the total audience figure for the London Paralympics will reach 4 billion.

It said that four years ago in Beijing, a total cumulative audience of around 3.8 billion in 80 countries watched the 2008 Paralympics — including a total of 1.4 billion viewings in China across 11 days, 670 million in Japan and 439 million in Germany. Calculating figures in that way means individual viewers are counted several times.

The London organizing committee said deals announced so far with about 90 global broadcasters will provide 10 million pounds (approximately $16 million) in revenue, a record for the Paralympics. However, the figure is dwarfed by the scale of broadcasting rights for the Olympics: NBC alone paid $4.38 billion last year to extend its rights to show the Summer and Winter Games through 2020.

Alongside a predicted increase in interest from television audiences, demand for Paralympic tickets has also soared, with a record 2.2 million seats in London sold so far. About

8.8 million tickets were sold during the 17-day London Olympics.

“Our athletes are surprising, exciting and inspiring people and the interest is a reflection of that,” said Alexis Schaefer, the commercial and marketing director for the International Paralympic Committee.

In Britain, Channel 4 will show 150 hours of programming, and about 350 hours more online and across three temporary on-demand channels. The Australian Broadcasting Corp. will screen about 100 hours of coverage, showing events live each day on its main channels and offering a highlights show and on-demand Internet service.

However, many global channels screening the Paralympics, including Japan’s NHK, China’s CCTV and the Korean Broadcasting Service, are public channels, without the same pressures to secure advertising as commercial networks. Others showing the competition are specialist cable sports channels, such as Brazil’s Globo — which has 11 million subscribers — or Italy’s Sky Italia, with 5 million paying customers.

NBC, which drew 31 million viewers with its coverage of the London Olympics closing ceremony, said it will screen a 90-minute roundup on Sept. 16 — a week after the Paralympics close. In addition, it will screen four 60-minute highlight programs on the NBC Sports Network — a cable channel it acquired in 2011 with 80 million subscribers.

“Four 60-minute segments and one 90-minute segment is embarrassing,” said Damon Herota, an IT consultant in Orlando, Florida, who has organized one of several petitions urging major networks to

cover events live.“The effect on people would be

simply amazing and the barriers it would break down between able-bodied Americans and the disabled would be monumental,” said Herota, whose online petition has so far attracted about 1,300 signatures.

NBC insists its coverage represents a major increase on previous years, up from the single 90-minute program it offered from the Beijing Paralympics. It also points out that the U.S. Olympic Committee, and not the network itself, controls broadcast rights to the Paralympics.

U.S. Olympic Committee spokeswoman Jeannine Hansen said public recognition of the Paralympics is “still in its infancy” in the United States, but added that viewers would have access to a combination of televised highlights and live online streams. She said the committee welcomed the fact NBC was increasing its coverage this year.

Hansen said NBC coverage would be re-aired on the Universal Sports Network and that daily highlight segments would be available on the U.S. Paralympic team’s YouTube channel.

The network drew criticism over its decision not to screen some events live during the Olympics, choosing instead to show them on tape-delay in prime time slots. However, NBC still won record audiences.

Schaefer said interest in the Paralympics in the U.S. is slowly increasing.

“If we were not seeing progress in the U.S. then that would be disappointing, but we do see progress,” he said. “You always want to have more coverage, and I hope in the future that we will be able to work with NBC on having live coverage on television and online in the United States. That’s the clear goal.”

Some equality campaigners hope that increasing television coverage of the Paralympics will help to change attitudes toward all disabled people.

“We hope that the Paralympics is a catalyst to get people thinking and talking about disability and asking why we don’t see more disabled people in the media, in politics or in industry, and what we can do about it,” said Richard Hawkes, chief executive of British disability charity Scope.

“At a time when we know attitudes to disabled people are getting worse, this kind of visibility can make a real difference.”

US underrates Paralympics

“Our athletes are surprising, exciting

and inspiring people and the interest is a reflection of that”

~Alexis Schaefermarketing director,

Intl. Paralympic

Committee

paralympics

Page 15: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Friday, august 24, 2012/ Page 15New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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SMALL, CLEAN, AND 2bdrm, 1ba house for rent. Two small living areas. Enclosed, grassy backyard with cov- ered portico. Carport, w/d hookup. Re- finished hardwood floors. Safe location. Walking, biking distance to UNM Medi- cal/Law School. Tenant must maintain yard. NS only. 1yr lease. Small pet ne- gotiable. Contact: kaycarrot@hotmail. com

AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1 2/3 BDRM 1 BA 1 car garage. 1615 Hermosa NE. $1,100/mo near med/ law school. Monica 505-280-0855.

BEAUTIFUL, NEWLY REMODELED Old Town casita available for rent, $900/mo. 1BDRM with cozy living space and kitchen, lots of light, and new tile throughout. Only a 5 minute walk away from Old Town plaza, restau- rants, and shops, and across the street from Albuquerque Museum and Tiguex Park. Includes a spacious, fenced-in back yard with storage shed. Remod- eled bathroom with new W/D. 1908 1/2 Old Town Rd. NW. Sorry, no pets/ NS. Available September 1. Call 505-459- 5272.

2 BDRM COTTAGE recently remodeled, 3 blocks to UNM, off street parking, hardwood floors, $750 +gas and elec- tric. No dogs. 842-5450.

TOWN HOUSE FOR rent in quiet area. 2 BDRM , 2 CG, W/D. 9704 Lagrima de Oro. $1200/mo. 505-344-7006.

2-3BDRM. HARDWOOD floors.Kiva fire- place. $950/mo. One year lease. Big back yard. Atrium. Pets ok. 505-450- 6788.

Houses For Sale

3BDRM 2BA PLUS detached studio. Near campus. Move-in condition. Hard- wood floors. All appliances stay. Joanna Muth Pargin Realty 505-440- 5022, 505-296-1500, JoannaMuth@ya hoo.com

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

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WelcomeBack

Shabbat!When: Friday, August 24th

Where: Aaron David Bram

Hillel House

Address: 1701 Sigma Chi NE

Albuquerque,

NM 87106

Time: 6pm

Phone Number: (505) 242-1127

Website: http://www.unmhillel.org

Hillel is the Jewish student organization

on campus welcoming students of traditional age, between 18-31.

YOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSCOULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!

SPONSORTHE DAILY LOBO

CROSSWORD505.277.5656

SPONSOR THISSUDOKU

Get your name out there with the Daily Sudoku505.277.5656

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

FOR RELEASE AUGUST 24, 2012

ACROSS1 Where a canary

sings6 Loser’s

catchphrase11 Blackjack variable14 Last Olds model15 Living proof16 Test to the max17 Trendy ski slope?19 Front-end

protector20 Assumed name21 Diamond offense23 Skelton’s

Kadiddlehopper25 Tried to hit26 Monogrammed

neckwear?31 Levi’s alternative32 Mini successors33 Henhouse37 Scout’s honor39 Pub. with more

than 100Pulitzers

40 Serengetiheavyweight

41 Nonproductive42 More than

strange44 Watch face

display, briefly45 Red, blue and

green foodcolors?

49 Lesser partner52 Southern cuisine

staple53 Trucker’s view56 “Same old, same

old”60 Airport 100+

miles NW of PIT61 Indicators of royal

contentment?63 Tease64 GI’s home65 Ready and then

some66 Mud bath site?67 Itty-bitty68 Impedes

DOWN1 Literary nickname2 The Phoenix of

the NCAA’sSouthernConference

3 Forfeited wheels

4 Exercise unit5 Pilgrimage

destination6 “Wait, Wait ...

Don’t Tell Me!”airer

7 Relative of mine8 Yes-or-no

decision method9 Original home of

the Poor Clares10 Raise canines?11 Ready to swing12 Sarkozy’s wife __

Bruni13 Put on a

pedestal18 Low life?22 “The Garden of

Earthly Delights”artist

24 Teen Spiritdeodorant brand

26 Kyrgyzstanborder range

27 Bawdy28 Series of rings29 Played around

(with)30 Letter-shaped

shoe fastener34 Like some

garage floors

35 Almost never,maybe

36 Pea jackets38 Amber, for one40 Caroling

consequences43 Pressing needs?46 Twisting force47 Stimulate48 First stage of

grief49 Serious players

50 Like MountRushmore atnight

51 High-maintenance

54 Many ages55 Dict. entries57 Food fought over

in old ads58 “Man, it’s hot!”59 Red gp.62 Rejection

Thursday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Marti DuGuay-Carpenter 8/24/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 8/24/12

dailysudoku Solution to yesterday’s problem.

dailycrosswordYear Zero

Level 1 2 3 4

Page 16: NM Daily Lobo 082412

Page 16 / Friday, august 24, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobo

GREAT BUY! DUPLEX on Adams Street. Make money for yourself or par- ents! Seller financing. Call Jeff 505-235- 4242/Signature J Homes.

Rooms For RentFEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to take over lease at Casas del Rio. $511/mo + utilities. Call 505-610-1589.

FEMALE TEACHER WELCOMES quiet, NS, employed/female grad student. Two story townhouse. Private upstairs BDRM with walk-in closet and private BA. $475/mo+utilities. Located at 12th and Mountain. 3 miles from UNM. $150 DD with lease. 505-975-6528.

LESS THAN 1 BLOCK FROM UNM! 2 females in house on Stanford. Seeking clean quiet female student for attached room $300/mo. Call/text Chloe: 505- 917-7123.

ROOM FOR RENT. UNM area. $495/mo. Utilities and Wi-fi included. 505-453-4866.

SUBDIVIDED HOUSE IN North Valley. Private 2BDRM 1BA, den, kitchen for rent. House has W/D. 0.5 acre yard and garage. $700/mo. Call Brenda 856-6993.

ROOMMATE WANTED. ASH/UNIVER- SITY. 3BDRM home. 1 dog. $500/mo. + 1/3utilities. 505-603-3622. 505-228- 6204.

BEAUTIFUL HOME CLOSE to campus. $350/mo. Male student preffered. W/D. Fully furnished home besides bedroom. Call Timothy at 486-2402 or Cindy at 486-0530.

STUDENT WANTED TO share 3BDRM 2.5BA home 10 mins from campus. Price $450/mo. includes utilities. Call 505-399-9020.

SEEKING UNM FEMALE student to share a 3BDRM shared BA. $520/ mo utilities included. If interested call 505- 310-1529.

QUIET MALE ROOMMATE to share 4BDRM house. Girard and Silver. $310/mo. +utilites. Ken 604-6322.

ROOM FOR RENT in 3BDRM 2BA. 4 blocks to UNM. $425/mo. includes utili- ties. Call 239-0570.

FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north cam- pus. $390/mo +1/4utilities. High speed Internet. Pictures available. Gated com- munity. Access I-40 & I-25. [email protected]

REMODELED HOME WITH 2 spacious rooms. $350/mo. plus shared utilities (including internet & cable), between Tramway & Copper. 505-920-9541 or 505-814-9422.

TWO ROOMS IN 3BDRM/2BA. Altura Park Home available Oct. 1st. $400/mo. each plus shared utilities. Female. Seri- ous Junior/Senior or Grad Students to share with Pre-med. 1yr lease min. Lisa 505-480-9072.

STUDENT WANTED $400 +utilities. Room available in big furnished house. W/D. Pets ok. 10 mins to UNM. Call Eric at 934-4540.

UNM/PRESBYTERIAN AREA ROOM- MATE Wanted: One-year rental agree- ment for a 1BDRM available in a fur- nished 3BDRM/1BA 1250 sq. ft. House within walking distance to UNM and 2 blocks from Presbyterian Hospital. Non- smoker and no pets. Rent is $500/mo. + 1/3 utilities (Gas, Water, Electric, Se- curity system, Internet) with a $500 se- curity deposit. Call 505-948-4230.

CLEAN, QUIET, EMPLOYED roommate wanted to share 3BDRM house. $325/mo. including all utilities and inter- net. Unfurnished. 2 miles from UNM. Graduate student preferred. Lawrence 505-264-6009.

LOBO VILLAGE LEASE! Swimming pool, great gym, hot tub. Awesome roommates! Female only. $519/mo. 307-689-9522.

RIO RANCHO HOUSE with open room. $300 deposit plus $100 pet deposit. $400/mo +1/3 utilities. Female only. Call or text 505-379-3958.

Bikes/Cycles

2006 SPECIAL EDITION Honda Metropolitan Scooter. Asking $1200 but negotiable. Call or text 688-3699.

PetsALASKAN/SIBERIAN HUSKIES FOR sale. 203-9316.

For SaleATTENTION MGMT 341 Students: Inter- mediate Accounting binder-ready ver- sion Sixth Edition textbook for sale. Only $80 (compared to $152.75 ebook and $206 used) Call 505-730-2745.

MUSIC: VINTAGE FRENCH Horn (1930) with case, a few dents, $350. Conn French Horn (student) $250. Mar- tin Cornet $125. Jimi 480-7444.

MEMORY FOAM MATRESS topper for sale. Twin bed. $50 obo. Russell 909- 538-5335.

BRADLEY’S BOOKS. (USED) Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Inside Winning Coffee. [email protected]

NEED SOMETHING FOR your dorm or apartment? TV’s, DVD’s + Shelf, Pil- lows, Bedding, File Cabinet, XX Men’s Clothes, Sm. BBQ, Dishes, Books in- cluding used text books. Contact 505- 268-3484 or 505-385-5888.

PIANO, WALNUT KAWAI 43” Upright, wood action, with bench. Perfect condi- tion, never stored, 1 owner. $1,500 obo, appraised $4,500. Payments possible. 220-7155.

NATIVE AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE textbook. Nabokov, author. Native American Art II -- Fry, instructor sells used for $48 at bookstore excellent con- dition for $35. 505-917-9528.

FurnitureDORM AND APARTMENT furnishings. Student desks, swivel chairs, file cabi- nets. Twice is Nice, 4716 CENTRAL AVE SE. On Central directly across from Dion’s between Washington and San Mateo.

USED FURNITURE. SOFAS $45, loveseats $35, sofa chairs $25, tables $120 and $100, chairs $20. Show stu- dent ID for 10% discount. Call 505-916- 7096.

TextbooksSELLING A BIOLOGY110 textbook. Cal- l/text 505-916-6958.

Vehicles For Sale

06 PT CRUISER 93,200 miles, Economi- cal, white/grey interior. Standard trans- mission. Runs good. Perfect for college.$5,500 .Call/text 505-489-6515. E-mail me at [email protected]

CHEVY MALIBU 2001. Runs well. 123600 miles. $2950. Call 505-917-8677.

2001 ACURA MDX for sale. $5995 OBO. 505-453-2739.

1992 FORD EXPLORER automatic, teal, overheats. Trade for car that runs. $1200 obo. Call 359-8194.

Child Care

CHILD CARE CHURCH services Sun- day Mornings 9-10, 11-12. Experience, references. $20/Sunday. Near UNM. 254-2606.

CHILD CARE POSITION available imme- diately, birth through elementary- hours 8:30am-12:30pm Sundays and other times as needed at First Presbyterian Church. Must be able to work during UNM breaks. $9/hr. libbywhiteley@ firstpresabq.org

BABY SITTER/ NANNY. Educator wants PT help for 2 small children AM & PM to drive before and after school programs. John at 553-4730.

Jobs Off Campus

CLASSROOM ASSISTANT NEEDED. Must be available everyday. Monday through Friday mornings and after- noons. Montessori experience helpful, will train. PREFER STUDENTS EN- ROLLED IN EDUCATION PROGRAM or 45hrs CDC required. Send info to: 11216 Phoenix Ave. NE, ABQ NM 87112. admin@academymontes sorischool.org 299-3200.

TUTOR NEEDED FOR 8th grade alge- bra for 3/hrs/wk. $10/hr. Call 505-231- 5010.

CAREGIVER FOR DISABLED adult. Daily. Monday-Friday 2 hrs am, Tues- day and Wednesday 2hrs pm. Prefer 8AM and 6PM, flexible on exact times. $10/hr. Nursing students preferred. 292- 9787.

CHEER/DANCE COACHES NEEDED! Energetic & Fun individuals to coach el- em/mid school teams. Working cell phone, email, reliable transportation. HS Diploma. Background check req’d. $10-$20/hr. earning potential. Call 292- 8819 today!

SOCCER COACHES, PT Saturdays only. 3-5 hrs, coach youth ages 4-11, great PT pay. 898-9999.

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

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

DANCERS WANTED AS entertainers for parties. Nights and weekends. Same day pay. 505-489-8066.

MALE PERSONAL ASSISTANT/AIDE for bookman/ spiritual director for fall semester. Flexible schedule. [email protected]

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a won- derful and supportive team of people providing top-quality afterschool pro- grams for 5-12 year olds. This is a train- ing and leadership development posi- tion. Associate Directors work under di- rect supervision of Program Directors who prepare them to be responsible for overall afterschool program manage- ment. $10/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Ap- ply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE or call 296- 2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org

LOS POBLANOS INN is hiring for part time banquet servers & bussers. Must be availible on the weekends and be al- cohol certified to serve in the state of New Mexico. Please send resumes and contact info to acabral@lospoblanos. com

M&M SMOKESHOP IS hiring for an hon- est sales representative. Hourly plus commission with benefits. Flexible with student schedules. Bring resumes to: 1800 Central Ave SE Albuquerque NM, 87106 from 9am- 1pm.

FEMALE NUDE MODELS needed for art photography. 433-9948.

WANT TO SELL television commer- cials? Are you creative and aggressive? Then come join the fun, fast paced, lu- crative field of broadcast sales. NewMexico’s CW is looking for account ex- ecutives. We will pay Top commissionsfor top level talent. Please send a re- sume to [email protected] ACMECommunications is an Equal Opportu- nity Employer.

FRESQUEZ COMPANIES IS currently hiring Crew Members, Servers and Cooks. Cooks - 2 yr. Previous Line cook experience (Work experience a plus). Servers must be alcohol certifiedApply at www.fresquezcompanies.comFax: 505-880-1015 apply in person 8218 Louisiana Blvd. NE ABQ, 87113ALL CANDIDATES MUST SUCCESS- FULLY COMPLETE PRE EMPLOY- MENT SCREENING.

PART- TIME RETAIL clerk needed at Old Town Gift Shop. Some retail experi- ence preferred. Apply at Plaza gifts. 2024 South Plaza NW.

EDUCATOR/CAREGIVER FOR TOP- quality after-school and summer child care program. Play sports, take field trips, make crafts, be goofy, have fun and be a good role model. Learn, play, and get paid for doing both! $9/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 296-2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org Work- study encouraged to apply.

WANTED: CHEMISTRY TUTOR. 298- 2170.

TUTORS WANTED: ACT / SAT. En- glish, math, science. PT $12-$15/hr DOE. Send resume to info@aplus coaching.com

LOOKING FOR TALENTED and experi- enced back end/front end programmer. Must know PHP, MySQL, databases, javascript, and HTML5. $750-$1000/wk based on experience. Email resume to [email protected]

ACTIVITY LEADERS, SUBSTITUTE Ac- tivity Leaders and Reading Tutors needed to provide homework help & fa- cilitate educational activities in after school programs. PT, M-F $10.50 hr. Apply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

SCRUBS DIRECT HIRING P/T customer service clerk. Friendly,dependable,self starter wanted.Immediate start. Apply at 2225-G Wyoming Blvd.

LOOKING FOR COLLEGE students to tutor in 21 APS schools. Flexible hours 7:30-3:00 M-TH. Starting salary $9.50- /hr Contact: Lucy [email protected]

CAREGIVERS: GET PAID to offer com- panionship and assist senior citizens with daily tasks (cooking, light cleaning, errands, medication reminders, and sometimes personal care). Rewarding employment and excellent experience for nursing and health sciences stu- dents. No experience needed; training provided. Part time work with student- friendly, flexible schedules. Apply on- line at www.rightathome.net/albu querque

ENRICHMENT CLASS INSTRUCTORS: Seeking people to teach enriching skills to children ages 6-12 after school. We want fun-loving people who can plan and teach short classes on: photogra- phy, painting, science, guitar, drawing, karate, dance, drama, sports, etc. Classes typically meet once or twice per week, for an hour, at one or multiple schools. Pay up to $20 per class ses- sion depending on education, expertise, and experience. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:00 T-F. Call Jeff at (505) 296-2880 or e-mail jeff@childrens choice.org

PERFECT JOB FOR college student! Caregiver needed for disabled working man living near Cibola HS. Dressing, cleaning, and laundry. No experience needed, no lifting. PT, M-F, 6-9:15am, $130/wk. Call 319-6474.

Volunteers

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR Agora Helpline’s Fall training! Application Deadline: September 8. Apply early, Apply now at AgoraCares.org

NEED VOLUNTEERS? Advertise in the Daily Lobo! 277-5656.

UNIVERSITY OF NEW Mexico is looking for Women with Asthma for Asthma Re- search Study. Women with asthma are needed for a new research study look- ing at the effects of body fat on the breathing tubes or airways. Participa- tion involves one outpatient screening visit with breathing tests. If you qualify,one to two overnight hospital stays will occur with additional testing including blood and breathing tests at no cost to you. Compensation of up to $100 for each overnight hospital stay will be pro- vided for your time and inconvenience (maximum of $200). If you are a woman with asthma, over the age of 18 and less than 56 years, and are interested in finding out more about this study, please contact or leave a message forTereassa Archibeque at 505-269-1074 or email [email protected]

Jobs On Campus

THE DAILY LOBO IS LOOKING FOR AN ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT!

Job duties include: Revenue reports, Campus billing, mailing of newspaper to subscribers, preparing & mailing tear- sheets & monthly statements. Special projects as assigned; data entry and fil- ing. 2-4 hours/day, 5 days/week, must be able to work mornings, position is year-round, 4-8 hrs/wk during the summer. Accounting experience re- quired including a working knowledge of Excel and Access. Accounting stu- dent preferred. Good customer service skills a plus. $8.50-$10.00 per hour de- pending upon experience. Apply online at: unmjobs.unm.edu/applicants/ Central?quickFind=68587

HIRING? ADVERTISE IN the Daily Lobo! Open Monday through Friday 8am-5pm. 277-5656 or [email protected]

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

Now You Can Place Your Daily Lobo Classified Online Ad at

www.dailylobo.com!!!

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

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

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

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

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

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230

1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

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

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

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

We Have MovedTo A

New Location!- Same Great Service-Closer to UNM-Locally owned and Operated

120 Yale Blvd s.e.Albuquerque, NM 87106

505-265-5170

Est. 1977

The

Ltd.

Producto de Nuevo Mexico

Volunteer Advocates answer the center’s phone hotline or online hotline for survivors of sexual violence and their loved ones.

Join a movement and gain valuable experience while working from home!

Volunteer with the Rape Crisis Center of Central New Mexico

All volunteers must complete a 40-hour training.Next training begins: September 21st, 2012

Contact the Volunteer Coordinator: [email protected]

505-266-7712 ext 117or Visit our website for more info!

rapecrisiscnm.org

BrazilianWax $35

WE NEVER DOUBLE DIP OUR STICKS!

BrazilianWaxing Boutiquefull body waxing • microderm facials

airbrush tanning

www.brazilianwaxingboutique.com

3 LOCATIONS!

WESTSIDE10200 Corrales NW

505-922-0WAX (0929)

EASTSIDE2910 San Mateo NE

505-217-5508

SANTA FE1544 Cerrillos Rd.

505-989-4WAX (4929)

TravelCenters of Americaof Americaof AmericaGood for $2 Off

Country Pride RestaurantThis location only.

2501 University Blvd NE505.884.1066

WE THANK YOUWhere seconds are on us!

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