NM Daily Lobo 110311

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Let’s do the Time Warp again see page 6 November 3, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 thursday Inside the Daily Lobo Photo essay See page 2 volume 116 issue 52 58 | 38 TODAY Nations worry See page 4 by Luke Holmen [email protected] Representatives from the (un)Occupy Albuquerque protest, including former hunger striker Sebastian Pais, met with President David Schmidly on Wednesday to discuss plans for the movement’s on-campus occupation. At the group’s general assembly meeting Wednes- day Pais said he requested the resignation of the pres- ident, and said the movement should not be required to obtain a permit. “Everybody is allowed to pass out information and express themselves on campus every day,” he said, “So we feel there is no need for a permit.” Schmidly said he didn’t recall Pais asking for his resignation, but said that he worked with the group to provide an amicable solution. “I thought it went very well, it was a very frank exchange,” he said. “We made it clear that we are very supportive of their freedom of speech. We asked for their cooperation to make sure that we move forward in a way that ensures their rights and the safety of by Chelsea Erven and Luke Holmen [email protected] A female jumped from the fourth floor of the Yale parking structure after contacting APD this morning, UNMPD spokesman Lt. Robert Haarhues said. Haarhues said UNMPD officers ar- rived on the scene but were unable to talk her down. She jumped and landed in a flow- er bed and was knocked unconscious, he said. She was then rushed to UNM Hospital, where she became conscious and alert almost immediately. Haarhues said she is not a UNM student. Agora Crisis Center spokesman Jeremy Jaramillo said suicide is a state- wide problem, and that Agora has handled several suicide attempts and a few completed suicides in the past month alone. Jaramillo said the best way to prevent suicide is to simply pay at- tention to emotional and physical changes in others. “e truth is, we need to have campus-wide training so that we know what to look out for with our friends and family,” he said. “Isolation, change in weight, sleeping patterns, loss of interest in activities, general hopelessness and change in mood — these all could be warning signs.” Jaramillo said Agora, in conjunc- tion with UNM’s Office of the Provost, is working on a training program to help professors and advisers recog- nize suicide warning signs. He said the program is an online, at-your- own-pace avatar-based course that will be ready in the coming weeks. “It teaches them to look out for the signs of people who may be having an emotionally difficult time, and it teaches them how to approach them, how to speak to them and how to re- fer them to the right place on cam- pus,” he said. Jaramillo also said Agora recent- ly developed an online chat system for those who feel more comfortable chatting online than calling Agora’s crisis prevention line. He said the best thing to do for those who may be considering sui- cide is to talk to them. “e best thing to do is be straight with them, and talk to them upfront and say, ‘Are you considering sui- cide?’” he said. “People need to get to a counselor, they need to talk to a professional. Ask them to call us and see what it feels like to talk to some- one. ey can always hang up or press ‘end chat.’” POLICE: SUICIDE ATTEMPTED AT UNM Unsuccessful attempts by method Suicides by method NEW MEXICO SUICIDE STATISTICS Victim fell four stories, survived by landing in garden Firearms 56% Suffocation 21% Poisoning 18% Cut/Pierce 1% Other 4% Poisoning 75% Cut/Pierce 16% Suffocation 2% Firearms 1% Other 6% Suicide is the eighth most common cause of death in New Mexico and the 10th most common cause of death nationwide. On average, 342 NM residents commit suicide each year. On average, 6.6 suicides occur per week in NM. Males account for 81 percent of all suicides in NM More men succeed in committing suicide, but more women attempt and fail. 60 percent of failed suicide victims in NM are female, while 40 percent are male. On average, 1,456 New Mexicans are hospitalized after an attempted suicide each year. There are an average of 4 attempted suicides in NM every day. The average medical cost per attempted suicide case is $9,440. All information is according to the New Mexico Suicide Prevention Resource Center Call the Agora Crisis hotline if you are considering suicide or just need to talk at 505-277-3013. 9 a.m. to midnight, 365 days a year Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo (un)Occupy protester and former hunger striker Sebastian Pais shakes hands with UNM President David Schmidly during a Wednesday morning meeting. Pais and other protesters met with Schmidly to discuss the future of the (un)Occupy movement on campus. Schmidly meets with protesters Protester Sebastian Pais says he asked Schmidly to resign from his post see Meeting PAGE 3 Continuing Coverage (un)Occupy Albuquerque

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NM Daily Lobo 110311

Transcript of NM Daily Lobo 110311

DAILY LOBOnew mexico Let’s do the Time

Warp againsee page 6

November 3, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895thursday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Photo essay

See page 2volume 116 issue 52 58 | 38

TODAYNations worry See page 4

by Luke [email protected]

Representatives from the (un)Occupy Albuquerque protest, including former hunger striker Sebastian Pais, met with President David Schmidly on Wednesday to discuss plans for the movement’s on-campus occupation.

At the group’s general assembly meeting Wednes-day Pais said he requested the resignation of the pres-ident, and said the movement should not be required to obtain a permit.

“Everybody is allowed to pass out information and express themselves on campus every day,” he said, “So we feel there is no need for a permit.”

Schmidly said he didn’t recall Pais asking for his resignation, but said that he worked with the group to provide an amicable solution.

“I thought it went very well, it was a very frank exchange,” he said. “We made it clear that we are very supportive of their freedom of speech. We asked for their cooperation to make sure that we move forward in a way that ensures their rights and the safety of

by Chelsea Erven and Luke [email protected]

A female jumped from the fourth � oor of the Yale parking structure after contacting APD this morning, UNMPD spokesman Lt. Robert Haarhues said.

Haarhues said UNMPD o� cers ar-rived on the scene but were unable to talk her down.

She jumped and landed in a � ow-er bed and was knocked unconscious, he said. She was then rushed to UNM Hospital, where she became conscious and alert almost immediately.

Haarhues said she is not a UNM student.

Agora Crisis Center spokesman Jeremy Jaramillo said suicide is a state-wide problem, and that Agora has handled several suicide attempts and a few completed suicides in the past month alone.

Jaramillo said the best way to prevent suicide is to simply pay at-tention to emotional and physical changes in others.

“� e truth is, we need to have campus-wide training so that we know what to look out for with our friends and family,” he said. “Isolation, change in weight, sleeping patterns, loss of interest in activities, general

hopelessness and change in mood — these all could be warning signs.”

Jaramillo said Agora, in conjunc-tion with UNM’s O� ce of the Provost, is working on a training program to help professors and advisers recog-nize suicide warning signs. He said the program is an online, at-your-own-pace avatar-based course that will be ready in the coming weeks.

“It teaches them to look out for the signs of people who may be having an emotionally di� cult time, and it teaches them how to approach them, how to speak to them and how to re-fer them to the right place on cam-pus,” he said.

Jaramillo also said Agora recent-ly developed an online chat system for those who feel more comfortable chatting online than calling Agora’s crisis prevention line.

He said the best thing to do for those who may be considering sui-cide is to talk to them.

“� e best thing to do is be straight with them, and talk to them upfront and say, ‘Are you considering sui-cide?’” he said. “People need to get to a counselor, they need to talk to a professional. Ask them to call us and see what it feels like to talk to some-one. � ey can always hang up or press ‘end chat.’”

POLICE: SUICIDE ATTEMPTED AT UNM Unsuccessful attempts by methodSuicides by method

NEW MEXICO SUICIDE STATISTICS

Victim fell four stories, survived by landing in garden

Firearms 56%

Suffocation 21%

Poisoning 18%

Cut/Pierce 1% Other 4%

Poisoning 75%

Cut/Pierce 16%

Suffocation 2%Firearms 1%

Other 6%

Suicide is the eighth most common cause • of death in New Mexico and the 10th most common cause of death nationwide.On average, 342 NM residents commit • suicide each year.On average, 6.6 suicides occur per week in • NM.Males account for 81 percent of all suicides • in NM More men succeed in committing suicide, • but more women attempt and fail. 60 percent of failed suicide victims in NM are female, while 40 percent are male.

On average, 1,456 New Mexicans are • hospitalized after an attempted suicide each year.There are an average of 4 attempted • suicides in NM every day.The average medical cost per attempted • suicide case is $9,440.

All information is according to the New Mexico Suicide Prevention Resource Center

Call the Agora Crisis hotline if you are considering suicide or just need

to talk at 505-277-3013.9 a.m. to midnight, 365 days a year

Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo(un)Occupy protester and former hunger striker Sebastian Pais shakes hands with UNM President David Schmidly during a Wednesday morning meeting. Pais and other protesters met with Schmidly to discuss the future of the (un)Occupy movement on campus.

Schmidlymeets withprotestersProtester Sebastian Pais says he asked Schmidly to resign from his post

see Meeting PAGE 3

Continuing Coverage (un)Occupy Albuquerque

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575-646-2736prospective.nmsu.edu/graduate

PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboThursday, NoveMber 3, 2011

volume 116 issue 52Telephone: (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-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorElizabeth ClearyNews EditorChelsea ErvenAssistant News EditorLuke HolmenStaff ReporterCharlie ShipleyPhoto EditorZach GouldAssistant Photo EditorDylan Smith

Culture EditorAlexandra SwanbergAssistant Culture EditorNicole PerezSports EditorNathan FarmerAssistant Sports EditorCesar DavilaCopy ChiefCraig DubykMultimedia EditorJunfu Han

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DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Photo essay: South central Dallas

Laurisa Galvan / Daily Lobo“D”, a young man from south central Dallas, poses for a picture in front of a run-down property in his neighborhood. D covers his face with a bandana and declined to give his real name because of his involvement with gangs. This photo is from Laurisa Galvan’s ongoing photo project, “South Central Dallas. ”The project focuses on communities within the large Texas city that are riddled with gang violence and poverty.

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students on campus.”Pais was on a hunger strike for

nearly a week trying to get Schmid-ly to meet with him, but Schmidly said he was out of town during that time.

Pais ended his strike Tuesday night after UNM Interim Provost Chaouki Abdallah met with pro-test representatives. Abdallah said he came for personal reasons and not because Schmidly asked him to.

Schmidly said he agreed with all of the requests and compromis-es of the movement, but said the group will not be allowed to have

any permanent structures and cannot stay on campus overnight. The group will be required to reap-ply for a permit to occupy Yale Park from 5-10 p.m. on a weekly basis.

“As long as they have agreed to abide by the policies we have on freedom of expression and dis-sent … there will be no problem,” Schmidly said.

Pais said Schmidly’s use of po-lice forces in recent weeks is the protesters’ primary concern, and he said he asked Schmidly not to use force in future. Pais said the movement is concerned about re-cent violence in Oklahoma and

Oakland.“The force brought to us last

Tuesday was extreme,” he said. “Bringing helicopters and riot gear to ask us to move out of there was too much, and we felt threatened and we felt that it wasn’t the right thing to do.”

Pais said the movement will be investigating UNM’s involvement in corporate funding and how UNM’s budget is spent, and may call for the resignation of other of-ficials in future.

“We want to bring accountabil-ity to this institution as we do any public institution,” he said.

by Luke Holmen [email protected]

UNM President David Schmidly is banning media presence at any meetings between his office and (un)Occupy protesters. Representatives from the movement met with the president behind closed doors Wednesday, as they did for the first meeting between protesters and the president on Oct. 26.

Schmidly barred the media de-spite requests from protester and UNM Peace Studies Professor Desi Brown that media be present at the meetings.

The president said allowing me-dia presence would hamper the conversation.

“We’re not going to let any media in here,” he said. “Sebastian (Pais), you and I need to have a conversation.”

Pais said he disagreed.“These meetings need to be open

to the media so that the public can know what is going on,” he said.

Pais said the media would help hold the administration accountable.

Schmidly and Pais met with the media after the meeting to offer comments.

“I don’t think it’s a media event;

that’s not a media event that took place in there,” Schmidly said. “That was a discussion with a group about how we could proceed with a peace-able assembly, and afterwards (the media) have had access to them and access to me, and I think that’s an appropriate response.”

Schmidly said no media will be allowed in future meetings with protesters.

Sarah Welsh, executive director of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government, said the presi-dent is not required to open the meetings to the public because he is not a public body.

Meeting from page 1

Media barred from meetings

FARMINGTON — Enrolled members of the Navajo Nation soon can ditch their green Certif-icates of Indian Blood in favor of new, tribal-issued identification cards.

The Daily Times reports the Navajo Office of Vital Records will begin issuing the cards to tribe members on Nov. 11.

The cards will be issued first to 100 randomly selected people dur-ing a test run of the program.

The tribe has pushed for the creation of an ID card for the last decade. The cards are designed to boost convenience, security and privacy for tribal members.

Tribes increasingly are issuing cards to members to offer easier identification of American Indians and to streamline affairs with out-side agencies.

After the initial test run, the Navajo Nation plans to issue ID cards from all five agencies on the 27,000-square-mile reservation.

ALBUQUERQUE — A bystander helping an Albuquerque grocery store manager during a robbery left with a knuckle sandwich and missing teeth.

Robert Carroll lost his teeth in late August after he tried to step in and help his grandson’s boss, who was confronting some alleged shoplifters.

Carroll tells KRQE-TV he went over to find out what was going on when someone hit him in the mouth, costing him some teeth.

He said when he stood up, the same man started pelting him, his grandson and the manager with rocks, which knocked out even more teeth. Carroll says it will probably cost him about $20,000 to get his teeth fixed.

The group of attackers took off, but police were able to identify the man who threw the punch.

Police arrested 22-year-old Ruis Romero on suspicion of aggravated battery.

ALBUQUERQUE — A special prosecutor will weigh evidence and consider whether to file criminal charges against an Albuquerque police officer who repeatedly kicked a fleeing man in the head after a traffic stop.

District Attorney Clint Well-born of Socorro says he was ap-pointed Oct. 21 by the office of District Attorney Kari Branden-burg in Albuquerque to handle the case against Albuquerque Police Department Officer John Doyle.

The Albuquerque Journal re-ports Doyle wrote in his incident report that he kicked 32-year-old Nicholas Blume after a short pursuit on Feb. 13. Doyle said he feared Blume might have a gun and didn’t want to encumber his hands by grappling with him.

Doyle has been on administra-tive leave since mid-May. A sec-ond officer who held Blume down has been on desk duty and does not face charges.

ALBUQUERQUE — Three armed men wearing Halloween masks busted into an Albuquerque apartment and robbed the terrified residents. What the three didn’t count on was the residents fighting back.

Police say the masked men were armed with a machete, a ba-ton and a golf club. The man with the machete was swinging it wild-ly as he demanded wallets and money Saturday night.

KOAT-TV reports the intrud-ers didn’t count on the vic-tims fighting back. Some of the victims picked up swords and chased the masked men out of the apartment.

Police later arrested Marcelo Gallegos, Joseph Morrison and Joshua Jordan on suspicion of home invasion, kidnapping, lar-ceny and aggravated battery.

LAS CRUCES — A New Mexico woman is recovering after police say she lost part of her scalp during a violent fight with a former friend.

Las Cruces police detectives say that 19-year-old Gabriela Nunez and a former friend, also 19, were at a party early on Saturday. That’s when police said Nunez and the vic-tim began fighting and hair pulling.

According to the police report, Nunez struck the woman and pulled her hair hard enough to cause skin to tear from the top of her head.

Nunez was later arrested on sus-picion of aggravated battery causing great bodily harm. She was booked into the Dona Ana County Detention Center with bond set at $10,000.

The victim’s injuries were not life-threatening.

It was unclear if Nunez had hired an attorney.

DEXTER — New Mexico State Police are investigating a rollover crash involving a stolen government vehicle that left one teenager dead and five others injured.

Police say Chavez County sher-iff’s deputies responded to a call about two suspicious vehicles parked near an intersection early Saturday.

The vehicle with the government license plate sped away and even-tually reached a dirt road, where the driver lost control. The vehicle rolled three times and all six passen-gers were ejected.

Police say 14-year-old James Lodoza of Dexter was killed.

One passenger has been released from the hospital but the other four remain in critical condition.

Police have identified the driver as 18-year-old Jacob Matta of Roswell.

Navajo ID programboosts convenience

Man loses teeth in struggle with robbers

Cop awaits fate afteradmitting brutality

Victims use swords toward off intruders

Fight between friends results in torn scalp

Stolen vehicle chase ends with teen death

For more information, email

[email protected] DAILY LOBOis looking for

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[email protected] Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Thursday

November 3, 2011

Page

4

Editor,

I am deeply disappointed that the Student Fee Review Board members voted unanimously to decrease the number of graduate student members on the SFRB.

Graduate students are uniquely positioned as the most experienced students on campus (although this vote evidences that they too are susceptible to intimidation tactics and can be made to forget who they represent).

Graduate and professional students have historically fought against the UNM administration’s moves to funnel our money to non-academic purposes. They compiled the statistics that showed the drastic increases in fees over the last nine years, they brought to light that with only three out of seven votes, graduate students were not by any means “controlling” the board or the outcome of the votes, and they fought to ensure that these meetings were video recorded.

Graduate students effectively built coalitions with and communicated to the larger community to raise awareness about the University’s priorities and stop unnecessary fee increases. What happened, Graduate and Professional Student Association? Did you just get tired of fighting? Did you accept political promises that can’t be enforced? Was this meeting video recorded? Is the recording available online so those of us who have to pay these fees can watch and hold our elected representatives accountable?

I encourage future GPSA administrations to work hard to pull graduate student fees from the SFRB process and to get heavily involved in undergraduate elections, as we now have a vested interest in how they vote. We also need all of the students to learn how to effectively lobby in Santa Fe. It’s time for students to mobilize teams of people to help candidates knock on doors so that when they get elected, they remember us.

It’s time for student employees to unionize so that we have the autonomy and resources necessary to ensure that all student employees are paid a fair wage and that our fees are invested into projects and services that will enhance our ability to learn and teach. It’s time for students to learn media management skills so that our message can be heard.

Lissa KnudsenUNM student, former GPSA president

LetterGPSA failed constituencywith recent board vote

editoriaL Board

Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief

elizabeth ClearyManaging editor

Chelsea ervenNews editor

by Jason Darensburg Daily Lobo Columnist

When former U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned the nation about the dangers of the ‘military-industrial complex’ in his farewell address on Jan. 17, 1961, he knew what he was talking about.

In that famous speech, Eisenhower challenged the American people to limit the undue influence of the military on our democratic society:

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of de-fense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.”

President Eisenhower was certainly not some wacky peacenik or conspiracy theorist. He was the ultimate military insider, the only four-star general to be elected president and the former commander of all Allied forces in World War II.

His dire warning to the American people was both profound and prophetic. Read his words again. He chose them very carefully, and there is much he left unsaid. Still, not even President Eisenhower could have envisioned the Orwellian, permanent war state we find ourselves living in today.

The U.S. defense budget is now equal to military spending in all other countries of the world combined. In 2010, the United States spent at least $700 billion on defense and security. Adjusting for inflation, that’s more than America has spent on defense since World War II. Military and security expenditures have soared by 120 percent since 2001. The total budget for the U.S. military empire is expected to reach a trillion dollars this year.

Although it is difficult to determine the exact dollar amount, the University of New Mexico receives many millions of dollars in funding each year for Research and Development from all branches of the military-industrial complex. UNM does a huge amount of military research on campus, according to various sources, but apparently none of it’s classified. About 50 UNM employees have active clearance to conduct classified research off campus. However, at the request of the UNM Board of Regents, the next UNM president will also be required to have a security clearance before he or she can take the job.

It’s a little-known fact that UNM has its very own nuclear reactor, hidden away somewhere in the bowels of the Engineering Department. Sure, it’s a tiny reactor, and barring any major disasters, we have no reason to be too concerned — but we all know that disasters can and do happen. Only time will tell.

In 2008, UNM President Schmidly signed a new Memorandum of Understanding with Sandia National Laboratories for cooperation in areas including computing infrastructure, homeland defense and national security. Sandia Labs is heavily involved in the Military Industrial Complex. So is UNM, but we are only a small piece of the spending on a national level.

The problem with determining the actual size of the U.S. defense budget is that much of it is hidden. About 8 percent of the Defense Department’s total spending is now classified. At least $60 billion is allocated in what is referred to as the ‘black budget’ — for operations and technology so secret not even Congress or the president are privy to them.

In an attempt to disguise the true size of the American military empire, the government has long concealed major military-related expenditures in departments other than defense.

For example, the current defense budget does not include the $25 billion for developing and maintaining nuclear weapons. That money instead goes to the Department of Energy. In the State Department budget, $25.3 billion is spent on foreign military aid (mostly to Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Pakistan). Another $1.3 billion outside of the official DOD budget is needed for recruitment and reenlistment incentives for the severely overstretched United States military. The Department of Veterans A currently gets at least $75.7 billion, also not included in the DOD budget. Another $46.4 billion goes to Homeland Security.

Also missing from this calculation is the $2 billion given to the Department of Justice for the paramilitary activities of the FBI; $38.5 billion to the Treasury Department for the Military Retirement Fund; $7.6 billion for the military-related activities of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and well over $200 billion in interest payments alone for past debt-financed defense outlays.

While other countries around the world have reduced military spending significantly over the last decade, we have increased it exponentially. The defense industry lives by the old maxim ‘use it or lose it,’ and somehow our military always finds a way to use it. We’re creating enemies faster than we can kill them. It’s good for business.

America currently garrisons the planet with more than 850 military bases around the world in more than 40 countries and U.S. territories. We deploy more than 190,000 troops across the globe. In Japan alone, we still have around 100,000 people connected to U.S. military forces living and working there, including members of the armed services, dependent family members and about 4,000 civilian employees.

The Pentagon also maintains dependent family housing complexes and schools around the world, along with resort hotels, private ski areas and golf courses. The U.S. military claimed to own a total of 172 golf courses in a 2007 audit report.

These huge concentrations of American military power outside the U.S. are not necessary for our national defense. If anything, they’re a major contributor to our numerous conflicts with other countries.

They are also outrageously expensive. The U.S. spends around $250 billion every year just to maintain its global military presence. The reason for this military presence is not to bring freedom and democracy to the world. The sole purpose is global hegemony and dominance over as many nations as possible.

We then demand these nations pay us exorbitant amounts of money for the privilege of letting us occupy their country, and we force them to sign “Status of Forces” agreements, which basically exempt the military (as well as private contractors) from any laws. Not just the laws of the land — any laws whatsoever.

The U.S. is also the world’s biggest weapons exporter, garnishing around 70 percent of the global arms trade. It’s ironic that our government claims to be so concerned about how dangerous the world is when America sells billions of dollars in high-tech weaponry to any two-bit dictator willing to play ball with us. The world is awash with American-made arms. To a large degree, U.S. defense contractors are directly responsible for making the world a more dangerous place. Weapons production is virtually the only sector of the U.S. economy that’s healthy.

We should have heeded President Eisenhower’s warning a long time ago. It’s far too late to do anything about it now. The military-industrial complex is bankrupting our country and diverting scarce resources from the desperately needed rebuilding of American infrastructure and other crucial spending needs into utterly pointless warmongering. We need to close all of our overseas bases and bring our troops home immediately.

CoLumn

Close bases, bring troops home

The U.S. defense budget is now equal to military

spending in all other countries of the world

combined.

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.

Thursday, November 3, 2011 / Page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

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by Stephanie NanoThe Associated Press

NEW YORK — The number of overdose deaths from powerful pain-killers more than tripled over a de-cade, the government reported Tues-day — a trend that a U.S. health official called an epidemic, but one that can be stopped.

Prescription painkillers such as OxyContin, Vicodin and methadone led to the deaths of almost 15,000 peo-ple, including actor Heath Ledger, in 2008. That’s more than three times the 4,000 deaths from narcotics in 1999.

Such painkillers “are meant to help people who have severe pain,” said Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, which issued the report. “They are, however, highly addictive.”

The report shows that nearly 5 per-cent of Americans age 12 and older said they’ve abused painkillers in the last year, using them for treatment without a prescription or just for the high. In 2008-09 surveys, Oklahomans reported the highest rate of abuse; the lowest was in Nebraska and Iowa.

The overdose deaths reflect the

spike in the number of narcotic pain-killers prescribed every year — enough to give every American a one-month supply, Frieden said.

Prescriptions rose as doctors aimed to better treat pain and as new painkillers hit the market.

Frieden and White House Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske, who joined him at CDC headquarters in Atlanta, said states need to take sharp actions to re-verse the long-running trend.

States oversee prescription prac-tices and can rigorously monitor pre-scriptions and crack down on “pill mills” and “doctor shopping” by pa-tients, Frieden said.

Doctors should limit prescriptions — giving only a three-day supply for acute pain, for example — and look for alternative treatments, he said.

“For chronic pain, narcotics should be the last resort,” he added.

A federal drug plan announced this year calls for state programs to track prescriptions. All but two states — Missouri and New Hampshire — have approved them, said Kerlikowske. But he said a number of states don’t have them in place yet or doctors aren’t us-ing them enough to check on their pa-tients’ past prescriptions.

by Sandrra CherebThe Associated Press

CARSON CITY, Nev. — A man who stormed into a Carson City IHOP res-taurant with an assault rifle was di-agnosed with paranoid schizophre-nia as a teenager and feared demons were after him in the months before he killed four people and ended his own life, according to newly released police information.

Eduardo Sencion, 32, was diag-nosed in 1999 and declared perma-nently disabled two years later.

The Carson City sheriff’s office de-tailed the deterioration of his mental state and the law enforcement agen-cy’s handling of the Sept. 6 chaos fol-lowing 85 seconds of terror that left five — including three National Guard members — dead, seven injured and a community traumatized.

The new information was first re-ported by the Nevada Appeal. A pre-sentation was given during a meeting Tuesday in Las Vegas of the Nevada Sheriffs’ and Chiefs’ Association, and a copy of the PowerPoint presentation was obtained Wednesday by The Asso-ciated Press.

Sencion was born in Mexico and moved to the United States in 1993. He spoke fluent English, graduated from high school, had no criminal history and was a devout Catholic,

authorities said.Investigators said his family first

became aware of mental health issues when Sencion complained about be-ing harassed by co-workers. He sought treatment when his employer told the family he was becoming increasing paranoid.

Family members said Sencion took his medication, and all but one of his mental health commitments were voluntary. The report did not say how many times Sencion was hospitalized.

But Sencion told his family he avoided intimate relationships be-cause he feared “he would father a child and pass along his illness.”

He immersed himself in the Bible and gave his mother keys to his gun safe, warning her that he was “getting sick.”

He thought people were demons trying to hurt him and began hearing voices telling him to do “bad things” to people.

Sencion’s medications were changed this summer. About a month later, he approached a priest in the street and asked him for help, telling the priest “They’re telling me to do bad things.”

The night before the shootings, Sen-cion, who lived with family members, took his medication at 10 p.m. Every-thing appeared normal the next morn-ing. His last comment to his family was

“I should have gone to work today.”Less than an hour later, a witness

saw him in front of a beauty supply store near the IHOP restaurant. At 8:57 a.m., he parked his minivan in the IHOP parking lot and took out a Norinco MAK-90 assault rifle. He fired two shots, then a full automatic burst of bullets.

The 911 calls began streaming in to emergency dispatchers.

Sencion walked into the IHOP and fired 30 rounds. Florence Donovan-Gunderson, a 67-year-old resident of South Lake Tahoe, was eating with her husband Wally that morning. They were the first to be shot. Florence Don-ovan-Gunderson died instantly, the report said.

Sencion then began shooting at five Nevada National Guard members sit-ting in a booth. Sgt. 1st Class Miranda McElhiney, 31; Sgt. 1st Class Christian Riege, 38; and Major Heath Kelly, 35, were killed. Their comrades — Sgt. 1st Class Jeremiah Mock, 32, and Sgt. Cait Kelley, 25 — were wounded.

Two other diners were shot and wounded.

Sencion then went out to the park-ing lot, where he shot a woman in the head as she tried to escape on her mo-torcycle. Her helmet saved her life, in-vestigators said.

He went back to his vehicle, picked up a handgun and shot himself.

Painkiller deathsskyrocket in US

Gunman had mental issues

[email protected] Editor / Alexandra Swanberg The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

ThursdayNovember 3, 2011

Page

6LoboCulture

by Nicole [email protected]

The dark theater buzzes with the hushed voices of stage and lighting crew members as a girl wearing a floun-cy skirt and glittery heels runs on stage pushing a man in a wheelchair, shriek-ing her lines at the top of her lungs. A woman with a headset stops the action, saying “Keep doing what you’re doing, we’re trying to get the light to follow you.”

With only a few days left until open-ing night, the cast and crew of the iconic “Rocky Horror Show,” produced by the UNM Department of Theater and Dance, is in the frantic process of bringing more than six months of plan-ning and rehearsal into fruition.

Director Gil Lazier said the play is a complex story of a naïve young couple, Brad and Janet, who stumble upon a castle of sex-crazed aliens. The main conflict is between the young couple and the leader of the group, a trans-sexual alien who tries to awaken their sexual desires.

“It’s very realistic, as you can tell,” he said.

Lazier said the musical was original-ly written in 1972 by Richard O’Brien, who was a transsexual musical com-edy performer struggling to land ma-jor roles in the theater. Lazier said O’Brien’s solution was to write some-thing for himself to perform. He said the play originates from the wildly sexual ‘70s counter-culture, but it also incorporates other cultures, particular-ly through the music.

“The show has not only stuff that sounds like the whole glam-rock trans-sexual scene in the 70s,” he said, “but it’s got American rock-and-roll, and it’s got rockamillion, and it’s got stuff that sounds like Chuck Berry, so there’s a whole pastiche of American popular music.”

The movie was produced soon after the play and was an immediate flop, but Lazier said someone re-released it and started showing it at midnight,

which is when its popularity skyrocket-ed and a cult following began.

The movie has exactly the same dia-logue and music as the original play and differs only technically, in matters such as set and location. He said this production will incorporate some vi-sual elements from the movie.

“Of course you can’t do a movie on the stage, so every time a stage pro-duction is done of it it’s brand new,” he said. “We’re trying to put into our production some similarities so the audiences who know the movie will recognize it in our production: visual references.”

Gilbert Sanchez, who plays the transsexual alien leader Dr. Frank-N-Furter, said the play is unique in its intricate technical details and artistic decisions.

“Our set is amazing,” he said, “Peo-ple say, ‘How’s Rocky?’ and I’m like, ‘The set itself is worth the ticket price.’ They went full-out. We have a whole staircase and a working slide on stage. Also, our costume design decided to go with a more Japanese-style costume, so the creative staff has worked a lot on making it very different but very intricate.”

Lazier said there are many technical complexities in the musical, so more than 100 people have been involved in the overall production since its conception.

“The show is spectacular,” he said. “We’ve got strobe effects, and we’ve got fog effects … and all kinds of stuff.”

He said there are 40 - 50 people backstage just to manage all of the effects.

Even for a musical, Sanchez said “The Rocky Horror Show” is one-of-a-kind and presents unique challenges for him as an actor. He said he loves how O’Brien played Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the film, but he still had to find his own inspiration for the character.

“For me it was hard not to just copy everything he did, because it was so good in the movie,” he said. “I had to take from him but also completely cre-

Fishnet-clad Lobos put fresh spin on 70s cult classic

Isabel Hees / Daily LoboUNM Students play the roles of alien sex fiends from Transylvania, a planet in a faraway galaxy. The play is put on by the UNM Department of Theatre and Dance and is directed by Gil Lazier.

Isabel Hees/ Daily LoboGilbert Sanchez performs as Dr. Frank-N-Furter during a dress rehearsal Friday at the Rodey Theatre. The original play inspired the 1975 movie that drew upon transsexual culture in 70s England.

see Rocky Horrorpage 7

“The Rocky Horror Show”

Opens FridayRuns until Nov. 20

Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays: 7:30 p.m.

Sundays: 2 p.m.

Rodey Theatre, UNM Center for the arts

$20 general admission$15 Faculty & Seniors$10 Staff & Students

at UNM

Thursday, November 3, 2011 / Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo culture

ate my own character using my acting techniques and research and stuff like that.”

Sanchez said the play presents physicals challenges, too.

“Learning to walk in huge high heels … my ankles and calves are sore from the last cou-ple days of rehearsal,” he said.

Although Dr. Frank-N-Furter seems outlandish, he’s not all alien. Sanchez said he has hu-man qualities that are important for the audience to understand.

“I think he comments on the obsession of having everyone’s eyes on him, being the center of attention,” he said. “I think, if anything, that’s probably his most relatable quality. It’s kind

of an extreme of what humans want: How they want all this at-tention, but they don’t get it.”

Lazier said that the audience should be able to relate to the characters they see, and the live connection between actors and viewers is the reason theater still has a dominant presence within the arts.

“That’s kept the theater alive for thousands of years,” he said. “It’s not dying. There’s media going, and there’s great movies and tremendously popular stuff on the Internet and video games and so forth, but it doesn’t take the place. It’s not the same as live theater. It’s a certain kind of communion.” Isabel Heesw / Daily Lobo

Amanda Machon adds finishing touches Gilbert Sanchez’s makeup before the show. Sanchez’s character, Dr. Frank-N-Furter, is a “sweet transvestite from transsexual Transylvania.”

Rocky Horror from page 6

Page 8 / Thursday, November 3, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobothe haps

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by Alexandra [email protected]

A transgender person could face a tough choice when deciding wheth-er to use the men’s or women’s bath-room, transsexual Nic Sedillo said.

Last year, Sedillo said there was a problem with Albuquerque Pride security monitoring outside the re-strooms to make sure males and females were going into the cor-rect ones. He said problems such as these embody ambiguous gender is-sues in the modern world.

“It’s not that there’s something wrong that needs to be fixed,” he said. “It’s something that occurs in nature … it’s not so much you have to get rid of it, you have to make it better.”

This problem, as well as many others affecting the LGBTQ com-munity, is where the Albuquerque Pride’s 2012 New Mexico Pride Pag-eant comes in. Several individuals compete for the titles Miss, Ms., Mr., and MisTer (see graph). The contes-tants’ titles depend on their combi-nation of gender expression in daily life and onstage. The winners spend the rest of the year campaigning for the platform of choice.

Sedillo will be the first in the pag-eant’s history to run a second year for a different title, exemplifying how changeable gender identity is. His current MisTer title is for those who live as females but perform as males. This year, Sedillo said he opted for the 2012 title of Mr., someone who lives and performs as a male, be-cause this year he has made the full

transition from a female to male. Both Sedillo and Tiffany Di Mar-

co, current Ms. New Mexico Pride titleholder, chose the Transgender Resource Center.

Though Sedillo said society is starting to accept transgender indi-viduals, some problems still exist, from the media misidentifying trans-gender murder victims as prostitutes to transgender individuals being un-sure of where they fit into society.

The glam comes in handy cap-turing an audience to educate and entertain, said Marshall LaRhya, current Miss New Mexico Pride ti-tleholder. LaRhya chose to focus on HIV/AIDS prevention and edu-cation. LaRhya has done fundrais-er drag performances one to three times every week for the past year.

Since the ’80s and ’90s, when HIV carriers were treated as though they all had full-blown AIDS, LaR-hya said activists have worked to re-move the stigma. However, he said there’s a widespread mentality that living with HIV is not like leading a normal life.

“So a lot of work was done to make sure people knew that wasn’t the case, that it wasn’t a death sen-tence,” he said. “That message got convoluted, amongst younger gay men especially.”

Michael Vasquez, current Mr. New Mexico Pride titleholder, said more than just educating the general public, titleholders represent all in-dividuals struggling with gender ex-pression. He chose to focus on teen suicide prevention.

His memory of the titleholders’

visit to the Phoenix pride events stands out most, he said.

“There was one moment where somebody came up to Tiffany (Di Marco) and they said, ‘I’m here to-day because of you, personally, be-cause of you standing up and rep-resenting yourself as a transgender woman,’” he said. “It brought her to tears, and it kind of got me to tears, and it was amazing to hear someone say that.”

In light of the progress the current titleholders have made, Vasquez said he and others are skeptical about how capable the 2012 contenders will be.

“You always see these people out and about with their crown and drinking and all this other stuff, but when it comes down to it, it’s repre-sentation, and if that’s what you look like, it’s not good,” he said. “A lot of people don’t have a lot of faith in the people that are running this year.”

Box2012 Albuquerque Pride PageantSaturday7-9:30 p.m.Sandia Prep Performing Arts

Theatre$15 general admission, $10 stu-

dents, seniorsAbqpride.com

Title Identity SexCurrent

TitleHolder

2012Contestant

MisTer Nic Sedillo No contestant

MissMarshall LaRhya Stacia DeVoue

&Shaila Cavalli

Ms. Tiffany Di Marco Shannon Haynes

Mr. Michael Vasquez Nic Sedillo

Pride Pageant titleholdersprepare to pass on crowns

2012 AlbuquerquePride Pageant

Saturday 7- 9:30 p.m.Sandia Prep

Performing Arts Theater

$15 general admission$10 student, seniors

Abqpride.com

Thursday, November 3, 2011 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo

CAMPUS EVENTSWRC Film SeriesStarts at: 5:30pmLocation: Women’s Resource CenterMade in India: A Film about Surrogacy. All films are free and open to the public-coffee, tea, and popcorn will be provided. All descrip-tions from Women Make Movies, wmm.com.

Changeling the LostStarts at: 8:00pmLocation: SUB, Santa Ana A&BPlay a character as part of White Wolf Pub-lishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.Please call Marco at 505 453 7825 for infor-mation/confirmation.

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar

for November 3, 2011Planning your day has never been easier!

Future events may be previewed at www.dailylobo.com

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:1. Go to www.dailylobo.com

2. Click on “Events” link near the top of the page.

3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page.

4. Type in the event information and submit!

Please limit your description to 25 words (although you may type in more, your de-scription will be edited to 25 words. To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will appear with the title, time, location and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.

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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 NOVEMBER 3, 2011

ACROSS1 Like gates, at

times5 Wide-brimmed

hat wearers10 5-Across, e.g.14 Pasture gait15 Archaeologist’s

prefix16 Chat room “Just

a thought ...”17 Much-feared

economicsituation

20 AOL feature21 Like grapefruit22 Cross shape23 It often has two

slashes24 Sightseer’s

option32 Despises33 Angst34 Egyptian threat35 Bell, book and

candle36 Reunion

attendees37 Humeri

attachments39 Former station for

26-Down40 Go astray41 Advil alternative42 It both aids and

hinders46 Mil. field rations47 Fruity suffix48 Noted51 Cold ones56 Optimal design

for clinical trials58 Tops59 Wading bird60 Yeats’s homeland61 Huck Finn-like

assent62 Golden, south of

the border63 Something on the

house?: Abbr.

DOWN1 Tough guy actor

__ Ray2 Make one3 Laundry room

item: Abbr.4 __-Tea: White

Rose product5 Manifests itself6 Emulate a

conqueror

7 “__ Three Lives”:old TV drama

8 Champagnedesignation

9 Dixie breakfastfare

10 Convent address

11 Mideast chieftain12 Mid-20th-century

Chinese premier13 Scads18 Lays in a grave19 Where it’s at23 Brand in a ratty

apartment?24 Ball25 WWII investment

choice26 Povich co-anchor27 Heyerdahl’s “__-

Tiki”28 Basketball Hall of

Fame centersince 2008

29 Baccarat cry30 Carrier renamed

in 199731 Shell out36 “The __ Are All

Right”: 2010Oscar nominee

37 Prepares to redo,as a quilt section

38 Court standard40 Ready-to-plant

plot41 Augmented43 “Crack a Bottle”

rapper44 Scott in an 1857

case45 Dough maker?48 Modern option for

sellers49 English jelly

fruit

50 Establishes, with“down”

51 Ballpoint penbrand

52 __ cell research53 “Timequake”

author Vonnegut

54 Hipster’s“Gotcha!”

55 Word sung onNew Year’s Day

57 Bigger than med.

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Julian Lim 11/3/11

(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 11/3/11

Dilbert dailycrossword

dailysudoku Level 1 2 3 4 Solution to yesterday’s puzzle

Page 12 / Thursday, November 3, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo

AnnouncementsNOT IN CRISIS? In Crisis? Agora listens about anything. 277-3013. www.agoracares.com

PLEASE JOIN US in chartering the UNM Campus Civitan club! It’s new member night! Friday, Nov. 4th, 5-6pm. SUB Mirage/Thunderbird Room. Bring a friend. Free refreshments! For more information: [email protected] or Tony Cook @ [email protected]

Lost and FoundLOST DOG YORKSHIRE Terrier. 2 year old male. 5 pounds. Cash reward. Call 720-9606.

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

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

MATHEMATICS, STATISTICS TUTOR. Billy Brown PhD. College and [email protected], 401-8139.

TYPING- ANY SUBJECT, including te- chinical. Word Center, 512 Yale SE 842- 9800.

MATH/ CHEMISTRY TUTOR. Excellent communicator. K-College. 505-205-9317.

ABORTION AND COUNSELING Ser- vices. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242-7512.

Health and WellnessBIRTHRIGHT CARES. FREE pregnancy tests, help. 262-2235.

Your SpaceHAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY Renee!! We waited ‘til today to put this ad in be- cause we knew you wouldn’t be here on your real birthday.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY LYDIA!!!I love you! Have a wonderful day!!1103!! 1103!! 1103!!Love, Doodie.

ApartmentsAPARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com

ATTRACTIVE 1BDRM. NEW Carpet, vinyl. Nob Hill, free UNM Parking. $490/mo plus electric, $250dd. No pets. $200 Move In special. 366-8391.

CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE, 2BDRM $750/mo utilities included. 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. Move in spe- cial. 262-0433.

BLOCK TO UNM. Large. Clean. Gated. 1BDRM. $600/mo. Includes utilities. No pets. Move in special. 255-2685.

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

1 BLOCK UNM. 1BDRM duplex. Sky- lights, some hardwood floors, driveway parking. $525/mo includes utilities. 299- 7723 or 382-0253.

4 BLOCKS UNM. 415 Vassar Village SE. 1BDRM. Secured, gated, rose gar- den. $500/mo + electric and gas. 839- 0874, 266-7422.

LOBO VILLAGE APARTMENT available December 1st. $499/mo. +share of elec- tricity. Call Sami 505-670-3259 after 11AM.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COM Awesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FP’s, court- yards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1, 2 and 3BDRM’s. Garages. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

STUDIOS 1 BLOCK UNM, Free utilities. $455/mo. 246-2038. 1515 Copper NE. www.kachina-properties.com

NEAR UNM 1BDRM Condo. All utilities paid. Pool, new laundry facility, off- street parking. Secure. $600/mo. Pets okay. Call Phillip @ 213-842-0821.

Houses For Rent3BDRM, W/D, BASEMENT, lots of park- ing. $1000/mo + $400 deposit. Does not include gas or electric. 2 blocks from UNM. 881-3540.

WHY RENT? FIRST time home buyers $500 down through MFA call John 450- 2878. Thomson Real Estate.

NEAR UNM NICE 3BDRM 2BA w/guest suite $1050/mo. + utilities. Pets ok. Bobby 934-5879.

Rooms For RentLARGE ROOM W/ separate entry. Own bathroom. Available now. Responsible female graduate student preferred. North Valley. $500/mo. N/S, no drugs, dogs okay. Call 505-699-2207.

LOBO VILLAGE ROOM available at end of semester. Female only. Sophomore or older. Contact Ally if interested 505-401-7682.

FULLY FURNISHED, NEAR north cam- pus. $410/mo. High speed Internet, 1/4 utilities. Pictures available. Gated com- munity. Access I-40&I-25. [email protected]

Bikes/Cycles

HONDA CBR1000 RR, 2007, black, 29K mostly highway miles, well maintained. $4,000 OBO. 505-220-0074.

Furniture

GREAT DEAL! OAK Entertainment Cen- ter-$75. Maple Hutch-$75. 36” Ma- hogany table, 4 chairs-$50. 55 gallon fish tank, accessories-$75, 2 bird cages Rehoming fees-$20 each. Laura 250- 4419.

Vehicles For Sale

2005 CHEVROLET MALIBU, 136k miles, CD player, front wheel drive, au- tomatic, cruise control, runs and looks great. $3600. Call or text 505-463-3996.

Jobs Off Campus

EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads. www.FreeCarJobs.com

PT. EVENINGS. TRANSPORTATION provided. Need 6 energetic sales peo- ple for fall campaign for New Mexico’s largest newspaper. Great opportunity and earnings potential with our gener- ous commissions and popular product. Call Mr. Hartnett 602-499-7113.

STUDENT ARTIST TO paint lettering/l- ogo on outside of building. Call 508- 6025.

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

XMAS BREAK JOBS- Not going home for the holidays? The C Lazy U Guest Ranch in the Colorado Rockies has po- sitions available from Dec. 18- Jan. 3. Rate of pay is $9.00/hr plus time & a half for OT. Meals & housing included. Stay free from 1/3- 1/8 to explore the area ski slopes. Apply online at www.clazyu.com under employment or call Phil Dwyer 970-887-3344.

TEACH ENGLISH IN Korea!2012 Teach and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government.●$1,300/month (15hrs/week) plus air- fares, housing, medical insuranceMust have completed two years of un- dergraduate.Last day to apply: 11/30/11Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr2011 English Program In Korea (EPIK)●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, air- fare, medical insurance, paid vacationMust have BA degreeLast day to apply: November 11th **this date is tentative and could change de- pending on circumstances**Please visit the website www.epik.go.krJai - (213)[email protected]

LOOKING FOR SEASONAL EMPLOY-EES? Advertise to students here by call-ing 505-277-5656 Monday-Friday 8:00 am- 5:00 pm or emailing [email protected]

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. [email protected] 299-3200.

REGULAR PART-TIME Tutor Pool- Chemistry Program (0601060) – ACE.Responsibilities: Tutors assist students individually and in small groups in the review of course material, solving of problems, and preparing for tests. Orga- nizing and conducting study groups; in- troducing study skills strategies; devel- oping and facilitating skills development workshops; researching and selecting learning materials, textbooks, software, and equipment to facilitate tutoring; as- sisting in maintaining and circulating au- dio visual and software materials; pro- viding point-of-use guidance to users in selecting materials to fit their individual learning needs. Participating in required tutor training sessions per term or term break and staying current with CNM’s texts, materials, and policies; Team or Task Force participation is encouraged as well as participation in CNM opportu- nities for professional growth and devel- opment. Participation in the New MexicoEducation Retirement Act (NMERA) is required of each CNM employee.Salary: $11.18 per hour. Requirements: Successful completion of 30-hours of post-secondary course work froman accredited institution. Coursework must include General Chemistry I & II, Organic, and Biochemistry or equiva- lent. Transcripts verifying these specific courses are required at time of applica- tion. Demonstrated verbal and written communication skills. Ability to relate one-to-one and in small groups utilizing a variety of tutorial methods. Deadline for application: Open Until Filled.Central New Mexico Community Col- lege provides an excellent benefit pack- age that includes: a pension plan, health, dental and vision insurance, dis- ability and life insurance. A complete job announcement detailing required ap- plication documents is available at jobs.cnm.edu or at CNM Human Re- sources 525 Buena Vista SE,Albuquerque, NM 87106.

GENERAL CONTRACTOR NEEDS a PT person who has a minimum of 1 year experience with networking. Must be proficient with MS Office products; expe- rience with Sage Masterbuilder a plus, but not required. 20 to 30 flexible hrs/wk. Starting Pay: $15/hr. If inter- ested, submit resume to [email protected]

PARTY TROLLEY IS looking for Re- sponsible, Outgoing and Charismatic tour-guide Thu/F/S with strong work ethic only. Contact Estelle and email re- sume [email protected]

!BARTENDER TRAINING! Bartending Academy, 3724 Eubank NE.www.newmexicobartending.com 292- 4180.

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

VolunteersUNM IS LOOKING for adult women with asthma for asthma research study. If you are interested in finding out more about this study, please contact Teresa at [email protected] or 269- 1074 (HRRC 09-330).

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