NM Daily Lobo 120910

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Ice, ice baby see page 6 December 9, 2010 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 Inside the Daily Lobo Deadly prison See page 3 volume 115 issue 75 60 | 35 TODAY Wiki-shima See page 4 thursday by Chelsea Erven [email protected] The large, stone-covered build- ing just east of the Yale bus stop is known for being one of UNM’s four designated smoking areas, but a closer look at a main campus map reveals that it is actually a city wa- ter reservoir. Thousands walk by the reser- voir every day, but few students know what the building is used for. Student Josh Madrid said he passes the building at least three times a day, but is unaware of its purpose. “I don’t hardly see anyone over there, just the smokers over by it or people walking on the rocks,” he said. “I never see anyone go in or out of it.” UNM Planning Officer Mary Kenney said the building is owned and operated by the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Au- thority. She said the University is not responsible for maintaining or managing the building, despite its location on main campus. Students smoking on the bench- es along the east wall of the reser- voir said they frequent the build- ing to smoke. What no one knows: The reser- voir is part of Albuquerque’s water distribution system, which pumps more than 450 million gallons per day, according the city website. In the reservoir, city aquifer wa- ter is stored and combined with cleaned water from the Rio Grande until it is needed, the website says. “The booster pump stations and the reservoirs, with the help of gravity, create the pressure the system needs to make water avail- able to the users,” it says. Water is only pumped into the reservoirs at night because that’s when elec- tricity is cheapest, according to the Water Authority website. by Ruben Hamming-Green [email protected] UNM’s retiree health benefits may face some cuts. Helen Gonzales, vice president of Human Resources, announced in a UNM Today column the cre- ation of a task force that will work to cut health insurance costs. Gonzales didn’t respond to repeated interview requests, but said in her column that UNM’s unfunded liability for retiree health insurance was $131.9 mil- lion in 2009, up from $91.3 mil- lion in 2007. “Given this increase in costs, UNM needs to reevaluate the re- tiree health plan,” Gonzales wrote. “While it is our goal to continue to offer retiree health benefits, we must do so within the context of rising costs, limited funding and budget cuts.” The task force, composed of employees and retirees, will sub- mit any recommendations by July 2011. The group will look at, among other things, changing the eligibility criteria for health insurance. Mary Thomas, a Universi- ty College employee, said she doesn’t support the changes. “I think they’re making long- term decisions that are going to be dismantling the stability of the state,” she said. “They have to be cognizant that they cannot make short-term fixes that disrupt edu- cation as an entity.” Thomas also said that chang- Building more than scenery for smokers Laurisa Galvan / Daily Lobo The stone building east of the Yale bus stop is owned by the city, not UNM. Students often smoke next to the building since it’s a designated smoking area. Student hiring rates steady despite sleepy economy Retirees face benefit cuts see Retirees page 5 Illustration by Adam Aparicio UNM Student Employment Real-world rates by Kallie Red-Horse [email protected] Unless you are a UNM student, the job market doesn’t look good these days. ough New Mexico’s unemployment rate is a staggering 8 percent, the University employs 5,050 students, a 1 percent in- crease from 2008, said Connie Dennison, of UNM’s Office of In- stitutional Research. She said last year the University employed 5,123 students. “is includes main campus, Health Sciences Center, and the branches,” she said. “is is both undergraduate and graduate student employees.” Student employment remained constant despite recent bud- get slashes, said Brian Malone, director of Financial Services. He said many students use work-study, and the federal government allocated more than $2 million in work-study funds for this aid year while the state government chipped in about $1.5 million. So while the job market outside the University has tanked, stu- dent employment at UNM has pretty much stayed the same, a con- sistency student employee Shonetta Henry said she appreciates. “Part of the appeal is being able to multitask, so it could be worse,” she said. Malone said there is no limit to how many students can be hired at any given time. “e number would depend on individual department’s hir- ing activity,” he said. “We have a limit on how much money we can spend on work-study programs, but student employment comes down to an aggregate of department-by-department decisions.” With budget cuts, Malone said, departments might scale back on hiring student employees. “Student employment would most likely be the fluctuating fig- ure,” he said. “Student employment jobs are not paid through fed- eral or state work-study money, and are usually paid 100 percent through department funds.” Student David Reza said he is unsatisfied with the pay com- pared to what the job requires, but the position’s flexibility offsets his grievances. “I believe the pay is low compared to other jobs I’ve had in the past …” he said. “e job is no more easy or difficult than any other office job; it is just staying on top of things, making sure things are in order and providing services when it comes to our little area.” And student employee Alexander Evans said UNM jobs are at- tractive because of their flexibility, networking opportunities and decent pay. “I get paid $8 an hour, which I consider good for what I am ex- pected to do,” he said. “I am a student success leader, so I help stu- dents with any kind of service they need. I used to work at the li- brary, which was pretty easy. Here it is not more difficult, but the mental effort is higher.”

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nmdailylobo120910

Transcript of NM Daily Lobo 120910

Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 120910

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Ice, ice babysee page 6

December 9, 2010 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Inside theDaily Lobo

Deadly prison

See page 3volume 115 issue 75 60 | 35

TODAYWiki-shima

See page 4

thursday

by Chelsea [email protected]

The large, stone-covered build-ing just east of the Yale bus stop is known for being one of UNM’s four designated smoking areas, but a closer look at a main campus map reveals that it is actually a city wa-ter reservoir.

Thousands walk by the reser-voir every day, but few students know what the building is used

for. Student Josh Madrid said he passes the building at least three times a day, but is unaware of its purpose.

“I don’t hardly see anyone over there, just the smokers over by it or people walking on the rocks,” he said. “I never see anyone go in or out of it.”

UNM Planning Officer Mary Kenney said the building is owned and operated by the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Au-

thority. She said the University is not responsible for maintaining or managing the building, despite its location on main campus.

Students smoking on the bench-es along the east wall of the reser-voir said they frequent the build-ing to smoke.

What no one knows: The reser-voir is part of Albuquerque’s water distribution system, which pumps more than 450 million gallons per day, according the city website.

In the reservoir, city aquifer wa-ter is stored and combined with cleaned water from the Rio Grande until it is needed, the website says.

“The booster pump stations and the reservoirs, with the help of gravity, create the pressure the system needs to make water avail-able to the users,” it says. Water is only pumped into the reservoirs at night because that’s when elec-tricity is cheapest, according to the Water Authority website.

by Ruben [email protected]

UNM’s retiree health benefits may face some cuts.

Helen Gonzales, vice president of Human Resources, announced in a UNM Today column the cre-ation of a task force that will work to cut health insurance costs.

Gonzales didn’t respond to repeated interview requests, but said in her column that UNM’s unfunded liability for retiree health insurance was $131.9 mil-lion in 2009, up from $91.3 mil-lion in 2007.

“Given this increase in costs, UNM needs to reevaluate the re-tiree health plan,” Gonzales wrote. “While it is our goal to continue to offer retiree health benefits, we must do so within the context of rising costs, limited funding and budget cuts.”

The task force, composed of employees and retirees, will sub-mit any recommendations by July 2011. The group will look at, among other things, changing the eligibility criteria for health insurance.

Mary Thomas, a Universi-ty College employee, said she doesn’t support the changes.

“I think they’re making long-term decisions that are going to be dismantling the stability of the state,” she said. “They have to be cognizant that they cannot make short-term fixes that disrupt edu-cation as an entity.”

Thomas also said that chang-

Building more than scenery for smokersLaurisa Galvan / Daily Lobo

The stone building east of the Yale bus stop is owned by the city, not UNM. Students often smoke next to the building since it’s a designated smoking area.

Student hiring rates steady despite sleepy economy

Retireesface benefi tcuts

see Retirees page 5

Illustration by Adam Aparicio

UNM Student Employment

Real-w

orld

rate

s

by Kallie [email protected]

Unless you are a UNM student, the job market doesn’t look good these days.

� ough New Mexico’s unemployment rate is a staggering 8 percent, the University employs 5,050 students, a 1 percent in-crease from 2008, said Connie Dennison, of UNM’s O� ce of In-stitutional Research. She said last year the University employed 5,123 students.

“� is includes main campus, Health Sciences Center, and the branches,” she said. “� is is both undergraduate and graduate student employees.”

Student employment remained constant despite recent bud-get slashes, said Brian Malone, director of Financial Services. He said many students use work-study, and the federal government allocated more than $2 million in work-study funds for this aid year while the state government chipped in about $1.5 million.

So while the job market outside the University has tanked, stu-dent employment at UNM has pretty much stayed the same, a con-sistency student employee Shonetta Henry said she appreciates.

“Part of the appeal is being able to multitask, so it could be worse,” she said.

Malone said there is no limit to how many students can be hired at any given time.

“� e number would depend on individual department’s hir-ing activity,” he said. “We have a limit on how much money we can spend on work-study programs, but student employment comes down to an aggregate of department-by-department decisions.”

With budget cuts, Malone said, departments might scale back on hiring student employees.

“Student employment would most likely be the � uctuating � g-ure,” he said. “Student employment jobs are not paid through fed-eral or state work-study money, and are usually paid 100 percent through department funds.”

Student David Reza said he is unsatis� ed with the pay com-pared to what the job requires, but the position’s � exibility o� sets his grievances.

“I believe the pay is low compared to other jobs I’ve had in the past …” he said. “� e job is no more easy or di� cult than any other o� ce job; it is just staying on top of things, making sure things are in order and providing services when it comes to our little area.”

And student employee Alexander Evans said UNM jobs are at-tractive because of their � exibility, networking opportunities and decent pay.

“I get paid $8 an hour, which I consider good for what I am ex-pected to do,” he said. “I am a student success leader, so I help stu-dents with any kind of service they need. I used to work at the li-brary, which was pretty easy. Here it is not more di� cult, but the mental e� ort is higher.”

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 120910

THE NATIONAL SECURITY STUDIES PROGRAMSpecial Issues Course and Summer Study Abroad Program

The UNM National Security Studies Program (NSSP) is announcing a spring semester special issues course and a student summer study abroad program.

The 2 credit special issues course (open to all majors with junior standing or above), will focus on national security issues and include a team project to analyze a national security challenge. The course is listed as:

Mgmt 490-022 (Kraye), Friday 3-4:50 p.m., Room GSM302. (Graduate Students may sign up under Mgmt 552 Howard Kraye) Cross listed as ECE 494-004, 595-004, POLS 499-20, and EC 395-004

The course will include lectures presented by a distinguished set of faculty and visiting experts with extensive national security backgrounds. Interested students may sign up for this class on-line, or come to the first class to add the course in the appropriate department.

The NSSP summer study abroad program provides extensive engagement in Central Asia studying the languages, cultures and technical as well as social/political issues of the area (6 credit hours). This cultural immersion program is open to NSSP scholars.

Contact: If you should have any questions or want additional information related to the courses, the summer program or becoming a NSSP Scholar, please contact Candace Shirley at [email protected] or 277-3223 and visit http://www.unm.edu/~nssp01/scholars.html.

THE STRENGTH TO HEAL andlearn lessons in courage.

To learn more, call 1-866-538-0001 or visitwww.healthcare.goarmy.com/l061.

PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboThursday, deceMber 9, 2010

volume 115 issue 75Telephone: (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.

Printed by Signature

OffSet

Editor-in-ChiefPat Lohmann Managing EditorIsaac Avilucea News EditorLeah ValenciaAssistant News EditorShaun Griswold Staff ReportersRuben Hamming-GreenChelsea ErvenAlexandra SwanbergOnline and Photo EditorJunfu Han

Assistant Photo EditorRobert Maes Culture EditorChris Quintana Assistant Culture EditorAndrew Beale Sports EditorRyan TomariAssistant Sports EditorNathan Farmer Copy ChiefElizabeth ClearyOpinion EditorJenny Gignac

Multimedia EditorKyle Morgan Design DirectorNathan NewProduction ManagerKevin KelseyAdvertising ManagerAntoinette Cuaderes Sales ManagerNick Parsons

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

What are your plans for winter break?

““I plan on starting this new job I got and just relaxing. … Finally!.”

Ana VigiilFreshmanUndecided

“Well, I guess much like most people, I plan on working. If I am not at work, then I will be home for two days, but I don’t really like going home. It’s not a big trip, but I really can’t stand those people anymore.”

Iain DeasonSenior

sociology

“Work. And I am planning on going to Las Vegas with some friends for the New Year. I really need to work and start paying off some loans and stuff.”

“I am going to Disneyland! And I plan on some much-needed sleep.”

Le Hoangsenior

Business

Daily lobo asks you:

Angel Portillo

SophomorePre-med

All photos byLaurisa Glavan

Daily Lobo

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 120910

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DAILY LOBOnew mexico

news Thursday, december 9, 2010 / Page 3

by Eva Vergara Associated Press

SANTIAGO, Chile — A fire that began during a riot in a severely overcrowded prison killed at least 81 inmates Wednesday and serious-ly injured 14 others, officials said. Chileans nationwide could hear the screams of inmates after a prison-er using an illegal cell phone called state television for help.

“The conditions that existed in-side this prison are absolutely inhu-mane,” said Chil-ean President Sebastian Pin-era, who visited an emergency center where in-mates were being treated for severe burns and smoke inhalation.

National pris-on police direc-tor Luis Masfer-rer said the blaze broke out about 5:30 a.m. (7:30 a.m. EST; 1230 GMT) at the San Miguel prison south of the capital, and it was brought un-der control about three hours later.

P r e l i m i n a r y reports indicated the fire was set in-tentionally, said investigator Alejandro Pena. Interior Minister Rodrigo Hinzpeter said it started during fighting between in-mates and reached its maximum in-tensity in just three minutes.

Firefighters said they were alerted to the fire by a call from a cell phone inside the prison.

A fire department communique

said the first firefighters arrived on the scene nine minutes after the ini-tial alarm at 5:48 a.m., and found a violent fire spread over a large part of the fourth floor of Tower 5. They cut through several locks, allowing them to save 60 inmates, it said.

Santiago region Gov. Fernando Echeverria said the official death toll was 81.

Health Minister Jaime Manalich called it an “enormous calamity,” and it appeared to be the worst disaster in the history of Chile’s prisons. A fire in

a northern prison killed 26 people in 2001.

Hundreds of worried and angry relatives of inmates gathered in a chaotic scene outside the gates of the prison, a collection of cement towers that rises above a middle class neigh-borhood. Some waited six hours be-fore officials read out the names of

survivors — which people mistook for those of the dead. Some spat or hurled rocks at Masferrer.

Police operations director Jaime Concha insisted police acted quickly despite coping with 1,900 inmates at the prison built for 700. In October, Judge Ana Maria Arratia Valdebenito warned that Tower 5 held 484 prison-ers — more than 100 per floor

Many inmates died on Tower 5’s third floor. Firefighters had to work with police to avoid problems with the rioting prisoners.

Pedro Her-nandez, who directs Chile’s prison guards union, said there were only five guards to watch over the prisoners. Pin-era, however, said there were six guards in the prison towers where the in-mates are held, and 26 others stationed at the perimeter.

Some rela-tives of inmates told state TV that prison po-lice initially closed the gates to firefighters and impeded efforts to con-

trol the blaze — allegations that the firefighters said were false.

“They wouldn’t let the firefighters come in. The riot police came in first and began to beat us, and later the firefighters came in,” an unidentified prisoner said in a phone call played on state TV. He didn’t give his name, saying he feared retribution.

81 dead in Chile prison fire

Aliosha Marquez / AP Photo

Inmate relatives at the San Miguel prison react as they listen to the list of names of inmates who died Wednesday in a fire in Santiago, Chile. Firefighters said a prison fire set off during a riot killed at least 81 inmates at the Chilean prison and injured at least 14 others.

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 120910

[email protected] / Ext. 133Opinion editor / Jenny Gignac The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Thursday

December 9, 2010

Page

4

Editor,

For quite some time now, it’s been the case that the best use for the op-ed page of the “Daily Lobo” is in the tray of the para-keet cage, but I must say that this time the editors have dredged new depths.

I am referring to the re-cent John Walker column.There is an old joke in engineering circles (people who must work with the world as it actually exists) that there are no engineer-ing problems, only marketing solutions.Walker, a marketing executive whose cho-sen profession is not reality-based but functions instead to warp people’s percep-tion of reality for the purpose of extracting cash, apparently considers himself some-thing of an authority on everything — en-ergy, environment, criminal and health systems, to name but a few.

His positions, however, are not those of a Renaissance man but rather those of a 12th century mind.

For brevity, I will address just one statement from his well-splattered can-vas, where he suggests firing the cur-rent energy secretary, Steven Chu.Walker, a peddler, has nothing but con-tempt for Dr. Chu’s scientific understand-ing. Chu is a Nobel Prize winner in physics who works for the Department of Energy. Heaven forbid that we cloud U.S. energy policy with facts or confuse it with the rea-soning of one of the finest minds on the planet. There’s marketing to be done for the extractive fuel industries, and since Chu is dealing with the reality of energy genera-tion and consumption, we are instructed to dismiss him.

As a shill for the something-for-nothing crowd, Walker would have us believe his drivel about how we can all have unicorns and rainbows for free — an approach that works quite well in marketing.

China, however, offers sterling real-world examples of the end result of un-regulated energy production, where pollu-tion-caused cancer is the leading cause of death. Perhaps 1 percent of city dwellers have air that’s fit to breathe, according to that commie organization, the World Bank.There was a time, not too long ago, when the “Daily Lobo” could at least occasion-ally pass muster as a university paper. Per-haps a name change is in order — some-thing along the line of the “Daily Cracker.”It’d be better marketing.

Ronald Kay UNM research engineer

Editor’s Note: The Daily Lobo discourag-es the paper’s use as parakeets’ bedding, but heartily recommends it as packing material, and perhaps, for reading.

Editor’s note: This is the last column from former Daily Lobo staff members studying in a different country this se-mester. We would like to thank our con-tributors, Zach, Hunter Riley, Nicole Raz and Kallie Red-Horse for their insightful and entertaining columns.

by Zach GouldDaily Lobo Columnist

Moving abroad is like getting thrown on your ass by an all-encompassing wave — so hard that afterward you feel nauseous.

You get plunged into instant identity crisis in every facet of your life. It’s terrible and wonderful at the same time, like too many similes in a paragraph.

If you come from the United States, there isn’t really anywhere in the world that hasn’t had some exposure to Western culture. There are, of course, the outliers North Korea, the deep southern states and bits of Africa. But anywhere you go these days, there always seems to be Coca-Cola and McDonald’s, and that’s probably the most common perspective of what Amer-ica is. Sometimes living abroad, you feel like it might be the most honest depiction.

But in between that first day and that second to third month, the new and excit-ing of it all falls away, and culture shock sets in.

Going to a new ethnic restaurant is fun and just outside of your comfort zone for

as long as you choose. But deciding to live there and not leave for six months to a year is a whole other story. The fun of not know-ing what you’re eating turns to frustration, and always being on the outside of a joke is embarrassing.

The clothes you think are cool seem even odder than at home. And this is where the wave comes in: You get knocked down.

You know nothing — not the language, the culture, the food. And you’ve decided to live here for the next little chunk of life. It sucks.

Then a funny thing happens. It’s the most surreal feeling. You leave the town you’ve been in and travel around the coun-try. And when you get back to the bus sta-tion or airport tired and haggard, you feel like you’ve come home. And like the ocean receding the horizon, it comes into view again. That wave that just knocked you on your ass doesn’t look like it ever could

have. Maybe you don’t crave all the new food you’ve encountered, but a dish or two.

I had been on a bus for nearly eight hours, which in Chile is laugh-ably nothing, and I was super hot, and the one thing I craved more than anything was an ice cold Piscola.

It’s a type of grape brandy made only in northern Chile/South-ern Peru, mixed with a soft drink. But I remem-

ber the moment fondly because I wasn’t crav-

ing something from home in a time of hot stress; I was craving something from right now — from Chile.

And this is the Zen-like mantra that moving abroad forces you to accept: You know nothing; you are nothing; you can-not predict anything. You are golden once you’ve accepted this mindset — strong like stone, smooth like water.

I am at about five months in, and about a month and a half ago, I started getting into the swing of things. Spanish is bue-no. I have a good amount of friends, and I know where and when to do things. One of the downsides about studying abroad only a short time is that once you get used to things, you move on.

I am coming back in early January and will start school almost immediately.

And while it will be nice to get back to normal, I am going to miss Chile.

Culture shock becomes nostalgia

LETTERMarketing executive’s column insults energy expert’s advice

LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY

Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo offi ce 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 refl ect the views of the author and do not refl ect the opinions of Lobo employees.

Zach Gould in Chile.

EDITORIAL BOARD

Pat LohmannEditor-in-chief

Isaac AviluceaManaging editor

Jenny GignacOpinion editor

Leah ValenciaNews editor

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Thursday, december 9, 2010 / Page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

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by Julie Hirschfeld Davis Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The chance for hundreds of thousands of for-eign-born youngsters brought to the country illegally to gain legal status is dwindling as time runs out on the Democratic-controlled Congress.

House and Senate Democrat-ic leaders have scheduled votes Wednesday to advance legislation that would pave the way for legaliz-ing the young immigrants, over op-position by most Republicans and several in their own party.

“It’s an uphill struggle,” Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat, acknowledged hours before the vote. “We’re trying.”

The so-called Dream Act is a top priority of Democrats and politi-cally active Hispanic groups, who call it a crucial down payment on a broader immigration overhaul. Critics call the measure backdoor amnesty for lawbreakers.

With the GOP taking control of the House and representing a stron-ger minority in the Senate next year, failure to enact the legislation by year’s end would virtually kill the last chance for years for any action by Congress to grant a path toward legalization for the nation’s millions of undocumented immigrants.

President Barack Obama’s team has made an intense public push for the bill, under pressure from His-panic activists angry that the White House has not pressed harder for a broad immigration overhaul to give several million illegal immigrants a shot at legal status.

In recent days, the administra-tion dispatched officials from the departments of Defense, Home-land Security and Commerce to ar-gue vociferously in public that the legislation would boost national se-curity and economic growth.

On Wednesday, the White House

issued a statement of support for the bill that called the current im-migration system “broken.”

“While the broader immigration debate continues, the administra-tion urges the Senate to take this important step and pass the Dream Act,” the statement said.

House Democrats, scrounging for the votes to pass the measure, planned an evening vote. They need at least a handful of Republicans to join them in backing the measure since dozens of their own members oppose it.

Even then, the bill would die if Senate Democrats are unable to muster the 60 votes needed to scale procedural hurdles and call it for an up-or-down vote.

Obama’s drive to enact the leg-islation and congressional Demo-crats’ determination to vote on it before year’s end reflect the party’s efforts to satisfy Hispanic groups whose backing has been critical in elections and will be again in 2012.

The legislation would give hun-dreds of thousands of young illegal immigrants brought to the Unit-ed States before the age of 16, and who have been here for five years and graduated from high school or gained an equivalency degree, a chance to gain legal status if they joined the military or attended college.

Hispanic activists have de-scribed the Dream Act as the least Congress can do on the issue. It tar-gets the most sympathetic of the millions of undocumented peo-ple — those brought to the United States as children, who in many cases consider themselves Ameri-can, speak English and have no ties to or family living in their native countries.

The measure is “very, very far from amnesty,” said Cecilia Munoz, Obama’s director of intergovern-mental affairs, citing the numer-ous hurdles those eligible would

have to scale in order to keep their legal status and eventually become citizens.

Estimates differ widely as to how many young people would be eligible for some sort of legal status under the measure. The Congres-sional Budget Office has estimat-ed that one version of the bill that applies to immigrants aged 35 and under would let more than 1 mil-lion apply for legal status over the next 10 years, and potentially allow 500,000 to receive it.

A newer version of the bill changed to improve its chanc-es only applies to those under 30, which supporters say would limit it to 300,000 or so.

GOP opponents in the Senate circulated a memo calling the mea-sure “mass amnesty,” noting that the bill has no cap or end-date. They contend it could allow even the most dangerous criminals and terrorists to gain legal status.

Those afforded legal status un-der the bill would, however, have to undergo the same background check as any immigrant seeking le-gal residency.

“These are not the individu-als that are threats to our pub-lic safety or to our security,” said Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

Dems push for DREAM act

changes to retiree health insur-ance will negatively impact cur-rent employees, especially since the Educational Retirement Board is set to reduce retirement benefits.

“We’re a state program,”

she said. “What happens there happens here — trickle down, trickle around. Employee loyalty will be lost, commitment to low-paying jobs, like education jobs, will be lost and it will affect edu-cation as an industry.”

Retirees from PAge 1

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 120910

[email protected] / Ext. 131Culture editor / Chris Quintana The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

ThursdayDecember 9, 2010

Page

6Culture editor / Chris Quintana

LoboThe Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Culture

by Andrew Beale [email protected]

Some things come only once a year: Harry Potter movies, Christ-mas and the Outpost Ice Arena’s Christmas Show.

Student Krista Keay will skate in the show, and she said it attracts about 100 spectators every year.

“Figure skating is not that big of a sport in New Mexico,” she said. “� is is like the one thing we do ev-ery year, where everybody can come and see what we do.”

Chanel Lucero, also a student, said performing can be nerve-wracking.

“It’s a little bit more intimidat-ing when you’re doing the solo,” she said. “I just remember to have fun and not let it get to me. We all know each other, and we’ve skated in front of each other’s families before, so it’s not too bad.”

All the women in the show, most of whom are UNM students, will skate to a song together, which has not been done in the past, Lucero said. She said the show will feature a “high number,” a piece performed by the most talented skaters.

“In the past years, the older girls have always been in the high num-ber, but now there are other girls

SKATERS SHARPEN UP FOR SHOW

Annual show to draw newcomers to the sport

ABOVE: Krista Keay and Antonella Ross practice a layback spin for the ice show Monday at the Outpost Ice Arena. Keay, a UNM student, balances life as a � gure skater while studying nutrition. LEFT: Desiree Cavazos-Arechiga dons her � gure skates for a rehearsal. She will perform in the Outpost Ice Arena Christmas Show, which is will take place Saturday at 5:30 p.m.

Robert MaesDaily Lobo

that are considered to be in the high level,” she said. “So we’re just kind of doing our own program.”

Home-schooled high school stu-dent Desiree Cavazos-Arechiga said

the show will inspire more people to start skating. Like most of the other women in the show, she coaches Outpost’s Learn-to-Skate program.

“A lot of other people are going

to see it, and they’re going to be in-spired by it, and they might want to join the sport,” she said. “I think that’s really cool. It might gain some other students.”

Keay said coaching taught her skills that apply to her life. She said

see Ice skaters page 7

“Half of � gure skating is opinion,

convincing judges.”

-Scott Hamilton

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 120910

Thursday, december 9, 2010 / Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo culture

Daily Lobo: Size: 3 col x 9” Run dates: 12/6 through 12/10 • 12/13 • 1/10

CRN Department Course-Section # Course Title Day Time Instructor

Spring 2011 : First 8-Week Session 40576 Art History ARTH 101-032 Intro to Art M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Meredith37651 Communication CJ 323-006 Nonverbal Communication M/W ➢ 1:00 – 3:30 Isaacson21605 Math MATH 120-019 Intermediate Algebra M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Glass40588 Math MATH 129-010 Survey of Mathematics M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Champine27669 Psychology PSY 105-030 General Psychology M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Hillard32737 Statistics STAT 145-018 Intro to Statistics M/W ➢ 1:00 – 3:30 Unnever40579 Astronomy ASTR 101-006 Intro to Astronomy T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Sta�28074 Economics ECON 105-013 Intro to Macroeconomics T/Th ➢ 2:00 – 4:30 Hymel30226 Math MATH 180-013 Elements of Calculus I T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Glass35111 Religion RELG 107-004 World Religions T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Meredith41519 Sociology SOC 398-015 Military Sociology T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Kowitz37646 Spanish SPAN 101-029 Elementary Spanish I T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Sousa

28076 Anthropology ANTH 130-004 Cultures of the World M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Biel28073 Communication CJ 130-039 Public Speaking M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Isaacson40583 Earth & Planetary EPS 101-007 Intro to Geology M/W ➢ 6:30 – 9:00 Ehlert17993 Math MATH 121-016 College Algebra M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Glass37650 Math MATH 180-014 Elements of Calculus I M/W ➢ 2:30 – 5:00 Glass40589 Psychology PSY 332-025 Abnormal Behavior M/W 5:30 – 8:00 Hillard28071 Art History ARTH 101-031 Intro to Art T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Botts10257 Biology BIOL 110-004 Biology for Non-Majors T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Glass36012 Economics ECON 106-010 Intro to Microeconomics T/Th ➢ 2:00 – 4:30 Hymel37644 English ENGL 101-060 Composition I: Exposition T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Sta�42045 History HIST 101-002 Western Civ to 1648 T/Th ➢ 2:30 – 5:00 Gonzales39150 Philosophy PHIL 156-012 Reasoning & Critical Thinking T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Meredith39552 Sociology SOC 101-007 Intro to Sociology T/Th ➢ 1:00 – 3:30 Garcia36009 Spanish SPAN 101-030 Elementary Spanish I T/Th 5:30 – 8:00 Sousa

KIRTLANDAIR FORCE BASE

Now Enrolling for Spring 2011

[email protected] http://distance.unm.edu — KAFB link.

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Rentals

Your community store since 1978

by Alexandra [email protected]

Plagued by suicidal thoughts most of his life, Jim Sagel recon-ciled a racially divided community through his writing.

“Las Palabras: La poesia del po-eta Nuevomexicano Jim Sagel” is a tribute to the New Mexican au-thor, poet and teacher that acts out more than 100 of his poems and short stories, providing insight to the Española community that he lived in. The performance is com-posed of his writing with few tran-sition words between the pieces.

Director Crawford MacCal-lum said Sagel’s work is unlike other poetry the theater company performs.

“His poems are … about some real situation or real person, and in that sense, his poems speak about the land very strongly,” he said. “It’s real, very accessible, very human.”

A white man, Sagel came from Colorado to Española to teach in the 1970s.

Peformer Argos MacCallum said Sagel was fascinated by the land and the people who accepted him into the community. He said Sagel’s work is historically signifi-cant because it was written when northern New Mexico was experi-

encing tense interracial relations.“He basically immersed him-

self in the culture in Española,” he said. “He was very important in the sense that in the 1970s there was a lot of tension between the Anglo community and the Hispan-ic community. His example … in a way helped Northern New Mexi-co heal somewhat and make a lot more acceptance between the two communities.”

Sagel killed himself in 1998, but his work lives on. Written in Eng-lish, Spanish and Spanglish, it will be performed in the original lan-guages for the tribute with subti-tles projected on a screen.

Crawford said his multilingual writing intertwined Anglo and His-panic cultures in Española. He said Sagel used whichever language ex-pressed what he wanted to say.

“It would be like taking the chile out of your omelet or burri-to,” Crawford said. “It just isn’t the same, so he has a very rich mixture of English or Spanish.”

Sagel won two international Chicano writing awards, some-thing Crawford said was contro-versial because Sagel was not Chicano.

“They decided to call him ‘Chi-canesque,’” he said. “He just loved

skating while going to school full time teaches better time-manage-ment skills.

“Growing up, it was just a stable thing to do,” she said. “It kept me out of trouble. It kept me from not fo-cusing on things. I did really good in high school. I had 60 credits coming in to UNM when I got here. It taught me a lot of discipline and how to balance my life.”

UNM student Romilly Tsinh-nahjinnie said the show will offer Albuquerque a rare opportunity to

see live figure skating.“When you see (figure skating)

on T.V., I think it looks a lot different from when you see it live, because you don’t realize how high people are jumping, say, or how fast people are really spinning,” she said “… It’s just cool to see it live.”

Cavazos-Arechiga said skat-ing offers an escape from everyday stress.

“It’s just, like, me and the ice,” she said. “All your problems or wor-ries just disappear. Honestly.”

Ice skaters from page 6

outpostchristmas

show

9530 Tramway Blvd.Saturday Dec. 11, 5:30 p.m.

$6 general admission

Late poet’s words inspired acceptance

Cavazos-Arechiga, left, and Antonella Ross walk up the stairs in skates after rehearsal. Cavazos- Arechiga said the show will recruit figure skaters to the program.

Robert MaesDaily Lobo

see Poet page 10

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 120910

Page 8 / Thursday, december 9, 2010 New Mexico Daily lobothe hapsmo

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Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 120910

Thursday, december 9, 2010 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo the haps

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Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 120910

Page 10 / Thursday, december 9, 2010 New Mexico Daily loboculture

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Phone: (505) 249-4990

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CAMPUS EVENTSReturning Women Students Walk-in HoursStarts at: 2:00pmLocation: Women’s Resource Center, 1160 Mesa Vista HallThinking about returning to school? Have some questions about how to get started? Come by the WRC and get some answers.

Women’s Veteran GroupStarts at: 4:00pmLocation: Women’s Resource CenterWomen’s Veteran Group is an opportunity to network and create a community for the women vets we have on campus.The Negative Side of Zero: Critically Rethinking EducationStarts at: 4:30pmLocation: SUB, Third FloorThis will be a multi-media presentation on the current state of public and higher educat-tion. It’s a chance for community, to discuss ways to address issues.

Danú–A Christmas in Ireland: An Nol-laig in ÉirinnStarts at: 7:30pmLocation: Popejoy HallThe members of Danú honor the season in grand Irish style with the songs and tradi-tions culled from their own families. www.popejoypresents.com/danuChangeling the Lost Starts at: 8:00pmLocation: SUB, Santa Ana A&BPlay a character as part of White Wolf Pub-lishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.Call Marco at 453 7825 for info/confirmation.

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico

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Event Calendarfor December 9, 2010

Planning your day has never been easier!Placing an event in the

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by Alexandra [email protected]

The blueprint to leaving a world impression starts in St. Louis — if the UNM Print Club can get there.

To do so, the club is hosting a student print sale to fund a trip to the Southern Graphics Council In-ternational conference in March.

Shaurya Kumar, assistant pro-fessor in the printmaking program, said the craft is about creating long-lasting relationships, which students will make at the conference.

“Printmaking is a very commu-nity-oriented activity,” he said. “We have the same studio where every-one uses the same press. They have to work very collaboratively and help each other out, so it already has a very communal aspect.”

The sale starts Thursday at the Fine Arts Building and features be-ginning and advanced work, as well as graduate students’ projects. The club will give demonstrations rang-ing from intaglio, a style involving

metal plate incisions, to alternative T-shirt printing, monotype and al-ternative digital printing.

Already, the UNM Print Club has given students an outlet to de-velop relationships, student Chelsea Wrightson said, but the conference will give them a chance to share portfolios with national and inter-national professional printmakers.

“Recently, I feel like it’s been more productive and proactive, just with the start of this community of printmakers building,” she said. “It’s really exciting to see all the students come together.”

UNM Print Club President Elena Lopez said submitted, to-be-sold prints weren’t subject to a prelimi-nary selection process. She said, as a result, there is a variety of featured printmaking techniques, including drawing, sculptural, painterly and photographic processes.

“People’s taste varies greatly, so what I think is atrocious someone else may love, and vice versa,” she said. “So we don’t want to make any

judgments in that sense, and we also want all the students to have that ex-perience of selling work.”

Kumar said the demonstrations will give the public an idea about how much work goes into each piece.

“Printmaking is a very techni-cal medium and goes through a series of complicated processes in order to make one image,” he said. “So in order to sensitize or to edu-cate people who are not familiar with that, we thought we should do demonstrations.”

Still in its infant stage, Kumar said, the club has developed into a tight-knit community, a pivotal point that students will rely on in the future.

“Once they graduate, this is the group they will be connected to pro-fessionally and personally,” he said. “It opens a lot of professional pos-sibilities for them to collaborate in the future or participate in different projects — things like that.”

the people, and they adopted him. He moved between both worlds. I don’t know to what extent he became Chicano, but he was accepted.”

Argos said the tribute was per-formed in Española, and it struck a chord with those who experienced the events he wrote about.

“It was almost like we felt Jim’s presence there,” he said. “We’re slowly finding out that a lot of his stories are based on very real happenings.”

Club sells prints to get to St. Louis

Poet from page 7

student print sale

Thursday, Friday, Sunday9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Fine Arts BuildingRoom 142

Adam Billie prepares for the student print sales in the printmaking lab on Wednesday. Printmakers hope the sale will generate enough money to fund a trip to a conference in St. Louis.

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Thursday, december 9, 2010 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 120910

Page 12 / Thursday, december 9, 2010 New Mexico Daily lobo

AnnouncementsSTRESSED? LOG ON to www.Spirituality.com

STRESSED ABOUT JOB? School? Life? Call Agora. 277-3013. www.agoracares.com.

Fun Food MusicLEGEND SELF-DEFENSE is offering training in karate and self-defense. Our classes are easy to fit into a busy schedule, affordable, and fun! Check out legenddefense.com or call 429- 0422 for more details.

Lost and FoundLOST GREY WEIMARANER puppy, Es- telle. 5mo old wearing a blue Pabst col- lar. Microchiped. Missing since 11pm 12/6 on Indian School and Charlisle. Re- ward call 401-2956.

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

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Your SpaceTO THE MAN who sits across from me in class, I’m going to miss you and your epicness. Never forget us.

ApartmentsAPARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com

MOVE IN SPECIAL- walk to UNM. 1BDRMS starting at $575/mo includes utilities. No pets. 255-2685, 268-0525.

UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1BDRM $490 2BDRM $675 +utilities. Clean, quiet, re- modeled. No pets allowed. Move in spe- cial! 573-7839.

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FREE UNM PARKING/ Nob Hill Living. $100 move in discount, 1BDRM, $490/mo. 256-9500. 4125 Lead SE.

WWW.UNMRENTALS.COMAwesome university apartments. Unique, hardwood floors, FPs, court- yards, fenced yards. Houses, cottages, efficiencies, studios, 1 and 2 and 3BDRMs. Garages. Month to month op- tion. 843-9642. Open 7 days/week.

Houses For RentCHARMING 2BDRM, HARDWOOD Floors, 3 blocks UNM, off-street park- ing. $750/mo water paid. No Dogs. 842- 5450.

A LOVELY KNOTTY Pined decor 3BDRM 1.5BA. Skylight, parking, UNM area. $799/mo. 1814 Gold. 299-2499.

Rooms For RentLOOKING FOR FEMALE roommate. 2 BDRM apartment. 4 blocks from UNM. $350 per month, w/utilities. Starting Jan- uary 7, 2011. If interested contact, [email protected] or 277-5352.

MALE PROFESSIONAL SEEKS a re- sponsible and non-smoking roommate to share a 2BRDM 2BA apartment at Mirabella Heights. $400/mo +utilities. Email [email protected]

ROOMMATE WANTED FOR 2BDRM house 2 blocks from Campus. $500/mo including utilities. Call Matt at 774-270- 1555 or email at [email protected]

FRIENDLY PROFESSIONAL FEMALE wanted ASAP to share beautiful 3/bdrm 2/ba condo in gated community. Inter- net/ cable, fitness center/ pool, security included. $450/mo + deposit. jsn [email protected]

FEMALE HOUSEMATES PREFERRED Fully furnished house across from UNM, 5 minute walk to UNMH. Quiet, safe neighborhood. WIFI, yardcare, cleaning provided. $400-$500. Avail- able Jan. 1. 610-1142.

LOOKING FOR A quiet, responsible roo- mate to share a 2BDRM 1BA, beautiful,house on Girard and Garfield. $550/mo. $550 dd. Call 505-450-8500.

QUIET STUDENTS WANTED To share 3BDRM 2.5BA home 10mins from cam- pus. Prices per room $350 or $400 in- cludes utilities. Call 505-470-4673.

VERY AWESOME ROOM. Beautiful house. Personal entrance, Private court- yard, Amazing/private BA. W/D. $500. Anthony 505-991-1743.

QUIET RESPONSIBLE STUDENT wanted to share nice 3BDRM, 2.5BA home. 10 mins from campus, GREAT LOCATION!. $400/mo, w/utilities in- cluded. (505)490-1998.

MASTER BDRM 350/MO. 1/2 Gas & Electric. Rent includes high speed inter- net, cable tv, private balcony & bath- room. NE Heights, Academy Rd. N/S perfered. [email protected]

FREE UTILITIES, INTERNET, Some Food, Laundry, Gym, Hot Tub, Sauna, Micro-Farm, Living Art Mural, 3 Miles/UNM, bike/bus path. 459-2071. www.ajelc.com

Computer Stuff2 NEW EPSON 4-in-1 printers, ultra high-def photo, copy, scan, fax, print. $65 (workforce 500) and $125 (rx-680). Sealed box. Al 836-4546.

AMD ATHALON LAPTOP, Averatech. 12 1/4in. 1.66 GHz, cd/ dvd writer, w/ good battery & adapter, office suite in- stalled, excellent screen. $195. Call Al 836-4546.

For SaleMASTERS (BLACK) CAP & Gown for sale, $30. Size 5’4-5’[email protected]

BRADLEY’S BOOKS ROCKS inside Winnings Coffee.

Vehicles For Sale1993 TOYOTA MR-2 Basic Body Mods. Air intake system. T-Top style. Power everything. New paint job. Negotiable pricing but asking $3,000. Call Sammy (505)331-6734.

97 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 6 cyl. NEW: Battery, ignition, and starter. PL, PW, PS, tilt, T-Top. Owned by mechanic’s son. $2700 obo. (505)697-1832.

1991 NISSAN SENTRA 4DR, 181k, 37mpg, excellent mechanically, body okay. $1600 obo. 620-0648.

Child CareCAREGIVERS FOR TOP-Quality sum- mer/after-school child care program. Play sports, take field trips, make crafts, be goofy, have fun and be a good rolemodel. Learn, play, and get paid for do- ing both! $9/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Must be able to work Wednesdays 12PM - 5PM in the fall. 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.

SEEKING IN-HOME, experienced nanny for 15 month old. Rate negotiable. E- mail at [email protected].

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a won- derful and supportive team. This is a training and leadership development po- sition. Associate Directors are trained and prepared for promotion to the posi- tion of Program Director (responsible foroverall afterschool program site man- agement). $11/hr plus paid holidays,paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with payraises (upon promotion - Program Direc- tor annual salary starts at $27,040).Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE or call 296-2880.

ENRICHMENT CLUB INSTRUCTIONS: Seeking people to teach enriching skills to children ages 6-12, in a top-quality af- terschool program. Plan and teach short classes on: photography, painting, drawing, karate, dance, drama, sports, etc. Pay $9 - $20/hr depending on edu- cation, expertise, and experience. Ap- ply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 - 2:- 00 T-F. Call 296-2880 or visit www.chil drens-choice.org UNM Work Study En- couraged to Apply.

Jobs Off CampusCOMPUTER GRAPHIC DESIGNER needed for advertising company. Must be professional, creative, and self-moti- vated. For more info contact 480-4461.

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

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

GREAT PAY! REWARDING PT Job! Ac- tivity & Sports leaders needed for the spring semester in our before & after school programs. $10.50-$12.60 hr. Qualified applicants must be available M-F, mornings (7-9 am) and/or after- noons (3:30-6 pm MTThF & 12:30-6 pm W). Paid training begins January 3. Ap- ply online at www.campfireabq.org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

NEED PART TIME help at local golf course. Includes golf privileges! Call 217-8326 leave message.

NEW COMPANY LOOKING for teach- ers, interns, and future teachers. Great pay, flexible hours, perfect for college students. Must be professional and driven. For interview contact 480-4461.

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