DAILY LOBOnew mexico
A p r i l 1 1 , 2 0 1 1 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895monday
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Homelesson
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by Kallie [email protected]
Of all the license plates in the United States and Canada, why New Mexico?
The Automobile License Plate Collectors Association award-ed New Mexico first place for its turquoise plates, but some New Mexicans are still bummed about the bumper decorations.
Student Adam Rottler said the plate is unworthy of a national award.
“It seems like a cop-out after the solid yellow one,” he said. “It is ba-sically the same thing, but with different colors. How about some creativity?”
The plate, de-signed by David Rohr, commemo-rates New Mexico’s 100-year statehood in 2012 and features a Zia sun symbol with yellow rays and a red center over a turquoise background.
The ALPCA will host an awards ceremony later in the year, and the organization’s president will travel to New Mexico to present state officials with award plaques.
New Mexico was among 12 fi-nalists, and 3,000 ALPCA world-wide members voted for their
favorite based on the design at-tractiveness and its ability to serve as a tool for public safety and law enforcement. Rhode Island took second, followed by Maryland’s War of 1812 bicentennial plate and the Canadian Northwest Ter-ritories’ plate.
Student Inka Markowski said the Centennial plate is better than
the “balloon” plate it replaced.
“I absolutely hate the balloon one — nobody can see what is going on in it,” she said. “It is just a mess of
pastel colors.”Student Caro-
line Liu said the Centennial plate is her favorite be-cause of the color-ing and simplicity.
“I’m from Illi-nois, so my plate is from there, but if I really wanted to change I would switch to that one,” she said. “It has my three favorite colors!”
Student Daisy Santistevan said the balloon plate is more representative of New Mexican culture.
“I really like the balloon plate,” she said. “I think that one should have won. Turquoise is our state stone, but it is definitely not the most prominent symbol of the state.”
by Kevin [email protected]
UNM o� ers scholarships to students eager to explore Brazil’s booming job market, but few are taking advantage of the opportunity.
Robyn Cote, the Latin American and Iberian Institute’s program director, said the program targets science students, but many aren’t willing to study Portuguese for four semesters, a program requirement.
“Language was the major
hindrance to engineers,” she said. “Unless they had a real interest in Portuguese, it would’ve been hard for them to add that to their coursework.”
In past years, fewer than half of the program participants were from math and science disciplines, Cote said.
UNM is teaming up with Texas Tech to o� er the program, which allows students to immerse themselves in Brazil’s fast-emerging global economy and explore the job market. Students can’t get out of the Portuguese requirement, but UNM o� ers accelerated classes that � t two semesters into one, Cote said, and other options that help students meet the requirement.
Professor Timothy Ross, an advocate for the Brazil program, said it is crucial for Americans in the business world to forge global ties.
“Engineering and technology is a global issue, and the U.S. is not a leader in this anymore,” he said. “At best, we can become a strong partner of the world community.”
To get people interested in applying for the program, the Fund for Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) granted an all-expenses-paid trip in March for nine students from Texas Tech and UNM to get acquainted with Brazil’s culture.
NM license platetops national list
Courtesy of FIPSEStudents from UNM and Texas Tech check out a cross atop the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil, in mid-March. The two universities o� ered students an all-expenses-paid trip in March to encourage them to participate in a scholarship program to study abroad in Brazil. The program targets science students due to Brazil’s wealth of job opportunities in the science � elds, but few science majors take advantage of the opportunity.
Brazil program needs nerds
by Shaun [email protected]
UNM’s Board of Regents will take its � rst step to determine tuition in-creases and approve an operating budget for 2012.
� e meeting starts today at 9 a.m. in SUB Ballroom A. � e hot topic: agreeing on a tuition increase. � e increase is expected to be between 5 and 8 percent.
� e Regents Finance and Facili-ties Committee will approve a budget and present it for vote by the full board during its Tuesday meeting.
Andrew Cullen, vice president at UNM Planning, Budget and Analysis, will present � nal budget recommen-dations to the committee.
Last month, UNM President David Schmidly presented a budget plan to the full Board of Regents that would increase tuition by 8.6 percent. � e re-gents requested lower tuition rates.
Regent Jamie Koch said the re-
gents shouldn’t increase tuition more than 5 percent.
Koch is on the Finance and Facili-ties Committee, along with Don Chal-mers and Gene Gallegos.
� e committee will look to ap-prove more than $16.6 million in capi-tal projects, including $9.5 million to create a complex for the Center of Mo-lecular Discovery and $4.6 million to improve the Department of Emergen-cy Medicine.
Language test makes science students opt out
see Brazil page 6
Committee to weighlikely tuition hike by Amanda Lee Myers
Associated Press
TUCSON, Ariz. — Despite recent student protests, regents for Arizona’s public universities voted Thursday to dramatically hike tuition, but will offer rebates for some students to help ease the financial strain.
The Arizona Board of Regents’ vote raised tuition and fees at the University of Arizona in Tucson by 22 percent to $10,027 for in-state freshman undergraduates in the fall. Those costs will jump by 19.5 percent, to $9,716, for in-state undergraduates at Arizona State University in Tempe and by 15 percent, to $8,824, at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.
The increases are far larger than average tuition hikes seen last year, when public universities nationwide increased in-state tuition and fees by an average of 7.9 percent, with the average price at $7,605, according to the College Board, the nonprofit group that runs the SATs.
But the regents also decided to give rebates of $350 to incoming in-state freshman undergraduates at NAU and $750 rebates to all in-state undergraduates at UA because those schools have rainy day funds to address cuts in their budget by the Arizona Legislature.
Board Chair Anne Mariucci said UA had $28 million and NAU has $18 million in unused money set aside in the event of legislative cuts to their budgets. ASU has no such money.
The rebates only apply for one year.
“I think it’s certainly better than nothing,” Mariucci said after the vote. “Next year it’ll be a new ball game.”
The board voted for the increase 7-2 after about six hours of debate, with members arguing over various alternative proposals that were mostly turned down.
Students have been strongly protesting against the tuition increases and legislative cuts. Hundreds of students rallied at the three universities on March
23, carrying signs that read “Keep education alive” and “Say no to cuts.”
“Are you kidding me? That’s stupid,” said Jordan King, a 20-year-old UA business sophomore, after learning of the vote. Of the rebates, he said, “That’s just a slap in the face. That’s like taking $1,000 from us and giving us $10 back.”
“That’s so much money. My parents are paying my tuition and they can’t afford that,” he said.
“We’re all struggling,” nursing sophomore Candace Jackson, 20, who goes to Arizona State University, said before the vote. “It’s a big chunk of money.”
Jackson has a $9,000 yearly scholarship for books and tuition, and said she’d probably have to get a job to cover any increases in tuition. She said that would take away some of her study time and threaten her ability to maintain a 3.5 grade-point average or higher to keep her scholarship.
“Not everyone is fortunate
Arizona tuition spikes startle
FINANCE ANDFACILITIESMEETING
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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboMoNday, april 11, 2011
volume 115 issue 133Telephone: (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-ChiefPat Lohmann Managing EditorIsaac Avilucea News EditorElizabeth ClearyAssistant News EditorShaun Griswold Staff ReportersChelsea ErvenKallie Red-HorseHunter RileyAlexandra Swanberg
Online and Photo EditorJunfu HanAssistant Photo EditorRobert Maes Culture EditorChris Quintana Assistant Culture EditorAndrew Beale Sports EditorRyan TomariAssistant Sports EditorNathan Farmer Copy ChiefTricia Remark
Opinion EditorNathan New Multimedia EditorKyle Morgan Design DirectorNathan NewProduction ManagerKevin KelseyAdvertising ManagerLeah MartinezSales ManagerNick ParsonsClassified ManagerDulce Romero
DAILY LOBOnew mexico
Students Antonio Romero and Rhiannon Schroeder build a cardboard lean-to on Johnson Field on Friday. Students from organization The Happy Campers organized an overnight stay on the field to raise awareness about homelessness.
Junfu HanDaily Lobo
Romero emerges from his cardboard box Friday on Johnson Field. He spent the night along with more than 30 students to raise awareness about homelessness.
On top of their overnight stay, students also accepted donations of socks and other essentials for the homeless.
PHOTO ESSAY: CAMPING FOR THE HOMELESS
New Mexico Daily lobo
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The wrestlers of Lucha Libre will be giving a free lecture on the history of Lucha Libre USA and also
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by Angus Shaw Associated Press
HARARE, Zimbabwe — A court has ordered militant supporters of Presi-dent Robert Mugabe to stop exhuming hundreds of skeletons they say were the victims of colonial-era massacres, a project that critics say is stoking racial hatred in Zimbabwe.
The High Court in Bulawayo ruled that the group must immediately cease digging out human remains from a dis-used mine shaft where officials have bused schoolchildren to view the re-mains as militants denounced whites and sang revolutionary songs.
Thursday’s ruling by Judge Nicholas Mathonsi says some surviving former guerrillas from the independence war had demanded a halt to exhumations that were not being carried out by ex-perts. Government ministers in charge of police and security must enforce the order, he said.
The judge said the exhumations violated all international protocols on investigating suspected human rights violations and amounted to “interfer-ence or tampering with crime scenes.”
Mugabe’s loyalists say the mass graves show how the country’s former rulers were guilty of human rights vio-lations far outweighing any accusa-tions leveled against Mugabe’s sup-porters. But some corpses still had hair,
skin and body fluids, raising doubts over dates of the killings in a nation long plagued by violence.
A group of ex-guerrillas from west-ern Zimbabwe protested to the court that the exhumations near the provin-cial center of Mount Darwin, 160 kilo-meters (110 miles) from Harare, were “chaotic and nonscientific” and testi-fied some of their fellow fighters died in the district fighting colonial-era troops.
Mugabe, who has been in pow-er since the country’s 1980 indepen-dence from Britain, was forced to en-ter a power-sharing agreement with the longtime opposition after disput-ed, violence-marred elections in 2008. But Mugabe has called for elections this year to bring to an end to the shaky two-year coalition brokered by region-al leaders.
Seen as a macabre thrust to election campaigning, Zimbabwe’s sole broad-caster controlled by Mugabe loyalists has urged ordinary citizens to visit the disused Chibondo gold mine to wit-ness the horror of colonial atrocities.
Reporters taken to the site on a trip organized by Mugabe’s Ministry of In-formation said school children were bused there. Militants sang revolution-ary songs, shouted slogans and de-nounced whites and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s pro-Western party for its links with Britain, the former co-lonial power.
Bones and remains lay in random heaps, some covered by sheets and blankets. Hair and clothes were clearly visible; the mine shaft emitted an over-whelming stench.
The prime minister’s party has criti-cized the exhumations for stoking ha-tred at a time the nation still suffers the effects of political violence. After inde-pendence, an estimated 20,000 civil-ians were killed by Mugabe’s soldiers when they crushed an armed uprising in the western Matabeleland province.
In what lawyers say is a landmark ruling that could open up Zimba-bwe’s violent secrets, Judge Mathonsi has directed officials to start a formal “legal process and framework” for in-vestigating deaths and disappearanc-es both before and after Zimbabwe’s independence.
by Susan Montoya Bryan Associated Press
A national panel of judicial and law enforcement experts convened in Albuquerque on Wednesday to begin its part in a massive federal and tribal effort aimed at revamping the justice system across Indian Country.
The nine-member Indian Law and Order Commission was established under the Tribal Law and Order Act signed into law last summer by President Obama. It is charged with conducting a comprehensive study of law enforcement and criminal justice in tribal communities across the country, and using its findings to make recommendations to Congress and the president.
Jefferson Keel, lieutenant governor of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma and president of the National Congress of American Indians, was among the commissioners meeting in Santa Fe. He said the panel has the potential to be a driving force behind implementing the act, which contains sweeping changes aimed at giving tribes more authority, resources and information needed to combat crime on reservations.
“Safe, strong tribal communities are in everyone’s interest,” Keel
said in a statement, adding that the commissioners all have a “deep experience and a passion to address the issues facing tribal communities.”
According to the federal government, violent crime rates on Indian reservations are more than twice the national rate, and there is an epidemic of domestic and sexual violence in Indian Country, along with high instances of child abuse, teen suicide and substance abuse.
Federal officials have also said there is a proliferation of gang activity on reservations, and yet law enforcement recruitment and retention across Indian Country lag far behind the rest of the nation. Statistics show there is a roughly 40 percent unmet need in staffing for police officers.
The commission will be focusing on these problems, as well as jurisdiction and juvenile justice issues, and the effect of tribal jails and the federal prison systems on reducing crime and rehabilitating offenders.
The Tribal Law and Order Act includes several key provisions, such as requiring U.S. attorneys who decline to prosecute alleged crimes in Indian Country to share information and evidence on those cases with tribal justice officials.
Digging up graves, anger Act: Increase safety of Indian country
Officials have bused schoolchildren to view
the remains as militants denounced whites and
sang revolutionary songs.
[email protected] / Ext. 133Opinion editor / Nathan New The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Monday
April 11, 2011
Page
4
Editor,
Have you noticed that the Walmart University flagship has sailed the educational seas rather erratically these days?
We need bold leadership in this brave new conservative era.
That’s why Osama bin Laden should be UNM president. Supported by the Daily Lobo online troll geniuses, Osama would provide a sense of real vision and direction at our beloved University.
We could finally throw money-wasting special-interest programs in the waste basket where they belong, such as Chicano Studies, Africana Studies, the College Enrichment Program and CAPS.
Spitting on teachers is just the beginning. We need to teach the dirty, smelly hippie professors a lesson or two. The Smith Plaza Beheading Program (SPBP) will be just the ticket. The uppity wymin on campus will also get a sense of what proper behavior is when they are hauled out on the plaza for a good, old-fashioned lashing.
Enough of this liberal softie stuff. Like my other brilliant, creative and
eminently practical ideas, my proposal can
take effect right away. This is also cheap, for those of you majoring in accounting and business who love Ayn Rand and are enamored with pragmatic realism and the romantic appeal of capitalism.
Osama is pretty available, too. He’s just been hanging out in that stinky,
old cave of his for all these years, and I bet he wouldn’t ask for more than $500,000 to run UNM.
Maybe he’d even be our president for free. All we have to do is ask.
James BurbankUNM faculty
Editor,
If you’re one of those folks trying to balance a job while getting a college education, filing federal income tax forms probably hasn’t been a huge priority.
But there is still time to file, and there are several reasons students should file, even if they owe no income tax.
As part of the federal stimulus bill enacted in 2009, Congress passed the American Opportunity Credit (AOC) for the 2009-10 tax years. AOC’s purpose is to make higher education more affordable for students and low-income families who otherwise may not be able to attend college.
This legislation expanded the Hope Credit, which applied only to the first two years of college. The AOC, however, is available for students pursuing an undergraduate degree who are in their first four years of college. Earning limits have been raised.
Filers may be eligible for AOC if they:Had an adjusted gross income in 2010
less than $80,000 for an individual.Had an adjusted gross income in 2010
less than $160,000 if married.Paid for “qualified tuition and related
expenses,” whether for themselves, spouse or dependents, at an eligible educational institution.
Are immigrants who are resident aliens for tax purposes.
AOC covers tuition and course-related materials. These materials include books, supplies and equipment needed for a course of study, whether the materials are purchased from the educational institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance.
AOC doesn’t cover expenses such as room and board, transportation, medical bills and child care. Tuition is the amount paid after tax-free contributions have been subtracted, such as scholarships, Pell grants, veteran’s assistance, fellowships and employee assistance.
Eligible educational institutions include colleges, universities, vocational schools and accredited schools eligible to
participate in the Student Aid program of the U.S. Department of Education.
Visit the U.S. Department of Education website if you are not sure whether your school qualifies.
The AOC is worth up to $2,500 of the cost of tuition and expenses paid during 2010 — that’s $700 increase from the Hope Credit’s maximum.
In addition, AOC provides a refundable credit worth up to $1,000, meaning students may qualify to receive up to $1,000 even if they owe no taxes. If students owe taxes, the credit is used to reduce tax liability.
For students not pursuing a degree, the Lifetime Learning Credit is still available at any point in their post-secondary education. Students who claim an education credit may also qualify to claim the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit, if they qualify.
To claim your AOC or Lifetime Learning Credit, you must use IRS form 8863. This form must be attached to your 1040 or 1040A form.
Kwaku SrahaUNM student
Editor,
� ere has been a lot of talk about the proposed student athletic facilities.
Students are getting excited and are failing to look at the reality of the situation. I graduated in 2009, and I can tell you that the University has been in talks for this since my junior year.
UNM is trying to make this sound like an amazing facility that is necessary for the school, when in reality the school is strapped for cash and already has a gym that is above
and beyond other universities’ gyms. If you don’t believe me, Google some other schools and check out their “gyms.”
� e reality is that if this is approved, tuition will go up to pay for a facility that won’t be built until well after paying students graduate.
� e University will say that it won’t be, but it will work it in to “student fees,” or some other portion of tuition. � e school is run by a nepotistic president who is paying unquali� ed people hundreds of thousands of dollars to run the University.
� e New York Times recently called UNM a “failure factory.” � e reason is that there is only an 11 percent graduation rate after four years and 44 percent after six years.
Instead of working on dismal graduation rates by o� ering more class sections and paying more faculty members, the University chooses to use funds to help its failing sports program.
On the East Coast, people know UNM only as the place with “that soccer girl” and “the football coach who keeps getting in trouble.”Instead of a gym, UNM needs to pull itself out of the “failure factory” category and improve its academic program.
Vote “no” on this proposed gym and help move toward making the University use funds to make degrees more valuable.
Christina TedeschiUNM alumna
LETTERS
Need help with tuition or books? Just file your taxes.
UNM’s ‘failure factory’ cure: Let dumb muscle atrophy
EDITORIAL BOARD
Pat LohmannEditor-in-chief
Isaac AviluceaManaging editor
Nathan NewOpinion editor
Elizabeth ClearyNews editor
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.
LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS:
THIS WEEK’S POLL:
If the 2012 presidential election were to-morrow, who would you vote for?
How much money have you taken out in loans to pay for school?
President Barack Obama
None.
The GOP Candidate
$1,000-5,000
Ralph Nader
$5,000-10,000
Sarah Palin
$10,000-15,000
64%
24%
3%
2%
GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM TO VOTE
D D L
Donald Trump 7%
Out of 263 total reponses
$15,000-20,000
$20,000+
Osama bin Laden would bring
much-needed leadership to UNM
Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo
ASUNMCANDIDATE ENDORSEMENT
FORUM & PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE
TUESDAY, APRIL 1212 PM - 2 PMSUB ATRIUM
Learn about the candidates’ platforms at this town-hall style forum.
Are you a chartered student organization?- Come endorse up to 10 Senatorial candidates,
1 Vice-Presidential candidate & 1 Presidential candidate
Editor to focus on people behind stories
by Andrew [email protected]
Chris Quintana, the Daily Lobo’s culture editor, will be the newspaper’s next editor-in-chief.
The UNM Student Publications Board appointed Quintana Friday, and he will take over May 1.
“I feel like I’ve been handed a big responsibility. Ever since Friday, there’s just things on my shoulders that haven’t been there before,” he said. “I’m just nervous that I won’t be able to live up to the legacy that the last editor left. At the same time, I’m excited to reach for that and be the best editor that I can be.”
Pat Lohmann, the Lobo’s current editor-in-chief, said he’s confident in Quintana’s ability to produce a great paper.
“Chris had, clearly, a successful year as culture editor, and I can’t wait to see how that is reflected across every page of the paper,” he said. “Chris is deeply passionate about the Lobo and journalism, and he is more than qualified to take on this endeavor.”
Quintana has served as the editor-in-chief of Conceptions Southwest, a student-produced literary magazine, for the last year. He said the experience prepared him for the responsibilities of his new position at the Daily Lobo, even though the two publications are significantly different.
“(At CSW) you get content in on a certain day and then you have the whole semester to edit that content,” he said. “It’s a little different than being at the Lobo. But I am used to crisis situations. There were a lot of crises at CSW.”
Lobo readers can expect a
familiar product under his leadership, although he would like to put more of a personal focus on stories, Quintana said.
“Ideally, I would like it not to change that much. I want the readers to have a consistent experience,” he said. “They can expect more story-driven articles by the news, culture and sports desks and see maybe a little bit more emphasis on the people involved in the stories that are happening. But other than that, we’re still going to put out the news in the best possible way.”
“We’re still going to put out the news in the best
possible way.”~Chris Quintana
New Daily Lobo Editor-in-Chief
The Daily Lobo is accepting applications for photographers.
Visit Unmjobs.unm.edu to fill out an application.
Daily Lobo Culture Editor Chris Quintana makes a lame attempt at one of those 80s end-of-movie celebrations. Quintana takes over as Daily Lobo editor-in-chief May 1.
Junfu Han Daily Lobo
Page 6 / Monday, aPril 11, 2011 news New Mexico Daily lobo
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Capturing �e Dragon:An Intimate Look Inside Contemporary ChinaBSE managing editor Ryan Tynan sits down with Daily Lobo photogra-pher Junfu Han for an interview and photographic tour of Han’s home town, Hangzhou, China. Read the interview. See the work that made the cover of the Fall 2010 issue of BSE.
Considering Cultural Identity: What Does It Mean to Be an Indigenous Woman in Mondern Times?BSE managing editor Ryan Tynan sits down with photographer Nina Freer to discuss her photo essay, “Indigina,” and her unique take on con-structions of cultural identity.
Film Noir: Understanding a Classic GenreIn “Lighting as a Creation for Darkness,” Alison Rodriguez explores just what classifies a film as “noir.”
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Student Ashley Hooper said the trip inspired her to take advantage of the FIPSE study-abroad program. She said she already knows Spanish, and can take a one-semester class to fulfill the requirement, so she’ll likely apply for the program.
“The purpose of the trip was to introduce us to Brazil and get a better idea if we want to do the FIPSE,” she said. “I can’t wait to get back.”
Drew Landis, a junior in mechanical engineering, also went on the March trip, but he isn’t sure if he’ll apply for the program because of the Portuguese requirement.
“I am interested, but I’m not sure whether or not I can because of when I need to take certain classes,” he said. “You know how they offer certain classes in the fall and certain classes in the spring? I’ve never
taken Portuguese before.” Scott Collins, one of the
principle investigators for the FIPSE scholarship, said the U.S.-Brazil Program will be focused on air/land and environmental sciences.
“Brazil has significant environmental issues and a lot of resources and great talent,” he said. “There are great opportunities for collaboration in environmental sciences, as we face common problems here and many of those problems are the same in Brazil.”
Lia Driscoll, who participated in FIPSE last year, said the program expanded her knowledge and global competency.
“The possibilities in Brazil are really endless,” she said, “It’s more important now than ever that the U.S. maintain this relationship with Brazil.”
Brazil from page 1
enough to have a scholarship,” she said. “I know a good handful of people who wouldn’t be able to afford tuition increases at all.”
The tuition spike was also tough to take for some regents, including Dennis DeConcini, a former U.S. senator.
“We are absolutely going crazy on tuition, it’s absolutely out of sight,” he said. “It is really absurd what we get ourselves talked into here, with all due respect to the great work of the presidents. This board is drinking the Kool-Aid. We’re taking these figures right down the line.”
Arizona universities say they’ve cut back where they can and blame the state Legislature’s steep cuts to their budgets. Over three fiscal years beginning in 2008, the Legislature cut a total of $232.5 million from the schools and has approved nearly $200 million in cuts to the schools during the next fiscal year.
Next fiscal year’s cuts amount to
a 22 percent reduction in university funding from the Legislature, though that reduction represents 4.7 percent of the schools’ overall funding, which they also get from things like tuition, dorm fees, and research grants. The universities still will get $692 million from the Legislature next fiscal year.
The one thing all the board members seemed to agree on Thursday was that the Legislature has been draconian in its cuts to higher education.
“There’s no good feelings around this board that I can see about anything regarding what has happened at the Legislature,” member Bob McLendon said.
“Our universities are giant beacons out there in this country, not just for the West,” he said. “Arizona is kind of short right now on those beacons. We’re not looked upon favorably by a lot of folks, but we do have some rays of hope out there. We must really continue to invest in our universities.”
Arizona from page 1
by Gillian Flaccus associated press
MORENO VALLEY, Calif.— When Melissa Noriega moved to a quiet street in this suburb east of Los Angeles five years ago, she thought it was the perfect family place: Kids played in the culs-de-sac, neigh-bors knew each other, and a small park was a stone’s throw from her doorstep.
That idyllic vision has been shat-tered after seven teens stand ac-cused of gang raping and sodom-izing an 11-year-old girl who was lured to the park by an older girl as she walked home from school. Police say the teens have ties to a homegrown gang that first attract-ed the attention of authorities fewer than three years ago — but Noriega and other residents still can’t un-derstand how such a violent crime could unfold in their backyard.
“My house is 50 feet away, my kids play outside. Are you kidding me?” said Noriega, as her three young children rode bicycles in the street. “This neighborhood, since we moved in, has gone up and down. Now it’s gotten bad, so bad.”
The park where police say the gang rape took place lies within a 4,000-home planned community in this commuter town 70 miles south-east of Los Angeles, a neighborhood built from scratch in the early 1990s for families attracted by less-expen-sive housing and the warmth of sub-urban living.
An award-winning elementary school abuts the park, which is also a short walk from a manmade lake with free fishing and boating, a golf course, an Olympic-sized pool and a fitness center. Families enjoy out-door movies on a 20-foot inflatable screen and Easter egg hunts and Oktoberfest.
The brutal attack in the careful-ly managed community blindsided Dan Rice, president of the Moreno Valley Ranch homeowners’ asso-ciation. He is frustrated that police haven’t said if the accused teens were from the neighborhood or were outsiders and he worries that the board hasn’t done enough to in-still a sense of community in a place sold on the currency of the Ameri-can dream.
“It was gut-wrenching,” Rice said. “You just think everything is good, where you live and what you do, and then when it happens, it’s a wake-up call. It makes you realize that it can happen anytime or any place.”
At the park on a recent weekday, Rice’s 9-year-old daughter skipped in the grass as a swallowtail butterfly flitted past wooden arches draped with purple wisteria blooms. A few teenage girls chatted nearby, but the place was otherwise deserted.
“The hope of everybody seems to be, ‘Is it just an isolated case? Did they catch all the culprits?’” Rice said.
Moreno Valley Ranch developers predicted outward sprawl from Los Angeles would eventually bring jobs to match the suburban landscape they were creating — but that never happened.
Now, most residents live in one of seven homeowners associations and commute hours to Los Angeles or Orange County, shop on their way home and collapse into bed without time to socialize, said Rice, head of the largest homeowner group, also called Moreno Valley Ranch.
The downturn in the economy worsened the situation, when many homes fell into foreclosure and were taken over by investors who rented them out — some to halfway houses and sober living facilities. Rice said his own home has lost half its value
in the recession.He is most bothered by the fact
that the young victim was new in town, according to authorities, but he doesn’t know who she is or any-thing about her alleged attackers and their families.
“I would love to say we’re the epitome of community and we rise above it. We’re doing what we can but I still think we do have a way to go,” he said. “Here’s a case where it’s right down the street from me and I don’t know if they have broth-ers or sisters or family members or if there’s more to this gang. It makes me quite uneasy.”
What happened around twilight March 10 has chilled even veteran detectives and prosecutors. Police waited two weeks to notify the pub-lic so they could arrest the last sus-pect, a 19-year-old named Michael Sykes, the only adult charged in the case.
The 11-year-old girl was walking home from school when an older girl asked her if she would like to get her nails done. Eventually the teen-age girl led the victim to the park and the boys were alerted, possibly by text message, said Lisa Loyola, a deputy district attorney assigned to Riverside County’s juvenile court. The boys, ages 15 to 17, dropped over fences and came through back-yards to the park restroom where the attack occurred.
When the girl failed to return home after school, her mother searched for her in vain. When she staggered home later, her parents called police.
“When I read this report, I was shaking. It was — and is — horren-dous,” Loyola said. “It was heart-breaking and as a mother, it’s very difficult to read something like this in this detail.”
Gang rape scares community
Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 7New Mexico Daily lobo
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Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 9New Mexico Daily lobo lo mejor otra vez
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Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lo mejor otra vez
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Page 12 / Monday, aPril 11, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobolo mejor otra vez
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Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 13New Mexico Daily lobo lo mejor otra vez
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Page 16 / Monday, aPril 11, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobosports
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by Cesar [email protected]
One week removed from absorbing a punch to its ego, UNM football’s defensive squad returned the favor Saturday at University Stadium.
The defense baited quarterback Tarean Austin into an interception and a fumble on the first two drives, and the offense didn’t score until 30 plays in. Austin, who went 4-of-5 for 39 yards, injured his lower back on an option run and only participated in 13 plays in the Lobos’ second spring scrimmage, but head coach Mike Locksley said Austin should be ready to play in next week’s Cherry-Silver scrimmage.
Linebacker Carmen Messina, who had six tackles, said he and his teammates didn’t hold back.
“We were thinking about what they did to us last time,” he said. “It was time for payback. … We wait all week for them to put those red jerseys on. We’re not going to be careful for anybody.”
Locksley said both squads were efficient, but he was encouraged to see the defense play with season-like intensity.
“(That was) probably the best
practice we’ve had under my tenure,” he said.
The ground attack ran at a usual pace. Kasey Carrier rushed for 101 yards on 22 carries and scored four touchdowns. James Wright had 83 yards on 16 carries, and converted running back DeMarcus Rogers continued to have a stellar spring. He rushed 19 times for 65 yards and three scores.
“I thought consistently we were running the ball the way we need to,” Locksley said.
With Austin limited by injury, Stump Godfrey and freshman Dustin Walton took the majority of snaps under center.
The windy environment made
for especially tough passing circumstances, and Godfrey completed only 7-of-20 passes for 66 yards, but had two touchdowns. He ran 17 times for 63 yards and found the end zone once.
Walton didn’t fare as well, going 5-of-8 for 33 yards, and he fumbled four snaps, one which linebacker Joe Stoner returned 33 yards for a touchdown.
Godfrey said it’s important that the defense get its swagger before fall rolls around.
“They came out and they got better today,” he said. “They learned from their mistakes, and they came out, gave us their all, and they fought hard. … We need them to come up and play like that every day. We need them to do that game-time, and I’m sure they will.”
Up Next
Cherry-Silver Game
Saturday2 p.m.
University Stadium
by Nathan [email protected]
It was a successful revenge trip to Denver.
The UNM men’s soccer team beat Creighton 1-0 in Saturday’s exhibition game, helping the
Lobos exact payback on the Bluejays after they thumped UNM 4-1 in the first round of
last season’s NCAA tournament.“It’s kind of a weird thing,” for-
ward Devon Sandoval said. “We are a different team now than we were when we played them last year.”
The game’s lone goal came in the 71st minute. Midfielder Javier Gomez stole the ball from Creigh-ton, then passed it to Sandoval who played it to midfielder Blake Smith. Smith placed the ball into the netting of the far post.
The Lobos, with 14 field play-ers available on their spring ros-ter, relied on six redshirt fresh-men who have gotten extended
playing time so far.“Our young guys did very well,”
head coach Jeremy Fishbein said. “Guys like Giovanni Rollie and Carson Baldinger started, and Javier Gomez played about 70 minutes.”
After missing much of the fall season because of a broken col-larbone, Smith has also been im-pressive, scoring two goals in his last three games.
“Smith is a big component to our team,” Sandoval said. “He is definitely a weapon on the field with that left foot and his speed. There are not many players in the country that can keep up with him.”
Up Next
Men’s Soccer at Denver
SaturdayTBA
Taos, NM
UNM 1
0Creighton
lobo football lobo men’s soccer
D-line surges in scrimmage Revenge is sweeteron Creighton’s grass
“It was time for pay-back. We wait all week for them to put those
red jerseys on. We’re not going to be carful for
anybody”~Carmen Messina
Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 17New Mexico Daily lobo sports
CongratulateLast Week’s
Lobo Winners!
Baseball defeated TCU 10-5
Softball defeated NMSU 3-2 UNLV 2-1
Associated Press
MIAMI — If this was an Eastern Conference semifinals preview, then the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics showed what to expect.
Few pleasantries.Pushing and shoving.And maybe a Game 7 in Miami.LeBron James scored 27
points, Dwyane Wade added 14 and the Heat moved closer to the No. 2 seed in the East playoffs Sunday by beating the sliding Celtics 100-77.
“It was a playoff-atmosphere type of game, from the fans to both teams’ approach to what the game meant,” Wade said. “It had that feel.”
Miami moved a game ahead of Boston, trimming its magic number to clinch the
second seed to two. The teams will finish second and third in some order behind Chicago in the East, slotted to play in the conference semifinals.
“We’d like to play them, I can tell you that,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. “And we may have to if we want to go somewhere.”
Chris Bosh added 13 points and eight rebounds for Miami, which had been 0-3 against Boston this season, though Heat coach Erik Spoelstra cautioned against overstating the win’s importance.
“We proved we can beat them tonight,” Spoelstra said. “That’s about it, in my mind.”
Paul Pierce scored 24 points and Kevin Garnett added 21 for Boston, which lost for the 10th time in its last 19 games. The Celtics were outrebounded 42-26, and outscored
44-26 in the paint.“What else do you expect?
It’s Boston-Miami,” Garnett said. “Supposedly it’s two of, if not the top two, teams in the East. You have to expect that. You have to expect that coming in here you’re not going to get the call. You had to expect their passion — a team you have beaten three times.”
The Heat finally solved the Boston hex, beating the Celtics for the third time in the last 21 meetings. Bosh had been 1-13 against Boston since March 2007, and the Celtics ended both the 2009-10 seasons for Wade (in the first round) and James (in the second round).
Miami won for the 13th time in its last 16 games, and its bench — maligned for much of the season — outscored Boston’s 32-12.
“What worked for us today is, offensively we played together,” Wade said.
Ray Allen scored 13 points for the Celtics. Rajon Rondo was held to just seven points and five assists on 3-for-8 shooting.
“Frustration is high on our team right now,” Rivers said.
Miami’s role players were huge.Mario Chalmers had nine points
in the second quarter, when the Heat took the lead. Joel Anthony had eight rebounds in the first half, two less than the entire Boston roster. Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored six quick points early in the third as the Heat remained in control, and Anthony took advantage of a triple-team on James for a dunk and a 74-59 lead on the final play of the third quarter.
Of course, this being Celtics-Heat, nothing would come easily for
Miami.Down by 22, Boston ran off 12
straight points, Allen starting it with a four-point play, and Pierce adding both a 3-pointer and a three-point play to get the Celtics within 85-75.
It was the last gasp. Mike Bibby’s 3-pointer with 4:49 left, followed by Bosh’s follow of James’ miss, sent the lead back to 15.
“We built that lead by just keeping guys in front of us, contesting shots and flying around defensively,” James said.
Boston scored the game’s first eight points and hit eight of its first nine shots. The Celtics were making it seem easy, especially when Garnett — who hadn’t made a 3-pointer all season — stepped into one from the left wing and connected for a 22-15 lead.
“It looked like the same old song,” Spoelstra said.
It didn’t stay that way. Boston went scoreless for the next 6:17, and Miami took the lead for good on the opening possession of the second quarter.
Tensions were already high, and emotions soon boiled over.
Jermaine O’Neal — who had just been easily scored on by James 27 seconds earlier in transition — tried to stop another drive by the two-time reigning MVP with a shoulder check with about 4 minutes left in the second, making no play on the ball.
A scrum quickly broke out under the basket. O’Neal earned a flagrant-1, James got a technical for throwing the ball back at O’Neal, Wade and Pierce also got technicals for some pushing and jostling, and a small amount of debris flew from the stands onto the court.
nba
Heat jumps to triple digits(AP Photo / Alan Diaz)
Miami Heat’s LeBron James, left, drives into Boston Celtics’ Paul Pierce in the first quarter at American Airlines Arena on Sunday. The Heat won 100-77 after losing three-straight games to the Celtics.
Miami 100
77Boston
Page 18 / Monday, aPril 11, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobolobo features
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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 APRIL 11, 2011
ACROSS1 Dance move5 Give a free ticket
to9 __-Abyssinian
War: 1936Mussolini triumph
14 Task list heading15 Foot’s curve16 Grinding tooth17 Bird sacred to Tut18 “I’ll pay whatever
you’re asking”20 Doves’ homes22 Holy smoke23 “Rock and Roll,
Hoochie __”:1974 hit
24 Sportageautomaker
27 As __ asMethuselah
28 “... three men ina __”
30 Cost to thecustomer, as ofillicit drugs
33 Toon storekeeperfrom India
34 Problem forPauline
35 Brake component36 Smooth urbanite40 Campus VIP42 Double-reed
winds43 “She Done __
Wrong”: MaeWest film
44 Subject of ahighly classifiedfile
50 Small bill51 Mustard’s rank:
Abbr.52 Audible dance
style53 Pub purchase54 Homemade shorts57 Lazy __:
revolving tray59 “Not another
word!”62 Use UPS63 Sound that might
accompany 37-Down
64 French francsuccessor
65 “The __ Love”:Gershwin song
66 Moorehead of“Bewitched”
67 Chess standoff
68 Yemen city on itsown gulf
DOWN1 Pick-up __: toy2 Also3 Newspaper
bigwig4 Model’s stance5 Is able to6 “... man __
mouse?”7 Early 20th-
century year8 Early antiseptic
compound9 Get in the way of
10 In a dilemma11 “The Guns of
Navarone” authorMacLean
12 Hiking boots, e.g.13 Galena or
hematite19 Civil rights gp.21 Trapshooting25 “Lord knows __!”26 Rent-a-car option29 Tampa NFLer31 “Beowulf,” e.g.32 Dole out35 Genealogy abbr.36 Discover
fortuitously37 Scoffer’s words
38 __ Nostra39 Hangs on to40 Pres. after GWB41 Chopping, as
garlic44 Runs fast45 Vegan staple46 Director Hitchcock47 “Cosby” actress
Phylicia48 Jerry’s female
friend, on“Seinfeld”
49 Part of adaunting split, inbowling
55 Rugby radial56 Cast aspersions
on58 West Point inits.59 When doubled, a
Gabor60 Savings vehicle
for later yrs.61 Comics punch
sound
Saturday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Gareth Bain 4/11/11
(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 4/11/11
Friday’s puzzle solved
Dilbert dailycrossword
dailysudoku level: 1 2 3 4 solution to friday’s puzzle
Monday, april 11, 2011 / page 19New Mexico Daily lobo
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CAMPUS EVENTSWomen’s Veteran GroupStarts at: 12:00pmLocation: UNM Women’s Resource Center, 1160 Mesa Vista HallThere is no question, women vets have special needs and this is a place where we can network to make sure those needs are met.
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by Brandon [email protected]
Can you smell what DeBroeck is cooking?
Sophomore right-hand hurler Kaela DeBroeck was virtually unstoppable on the mound Sunday, allowing two hits and one run in seven innings of work. Behind her arm, the UNM softball team got its � rst Mountain West Conference win — a 2-1 victory over UNLV.
Head coach Erica Beach said that DeBroeck’s pitches were on point.
“She did a good job of hitting her spots today,” Beach said. “She did
a nice job mixing things up and keeping the batters guessing, and what I really liked was her ability to dig deep and get out of trouble when she needed to.”
Sunday’s victory came after a bumpy Friday, where the Lobos were run-ruled 8-0 by San Diego State. � en Saturday, UNLV dispatched UNM 3-1 in Game 1, UNM’s only run coming o� a � elding error in the second inning.
But in Sunday’s hotly contested
pitchers’ duel, UNM was � rst to draw blood.
� e Lobos scored two in the bottom of the � rst inning o� the bat of Danielle Castro, who doubled to right to score third baseman Kaity Ingram and center� elder Kerry Hodgins.
Ingram, who was 3-for-3 from the plate, said everyone contributed.
“Everyone has a good day; everyone has a bad day,” she said. “Our entire team, one through nine, has the ability to put the ball in play and make things happen. Today it was the top of the lineup. Next week it might be the bottom of the lineup.”
UNLV’s designated hitter Kylie Wagner provided the Rebels’ only run with a solo homerun in the top of the fourth.
In the top of the � fth, UNLV’s Tayler Van Acker led o� with a single, and DeBroeck walked the next batter to put the tying run in scoring position.
But that was as close as the Rebels came, as DeBroeck shut down the next three batters with two strikeouts and a groundout.
“I felt really good out there,” DeBroeck said. “I was moving the ball around, staying loose and doing what I do.”
DeBroeck said UNM will carry this weekend’s momentum into next weekend’s MWC series against Colorado State.
“We did a lot of good things this weekend, and we still have some things to � x,” she said. “But most importantly, we know that every game is going to be a dog � ght from here on out, and we’re going to give it our all and leave everything on the � eld.”
[email protected] / Ext. 131The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 [email protected] / Ext. 131
Lobo Monday April 11, 2011
Page
20The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
SportsSports editor / Ryan Tomari
UP NEXT
Softball at Colorado
StateSaturday
1 p.m.Colorado Springs, CO
by Nathan [email protected]
Ten years from now, the outcome of Sunday’s match won’t matter to Ashley Bonner and Anya Villanueva; the memories will.
The UNM women’s tennis team fell 6-1 to UNLV on Sunday during the two seniors’ final home match at the Linda Estes Tennis Complex.
No matter Sunday’s outcome, head coach Roy Canada said Bonner and Villanueva have kept the team strong through ups and downs throughout their four-year careers.
“They will be leaving a good legacy,” he said. “… Last year we had a very rough year and they managed to keep the team together.”
The Lobos’ only point came off of an intense 10-point tiebreaker match between Lobo freshman Michaela Bezdickova and UNLV’s Lucia Batta.
The match between Bezdickova and Batta, arguably the best player in the conference, ended 7-5, 2-6 and went to a 10-point tiebreaker, with Bezdickova winning 18-16.
“In my opinion, she clinched all-conference right there,” Canada said. “Batta was the No. 1 player in our region ... The biggest thing for (Bezdickova) was winning that 10-point tiebreaker. She had not won one all season. “
Villanueva lost to Aleksandra
Josifoska 6-2, 6-0 in her singles match. She said UNLV is ultra talented.
“More than the fight, they have more talent, and you can see on each court they play really well,” Villanueva said. “They were stepping their game up, and once we stepped ours up, they would go even higher.”
The two seniors then played together in the doubles play, but lost 8-4 to the Rebels’ Nives Pavlovic and Josifoska.
Over the course of their careers, the duo was often paired together in doubles play.
Villanueva said she built a special bond with umpires and fans at UNM, and she will miss
those moments.“I think overall I will miss
just being close to the umpires because they care and they like when you do well,” she said. “I grew really close to the fans and some ladies would even bring us cookies, and they would cheer on the team.”
A tearful Bonner said she
will miss her partnership with Villanueva and her time at UNM. It’s something she said she will remember for the rest of her life.
“It’s sad, but it was a fun time, and I don’t regret anything,” she said. “It was great playing with Anya, and we interacted well with each other and with the rest of team.”
Home not so sweet for these seniors
Dylan Smith / Daily LoboSenior Anya Villanueva waits for a serve in a match against UNLV Sunday at the Linda Estes Tennis Complex. Villanueva, a senior, played her last home match for the Lobos on Sunday as the team fell 6-1 to the Rebels.
Laurisa Galvan / Daily LoboKaela DeBroeck winds up at Lobo Field on Sunday during UNM’s series � nale against UNLV. DeBroeck guided the Lobos to a 2-1 win over the Rebels, UNM’s � rst MWC win of the season.
Hurler nearly pitcher perfect
“Last year we had a very rough year and they
managed to keep the team together.”
~Roy Canada
“Our entire team, one through nine, has
the ability to put the ball in play and make
things happen.”~Kaity Ingram
Lobos bounce back a� er eight-run loss
UNM 2
1UNLV