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D AILY L OBO new mexico The bird gets nervous see Page 4 October 25, 2012 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 thursday Inside the Daily Lobo Dr. Spaceman see Page 11 volume 117 issue 47 65 | 38 TODAY In absentia see Page 2 Show w Me How by Svetlana Ozden [email protected] e termination of the health insurance contract between ABQ Health Partners and Lovelace Health System forced thousands of patients, some of whom are UNM employees, to switch health care providers, or pay their health care costs out-of-pocket, in less than one month. UNM employees who choose to purchase health insurance through the University have the option to purchase a Presbyterian or Lovelace plan. ABQ HP is a network of 184 in- dependent physicians that has been closely affiliated with Love- lace and formerly contracted with LHS to accept Lovelace health insurance. Lovelace CEO and President Ron Stern said at a meeting Tues- day that LHS received a letter last week from ABQ HP that terminates LHS’ contract, effective Nov. 8. He said LHS had a five-year contract with ABQ HP and that attempts to negotiate a new five-year contract were ineffective. Stern said ABQ HP submitted the contract and that, because he did not feel the contract was appro- priate for LHS to sign, he requested additional time for the contract to be reviewed by the superintendent from the department of insurance to ensure it made sense. He said ABQ HP representatives gave LHS one week to review the contract but that the time span was insufficient to ensure it was properly reviewed, so the Nov. 8 termination date re- mained in place. “ey gave us a proposal that didn’t make sense, not for eco- nomic reasons but the way they wanted to structure the agreement. We need some time to make sure it makes sense,” he said. “I’m not going to sign any agreement that I don’t think is in the best interest of you and all the health plan’s mem- bers we serve and the hospitals and all of our patients.” Stern said that after the meeting with ABQ HP, LHS learned that the company was sold to Healthcare Partners, a company in California, in September. He said he requested to speak with representatives from California, but that conversations with company representatives did not make a difference. “We said ‘Well, let’s get those people from California and sit down and talk with them, maybe they’ve got it figured out and they’ll solve the problem,’” he said. “Well it didn’t quite work that way, they stood firm and said here’s the deal take it or leave it … so I said ‘We’d rather lose health plan members than sign a bad deal.’” Stern said LHS will continue to hold meetings to help transfer members to new doctors and that members can call LHS or visit the LHS center for assistance. He said that despite the conflict with ABQ HP, other doctors and medical practices in the area, such as New Mexico Orthopedics and the New Mexico Heart Institute, have sup- ported LHS. “We’re going to do everything we can to make sure you get a great doctor, and if you don’t like the first one, we’ll give you a second and if you don’t like the second, we’ll give you a third,” he said. “As this process began, we’ve been very surprised by the medical community at large … we’ve had doctors who said they’re standing up for Lovelace. We’ve had overwhelming support.” But Stern said LHS needs to open additional urgent care facili- ties and will look into facilities in Rio Rancho and Albuquerque. He said patients who visit urgent care facilities for immediate health care can use Lovelace hospital emer- gency room facilities at no addi- tional cost during the transition period. Stern said LHS filed a lawsuit against ABQ HP because ABQ HP has exhibited illegal practices re- garding relations with Medicare beneficiaries. According to an article in the Albuquerque Journal, ABQ HP breached its contract with LHS by soliciting LHS members to utilize other insurance companies, in- terfering with business between LHS and its customers and violat- ing state and federal regulations that govern marketing to Love- lace’s Medicare Advantage plan customers. “We’ve asked the courts to give us some relief on that issue,” Stern said. Lovelace Chief Programs Officer Marlene Baca said that although some Lovelace Health Plan mem- bers were told by ABQ HP represen- tatives that patients can continue to see ABQ HP doctors until De- cember, Lovelace will adhere to the contract termination date, which is Nov. 8. She said that, should a pa- tient continue to go to ABQ HP, he or she should request that ABQ HP put in writing that its providers will continue to see Lovelace members Lovelace, ABQ Health Partners split by Janet McConnaughey The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS An eel undulating through coastal waters, powered by batteries and checking for mines. A jellyfish is actually a surveillance robot, powered by the atoms around it. Fins pick up intelligence while propelling a robot bluegill sunfish. e Office of Naval Research is supporting baby steps toward making those visions of the future a reality. For instance, the jellyfish work in Texas and Virginia is fo- cused on how the creatures move in water, and how to mimic or even surpass their abilities. e robojel- lyfish is currently tethered to hy- drogen and oxygen tanks, and ONR project manager Robert Brizzolara said he doesn’t plan to try making it move autonomously yet. ere’s plenty still to learn about basic hydrodynamics. “We, as engineers, haven’t cre- ated anything that swims nearly as well as a very basic fish,” said Drexel University’s James Tangorra, who is working on a robotic bluegill. Part- ners at Harvard and the University of Georgia are studying the actual fish; he uses their findings to en- gineer imitations. “ere are great things we can learn from fish … e way they propel themselves; the way in which they sense water.” Ultimately, the Navy wants “the next generation of robotics that would operate in that very Navy-unique underwater domain,” said Jim Fallin, a spokesman for Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific, which is doing separate work in San Diego. One aspect is finding long-lived power sources to let drones loiter a long time to collect information, he said. Possible uses include spying, mapping, and mine detection and removal. e Navy is not the only agency paying for such research. In 2007, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency offered small busi- ness innovation research money for an underwater robot that could navigate rivers, inlets, harbors and coastal waters to check for general traffic, obstacles, things on and un- der the bottom, and “specific ves- sels of interest.” e ONR studies are more basic. e grants aren’t aimed as much at creating drones as at understand- ing how things move forward un- derwater, Brizzolara said. The Navy uses torpedo-shaped drones and tethered vehicles to detect mines and map the ocean floor. But propellers and jets can be easily tracked on radar and so- nar. Robots modeled after water creatures could be both more ef- ficient and harder to detect, and could move through perilous wa- ters without endangering people, researchers say. e work isn’t all at universities. e Office of Naval Research opened a 50,000-square-foot robotics laboratory this year. A prototype dubbed Razor, developed at the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, R.I., uses flippers for stealth. Like the jellyfish work and the University of Virginia studies on manta rays, the eel research at the University of New Orleans is all about hydrodynamics. e spark is UNO professor emeritus William Vorus’ theory that sinuous undula- tions, though a slow way to swim, should allow forward movement without creating a wake. Brandon M. Taravella, who studied under Vorus and is now an assistant professor of naval archi- tecture and marine engineering at UNO, sees the robot eel as a pos- sible surveillance tool. But the Of- fice of Naval Research’s three-year, $900,000 grant is focused on mak- ing an eel and seeing whether it can swim without disturbing the water around it. Other scientists have checked real eels, Taravella said. “It’s pretty high-efficient ... but still has some wake. at’s why we’re not drop- ping eels into the tank.” Comput- er-generated models indicate just how a robot eel should move to get through the water without any drag. Creating one to do that is far from easy. Like many of the other projects, this one is still in early stages. Most of the time, the nameless first- year prototype is hooked onto a Scientists do some fi shy research see Robots PAGE 3 see Lovelace PAGE 3 “We’re going to do everything we can to make sure you get a great doctor, and if you don’t like the first one, we’ll give you a second...” ~Ron Stern Lovelace president TAKES ONE TO FLAMENCO Natalia Jacquez / Daily Lobo Flamenco student Dolores Garcia twirls in the “Points in Space” solo piece “Alegrias.” Garcia choreographed and performed the piece. See full story on Page 8.

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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 102512

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

The bird gets nervoussee Page 4

O c t o b e r 2 5 , 2 0 1 2The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 tuesdaythursday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Dr. Spaceman

see Page 11volume 117 issue 47 65 | 38TODAY

In absentia

see Page 2

Show Me HowShow Me

How

by Svetlana [email protected]

� e termination of the health insurance contract between ABQ Health Partners and Lovelace Health System forced thousands of patients, some of whom are UNM employees, to switch health care providers, or pay their health care costs out-of-pocket, in less than one month.

UNM employees who choose to purchase health insurance through the University have the option to purchase a Presbyterian or Lovelace plan.

ABQ HP is a network of 184 in-dependent physicians that has been closely a� liated with Love-lace and formerly contracted with LHS to accept Lovelace health insurance.

Lovelace CEO and President Ron Stern said at a meeting Tues-day that LHS received a letter last week from ABQ HP that terminates LHS’ contract, e� ective Nov. 8. He said LHS had a � ve-year contract with ABQ HP and that attempts to negotiate a new � ve-year contract were ine� ective.

Stern said ABQ HP submitted the contract and that, because he did not feel the contract was appro-priate for LHS to sign, he requested additional time for the contract to be reviewed by the superintendent from the department of insurance to ensure it made sense. He said ABQ HP representatives gave LHS one week to review the contract but that the time span was insu� cient to ensure it was properly reviewed, so the Nov. 8 termination date re-mained in place.

“� ey gave us a proposal that didn’t make sense, not for eco-nomic reasons but the way they wanted to structure the agreement. We need some time to make sure it makes sense,” he said. “I’m not going to sign any agreement that I don’t think is in the best interest of you and all the health plan’s mem-bers we serve and the hospitals and all of our patients.”

Stern said that after the meeting with ABQ HP, LHS learned that the company was sold to Healthcare Partners, a company in California, in September. He said he requested to speak with representatives from California, but that conversations with company representatives did not make a di� erence.

“We said ‘Well, let’s get those people from California and sit down and talk with them, maybe they’ve got it � gured out and they’ll solve the problem,’” he said. “Well it didn’t quite work that way, they stood � rm and said here’s the deal take it or leave it … so I said ‘We’d rather lose health plan members than sign a bad deal.’”

Stern said LHS will continue to hold meetings to help transfer members to new doctors and that members can call LHS or visit the LHS center for assistance. He said

that despite the con� ict with ABQ HP, other doctors and medical practices in the area, such as New Mexico Orthopedics and the New Mexico Heart Institute, have sup-ported LHS.

“We’re going to do everything we can to make sure you get a great doctor, and if you don’t like the � rst one, we’ll give you a second and if you don’t like the second, we’ll give you a third,” he said. “As this process began, we’ve been very surprised by the medical community at large … we’ve had doctors who said they’re standing up for Lovelace. We’ve had overwhelming support.”

But Stern said LHS needs to open additional urgent care facili-ties and will look into facilities in Rio Rancho and Albuquerque. He said patients who visit urgent care facilities for immediate health care can use Lovelace hospital emer-gency room facilities at no addi-tional cost during the transition period.

Stern said LHS � led a lawsuit against ABQ HP because ABQ HP has exhibited illegal practices re-garding relations with Medicare bene� ciaries.

According to an article in the Albuquerque Journal, ABQ HP breached its contract with LHS by soliciting LHS members to utilize other insurance companies, in-terfering with business between LHS and its customers and violat-ing state and federal regulations that govern marketing to Love-lace’s Medicare Advantage plan customers.

“We’ve asked the courts to give us some relief on that issue,” Stern said.

Lovelace Chief Programs O� cer Marlene Baca said that although some Lovelace Health Plan mem-bers were told by ABQ HP represen-tatives that patients can continue to see ABQ HP doctors until De-cember, Lovelace will adhere to the contract termination date, which is Nov. 8. She said that, should a pa-tient continue to go to ABQ HP, he or she should request that ABQ HP put in writing that its providers will continue to see Lovelace members

Lovelace, ABQHealth Partners split

by Janet McConnaughey The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — An eel undulating through coastal waters, powered by batteries and checking for mines. A jelly� sh is actually a surveillance robot, powered by the atoms around it. Fins pick up intelligence while propelling a robot bluegill sun� sh.

� e O� ce of Naval Research is supporting baby steps toward making those visions of the future a reality. For instance, the jelly� sh work in Texas and Virginia is fo-cused on how the creatures move in water, and how to mimic or even surpass their abilities. � e robojel-ly� sh is currently tethered to hy-drogen and oxygen tanks, and ONR project manager Robert Brizzolara said he doesn’t plan to try making it move autonomously yet.

� ere’s plenty still to learn about basic hydrodynamics.

“We, as engineers, haven’t cre-ated anything that swims nearly as well as a very basic � sh,” said Drexel University’s James Tangorra, who is working on a robotic bluegill. Part-ners at Harvard and the University of Georgia are studying the actual � sh; he uses their � ndings to en-gineer imitations. “� ere are great things we can learn from � sh … � e way they propel themselves; the way in which they sense water.”

Ultimately, the Navy wants “the next generation of robotics that would operate in that very Navy-unique

underwater domain,” said Jim Fallin, a spokesman for Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Paci� c, which is doing separate work in San Diego. One aspect is � nding long-lived power sources to let drones loiter a long time to collect information, he said.

Possible uses include spying, mapping, and mine detection and removal.

� e Navy is not the only agency paying for such research. In 2007, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency o� ered small busi-ness innovation research money for an underwater robot that could navigate rivers, inlets, harbors and coastal waters to check for general tra� c, obstacles, things on and un-der the bottom, and “speci� c ves-sels of interest.”

� e ONR studies are more basic. � e grants aren’t aimed as much at creating drones as at understand-ing how things move forward un-derwater, Brizzolara said.

The Navy uses torpedo-shaped drones and tethered vehicles to detect mines and map the ocean floor. But propellers and jets can be easily tracked on radar and so-nar. Robots modeled after water creatures could be both more ef-ficient and harder to detect, and could move through perilous wa-ters without endangering people, researchers say.

� e work isn’t all at universities. � e O� ce of Naval Research opened a 50,000-square-foot robotics

laboratory this year. A prototype dubbed Razor, developed at the Naval Undersea Warfare Center in Newport, R.I., uses � ippers for stealth.

Like the jelly� sh work and the University of Virginia studies on manta rays, the eel research at the University of New Orleans is all about hydrodynamics. � e spark is UNO professor emeritus William Vorus’ theory that sinuous undula-tions, though a slow way to swim, should allow forward movement without creating a wake.

Brandon M. Taravella, who studied under Vorus and is now an assistant professor of naval archi-tecture and marine engineering at UNO, sees the robot eel as a pos-sible surveillance tool. But the Of-� ce of Naval Research’s three-year, $900,000 grant is focused on mak-ing an eel and seeing whether it can swim without disturbing the water around it.

Other scientists have checked real eels, Taravella said. “It’s pretty high-e� cient ... but still has some wake. � at’s why we’re not drop-ping eels into the tank.” Comput-er-generated models indicate just how a robot eel should move to get through the water without any drag. Creating one to do that is far from easy.

Like many of the other projects, this one is still in early stages. Most of the time, the nameless � rst-year prototype is hooked onto a

Scientists do some fi shy research

see Robots PAGE 3see Lovelace PAGE 3

“We’re going to do everything we can to

make sure you get a great doctor, and if you don’t like the fi rst one, we’ll give

you a second...”~Ron Stern

Lovelace president

TAKES ONE TO FLAMENCO

Natalia Jacquez / Daily Lobo

Flamenco student Dolores Garcia twirls in the “Points in Space” solo piece “Alegrias.” Garcia choreographed and performed the piece. See full story on Page 8.

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 102512

PAGETWONEW MEXICO DAILY LOBOTHURSDAY, OC TOBER 25, 2012

volume 117 issue 47Telephone: (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 re� ect the views of the students, faculty, sta� 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.

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

Culture EditorNicole PerezAssistant Culture Editor Antonio SanchezSports EditorThomas Romero-SalasAssistant Sports EditorJ. R. OppenheimOpinion/Social Media EditorAlexandra SwanbergCopy ChiefAaron Wiltse

Design DirectorRobert LundinDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanJosh DolinJohn TyczkowskiAdvertising ManagerRenee SchmittSales ManagerJeff BellClassified ManagerBrittany Flowers

If you registered to vote with an address outside Albuquerque or you can’t go to the poll stations on Election Day, your vote can still count if you submit an absentee ballot. � e Daily Lobo spoke with volunteers and employees at the County Clerk’s o� ce to learn how to complete and submit an absentee ballot.

Check your voter registration

statusVoter registration papers can be faulty or sent to the wrong address. Make sure your registration was ac-cepted and that all your information is up to date and accurate. � is can be done at voterview.state.nm.us. You must know all your registration information, including the address

you registered with, in order to � ll out your absentee ballot application.

Apply for an absentee ballot

Absentee ballot applications can be downloaded online at bernco.gov. Print and � ll out the entire applica-tion and double-check it to ensure accuracy, as any mistakes can cause a delay in receiving your ballot. � en, return the application to the County Clerk’s o� ce in person at 620 Lomas Blvd. N.W., or mail it to O� ce of the County Clerk at P.O. Box 542 Albu-querque, NM, 87103, for those regis-tered in Bernalillo County.� ose who are not registered in Bernalillo County can look up the in-formation online for the County Clerk’s o� ce in their city. Requests

for absentee ballots must be turned in by 5 p.m. on Nov. 2. Only you or an immediate family member may hand-deliver your absentee application.

Fill out your absentee

ballot once you receive it

� e County Clerk’s o� ce will process your application and mail your ab-sentee ballot to the address listed on your application. Fill out your entire ballot. If you are a � rst-time voter, you may be asked to include a form of identi� cation when you get your ballot. Utility bills and bank state-ments are valid forms and don’t need to match your registered address. Sign the included return envelope

and mail it to the O� ce of the County Clerk. Ballots must be received at the County Clerk’s o� ce before 7 p.m. on Nov. 6.

If you don’t receive your

ballot on time, you have to vote in person

If your ballot doesn’t come in the mail in time, you can still vote in per-son at your polling station, but you will be required to swear that you never received your absentee ballot in the mail.

Watch out for mistakes

Do not � ll out absentee ballots that arrive in the mail for which you did

not apply.Never send secure information through mail without an enve-lope. Be certain that your ballot is sent to the correct address, as this is a common way for ballots to be lost and go uncounted.

If you can vote in person,

find a polling center

For a list of early voting and Election Day voting centers in Bernalillo County, visit cabq.gov/clerk/elections/voting/consolidated-polling-centers

~Emma Cohnheim

Show Me How

to vote absentee

Step 1

Step 2Step 3 Step 4

Step 5

Step 6

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 102512

New Mexico Daily lobo

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Renowned diversity. A unique, hands-on approach. Unlimited opportunity. There’s a reason Phoenix School of Law is ranked one of the top 20 most innovative law schools in the country.

Join the community leaders of tomorrow.To learn more, visit phoenixlaw.edu/UNM or call 602-682-6936

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news Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012/ Page 3

until the end of the year.“There’s a lot of confusion

around the November 8th and De-cember 31st dates … because we have a contract, we’re following with the termination date of No-vember 8th,” she said. “The decision that ABQ Health Partners is making about seeing patients through the end of the year, that’s their deci-sion, and we don’t really know how they’re going to do that.”

But Baca said current UNM em-ployees and retirees can continue to see doctors at the UNM San-doval Regional Medical Center. She said the contract with UNM SRMC has not been terminated.

Following a meeting with the New Mexico Superintendent of In-surance John Franchini, ABQ HP and LHS representatives agreed to a special plan that will allow some patients to not experience a gap in health care.

Franchini said that at a meeting with ABQ HP and LHS, representatives shared a transitional care plan that will allow about 3,000

Lovelace Health Plan members to continue to see their doctors at ABQ HP. He said members who are currently receiving health care for certain medical problems, including cancer treatment, care for serious diseases and planned or recent surgery, will not experience a gap in coverage.

Franchini said that under the transitional care plan, women who are pregnant can continue to see their obstetric and gynecological doctors until six weeks after they give birth for postpartum care. He said members who use the plan will not experience an increase in out-of-pocket costs.

metal pole called a mast, which is attached to sensors on a platform pulled by metal cables from one end of a 160-foot-long towing tank to the other.

At the end of one session half of its batteries were removed and it was set into the water for a free swim toward the platform. When it hit one side or headed under the platform, Taravella and gradu-ate student Baker Potts guided it back by sticking canoe paddles in its way.

“This time it tracked straighter a lot better … Remember? It was go-ing in circles,” said Potts.

Taravella said, “Year 2, we’re hoping to have it remote controlled. By Year 3, we hope to have it fully autonomous,” They’d also like it to wriggle up and down as well as side to side, letting it rise and dive.

MIT has a pike, a sea turtle and two generations of Charlie the Ro-botuna. Michigan State is working on a school of fish.

One aim is outdoing nature, at least as far as swimming goes, Briz-zolara said.

“We’d like to understand the very good performance that some sea creatures can achieve. But also we’d like to see if we can improve on that,” he said.

“We can produce perhaps a better result than a sea creature that’s been optimized by nature. We haven’t done that yet. But that’s one of our long-term goals,” Brizzolara said.

The research could have a broad range of uses, said Drexel’s Tan-gorra. Part of understanding how fish move is understanding how their nervous systems pull together a wide assortment of information and impulses. And knowing how their fins work could improve other equipment used to control the flow of liquid, from big pumps and pipes to blood flowing in a body.

And, he said philosophically, “You don’t look at a sunfish and say, ‘Oh my gosh, this is the most incredible evolved device that ever came through.’ But you look at it and see that evolution is a wonderful thing.”

Lovelace from page 1

Robots from page 1

Gerald Herbert / AP photo

Graduate student Baker Potts handles a prototype robotic eel in a pool inside the engineering building at the University of New Orleans Oct. 2 in New Orleans. The robotic eel might be able to wriggle through dangerous waters with almost no wake, letting it move on little power and with little chance of radar detection as it looks for underwater mines.

For more information, contact

Lovelace Health System at (505) 727-5555

or visit Lovelace.com

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 102512

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

October 25, 2012

Page

4

by Damian ErasmusDaily Lobo guest columnist

[email protected]

I will not defend Republicans, because they have the same problems Democrats have: a misunderstanding of moral is-sues. My defense is of capitalism and the rational, selfish pursuit of happiness.

The statists like to pretend it was the government that laid the foundation of capitalist success, that built the roads, that created an educated workforce, that “invented” the Internet.

However, could all these things exist or have existed in the absence of govern-ment? Yes, and they did before the govern-ment injected itself. Private institutions would happily replace the public ones, as there are profits and value to be made by them. Profit is the sense of harnessing val-ue, and competing consistently increas-es that value. Make no mistake as to why roads, schools, banks and health care seem to remain fully stagnant. In fact, it is only the free market or the confiscations of its success that have allowed these institu-tions to exist.

They claim that government is need-ed to prevent anarchy because everyone would otherwise find the quickest route to extorting cash. But would a business-man make profits by raising prices to ri-diculous levels? Not with Walmarts, or the need to exchange with all levels of income. Would restaurants, such as Mc-Donald’s, make any money if they sold bacteria-contaminated food? Would un-scrupulous doctors last if they performed unnecessary surgery?

The statists would like you to believe so. They conjure up ideas of rampant an-archy and uncontrollable irrationality. It almost comes as a natural thought, that all people are cheaters, not honest. But of the people with whom you choose to have relationships, would they turn on these values if they were rich? What would these people lose if they took the shortest route to acquire money? To be dishonest and without integrity is an act of self-immolation. Bernie Madoff was not an example of freedom run amok.

The statists will say that I am painting an extreme picture, that they actually want only “small” amounts of redistribution or “some” taxes; they don’t want full control, only partial. But if we accept their premise, this distorted idea of morality, our road to serfdom is all but certain. The “partial” statist will always be undermined by the more “moral” controlling statist, moving further and further to complete control. We must reject their so-called view of morality on the ground level. Below is a partial list of the moral issues that must be faced:

1. The demonization of the profit-motive. To them, man does not have the right to his own life, what he earns. The contracts made between the employer and employee are not good enough; they must give more. We must understand that workers and executives have rightful-ly given and received value by means of peaceful and voluntary trade. The money was obtained by the creation or exchange

of value. Many do destroy this value by the justification of forceful redistribution. For example, bailing out failing banks, stimu-lus packages, food stamps and corporate welfare. This ideology is not how society is helped, and not how our civilization evolves or moves forward.

2. The blame of the free market — or individualism — for the government’s failures. In any case, you will see the rise of prosperity parallel to the level of free-marketeering a country invokes, for rich and poor. When things go wrong, and they do in free societies, but never to the extent of pure statist ones, a crisis is equivocated, and the finger is pointed at someone and says “look at what he has, lynch him, he’s rich, he has taken it all and is the reason for your misery.” It’s because of “greed.”

Then there is an equivocation of what is at fault, unharnessed capitalism. The pre-scription is more government; the cycle continues. The free market creates value; it is the intervention of government that stagnates and cripples free creativity in the pursuit of happiness. You can see the clear experiments in action from East and West Germany, North and South Korea, Hong Kong and greater China, and now, to some extent, the espousal of the majority of people in Greece, Italy and France.

The more government intervention and planning, the worse off its citizens are. With a government to protect only individual rights, men would have a self-interest in honesty. Honesty, integrity and pride are all values that can bring real wealth, not by colluding with the govern-ment. It would be in the best interests of private entrepreneurs to play honestly and provide harmonious relationships with the voluntary decisions of society, or they wouldn’t win their dollars.

3. Many see money as an end. This

is an important concept to understand. Money is only a tool; it brings more choic-es, but what you produce is what you val-ue. Whether it is a family, relationships, working for the poor; it is all related to what you produce. And long-term hap-piness is directly correlated with value. This is why the left champions spending, wealth redistribution, and why it doesn’t work. They claim the “moral responsibil-ity” of redistribution or “paying your fair share.” They either fail or refuse to under-stand what value really is.

When it is redistributed, that is what destroys value. It sedates individuals from finding ways to contribute value. The wealth redistributors are no different from the unscrupulous Wall-Streeters and Big Bankers either, the looters of wealth. They instead use political pull to acquire material goods. Bernie Madoff, Kenneth Lay and Andrew Fastow cannot survive in pure capitalism; they obviously could not survive in a society of honest men. They didn’t understand production is what brings happiness.

4. “Rights” are rights to action, not to someone else’s work. You do not have a right to the work of another man, wheth-er it is health care, insurance coverage or picking cotton. You do not have the right to enslave others to some undefinable an-ticoncept such as “the common good.”

5. The acceptance of the morality of self-sacrifice. This is the most important

point of all. And this also goes to the idea of nationalism, patriotism and the com-mon good. This is rooted in Kantian phi-losophy and has followed through Marx, Hegel, the Pope, religious leaders and even politicians such as Bush and Obama.

To be clear, Immanuel Kant tried to save religion from the onslaughts of sci-ence and reason. He understood perfectly well the idea of individualism, with it self-ishness, and wanted to destroy it. Self-sac-rifice is the core issue that is shared by too many; religious Republicans, including Paul Ryan, agree to the nobility.

All of the following examples have some “morality” based in self-sacrifice: Christianity, the quasi-religious idea of the “common good” or even to the Earth in religious environmentalism. It’s not mor-al, they say, to be selfish. It’s not moral to pursue your own goals, your career, your dreams, your happiness — unless you are doing it for the common good or for our form of self-sacrifice. Self-destruction is essentially moral; selfishness is not.

But it is absolutely moral to have self-esteem, selfishness and greed, but not self-destructive greed, as in the case of Bernie Madoff, but what you earn through honest trade. If you harness these morals, you will find the utmost happiness. If we champion this idea of selfishness instead of shunning it, we will see a society of willing and capa-ble men, not of victims with consistent ex-cuses and finger-pointing. We have to take the moral high ground and reverse the de-structive act of self-sacrifice.

I can only give you this small glimpse of objectivism and the ideas of Ayn Rand. However, if you want to know more, or if you want to understand these ideas, start by reading the book “Free Market Revolution,” just released last month.

Rational self-interest underlies a true utopiaSelf ishness, not selflessness, creates a just, moral society

column

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

Editorial Board

Elizabeth clearyEditor-in-chief

danielle ronkosManaging editor

alexandra SwanbergOpinion editor

Svetlana ozdenNews editor

It is absolutely moral to have self-esteem,

selfishness and greed...

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 102512

New Mexico Daily lobo the haps Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012/ Page 5

Thursday

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Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 102512

Page 6 / Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobothe haps

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Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 102512

Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012/ Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo the haps

Trick or TrotRoad Race

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Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 102512

[email protected] editor / Nicole Perez / @PerezNicoleM The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

ThursdayOctober 25, 2012

Page

8Culture editor / Nicole Perez / @PerezNicoleM

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

Culture

tudents C h e l s e a Costello and Elysia Pope waved their jazz hands and shrugged their shoulders as they danced onto stage Friday night. As one member of the duo pursued dancer Louis Roccato, the other sat on stage and began to convulse in a violent exorcism of � ailed arms and swing-dance shoes.

“Points in Space” is the UNM De-partment of � eatre and Dance’s stu-dent choreography showcase. � e show features 11 separate dances, ranging stylistically from tango and � a-menco to stepping and modern dance. Every aspect of the show is student driv-en, from the dancing and choreography to the lighting and costuming.

Choreographer and department assis-tant Emily Bryan said the show not only provides a hands-on approach for students to learn how to produce a show, but it also gives them a platform for their work.

“It gives them a place to show what they’ve been working on, to have an audi-ence for what they’ve been working on. Ev-erything is really a work in progress, and to be able to get feedback from faculty mem-bers and people in the community is really important,” Bryan said. “Something hap-pens when you take your work out of a stu-dio place and into a performance. It’s a very good learning experience for the student.”

Bryan said the title of the show refers to the concept that di� erent people exist within similar points in space. Much like the show,

d i f f e r e n t worlds of

dance are performed on the

same stage. Bryan said she hopes her choreo-

graphed piece will tran-scend mere theatrics.

“I hope the audience is drawn into this world that I’ve

created,” she said. “I worked really hard with the dancers

in creating a very speci� c musi-cal world that they are living in,

and the idea of kinetic empathy and the way the dancers are moving so that the audience can get some sort of aesthetic hit from watching the piece, so that the audi-ence feels engaged.”

Artistic director and visiting professor Zoe Knights said she was impressed with UNM’s dance department.

� e head of the University’s dance de-partment asked Knights, a choreography professor from Berlin, to teach for two se-mesters at the department. As art director, Knights is in charge of organizing and run-ning the showcase. Knights said producing the show has been a learning experience for her, both as a professor and as someone who produces work on a di� erent continent.

“I’m learning a lot about how it works, both in the university system and in the states, in terms of putting it on stage,” Knights said. “I’m used to in Europe doing a lot of stu� by

myself; I have a very close con-

nection with my light, designer and

sound, and just being organized. It’s interest-

ing to see these di� erent areas do their jobs.”

Student performers crisscrossed every inch of the stage in the open-

ing show Friday night. In Radi Sha� e’s “Im-permanence and the Eternal,” two students stalked each other, circling one another be-fore colliding into an entangled tango crawl. Flamenco artist Dolores Garcia performed alongside live musicians at one moment in “Alegrias.” In “Romanza Andaluza,” Garcia competed against Carlos Menchaca in what can only be described as a � amenco mara-thon, a “Pepé Le Pew”-inspired chase end-ing in a � t of sweat, accompanied by laughter from the audience. Peter Bennett’s jazz-in-� uenced ballet “� e Parker Piece” saw his performers leap and dance in button-downs and ties and cocktail dresses.

Choreographer and performer Bennett said the student-driven show has helped him approach choreography from a holistic perspective.

“I think it’s hugely educational in terms of what it takes to choreograph and to develop something from an idea into an actual work, an actual piece of art, in terms of planning it, scheduling your dancers, getting rehearsals in, shaping your piece,” he said. “And then when that’s all done, you have to create a

chance to work with designers

and really learn that aspect about it

as well. You can see the importance of lights, and how

you can change a piece.”Dancer Sarah Williams tackled

one of the more di� cult pieces of the night with the interpretive “Aqui, Adentro.”

“It’s a modern piece that is centering around memories and how we relate to our own memories, whether we want to keep them far away from us or keep them close,” Williams said. “Part of the piece is per-formed in silence, which is di� cult for me as a performer, di� cult for the audience just because it’s very tense.”

Williams opened the piece Friday near the edge of stage left, dancing in complete silence. As she began to grasp at the air near her head with one hand, a whirring buzz hummed throughout the stage. With the whir’s crescendo came Williams’ increas-ingly sporadic movement, as she � ung her tightly clenched � ngers above her head.

Williams said the piece is meant to cause anxiety among the viewers and really ques-tion their relationship with dance.

“I know it’s a very abstract piece, so I know a lot of people will be leaving feeling a little confused, which is good,” she said. “I would like them to leave examining them-selves and how they feel in relation with dance in general.”

Po in t s i n SpaceFriday and Saturday, 7:30 p.m.,

Sunday, 2 p.m.

Carlisle South Arena Performance Space in the Carlisle Gym$8 staff and students,

$10 faculty and seniors, $12 general admission

unmtickets.com

Staying

S t a y i n g o n p o i n t e

dance in general.”

stories by Antonio Sanchez and Nicole Perez

[email protected]

photos by Natalia Jacquez

S

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 102512

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2012/ PAGE 9NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO CULTURE

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African slaves began “stepping” in the 1800s, and fraternities and sororities now perform the dance style across college campuses nationwide.

� e dance is not performed to music. Instead, performers create their own rhythms by clapping, stomping and slapping parts of their bodies.

Senior dance major Erin Kathmann choreographed and performs in the only stepping dance piece at this fall’s theater and dance showcase, “Points in Space.”

“I just wanted to let Albuquer-que and UNM know that there’s more in the dance department than meets the eye,” she said. “And I think that’s a way that I want to go: to show the world that there’s more out there than the basic kinds

of dancing that we have.”She said she was in-

spired to try stepping after watching the movie

“Stomp the Yard,” and she started stepping within her

multicultural sorority, Theta Nu Xi.

Kathmann’s piece “Belichikun Dim Dum Ticket Dome Check” began Friday night with a vigorous set of stepping, and in the middle of the piece, the group of three dancers paused at exactly the same time, exclaiming “I’m so tired,” and “Today was a bad day for milk.” Af-ter heaving and panting for a few minutes, they exclaimed, “You can’t stop the beat” in unison and

continued with the routine. Kathmann said she wanted to

add some more humorous ele-ments to the show.

“You can’t take life so seriously, so dancing’s the way to break out and be yourself, and for me, I al-ways have a smile on my face, half laughter, so I wanted to put some comedy into it,” she said. “I think people are driven to it; if they can laugh about it then they’re going to be more interested.”

She said the name “Belichikun Dim Dum Ticket Dome Check” is the sounded-out version of what the rhythmic beat of the piece sounds like.

“� e title of our piece, it’s like ‘What the heck is this?’” she said. “People don’t know what’s going on. Once we start that beat with slapping our hands or clapping, they’re like ‘Oh, this is something new to me, I want to learn more.’”

Kathmann said a stepping dance is rarely repeated more than once. Each dance features new choreographed moves and ele-ments. She said this means it can be more interesting than tradition-al ballet or modern dance.

“You can get the same thing out of (stepping) that you would if you loved ballet,” she said. “I think it’s for everybody; you don’t want to go to a show and just see bal-let, because over and over it could become quite boring at times. You want to see something fresh and something new, and I think that’s where stepping comes in.”

‘Stepping’ steps up, weaving rhythm without music

Left Dancers in choreographer Kevin Clark’s “Nascence” skip about in a circle on stage Friday. “Points in Space” is entirely student-driven, from the dancing and choreography to the lighting and costuming.

Above Dancers leap in unison in choreographer Kevin Clark’s ballet “Nascence.” Clark is one of the few undergraduate choreographers of this year’s “Points in Space,” with this being his second choreographed piece.

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 102512

Page 10 / Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012 New Mexico Daily loboculture

Janae Amparan, Julie Amstadt, Marissa Amstadt, Anna Ballie, Miranda Barela, Sarah Bartlett,

Rachel Bejewski, Annie Blair, Jessica DeReu, Asyia Felson, Alex Hidalgo, Malika Ladha, Nicole Lucero, Amanda Miller, Mariah Montoya, Maddie Palmer, Hanna Park, Chloe Pinto, Sarina Pollat, Mercedes Ramos, Gabrielle Rivera, Sarah Rubin,

Demaree Sanchez, Sara Sariñana, Alex Stern, Claire Schuster, Zina Lovato

The Ladies ofKappa Kappa Gamma

Welcome their Fall 2012 Initiates!

Claire Schuster, Zina Lovato

It’s World Series time!Have you played baseball? Watch baseball?

Like baseball? Like anyone who does? Any interest in baseball at all?!

Then come toUniversity Heights

United Methodist Churchon Sunday, Oct. 28 at 10:15am

2210 Silver SE @ Yale Blvd.Call 323-1251

with any questions or for additional info.

Enjoy the sermon,“Baseball’s Life

Lessons”

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by Nicole [email protected]

There’s no wrong way to eat a Reese’s in the theater business, according to “Lion King” star Syndee Winters.

Winters, who plays Nala in the Broadway production of the Disney classic; Ben Lipitz, who plays Pumbaa; and Michael Hollick, the standby for Scar and Pumbaa, gave a class to undergraduate theater students Wednesday morning about how to break into the business of show business — and apparently, there’s no wrong way.

The Broadway pros discussed various strategies to be successful and answered questions from students about agents, auditions and education.

They said students should be spontaneous during an audition to showcase their talents and be memorable. All three actors discussed the importance of networking. They advised college thespians to get to know the names and faces of the people in the business and to be proactive about getting themselves out there.

“You have to be clear with yourself with what your goals are,” Hollick said. “Do you want a satisfying career? Do you want fame and fortune?”

The students gathered at the front of the room for a

movement exercise that stressed the importance of being in the moment. The students stomped, clapped and shouted letters of the alphabet, attempting to create a rhythm. Students expressed that it was harder than it looked. The group had to start at the beginning more than once because someone stomped or clapped at the wrong time.

“Some people were nervous and messing up, which made everyone else mess up. We were put on the spot,” student Alexandra McCrary said.

Hollick told the students that none of them did the exercise correctly because they were too worried about forgetting their letter or looking ahead to their turn, instead of being in the moment.

The stars of “The Lion King” Broadway production also said

that because they are constantly on the road, it’s easy to contract illnesses. They had a few tips for staying healthy for work.

“‘Lion King’ was my first production out of college … every time the season changed, I would get sick,” Winters said.

Winters said she swears by apple cider vinegar to keep her voice in top condition.

Hollick said yoga helps him both in his personal life and professional career.

“There are certain things about yoga that are conducive to acting,” he said.

One student asked about the importance of a master’s degree.

“I have half a master’s degree … so I’m at half mast. There are pills that help me though,” Lipitz said.

He also said a colleague of his had a very successful career without ever attending college, so degrees aren’t a must.

Hollick told students that people will often procrastinate going out into the field and instead stay in school longer because they may not feel ready.

Hollick said that when actors begin to feel the show revolves around them, the whole thing can fall apart.

“It’s a collaborative process. I think a lot of actors maybe get into it for the wrong reasons,” he said. “There is no perfect performance, don’t judge yourself.”

Stars share show-biz tips

“There is no perfect

performance, don’t judge yourself.”

~Michael Hollickactor

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Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012/ Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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dailycrossword

Level 1 2 3 4

Year ZeroLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 25, 2012

ACROSS1 The grand

concert one has47 strings

5 Teen hangout9 __ poll

14 Frenchpossessive

15 Chills and fever16 “The Voice” judge

Green17 Holdup device?18 Party person19 Communications

device20 Question cads in

their cups?23 Response to “Are

you serious?”24 Gardner of old

films25 Wow28 Burden beasts of

burden?32 Western

landscape feature36 Vessel

designation37 Weigh station

visitors38 New Testament

book39 Variable-yield

investment option42 Passed-down

tales43 CBS

newswomanO’Donnell

45 Summer baby46 Termini47 Stumble over

plumbing gunk?51 Brahms’s A?52 View from

Marseille53 To-do58 Proper sort ... or

a cry uponsolving each ofthis puzzle’stheme answers?

62 Canceled areservation,maybe

64 Waikiki’swhereabouts

65 Yankee great,familiarly, with“The”

66 Window boxbloom

67 “Exodus” novelist68 US Open stadium

69 Post with carvings70 Passé demo item71 Scholarship factor

DOWN1 “Satisfied now?”2 “__ friend

unbosoms freely...”: Penn

3 Innkeeper’sofferings

4 Longstocking ofkiddie lit

5 Hawaiian for“very strong”

6 All atwitter7 Thick with

vegetation8 Super-harmful9 Serious

argumentcomponents

10 Colorful duck11 North Pacific

sockeye12 Woodcutter Baba13 Seek favor with21 Feasts on22 Garden outcast26 Strange and then

some27 Pluralizers29 Society honoree30 Waggish31 Ubangi tributary

32 Minister’s quarters33 Culprit in some

food recalls34 Severe35 “Without delay!”40 “The Matrix” hero41 Spot for one in

disfavor44 Rebus puzzle

staple48 Outlaw Kelly49 Shriek50 Brillo alternative

54 “You’ve got to bekidding”

55 Grace56 Nourishment for

un bebé57 Put in a request59 Department of

northern France60 Lipinski with a

gold medal61 Beat62 Well-put63 Confucian path

Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Elizabeth A. Long 10/25/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 10/25/12

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 102512

Page 12 / Thursday, OcTOber 25, 2012 New Mexico Daily loboclassifieds

Announcements

EDUCATION MAJORS (UNDERGRADU-ATE/GRADUATE Degrees). Elemen-tary, Secondary, Special Education. Regional Accreditation. NMPED Ap-proval/ Licensure. Tuition Commensu-rate with UNM. Wayland Baptist Univer-sity (Albuquerque Campus). 2201 SanPedro Dr. NE (505-323-9282) [email protected] http://www.wbu.edu/colleges-in-al b u q u e r q u e / e d u c a t i o n 1 2 - 1 3 .pdf

I’LL SEE YOU at Neds on the RioGrands for crazy special. Monday 8pm-11pm for $1 draft.

LEARN ABOUT SANDIA/KIRTLANDaquifer contamination, October 26th 6-8pm ACPJ 202 Harvard SE. Dinner.Prepare to testify at a hearing. 243-5806.

Services

CATER YOUR NEXT event withOlympia Cafe. Authentic Greek Food&Pastries. Call for prices 266-5252.

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

NEED CASH? WE Buy Junk Cars. 505-227-3877.

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

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

Your Space

VICTORY OUTREACH ABQ presentshallways of hell Wednesday Oct 31, 7pm1404 Lead SE. Free admission. 505-843-7930.

Apartments

1 BR CASITA - Walk to UNM, CNM.Semi-private yard. $600, utilities in-cluded. No dogs. 243-0827.

NEAR UNM/ NOB Hill. 2BDRM 1BA likenew. Quiet area, on-site manager, stor-age, laundry, parking. Pets ok, no dogs.137 Manzano St NE, $680/mo. 505-610-2050.

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

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

1BDRM CONDOMINIUM NEAR UNM.Laundry facilities, dog run, swimmingpool. $520/mo includes all utilities.$250dd. Available immediately. 861-1012. 859-0975.

STUDIOS, 1 BLK UNM, $455/free utili-ties. 246-2038. www.kachina-properties.com

AFFORDABLE 2BDRM TOWN house.1.5 blocks to UNM. $750/mo. +utilities.$300dd. $200 move-in special. No pets.505-268-0525.

SEETHE BEST TODAY! Fabulous 1Bedroom Guest House with PrivateCourtyard near UNM . No need for car.Move in Today. Perfect for 1 responsi-ble, clean, quiet tenant who will pamperit. Completely furnished, even withdishes. Just bring books. References,Lease. No Drugs/Pets/Smoking/Parties.Crime Free Policy property. Only $443to lucky person chosen to live here. 505-220-8455 [email protected]

CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE 2BDRM$775/mo utilities included. 3 blocks toUNM, no pets. $200 move-in special.262-0433.

DuplexesAVAILABLE NOW. 2 BDRM near UN-M/CNM. Refi nished hardwood fl oorsand bathtub, new curtains and kitchenfl oor. Off street parking. $680/mo. $400deposit. Water paid. 505-268-1964.

Houses For Rent1BDRM/1BA FOR RENT in 3BDRM/2BAhouse, two blocks from UNM. Seriousstudent only. $425/mo includes utili-ties/HSI. Call 239-0570.

UNM MED/LAW HOUSES - Discountedrents are available from the owner forUNM students and employees. 1204Columbia NE, and 1526 Vassar NE.Please contact the owner only after youhave seen the house of interest. 505-266-5874.

Rooms For Rent

LOOKING FOR MALE Roommate totake over Lobo Village lease for Spring2013. Call 399-9797.

ROOMATE WANTED, TO share a3BDRM 2BA house with 2 female stu-dents. $450/mo including utilities. Closeto UNM, Carlisle and Contitution. TextKaitie at 459-7583.

LOBO VILLAGE $519/MO. Looking for amale to take over lease ASAP! Great lo-cation, fully furnished, W/D and wifi /ca-ble. Roommates are clean. Call or text,505-516-5493.

LOOKING FOR MALE roomate for LoboVillage. $300 off fi rst month of rent. Call429-3302.

WANTED ROOMMATE TO share Broad-stone Apartments. Female preferred,serious student, n/s, clean, mature,friendly. $350/mo. Text 208-993-7141.

$519/MO FEMALE STUDENT needed tomove in December 1st. Furnished apart-ment, walk in closet. Daily shuttle toUNM. Possible move-in incentive. Cal-l/txt, 505-573-4470.

MOVE INTO LOBO Village NOW with 3cool roomates & get a FREE beer pongtable! Contact me [email protected]

LOBO VILLAGE $519/MO. Looking for afemale to take over my lease for Spring2013. Fully furnished apartment! Contact me at [email protected]

Bikes/Cycles

ALMOST NEW. ONE adult owner. 75-90miles per gallon Honda scooter.$1,000.00 fi rm. 2 helmets. No special li-cense required. [email protected]

For Sale

QUEEN BED ($150), Computer table($25), Couch ($75), Microwave ($25),Bookshelf ($20), Router ($20) and Mo-dem ($15) for sale. Contact 505-358-5858 for Pictures and information.

PAIINT BALL EQUITMENT- reasonableoffer. Cintact Carlos 505-603-8480.

BRAND NEW DR. Dre Beat Box pow-ered by monster, $250. Call/Text 505-249-8576.

**BEEF JERKY** BUY delicious BeefJerky, that’s fl avorful, and melts in yourmouth! I’m on UNM frequently! 1 gallonbag $20.00! Call/Text 575-613-5004.

Garage Sales

SAT./SUN. - Garage sale @ Carlisleand Lomas - Beds, couches, desks,treadmills, appliances, clothes, gunsafe, tv’s, misc.

Vehicles For Sale

1998 NISSAN ALTIMA. Black, 130,000miles, runs great, $2,600obo. Call/Text865-684-6597.

1976 L-82 Corvette Stingray 4spd. Newbrakes, new engine, and more. $9,500obo. Or trade. 270-0759.

Child CareEDUCATOR/CAREGIVER FOR TOP-quality after-school and summer childcare program. Play sports, take fi eldtrips, make crafts, be goofy, have funand be a good role model. Learn, play,and get paid for doing both! $9/hr pluspaid holidays, paid planning time, paidpreparation time, and great training withpay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas BlvdNE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 296-2880 orvisit www.childrens-choice.org UNMWork-study encouraged to apply.

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a won-derful and supportive team of peopleproviding top-quality afterschool pro-grams for 5-12 year olds. This is a train-ing and leadership development posi-tion. Associate Directors work under di-rect supervision of Program Directorswho prepare them to be promoted toProgram Director. Starts at $10/hr pluspaid holidays, paid planning time, paidpreparation time, and great training withpay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas BlvdNE or call 296-2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org

Jobs On CampusRESTAURANT SERVERS WANTED forUNM Psychology research study. Seek-ing healthy women aged 18-35 whowork at least 20hrs/wk as servers in fullservice dine-in restaurants. To compen-sate for their time, participants will re-ceive a $100 Visa gift card that can beused wherever debit cards are ac-cepted. If interested, please call oremail Professor Geoffrey Miller [email protected], 505-277-1967, formore information.

Jobs Off Campus

VETERINARY ASSISTANT/ RECEP-TIONIST/ Kennel help. Pre-veterinarystudent preferred. Ponderosa AnimalClinic: 881-8990/ 881-8551.

TOP TEN INTERNSHIP: Fortune 500 fi nancial fi rm seeks 2 UNM students forspring internship. Application deadline:Nov. 1st. Email resume: [email protected]

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

MANAGER NEEDED FOR before and af-ter school programs. 2+ years of experi-ence with school age children pre-ferred. $12.00-$13.00/hr. PT, must beavailable both mornings (6:30-8:00) andafternoons (1:45-6:00) M-F. Apply on-line at www.campfi reabq.org or in per-son at 1613 University NE.

BE IN MOVIES no experience needed.Up to $300/PT. 505-884-0557. www.A1StarCasting.com

SPRING 2013 TEACH and Learn in Ko-rea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean gov-ernment. $1,300/month (15hrs/week)plus airfares, housing, medical insur-ance. Must have completed two yearsof undergraduate. Last day to apply:11/31/12. Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr

Volunteers

UNM IS LOOKING for adult women withasthma less than 56 years old for a re-search study. If you are interested infi nding out more about this study,please contact study coordinator at 925-6174 or e-mail [email protected]

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LOBO LIFE Events of the DayThings to do on campus today.

Dancing With The Dark10:00am - 4:00pmUNM Art Museum 203 Cornell Dr. NEThe fi rst exhibition about Joan Snyder’s adventurous approach to printmaking, a medium in which she has worked extensively for over forty-fi ve years. Recognized as one of the pioneering voices that championed feminism.

The Transformative Surface10:00am - 4:00pmUNM Art Museum 203 Cornell Dr. NEThe fi rst group exhibition of its kind at the UNM Art Museum to feature innovative new media, video, and

sound works of art by nine faculty artists from the departments of Art; Art History and Interdisciplinary Film and Digital Media, and six guest artists from San Francisco and Santa Fe.

Meeting of the Minds-- Art conver-sation12:00pm – 1:00pmUNM Art MuseumJoan Snyder’s My Work... Led by Brook Steiger, Manager, Print-making Lab, Dept. of Art and Art History.

The Dark Knight Rises3:30pmSUB TheaterMid Week Movies

Disney’s the Lion King7:30pm Popejoy Hall

Changeling the Lost8:00pmStudent Union Building, Upper Floor Santa Ana A&BPlay a character as part of White Wolf Publishing’s ongoing offi cial worldwide chronicle.

Flu Shot Clinic10:00am – 2:00pmSUB Atrium

What’s Next? Grad School 101 Event4:30pm-630pmElcentro de La RazaFree Food! Get info. about grad

school options, meet professors, faculty and grad students.

Designated Lobos9:30am – 2:30pmBetween SUB & Mesa Vista Hall WestCosap- promoting safe drinking and driving practices.

Candidate Meet and Greet11:00am – 2:30pmDuck pond, cactus garden

Voting8:00am – 10:00pmSUB-Isleta, Acoma A & B, Cochiti Lounge

Fall Sidewalk Sale!10:00am – 4:00pmMain & North Campus Bookstores

“What is Desíre?” Roundtable Discussion3:30pm – 5:00pmOrtega Hall Reading Room 335

Jitterbugs Anonymous8:30pm – 10:30pmRhythm Dance Lounge, 3808 Cen-tral Ave SESwing dance club hosts a Hal-loween Dance with a costume contest and some sweet tunes! At 8:30pm we will have a social dance party. Bring your friends, no partner or experience required. Come out and get some rhythm in your feet. $3 at door with student ID. (Jitterbugs Anonymous mem-bers free).

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar: 1.) Go to www.dailylobo.com 2.) If you are not already a registered user, sign up! It’s easy and free! 3.) Log in 4.) Click on Events Calendar in the left column. 5.) Add your event! 6.) Times must be entered in the format 10:00 in order to be captured.

Art & Music

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1. Go to www.dailylobo.com2. Click on the “Events” link near the top of the page.3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page4. Type in the event information and submit!

Want an Event in Lobo Life?

1. Go to www.dailylobo.com2. Click on the “Events” link near

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Listing” on the right side of the page

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* Events must be sponsored by a UNM group, organization or department.

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* Events must be of interest to the campus community.

Meetings

Student Groups & Gov.