12
D AILY L OBO new mexico January 30, 2012 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 monday Inside the Daily Lobo Where are we? See page 2 volume 116 issue 88 58 | 31 TODAY Fledgeling greed See page 4 by Tamon Rasberry [email protected] Finding funds is the next step in getting ASUNM’s bike-share program rolling according to ASUNM president Jaymie Roybal. “We have had some informal conversations with sponsors who are interested in the program, but we are waiting until we know the exact price and other specifics be- fore we start getting actual pledg- es,” she said. Roybal said ASUNM intends to fund the program through pri- vate sponsorship. ASUNM mem- bers, including Roybal, proposed the program, which would al- low students to rent bikes for use throughout campus and nearby Nob Hill. The bike-share program is being developed in part by Parking and Transportation Services. According to PATS, a first year cost of $353,000 would pay for nine stations and a total of 46 bicycles. From there, the program would require recurring funding of $60,000 a year to continue operation. In a presentation before the Student Fee Review Board, Dan- ielle Gilliam, program specialist, said PATS is requesting a one- time donation of $50,000 in stu- dent fees as down payment to jump-start the program. Gilliam said if this amount is granted, students will not have to pay out of pocket for the following year. Rather than being supported by student fees on a yearly basis, If fundraising and other efforts fail to raise the amount needed, PATS has suggested that students could pay for the rental of the bikes on campus. A $6 per day pass with 10,000 users a year would be suffi- cient to completely fund the pro- gram, according to the PATS SFRB presentation. “If we can get the $50,000 … one time, I would like to not have to come back and request more student fees to fund the program. I think we can keep (the program sustainable) with donations, fundraising … and advertising.” Roybal said she hopes to fund- raise most of the $60,000 cost through donations and advertis- ing to keep costs to students low. Gilliam said the expansion of housing and the possible influx of 2,000 students requires alter- native methods of transporta- tion. Gilliam said the bike-share program will lessen dependence on automobiles, reduce traffic and congestion on campus and provide speedy access to parts of campus and other amenities in the campus area currently off- limits to motor vehicles. ASUNM Sen. Sunny Liu said the UNM bike-share program could be the first step in a city- wide bike-share program. In the Parking and Transporta- tion Services SFRB presentation, Gilliam said if UNM takes the first step in providing bike-share kiosks in the UNM area, the city may follow with additional fund- ing for kiosk expansion. “This program could initi- ate the city to want to revamp the city’s transportation structure and open the limitations for better bik- ing routes and policies,” Liu said. More than 90 colleges current- ly offer some sort of bike-sharing program on their campus. GPSA President and SFRB Chair Katie Richardson said she isn’t sure if the program should be funded by student fees. “While I am excited about sus- tainability efforts at UNM, I am not sure if students will use the program enough to justify its ex- pense,” Richardson said. “Student support could give a reason to use fee dollars as seed money for the program even before the rest of the capital is raised by business- es, but I haven’t heard a ground swell from students yet. I’d like to see a study showing student need and support.” –Luke Holmen contributed to this report by Luke Holmen [email protected] The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found New Mexico has the highest overall drug overdose death rate of any state, but two bills introduced at the start of the 2012 legislative session aim to curb those rates. SB90 contains language that would allocate $200,000 to the De- partment of Health to fund a state- wide overdose prevention and awareness campaign of legal and il- legal drugs. SJM21 requests the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Center for Health Policy to perform a study to expand New Mexico’s drug overdose prevention programs. Sen. Richard Martinez (D, Rio Ar- riba, Los Alamos and Santa Fe), who helped sponsor SB90 and SJM21, said the legislation will reduce the number of accidental drug overdose deaths in New Mexico. “I’m asking the Legislature and the Governor to act with compassion and common sense. ese deaths are preventable,” Martinez said. “Over- dose spares no one and affects ev- eryone, especially families.” New Mexico suffered 27 overdose deaths per 100,000 people in 2010, more than twice the national Parking rep: bike program would cost $60k yearly Rate of overdose deaths in New Mexico is highest in the nation Back on track See page 12 A NEW HOPE Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo Sophomore guard Kendall Williams celebrated the win 71-54 over TCU Saturday afternoon in The Pit. Because of San Diego State’s lost to Colorado State, the Lobos are one win away from the top of the conference. See page 8 for story. Se n.: aim to stop drug overdose average according to the CDC. Additionally, the overdose death rate in the state has increased 242 percent since 1991. According to the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator, 204 individuals died from drug- caused injury in 2010, in the most recent report available. SB90 has passed the Senate Finance Committee and is awaiting a committeereportfromtheCommittees’ Committee and the Public Affairs Committee. SJM21 is currently in the senate Rules Committee awaiting a committee report. Sen. Sue Wilson Beffort (R, Ber- nallilo, Sandoval, Torrance and Santa Fe) said the Senate is reluc- tant to fund new programs, but will evaluate each program’s mer- its separately. “What we’ve said at this point is that we would not be putting mon- ey into any new programs,” Beffort said. “at being said, a lot of that has to do with what the appropria- tion requests will be, and I look for- ward to hearing this legislation.”

NM Daiy Lobo 013012

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Page 1: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Januar y 30, 2012 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895monday

Inside theDaily Lobo

Where arewe?

See page 2volume 116 issue 88 58 |31

TODAYFledgeling

greed

See page 4

by Tamon [email protected]

Finding funds is the next step in getting ASUNM’s bike-share program rolling according to ASUNM president Jaymie Roybal.

“We have had some informal conversations with sponsors who are interested in the program, but we are waiting until we know the exact price and other specifics be-fore we start getting actual pledg-es,” she said.

Roybal said ASUNM intends to fund the program through pri-vate sponsorship. ASUNM mem-bers, including Roybal, proposed the program, which would al-low students to rent bikes for use throughout campus and nearby Nob Hill.

The bike-share program

is being developed in part by Parking and Transportation Services. According to PATS, a first year cost of $353,000 would pay for nine stations and a total of 46 bicycles. From there, the program would require recurring funding of $60,000 a year to continue operation.

In a presentation before the Student Fee Review Board, Dan-ielle Gilliam, program specialist, said PATS is requesting a one-time donation of $50,000 in stu-dent fees as down payment to jump-start the program. Gilliam said if this amount is granted, students will not have to pay out of pocket for the following year. Rather than being supported by student fees on a yearly basis, If fundraising and other efforts fail to raise the amount needed, PATS

has suggested that students could pay for the rental of the bikes on campus. A $6 per day pass with 10,000 users a year would be suffi-cient to completely fund the pro-gram, according to the PATS SFRB presentation.

“If we can get the $50,000 … one time, I would like to not have to come back and request more student fees to fund the program. I think we can keep (the program sustainable) with donations, fundraising … and advertising.”

Roybal said she hopes to fund-raise most of the $60,000 cost through donations and advertis-ing to keep costs to students low.

Gilliam said the expansion of housing and the possible influx of 2,000 students requires alter-native methods of transporta-tion. Gilliam said the bike-share

program will lessen dependence on automobiles, reduce traffic and congestion on campus and provide speedy access to parts of campus and other amenities in the campus area currently off-limits to motor vehicles.

ASUNM Sen. Sunny Liu said the UNM bike-share program could be the first step in a city-wide bike-share program.

In the Parking and Transporta-tion Services SFRB presentation, Gilliam said if UNM takes the first step in providing bike-share kiosks in the UNM area, the city may follow with additional fund-ing for kiosk expansion.

“This program could initi-ate the city to want to revamp the city’s transportation structure and open the limitations for better bik-ing routes and policies,” Liu said.

More than 90 colleges current-ly offer some sort of bike-sharing program on their campus.

GPSA President and SFRB Chair Katie Richardson said she isn’t sure if the program should be funded by student fees.

“While I am excited about sus-tainability efforts at UNM, I am not sure if students will use the program enough to justify its ex-pense,” Richardson said. “Student support could give a reason to use fee dollars as seed money for the program even before the rest of the capital is raised by business-es, but I haven’t heard a ground swell from students yet. I’d like to see a study showing student need and support.”

–Luke Holmen contributed to this report

by Luke [email protected]

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) found New Mexico has the highest overall drug overdose death rate of any state, but two bills introduced at the start of the 2012 legislative session aim to curb those rates.

SB90 contains language that would allocate $200,000 to the De-partment of Health to fund a state-wide overdose prevention and awareness campaign of legal and il-legal drugs.

SJM21 requests the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Center for Health Policy to perform a study to expand New Mexico’s drug overdose prevention programs.

Sen. Richard Martinez (D, Rio Ar-riba, Los Alamos and Santa Fe), who helped sponsor SB90 and SJM21, said the legislation will reduce the number of accidental drug overdose deaths in New Mexico.

“I’m asking the Legislature and the Governor to act with compassion and common sense. � ese deaths are preventable,” Martinez said. “Over-dose spares no one and a� ects ev-eryone, especially families.”

New Mexico su� ered 27 overdose deaths per 100,000 people in 2010, more than twice the national

Parking rep: bike program would cost $60k yearly

Rate of overdose deaths in New Mexico is highest in

the nation

Back ontrackSee page 12

A NEW HOPE

Adria Malcolm / Daily LoboSophomore guard Kendall Williams celebrated the win 71-54 over TCU Saturday afternoon in The Pit. Because of San Diego State’s lost to Colorado State, the Lobos are one win away from the top of the conference. See page 8 for story.

Sen.: aim to stop drug overdose

average according to the CDC. Additionally, the overdose death rate in the state has increased 242 percent since 1991.

According to the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator, 204 individuals died from drug-caused injury in 2010, in the most

recent report available.SB90 has passed the Senate

Finance Committee and is awaiting a committee report from the Committees’ Committee and the Public A� airs Committee. SJM21 is currently in the senate Rules Committee awaiting a committee report.

Sen. Sue Wilson Beffort (R, Ber-nallilo, Sandoval, Torrance and Santa Fe) said the Senate is reluc-tant to fund new programs, but will evaluate each program’s mer-its separately.

“What we’ve said at this point is that we would not be putting mon-

ey into any new programs,” Be� ort said. “� at being said, a lot of that has to do with what the appropria-tion requests will be, and I look for-ward to hearing this legislation.”

Page 2: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboMoNday, JaNuar y 30, 2012

volume 116 issue 88Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

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

Printed by Signature

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Editor-in-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorElizabeth ClearyNews EditorChelsea ErvenAssistant News EditorLuke HolmenPhoto EditorDylan Smith

Culture EditorAlexandra SwanbergAssistant Culture EditorNicole PerezSports EditorNathan FarmerAssistant Sports EditorCesar DavilaCopy ChiefDanielle RonkosAaron WiltseMultimedia EditorJunfu Han

Design DirectorJason GabelDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanElyse JalbertStephanie KeanRobert LundinSarah LynasAdvertising ManagerShawn JimenezClassified ManagerBrittany Brown

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Every Monday the Daily Lobo challenges you to identify where we took our secret picture of the week. Submit your answers to [email protected]. The winner will be announced next week. Where are we?

Joshua Ellison correctly guessed last week’s Where Are We, which is located on the southern side of the top floor of the SUB.

Dylan Smith / Daily Lobo

Page 3: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

New Mexico Daily lobo

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news Monday, January 30, 2012 / Page 3

by Avicra [email protected]

Donna Brazile, a political commentator, author and adjunct professor at Georgetown University urged young black people to become engaged in politics and called on young women at UNM to become leaders.

The New Orleans native spoke in front of about 300 community members, UNM students, faculty and alumni Saturday at a luncheon in the SUB ushering in Black His-tory Month.

“We need more women to blaze the path,” she said. “To create new opportunities and to help us keep moving forward. Why you? Be-cause there’s no one better. Why now? Because tomorrow is not soon enough.”

Brazile recounted the achieve-ments of black women such as Rosa Parks, Ida B. Wells, Mary Mc-Cleod Bethune, Harriet Tubman and Oprah Winfrey as examples of black women who broke through social restraints to become leaders in society.

Speaker inspires at lunchKyran Worrell is a senior

pursuing a degree in Africana studies. She said Brazile is a modern woman challenging modern-age racism.

“(Brazile) embodies what perse-verance, ambition and determina-tion is for black men and women,” he said. “The reality is, although we are in 2012, racism still exists. For us to see her achieve and progress is inspirational.”

Sonia Rankin, professor and as-sociate director of Africana studies, helped coordinate the event this year along with professor Alfred Mathewson, interim director of the program, and others. Rankin said Brazile is unique in that she has been successful in so many fields.

“There are few black women in the United States today who have the kind of reach that (Brazile) has had,” Rankin said. “Being that she’s been the ground breaking woman for so many opportunities in poli-tics, history and culture, we decid-ed that we would like to hear her perspective,” she said.

Charles Becknell Jr., Ph.D. and part-time instructor at the pro-

gram, said the luncheon boosts awareness of Black History Month.

“It’s good to see Africana Stud-ies host an event that has the ability to reach a broader audience simply by bringing in someone with na-tional and international exposure to bolster the standing of the Afri-cana Studies program.”

Rankin said Black History Month began as Negro History Week and was started by Carter G. Woodson as a way to discuss the black expe-rience in a positive way.

“It’s used as an opportunity for the nation to pause and reflect on the black experience and, by exten-sion, across the world,” she said.

Rankin said the first brunches were held in the mid-80s by Shiame Okunor Ph.D., director emeritus and part-time instructor of Africana studies. Okunor wanted an event that formally recognized Black History Month in New Mexico, Rankin said. In the past, the event hosted speakers such as Cornel West and Maya Angelou.

For more details on events cel-ebrating Black History Month, visit www.nmblackhistorymonth.com

by Christopher ToothakerThe Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezu-elan President Hugo Chavez warned private banks on Sunday that he will consider nationalizing any that refuse to finance agricultural projects pro-moted by his government.

Banks are required by law in Venezuela to provide at least 10 percent of their lending to finance government development projects.

“The private banks that do not comply with the constitution and their duty, well, I do not have any problem nationalizing them,” Chavez said dur-ing his weekly radio and television program. “We must ensure the consti-tution and laws are complied with!”

Chavez charged that the rules aren’t being followed by some of Venezuela’s biggest private banks — Banesco, Banco Mercantil and Banco Provincial, which is controlled by Spain’s Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria.

Chavez singled out the president of Banesco, Juan Carlos Escotet, or-dering him to lend more to Venezue-la’s cash-strapped farmers.

“If you cannot do it, give me your

bank,” Chavez said, prompting ap-plause from a crowd of government officials and supporters.

A bill approved last year by Chavez’s allies in the National As-sembly describes banking as a “pub-lic service” and gives the government the authority to declare banks to be of “public utility,” which paves the way for state nationalizations.

The government already seized control of about a dozen banks in re-cent years, accusing them of caus-ing financial problems and violating banking rules.

Chavez’s government controls about 28 percent of Venezuela’s bank-ing sector.

The president hosted Sunday’s program from the city of Barinas in the heart of “Los Llanos,” Venezuela’s vast central plains. The sun-baked region produces most of Venezuela’s meat, fruits and vegetables, but many farm-ers and ranchers complain of state expropriations and say government-imposed price controls on many basic foods cut into their profits.

Chavez kicked off the program chatting with workers at a state-financed cattle ranch. The self-proclaimed “revolutionary” spent

much of Sunday’s show discussing the need to develop “idle” lands as a means of boosting agricultural production, which has diminished in recent years.

“We must advance quicker with the recuperation of land,” Chavez said, stressing that the government must make more land available to the poor.

Chavez instructed government-friendly mayors and state governors “to travel on horseback and on foot, day and night” in search of lands that have not been put to adequate use under government standards that define when officials can initi-ate expropriations.

The government says it is redis-tributing large estates and other land that is not adequately used. Critics contend the land seizures have hurt productive farms, thus cutting agricultural production and forcing the oil-exporting country to boost food imports.

Opposition leader Pablo Perez, a state governor who hopes to challenge Chavez in an Oct. 7 presidential elec-tion, strongly criticized the govern-ment’s agriculture initiatives Sunday, noting that oil-rich Venezuela imports much more food than it produces.

Chavez warns defiant banks

Page 4: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

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

January 30, 2012

Page

4

by Jason DarensburgDaily Lobo columnist

Now that the holidays are over — along with the � owery talk about peace on Earth and goodwill toward men — it’s important to remember the su� ering in the world and how far the human race still has to go before we reach the ideals of respect and dignity for all living beings.

Unfortunately, recent studies con� rm that a growing number of college students are los-ing empathy for their fellow man. In a world that clearly needs more compassion, this loss is a shocking trend.

Studies conducted between 1979 and 2009 found that college students today have less empathy toward their peers than previous generations. � e � ndings come from the study Changes in Dispositional Empathy in American College Students Over Time: A Meta-Analysis, authored by Sara Konrath, Edward H. O’Brien and Courtney Hsing.

For 30 years, 14,000 college students were surveyed in 72 separate studies. College stu-dents scored 40 percentage points lower on the empathy scale than their predecessors.

Compared with students of the late 70’s, to-day’s undergraduates are less likely to describe themselves as “soft-hearted” and less prone to agree with statements like: “I sometimes try to understand my friends better by imagining how things look from their perspective,” or “I often have tender, concerned feelings for people less fortunate than me.”

They are far more likely to admit that other people’s misfortunes usually don’t bother them.

Of the � ndings, Konrath said, “Many peo-ple see the current group of college students — sometimes called ‘Generation Me’ — as one of the most self-centered, narcissistic, competi-tive, con� dent and individualistic in recent his-tory. We found the biggest drop in empathy after the year 2000.”

I would have substituted the word “individu-alistic” with “robotic,” based on my experience at UNM, but then again, I’m not a researcher.

Empathy is the ability to understand and sympathize with another person’s feelings and thoughts. It’s the capacity to put oneself in the shoes of others — not just as individuals, but entire groups of people and other living beings, especially those who are oppressed, threat-ened or exploited.

Empathy goes beyond just “feeling,” however; it involves some level of understanding and compassion, and it

extends to individuals, communities and even to other species.

A person’s capacity to feel empathy is pri-marily the result of family upbringing, social conditioning and personal history. � e ability to empathize has been likened to a muscle: ca-pable of growth, atrophy, disability and regen-eration over time.

Empathy is at the heart of true human rationality because it goes to the very core of our moral values and our perception of justice. We wouldn’t want to live in a world without empathy.

As Mark Davis, a professor of Psychology at Eckerd College in Florida, put it: “Imagine if humans didn’t have the capacity for empathy. What would it mean if, in fact, we never gave a damn about what happened to other people? � at’s an almost inconceivable world.”

Several factors were examined in an at-tempt to explain this phenomenon: our high-ly competitive, materialistic society; the role of the mass media; the stress of paying for col-lege; and the ever-shrinking job market are just some of the causes associated with this huge drop in empathy.

Frequent exposure to violent media, such as video games, certainly plays a role in desen-sitizing young people to the su� ering of oth-ers. It undoubtedly helps to keep the armed forces in business, but I would also say that America’s authoritarian, police-state mental-ity is now � rmly entrenched in every aspect of the collective national psyche.

Military force invariably takes precedence over negotiation and compromise. College students today have grown up in a state of per-petual war. Our civil liberties have been se-verely restricted over the last decade and SWAT teams and riot squads are a fact of life.

� e passive acceptance of Social Darwinism — “I’ve got mine, screw you” — has also clear-ly a� ected the youth of this country. We’re just now beginning to see the negative results.

Another factor contributing to lack of em-pathy — oddly enough — is the widespread, excessive use of social networks like Facebook and Myspace, where “friends” are too easily ac-quired and disposed of.

� is increase in social isolation and lack of human interaction in the computer age over-laps with the drop in empathy, according to the researchers. In the past 30 years, Americans are more likely to live alone and less likely to join groups — from clubs and unions to student or-ganizations and political parties.

Further studies have shown that this type of isolation, lack of face-to-face interaction

and emotional connection contributes to the decline of empathy among college students.

It didn’t come as a surprise to the researchers that this growing emphasis on “me, me, me!” has been accompanied by a corresponding devaluation of others and an epidemic of narcissism in our society. Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) is far more common than researchers once thought.

One in four college students agreed with the majority of the items on a standard mea-surement of narcissistic traits. In data from yet another study of 37,000 college students, narcissistic personality disorders rose as fast as obesity rates.

A lot of the people I see on campus are hooked up to some sort of expensive elec-tronic device, totally detached from the out-side world. I’m convinced that this voluntary disconnection from reality is one of the deep-er causes for the lack of empathy in many col-lege students.

� is generation is far more comfortable living in cyberspace than in real life, and our increas-ing dependence on technology has allowed hu-man relationships to su� er. More technology certainly can’t � x that.

All of these wonderful gadgets are helping to isolate us from one another, instead of unit-ing us in the much-ballyhooed “global village.” College students are constantly aware of their friends’ and family’s needs, but all that connec-tivity doesn’t appear to translate into genuine concern for other people, or the world at large.

The good news is that a person’s ability to empathize can be enhanced through a variety of methods.

Empathy can increase when students are coached to develop their interpersonal skills and their ability to recognize other people’s emotions. Concerned educators can contribute a great deal to turning this trend around.

It would be wise to pay close attention to these developments and take corrective action before it’s too late.

Technology kills society’s empathyCOLUMN

LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS:

THIS WEEK’S POLL:

Who do you think will win the Republican nomination?

How do you feel about UNM property around Lobo Village being slated for commercial development?

Ron Paul

Excited. It’s about time we got some businesses in the area.

Mitt Romney

Wary. It’s starting to feel like a corporate takeover.

Stephen Colbert

Indi� erent. I can’t a� ord to live in Lobo Village anyway.

Newt Gingrich

I don’t even know what Lobo Village is.

54%

25%

15%

5%

GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM

TO VOTE D D L

Out of 168 responses

EDITORIAL BOARD

Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief

Elizabeth ClearyManaging editor

Chelsea ErvenNews editor

Rick Santorum 1%

Cheap pay, long hours and hard work await at the Lobo

EDITORIAL

Readers, Let me tell you something. The Daily

Lobo is the real world as far as journalism is concerned.

For those of you who just laughed, why don’t you come see if you can keep up with the pace in the newsroom? Chances are, we would all laugh at you.

Most of you are not going to get a job here because you don’t care about the quality of your work and you can’t string a coherent thought together, let alone work for a news-paper with deadlines, stylistic guidelines, and, wait for it … real work. You are content to sit back and criticize from afar.

You should note, though, that we can teach anyone who is willing to work. So if you aren’t the best yet, we can help you get there if you’re willing to work yourself into a stupor.

But you might ask yourself: “Why should I write for the Lobo if the pay is little, the stress is high, and the rewards are almost nonexistent?”.

Let me tell you why I write.I had a private interview with the U.S. secre-

tary of energy last week. I watched as police un-folded a trail of evidence linking former UNM President F. Chris Garcia to an interstate pros-titution ring. I watched as Occupy Albuquer-que protestors were expelled from Yale Park by dozens of police in riot gear in the middle of the night. I jumped o� a cli� into a giant waterfall in the Jemez mountains. I got to see how beer was made, and then I got paid for it.

You want my job? You can have it, but you better be good enough to take it from me. Come to Marron Hall tonight at 7 p.m. Show up with a résumé and writing samples in hand if you got them.

–Luke Holmen, assistant news editor

Page 5: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Monday, January 30, 2012 / Page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

Panel Discussions in conjunction with our new exhibition “100 Years” - 5:30-7:00pm - Free ADmission

Supported by the WK Kellogg Foundation

March 14 - Changing Roles: Women in Leadership, Health, Education and Art - Panelists: Rosemary Lonewolf, Santa Clara Pueblo, Lela Kaskalla, Nambe Pueblo, Katherine Augustine, Laguna Pueblo, Glenabah Martinez, Taos Pueblo/Navajo April 18 - New Pueblo Direction: Young Voices Respond to 100 Years of State and Federal Policy - Panelists: Lee Francis IV, Laguna Pueblo, Jodi Burshia, Laguna Pueblo

May 16 - Indigenous Science/Cross-Cultural Science: Teaching for the Future - Panelists: Dr. Shelly Valdez of Laguna Pueblo, Kirby Gchachu of Zuni Pueblo

June 20 - Indian Reorganization Act and its Impact on the Pueblo of Laguna - Speaker: Former Pueblo of Laguna Governor, Roland Johnson

July 18 - Maintaining Pueblo Languages: The Challenges posed by 100 years of policy - Speaker: Dr. Christine Sims of Acoma Pueblo, Linguist and Educator

August 22 - Mt. Taylor: Traditional Cultural Property (TCP) on the New Mexico Register of Cultural Properties - Panelists: Theresa Pasqual (Acoma Pueblo) of the Acoma Historic Preservation Office, Shelly Chimoni, (Zuni Pueblo) & Executive Director to the All Indian Pueblo Council

September 12 - The Return of Taos Blue Lake: Religious Freedom and Cultural Identity - Panelists: Gilbert Suazo, Sr., Taos Pueblo, Linda Bernal Yardley, Taos Pueblo

November 14 - Pueblo Indian Suffrage and the Legacy of Miguel Trujillo - Speaker Josephine Waconda, Daughter of Miguel Trujillo

This exhibition and its public programming will reflect upon the human experience behind enacted policies and laws on Pueblo communities by other governments. It will add to a well-documented history of Pueblo resilience since the time of Emergence. Interviews with Pueblo members will provide visitors with historical and personal reflections to help them understand and appreciate these historic challenges, often imposed through policy and laws, all intended to purposefully remove Pueblo people away from their core values.

Indian Pueblo Cultural Center2401 12th St. NW, Albuquerque, NM 87104Toll Free: 1-866-855-7902 | IndianPueblo.org/100yearsGrades 1 - 12 Curriculum Available in 2012

by Laura Wides-MunozThe Associated Press

HIALEAH, Fla. — If Mitt Romney wins Tuesday’s primary, a sliver of the GOP electorate in Florida may be one of the big reasons.

Cuban-Americans are deeply committed voters who can have an impact in competitive races, and Romney has strong support among the influential Cuban-American establishment.

Older exiles also tend to vote heavily through absentee ballots, where the former Massachusetts governor all but certainly has an edge. And the candidate’s emphasis on fixing the economy is resonating with backers like Jesus Ovidez, who cares more about jobs than he does U.S. policy toward Cuba.

“When we are in a better position here, then we can worry about over there. But first you have to put your own house in order,” said Ovidez, who spent months in a forced labor camp before fleeing the island in the late 1960s.

Ovidez has been a co-owner of Chico’s Restaurant for more than 30 years in the heavily Cuban-American community of Hialeah north of Miam. He gestured around to the mostly empty chairs during one recent lunch hour and talked

about how Romney’s emphasis on the economy was one of the main reasons he already has cast his vote for the former businessman.

“There’s no money. People don’t go out to eat any more,” said Ovidez. Maybe, he said, Romney can help change that. Plus, Ovidez argued, Romney is the only Republican who can beat President Barack Obama, saying: “He’s an individual who is a millionaire, and with money you win elections.”

During the past week, a series of polls have shown Romney pulling ahead of chief challenger Newt Gingrich in the run up to Tuesday’s primary.

Overall, roughly 11.1 percent of registered Republicans in Florida are Hispanic. And of all Hispanic voters in the state, 32.1 percent are Cuban, 28.4 percent are Puerto Rican and 25 percent come mostly from Central and South America, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, which cites the Florida Division of Elections.

Ana Carbonell, a longtime politi-cal operative now working for Rom-ney, estimates that 14 percent of the GOP primary vote comes from Mi-ami-Dade County and, of that, 75 percent is Cuban-American.

Generally, Cuban-American voters have the highest turnout rates. In 2008, they helped John

McCain win the primary over Romney, who lost heavily in Miami-Dade County, where this voting group is most concentrated.

Cuban-American voters are particularly reliable in the primary in part because so many of the older exiles vote early through absentee ballots, and Romney’s campaign — with the significant help from local Cuban-American political leaders — has led all other campaigns in encouraging Floridians to vote before Tuesday. He or his allies have been on the TV airwaves since December targeting early voters.

And in recent days, they have flooded Spanish-radio and TV with ads attacking Gingrich.

Romney’s strength among the old-guard Cuban-Americans was evident last week when he received a standing ovation before he even spoke to more than 400 exiled polit-ical and civic leaders. They packed the Freedom Tower in downtown Miami, where thousands fleeing Fidel Castro’s revolution first re-ceived health care and were pro-cessed by immigration officers in the 1960s. Romney was flanked by prominent Cuban-American poli-ticians, including former Sen. Mel Martinez and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the first Hispanic woman elected to Congress.

While Romney highlighted his business background and spoke on the economy, he also tapped into the pride many Cuban-Americans still feel toward the island nation and their angst over its leaders.

“If I’m fortunate enough to become the next president, it is my expectation that Fidel Castro will finally be taken off this planet,” Romney told the crowd to wild applause. Castro, 85, has been ill since 2006, when he handed over power to his brother, Raúl. “We have to be prepared, in the next president’s first or second term, it is time to strike for freedom in Cuba.”

Arguably the state’s most pop-ular Cuban-American politician, Sen. Marco Rubio, has withheld an endorsement during the primary but came to Romney’s defense in the past week, criticizing Gingrich over an ad that labeled Romney anti-immigrant.

Gingrich, for his part, has called for a U.S.-supported “Cuban spring” uprising against the long-standing communist regime.

If elected, he told a crowd of His-panic business and civic leaders Friday, he would bring to bear “the moral force of an American presi-dent who is serious about intending to free the people of Cuba, and will-ingness to intimidate those who are the oppressors and say to them, ‘You will be held accountable.’”

Gingrich has talked of covert ac-tion to overthrow the government of Raúl Castro, though he insisted such efforts would not include violence.

And he signed a pledge to roll back the ability of Cubans to visit and send money to relatives on the island to the strict limits Bush imposed in 2004. Such promises play well in the older exile community, many of whose homes were confiscated during the Cuban revolution and are far less likely than newer Cuban immigrants to have close family there.

Romney courts Cuban-Americans in Florida

“When we are in a better position here, then we can worry about over there.

But first you have to put your own house

in order”~Jesus Ovidez

Romney supporter

Page 6: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Page 6 / Monday, January 30, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobocoupon bonanza

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Page 7: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Monday, January 30, 2012 / Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo coupon bonanza

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Cafe Trang | 230-A Louisiana Blvd. SE, Albuquerque | 505.232.6764Pho Bar | 3301 Southern Blvd SE, Rio Ranch | 505.994.9150

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Page 8: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Page 8 / Monday, January 30, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

Congratulatethis week’s

Lobo Winners! Men’s Basketball defeated CSU 85-52 TCU 71-54

Men’s Tennis defeated Texas A&M 7-0

Track & Field won Men’s 60m Men’s High Jump Men’s 600m Men’s 400m Hurdles Women’s Pole Vault Women’s 600m Women’s 800m Women’s High Jump

by Nathan [email protected]

Right before tipoff, the men’s basketball team got some news that charged the players up to beat TCU.

The crowd and players learned that Colorado State had beaten MWC leaders San Diego State. The crowd roared. UNM was just one game behind the Aztecs if the Lobos could beat TCU, which they did eas-ily by 71-54.

“These next two games are really important for us now that San Diego State just dropped one against CSU, and that puts us in the hunt again,” senior guard Phillip McDonald said. “We were one game behind from first place and if we can get these next two in the ‘win’ column, we’ll be in good shape.”

TCU kept the game close and had a one-point lead over UNM with 9:38 left in the first half, but it would be the last time in the game they would be ahead.

UNM then went on a 12-2 run and took a seven-point lead into halftime.

“It was a really good win,” head

coach Steve Alford said. “I’m really proud of our team and they did a great job defensively. Overall, it was a terrific win; we needed these two.”

The Lobos continued to control the game with sophomore guard Tony Snell hitting two quick 3-pointers to start the second half and take their lead to 17 with 15:54 left.

Snell finished with a game-high 18 points, going 7-12 shooting, in-cluding 4-8 from behind the arc.

“Tony Snell had a very good game offensively which was a huge key,” Alford said.

TCU went on a run of its own and cut the Lobos’ lead to just six with nine minutes remaining.

The Lobos responded and built their lead back up to 17, to finish the game.

Alford said TCU is a team that of-ten comes from behind, and he was pleased with how his team respond-ed to TCU’s run and didn’t let it get back into the game.

“We know how explosive they can be and they started to make some 3s there in that stretch in the second half once we got up 15 points,” Alford

said. “It was a really good credit to our guys. They didn’t panic and we did a good job of getting a good shot and stopping their run.”

The Lobos finished 28-58 shoot-ing and 7-19 from behind the arc. TCU shot just 17-42 for the game. Both teams struggled with free throws, with UNM going 8-16 and TCU 12-21.

The win takes UNM to 17-4 and Alford said the key to UNM’s vic-tory was stopping TCU’s Hank Thorns, who was the leading scorer for the Horned Frogs coming into the game and averaged more than 13 points a game.

UNM held him to just eight, and Alford credited sophomore guard Kendall Williams for his defensive performance on Thorns. Williams was an added threat on the offen-sive end, finishing with 14 points and five assists.

“I thought the key to the game was Kendall Williams,” Alford said. “That is probably as good defensively that Kendall has been here, and that has been a good growth to see.”

Last-minute news fuels victory

Adria Malcolm/ Daily Lobo

UNM sophomore guard Kendall Williams brings the ball up court after stealing it from TCU guard Nate Butler in the first half of the game Saturday afternoon at The Pit. The Lobos defeated the Horn Frogs 71-54.

lobo men’s basketball

by John Pye The Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Novak Djokovic ripped off his shirt and let out a primal scream, flexing his torso the way a prize fighter would after a desperate, last-round knockout.

This was the final act in Djokovic’s 5-7, 6-4, 6-2, 6-7 (5), 7-5 victory over Rafael Nadal in the Australian Open fina l— a sweat-drenched, sneaker-squeaking 5 -hour, 53-minute endurance contest that ended at 1:37 a.m. Monday morning in Melbourne.

Djokovic overcame a break in the fifth set to win his fifth Grand Slam tournament and third in a row. None, though, quite like this. This one involved tears, sweat and, yes, even a little blood. It was the longest Grand Slam singles final in the history of pro tennis and it came against Nadal, the player who built a career on his tenacity, on outlasting opponents in matches like these.

“It was obvious on the court for everybody who has watched the match that both of us, physically, we took the last drop of energy that we had from our bodies,” Djokovic said. “We made history tonight and unfortunately there couldn’t be two winners.”

When the drama was finally over at Rod Laver Arena, the 24-year-old Djokovic joined Laver, Pete Sam-pras, Roger Federer and Nadal as the only men who have won three consecutive majors since the Open Era began in 1968. Nadal was his vanquished opponent in all three.

Djokovic will go for the “Nole Slam” at Roland Garros in May.

As the players waited for the tro-phy presentation, Nadal leaned on the net, while Djokovic sat on his haunches. Eventually, a nearby of-ficial took pity and they were given chairs and bottles of water.

Nadal held his composure during the formalities, and even opened his speech with a lighthearted one-liner.

“Good morning, everybody,” he said.

A few minutes earlier, after hug-ging Nadal at the net, Djokovic tore off his sweat-soaked black shirt and headed toward his players’ box, pumping his arms repeatedly as he roared. He walked over to his girlfriend, his coach and the rest of his support team and banged on the advertising signs at the side of the court.

“I think it was just the matter of, maybe, luck in some moments, and matter of wanting this more than maybe other player in the certain point,” Djokovic said. “It’s just in-credible effort. You’re in pain, you’re suffer(ing). You’re trying to activate your legs. You’re going through so much suffering your toes are bleed-ing. Everything is just outrageous, but you’re still enjoying that pain.”

The match was full of long rallies and amazing gets. Djokovic finished with 57 winners, along with 69 un-forced errors. Nadal had 44 winners against 71 unforced errors.

Bloody match ends in close winprofessional tennis

Page 9: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Monday, January 30, 2012 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo sports

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Say goodbye to paper application forms. Beginning this year, applications for all licenses will be made through the Department’s online application system at www.wildlife.state.nm.us.

License and application fees will be charged at the time of application. Applicants can pay by credit card or electronic check, a new convenience beginning this year. Once an application is complete, it can not be changed, only deleted. Applicants can reapply, and will receive a refund for the deleted application after the drawing.

New legislation requires everyone who hunts or applies for a license in New Mexico to purchase a Game-hunting License or a combination Game-hunting and Fishing License. Game-hunting ($15 for residents, $65 for nonresidents) and Game-hunting and Fishing licenses ($30, residents only) will be available online or

over the counter from license vendors statewide. Senior and junior hunters, handicapped and some military may be eligible for discounted licenses.

Hunters who need help applying for 2012-13 licenses online can get it from a real person over the telephone or at one of several locations with public computers staffed by Department of Game and Fish representatives.

Assistance is available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. MST, by calling toll-free, (888) 248-6866. The Department will offer computer access in public locations statewide.

Look for more information and locations online, www.wildlife.state.nm.us.

GOING PAPERLESSNew rules, license fees and application methods will require New Mexico hunters to do some homework before planning their hunts for the 2012-13 seasons. Dramatic changes adopted by the State Legislature or approved by the State Game Commission will affect the application process, season dates and how many licenses are reserved for state residents. The changes were designed to streamline the application and licensing process, provide more hunting opportunities for state residents, and to make drawing results and refunds available much sooner.

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men’s tennis

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The men’s tennis team had a rough time at the Intercollegiate Tennis Association indoor playoffs against No. 5 Florida.

The Lobos were snapped in half 7-0 by the Gators to give UNM its first loss of the early season.

In doubles play, senior Phil Anderson and junior Jadon Phillips, a duo ranked No. 16 in the country, fell 8-3 to the Gators Billy Federhofer and Nassim Slilam, who are ranked No. 4. The other two Lobos’ doubles teams also lost.

In singles play, in the one slot, Phillips fell to the Gators’ Bob van Overbeek, 6-2 and 6-3.

The trend continued for the rest of the team, and UNM failed to snag a single point from Florida.

“Florida is a very good team playing outdoors with low altitude,” head coach Alan Dils said. “I am proud of our guys and our seniors. They were the last three guys out there fight-ing and scraping on the courts.”

women’s basketball

FORT WORTH, Texas — The women’s basketball team continued its losing streak in the MWC with a 63-56 loss to TCU.

The Lobos have yet to win a game in MWC play, and the loss against TCU marks the Lobos’ sixth straight defeat.

Junior guard Caroline Durbin continued to lead the Lobos offensively with 20 points, but her effort wasn’t enough. Senior forward Porche Torrance was the only other player in double figures, with 10 points and nine rebounds.

UNM has a chance to end its losing streak when it plays Air Force on Tuesday.

sports briefs

Dylan Smith / Daily LoboJunior Jadon Phillips returns a serve Jan. 21 against Nevada at The Linda Estes Tennis Complex. The Lobos were shutout by the Florida Gators on Saturday. It was the first loss for the team this season.

DAILY LOBO

Hiring Open HOuseTONIGHT

MARRON HALL7 P.M.

Page 10: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Page 10 / Monday, January 30, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobo

ATTN: Student Organizations! Do You NEED Money?!

The Workshops for the 12/13 Annual Budget Process will be:

Feb 1st at 10 a.m. (SUB Santa Ana) Feb 3rd at 12 noon (SUB Santa Ana) Feb 9th at 5:15 p.m. (SUB Mirage)

All groups requesting funding must attend a mandatory workshop: 1) Must be a Chartered Student Organization 2) Have graduate members, and 3) NOT directly apply for and receive GPSA PB (Pro-rated Benefit) Funds.

Please direct questions to [email protected] or SUB Room #1021 For more information: http://www.unm.edu/~gpsa

Student Health & Counseling Counseling Services

Spring 2012 Workshops Academic Success:

Tips & Tricks

ADHD Coping Skills

Anger Management

Anxiety/Stress Clinic

Rewiring Your Brain: Changing Habits of Thought, Behavior & Emotion

Sleep Hygiene

Social Success: Secrets to Liberating the Prisoner Within

Test Anxiety

Assertive Communication

Body Image

Creating Motivation for Change

Mindfulness Meditation: Expanding the Possibilities of You

Enroll online at shac.unm.edu/counseling.html or call (505) 277-4537.

CAMPUS EVENTSMonday MadnessStarts at: 9:00amLocation: Lobo Den Store at the PitSave 30% on a $30 purchase of Lobowear & spirit items every Monday during Lobo basketball season!

Photography with a Digital CameraStarts at: 6:00pmLocation: UNM Continuing Education,1634 Universty Blvd.

Learn the basics of photography as you ex-plore the capabilities of your digital camera. Discover the different uses.

COMMUNITY EVENTSMadison Library FundraiserStarts at: 9:00amLocation: www.titlewish.com/101327The Madison Middle School library located in Albuquerque is holding an online Titlewish fundraiser. 100% of the money raised will go to purchasing new materials for the school library.

Witness for the ProsecutionStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: Albuquerque Little TheatreWitness for the Prosecution based on the work of Agatha Christie.

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar

for January 30, 2012Planning your day has never been easier!

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:

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

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

right side of the page.

4. Type in the event information and submit!

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

Future events may be previewed at

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Across1 Fashionable5 __ Blanc, the Alps’ highest peak9 Wintry mess14 Prolonged unconsciousness15 Confess openly16 Like horror film music17 Practice boxing18 Luke Skywalker, e.g.19 Postal service symbol20 DUCK23 The NFL’s Cowboys25 Energy26 Snake’s warning27 “Can __ honest with you?”28 2011 World Series champs, on scoreboards30 Rogue32 Ring loudly34 “Othello” villain37 Fits of anger41 CRANE44 Actor Davis45 __-poly46 Yours, to Yves47 Presidents’ Day mo.49 “__-haw!”51 Any nonzero number divided by itself52 Arafat’s org. until 200455 Remove, with “off”58 “Key Largo” 54-Down winner Claire

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Down1 IV amounts2 “__ on Pop”: Dr. Seuss3 “Lay it on me!”4 Christmas song5 Like the Grand Canyon6 Higher than7 All-nighter pill8 Bale binder9 Reel from a blow to the head10 Wife of Jacob11 Involuntary impulses12 Eliot’s “__ Marner”13 Obeys21 Used to be22 Upper-left PC key23 Tippler, for short24 Helps with a heist29 Actor Bert (see 70-Across)31 Carvey or Delany

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Capricorn — You should be careful what you wish for this week, but not because it may come true. You may be playing out a fantasy so vivid that it will be difficult to distinguish it from reality. You may be able to glean new ideas worth pursuing and invent solutions to old problems you probably wouldn’t have formulated otherwise, but you’re risking disappointment when reality falls short of those soaring expectations.

Aquarius — This week can be incredibly productive if you are selective about the whims you choose to pursue. Almost anything you want is close. Like a sheltered teenager entering college life, it may be difficult not to indulge in activities that are only briefly stimulating but counterproductive in the long run. This is fine if you aren’t sacrificing higher hopes for a brief bit of fun. Remember to reflect and consider how you’re serving yourself.

Pisces — At times this week, you may question whether your dreams left your life upon waking. This past week, you’ve nurtured a brain child that has grown so big there is no room for much else. Depending on the nature of the idea, it may not be a bad thing to become well-acquainted with what could prove to be a significantly life-altering endeavor. Because you may have lost perspective, do your best to listen to loved ones if they caution you against it.

Aries — A solemn mood that’s hung over you like old cobwebs has been dusted away by a renewed friendship or a refreshing, new relationship. Though you’ve changed your tune, the situation puzzling you has not. However, with the weight off your mind, the solution seems easily within your grasp. Have this person help you a step further and hash it out with them from the beginning. Don’t leave out any details; the real problem may only be evident to new eyes.

Taurus — The past week was a long, hard walk down the plank for you as the circumstances have left you no choice but to change your old ways. Having taken the plunge, these new elements have required drastic adjustment in the way you conduct yourself in your daily life. Years from now, it will seem so obvious what needed to be done, but for now you’ll have to do your best to accept the situation and act accordingly. Keep in mind, this is all for the better.

Gemini — You may be forced to deal with the mood swings in your support system. Be sure to recognize that any lashing out is probably not your fault, but comes from fear of uncertainty. This is a time to learn how much you mean to people, though they don’t always express these sentiments in clear terms. Avoid making a wall in defense; if the relationship means something to you, give them space but leave the path back to them open.

Cancer — The salty remarks of others may feel more abrasive than usual, as this is a time when you feel a heightened sense of vulnerability. It is likely this weakness could be remedied by building up your support system. These remarks could be stemmed in feelings of neglect and a growing disconnect. Set some dates with your most cherished friends and make an effort to let them know how much they mean to you. You’ve done nothing wrong; everyone needs reassuring here and there.

Leo — You like to know the people you care about and respect are on your side, especially in times of need. It seems lately you’ve needed more only to find the well has been tapped dry. Any relationship requires a careful balance of reciprocity. If you find relations are more strained that usual, it may be time to account for how much you are taking. Even if these people don’t ask for much, there are other ways of showing your appreciation that don’t need to be solicited.

Virgo — Now that you’ve really got the ball rolling on something that you’ve been striving towards for the past several weeks, you may find yourself in a frenzy, hopping from thought to thought like a frog across lily pads. It will be too easy to overlook details that may prove their importance only once it’s too late. With this in mind, carry on as you will because the satisfaction of progress is worth celebrating. Just take care not to let your thoughts exceed your capacity to do a thorough job.

Libra — After a period of relative social isolation, you’ve made up your mind that certain boundaries don’t serve the purpose you had in mind. You want to feel close with someone, and toward that end you’ve eliminated any filter through which good people in disguise may not pass. The downside is that you let in the wolves in sheep’s clothing. Continue seeking friends in all spheres, but devise some system of self-protection to avoid being spotted as easy prey.

Scorpio — A grand sense of duty toward others has arisen in you this past week, and you may find yourself unable to contain your passion. Society is in need of people with this sense, although you are in danger of exhausting yourself trying to take on everyone’s problems. Start with your family and close circle of friends, and move out only when you’re able to. With the extra time and energy, you can go far innovating ways to help people on a mass scale without sacrificing yourself completely.

Sagittarius — Sometimes the most ordinary circumstances and observations serve to set your beliefs in stone, making you surer than ever that you’re right. Such a thing has likely happened in the past week or so, prompting you to spread the word as far as your voice can travel. You may come off as overbearing and proselytizing because this may only ring true for some and not others. If someone isn’t listening, there’s not much you can do except try to understand their perspective.

Weekly Horoscopesby Alexandra Swanberg

Page 11: NM Daiy Lobo 013012

Monday, January 30, 2012 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo

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ALASKAN/SIBERIAN HUSKIES FOR sale. 203-9316.

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Jobs Off CampusNOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for spring employment for swimming in- structors and lifeguards. Apply at 4901 Indian School Rd. NE. or call 265- 6971.

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

Lobo Monday January 30, 2012

Page

12The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

TrackSports Editor / Nathan Farmer

by Mundo [email protected]

� e men’s track team dominated the Convention Center this week-end at the New Mexico Invitational.

UNM had four first-place finish-es. Freshman sprinter Beejay Lee won the 60-meter dash with a time of 6.81 seconds, and sophomore mid-distance runner James Senior won the 600-meter run with a time of 1:22.31. Senior hurdler Chad Clark won the 400-meter hurdles with a time of 55.92 and freshman jumper Markus Miller won the high jump by clearing a height of 1.99 meters.

“� e men did very well,” head track coach Joe Franklin said. “We’re making a lot of progress and that’s good because our conference cham-pionship is in exactly four weeks.”

� e Lobos also had four second-place � nishes and had three top-5 � nishers in the long jump, pole vault and 600-meter run.

� e four second-place � nish-es include junior jumper Kendall Spencer with a leap of 7.48 meters in the long jump and sophomore pole vaulter Logan P� ibson with a height of 5.22 meters.

Junior sprinter Derek Montoya � nished with a time of 1:24.07 in the 600 meters. Junior triple-jumper Floyd Ross jumped 15.56 meters in the triple jump, which was only .13 meters short of � rst place.

Despite losing the event by nar-row margins, Ross said he is happy with his performance.

“I think I was pretty good, but I could always do better,” he said. “It’s just a matter of time before every-thing comes together and I get that big jump. I just have to be patient.”

Even though Ross and Spencer � nished second in their respective events, Franklin said his jumpers are skilled.

“Floyd (Ross) has a lot of ability and Kendall Spencer right now is one of the best long jumpers in the country,” he said.

Ross also � nished third in the long jump, with a distance of 6.92 meters.

Other third-place � nishes include senior distance runner Matt Everett in the 800-meter run with a time of 1:56.12, junior hurdler De’Vron Walker in the 60-meter hurdles with a time of 8.1 seconds, and junior pole vaulter Robert Warensjo with a height of 5.07 meters in the pole vault.

by Nathan [email protected]

In a weekend with more than 40 top-ten � nishes, one athlete rose above an already exceptional team.

Junior distance-runner Jo Moultrie broke school records in the 600-meter and 800-meter races.

Last weekend, Moultrie missed the school record in the 600-me-ter by just half a second, but this time made the record hers with a time of 1:33.21. In the 800 me-ter, she finished in 2:10, another school record.

She said she used the o� sea-son and cross country running as a means to get faster for the upcom-ing track season.

“I’m really pleased,” Moultrie said. “My strength has really built up with the long runs and I think my speed was sitting there and I just put it into the races.”

Head coach Joe Franklin said he was pleased with Moultrie’s � nish, but said he expects her to get even better as the season the progresses.

“She is a gifted woman, just like all of our student athletes,” he said. “She has a long way to go to reach her goals.”

Franklin said he was pleased with the overall � nish of the team as well, which included 44 top-ten � nishers and eight � rst-place victories.

“I think the women did really well,” Franklin said. “To have last weekend’s school record in the 4x400 meter with the women, and two school records today, I think it’s shaping up pretty well.”

� e Lobos took over the podium in pole vault, going 1-2-3 with sophomore Margo Tucker and redshirt junior Amber Menke tied at the 12’-9.5” mark. Sophomore Nathalie Busk � nished third at the 11’-9.75” mark.

� e team also had strong per-formances in the mile. It placed � ve runners in the top 10.

Junior distance runner Imogen Ainsworth led UNM with a third-place � nish and a time of 4:55.49. Se-nior distance runners Sarah Waldron and Ruth Senior and junior distance runner Shawna Winnegar � nished � fth through seventh, respectively. Senior distance runner Kirsty Milner rounded out the top 10.

Franklin said he was impressed with how well the distance run-ners performed.

He said he expected his mile run-ners to be in � rst place in the MWC.

“We just had good performanc-es all around,” he said. “Our women milers did really well, and they will probably be one through four in the conference standings.”

In the sprints, sophomore sprint-er Kayla Fisher-Taylor � nished 12th in the 60-meter with a 7.89 time.

Junior sprinter Tawsha Brazley � nished 10th in the 200-meter with

a time of 25.20 and junior sprinter Rachel Kelchner � nished ninth in the 400-meter in 58.05.

It wasn’t all good news for the Lobos, as junior hurdler Precious Selmon in-jured her hamstring on Friday.

Selmon was the conference champion last year in the 60-meter hurdles and was placed on the 2011 All-Indoor MWC team.

Franklin said the injury is a blow but, he said he expects her to recov-

er quickly and the rest of her team-mates to step up in her absence.

“Whenever you lose someone that is a conference champion, that’s going to a� ect you,” he said. “(We want to) get her healthy enough quickly and if not, have someone else step in and increase their per-formance to pick up the points.”

Women jump, sprint, throw to 40 top-ten fi nishes

Junfu Han / Daily LoboAshlee Smalley runs in the women’s mile race on Saturday afternoon at the Albuquerque Convention Center. Smalley � nished 14th, with a time of 5:26.03.

Men hurtle to four fi rst-place fi nishes

Ross said that the team can easily take the MWC championship in late February at the Convention Center.

“I think we have a pretty legiti-mate team,” he said. “Everybody’s good; we all work hard. When con-ference comes, I think we’re going to easily take that.”

Junfu Han/ Daily LoboUNM’s De’Vron Walker (right) looks over his shoulder at Purdue’s Joshua Hembrough, running independently, while leaping the last hurdle during men’s 60m hurdle � nal. Walker � nished in third place with a time of 8.10 .

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