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D AILY L OBO new mexico Appease the people see page 4 May 2, 2012 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 wednesday Daily Lobo volume 116 issue 150 86 | 54 TODAY APPLY ONLINE @ LOBOVILLAGE.COM • 505.925.5575 fewer than 150 spaces left Rebecca Hampton / Daily Lobo A group of activists dancing in the concheros style of Danza Azteca, a traditional dance from Mexico, marched in a parade for International Workers’ Day in downtown Albuquerque Tuesday evening. The march endorsed worker, immigrant and other human rights. The International Workers’ march coincided with the March Against Capitalism. See photo page 2. FINDING COMMON GROUND by Avicra Luckey [email protected] UNM has a balance of almost $438 million in bonds, which it uses to pay for University improvements, and the administration depends on student fees to repay some of these bonds. Associate Vice President of Planning, Budget and Analysis Andrew Cullen said facilities fees, which make up almost half of $1,158 in fees per student per year, pay for construction on campus and students don’t have an official say in how those fees are spent. He said the money students pay in facilities fees can be used as debt service to repay bonds. Cullen said the University uses this money because there is no other way for them to earn the money. “Student fees paid for the renova- tion of Mitchell Hall because there’s no individual identified revenue stream associated with you (students) attend- ing class at Mitchell Hall, other than you’re a student here at UNM and you pay tuition and you pay fees,” he said. UNM’s bond balance includes a proposed $35.2 million bond package for 2012. e Fall 2012 bonds package will include funds to renovate Clark Hall at $16 million, the biology building at $3 million and an upgrade to the Taos branch’s infrastructure at $3 million, among others. e almost $438 million amount is for bonds issued from 1992 until 2012. Cullen said multi-million dollar projects, such as campus infrastructure renovations, are funded by bonds, including the renovations made to Hodgin Hall and Logan Hall in 2007. He said bonds are similar to loans and are issued to the University through either the state or system revenue bonds. “Big bond traders would go out and look at our bonds and buy our bonds,” he said. “ey say we’re going to es- sentially fund you, so here’s the mon- ey and then you’re going to promise to pay us each year principal and interest over 30 years.” He said there are different types of bonds, such as severance tax bonds, which are funded through natural gas and oil revenues, and general obliga- tion bonds, which are funded through taxpayer money. He said every bond is funded differently. According to the University and communication reports on Universi- ty bonds, a $123.2 million bond pack- age in 2007 included the renovation of Mitchell Hall, e Pit, Hodgin Hall and Logan Hall, as well as classroom mod- ernization, building parking structures and football stadium improvements such as luxury boxes. In 2005, a $125 million bond pack- age funded projects such as compact shelving in Zimmerman Library and the renovation of the Communication and Journalism building. Student fees pay back bonds Original ‘Lobo Louie’ inspires activism by Avicra Luckey [email protected] Environmental activist Demis Foster said young people can bring out-of-style causes back into the public eye with fresh ideas. Foster began her career as an activist in 1987 as a volunteer with the Wolf Recovery Foundation while still in college at Boise State University. After graduation, she moved to Seattle and continued her volunteer work with the Pacific Crest Biodiversity Project. She spoke in front of an art studio class in the Cochiti room in the SUB Tuesday. Students gathered around a preserved Mexican Gray Wolf, which she said was the original “Lobo Louie.” e exhibit was put together by artist and graduate student Daniel Richmond and features memorabilia and photos of “Lobo Louie” on display. An English major, Foster always thought she would travel the world and teach, but once she experienced the rainforest, everything changed. “I realized when I graduated from college and moved to the rainforest, how significant and amazing the Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo A taxidermied Mexican Gray Wolf “Lobo Louie” sits in the Cochiti Room in the SUB. The mascot was chosen by the University in 1920. see Lobo Louie PAGE 2
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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Daily lobonew mexico

Appease the peoplesee page 4

M a y 2 , 2 0 1 2 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895wednesday

Daily Lobovolume 116 issue 150 86 | 54

todayAPPLY ONLINE @ LOBOVILL AGE.COM • 505.925.5575

fewer than150 spaces left

Rebecca Hampton / Daily Lobo

A group of activists dancing in the concheros style of Danza Azteca, a traditional dance from Mexico, marched in a parade for International Workers’ Day in downtown Albuquerque Tuesday evening. The march endorsed worker, immigrant and other human rights. The International Workers’ march coincided with the March Against Capitalism. See photo page 2.

finding common ground

by Avicra [email protected]

UNM has a balance of almost $438 million in bonds, which it uses to pay for University improvements, and the administration depends on student fees to repay some of these bonds.

Associate Vice President of Planning, Budget and Analysis Andrew Cullen said facilities fees, which make up almost half of $1,158 in fees per student per year, pay for construction on campus and students don’t have an official say in how those fees are spent. He said the money students pay in facilities fees can be used as debt service to repay bonds.

Cullen said the University uses this money because there is no other way for them to earn the money.

“Student fees paid for the renova-tion of Mitchell Hall because there’s no individual identified revenue stream associated with you (students) attend-ing class at Mitchell Hall, other than you’re a student here at UNM and you pay tuition and you pay fees,” he said.

UNM’s bond balance includes a proposed $35.2 million bond package for 2012. The Fall 2012 bonds package will include funds to renovate Clark Hall at $16 million, the biology building at $3 million and an upgrade to the Taos branch’s infrastructure at $3 million, among others.

The almost $438 million amount is for bonds issued from 1992 until 2012.

Cullen said multi-million dollar projects, such as campus infrastructure renovations, are funded by bonds, including the renovations made to Hodgin Hall and Logan Hall in 2007. He said bonds are similar to loans and are issued to the University through either the state or system revenue bonds.

“Big bond traders would go out and look at our bonds and buy our bonds,” he said. “They say we’re going to es-sentially fund you, so here’s the mon-ey and then you’re going to promise to pay us each year principal and interest over 30 years.”

He said there are different types of bonds, such as severance tax bonds, which are funded through natural gas and oil revenues, and general obliga-tion bonds, which are funded through taxpayer money. He said every bond is funded differently.

According to the University and communication reports on Universi-ty bonds, a $123.2 million bond pack-age in 2007 included the renovation of Mitchell Hall, The Pit, Hodgin Hall and Logan Hall, as well as classroom mod-ernization, building parking structures and football stadium improvements such as luxury boxes.

In 2005, a $125 million bond pack-age funded projects such as compact shelving in Zimmerman Library and the renovation of the Communication and Journalism building.

Student fees payback bonds

original ‘Lobo Louie’ inspires activism by Avicra Luckey

[email protected]

Environmental activist Demis Foster said young people can bring out-of-style causes back into the public eye with fresh ideas.

Foster began her career as an activist in 1987 as a volunteer with the Wolf Recovery Foundation while still in college at Boise State University. After graduation, she moved to Seattle and continued her volunteer work with the Pacific Crest Biodiversity Project.

She spoke in front of an art studio class in the Cochiti room in the SUB Tuesday. Students gathered around a preserved Mexican Gray Wolf, which she said was the original “Lobo Louie.”

The exhibit was put together by artist and graduate student Daniel Richmond and features memorabilia and photos of “Lobo Louie” on display.

An English major, Foster always thought she would travel the world and teach, but once she experienced the rainforest, everything changed.

“I realized when I graduated from college and moved to the rainforest, how significant and amazing the Adria Malcolm / Daily Lobo

A taxidermied Mexican Gray Wolf “Lobo Louie” sits in the Cochiti Room in the SUB. The mascot was chosen by the University in 1920. see Lobo Louie page 2

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 050212

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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily lobowe d N e s d a y, M a y 2 , 2 0 1 2

volume 116 issue 150Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

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

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Editor-in-ChiefElizabeth ClearyManaging EditorDanielle RonkosNews EditorSvetlana OzdenAssistant News EditorAvicra LuckeyStaff ReporterHannah StangebyeBarbara Gomez-AguinagaPhoto EditorDylan Smith

Assistant Photo EditorAdria MalcolmCulture EditorNicole PerezSports EditorMundo CarrilloOpinion/Social Media EditorAlexandra SwanbergCopy ChiefAaron WiltseMultimedia EditorJunfu Han

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DAILY LOBOnew mexico

rainforest was,” she said. “When I saw that it was being destroyed so quickly and needlessly, all of a sudden I knew immediately I needed to do something, and the next thing I knew I was volunteering.”

She has been an environmental activist for the better part of the last 20 years. Foster is most well-known for her work with the Ancient Forest Roadshow, a campaign to bring atten-tion to clearcutting of ancient forests by driving a 450-year-old Douglas-fir tree around to 38 states.

Richmond said as the UNM Lobos, a great way for UNM students to show Lobo pride is to get behind the Mexican Gray Wolf restoration effort.

He asked Foster to speak to his art studio class about the role artists

can play in social and environmental movements.

“I thought it was a good venue to show them the (exhibit), which uses a visual symbol of the University that we’re all a part of and then also mix it with someone who has done outreach work with art and with community and symbols,” he said.

UNM student Stevie Lowrey said she is able to see what she can do as an artist to contribute to larger so-cial movements and is excited to start weaving different subject matters, in-cluding animals, into her artwork.

“The concept of saving the wolf and saving beings that are higher up in our food chain put into perspective our be-ing and what we can do to make things work,” she said.

Lobo Louie from page 1

A flag strung between two trees hangs in Robinson Park Tuesday as protesters gather in the background to celebrate International Workers’ Day and the March Against Capitalism. The protesters aimed to raise awareness about human rights.

Rebecca Hampton / Daily Lobo

Photo Journalism: Protest

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 050212

New Mexico Daily lobo

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news Wednesday, May 2, 2012 / Page 3

by Jeanne NussThe Associated Press

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — When a black bear climbed a tree in a cen-tral Arkansas city and refused to come down, authorities turned to unconventional rescue tools: bouncy houses.

Foster the Bear — named for

the residential street where he holed up in a tree — wouldn’t budge from his branch Monday. So, authorities turned to a local hardware store owner who rents inflatable houses and castles for children’s birthday parties.

They asked him to set up two of the bouncy contraptions beneath the tree. Then, wildlife officials shot

the bear with tranquilizer darts.“He would slide to one side,

and we’re like, ‘Oh, oh, oh, he’s going to come down, he’s going to come down,’” Conway police spokeswoman La Tresha Woodruff said. “And then he’d balance him-self again.”

Bear gets bouncy-house rescue

Courtney Spradlin / AP PhotoA bear stays perched up a tree as city officials prepare to tranquilize the bear Monday in Conway, Ark.

see Bouncy bear page 5

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 050212

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

May 2, 2012

Page

4

Editor,

Labor Day, celebrated each year on the first Monday of September, is widely known and celebrated as a holiday for American workers. Perhaps less well-known as a day for the labor movement is May Day, ob-served around the world on May 1.

While it originated as a celebration of nature and spring, May Day became, by the end of the 19th century, a decidedly working-class holiday set aside for parades and demonstrations by tradesmen and or-ganized labor groups.

In the United States and abroad, the concerns of the labor movement are often assumed to be plainly at odds with those of free-market libertarians. Mutually un-aware of their historical and ideological overlap, both groups have been skeptical, indeed antagonistic, toward each other, each regarding its counterpart as ideologi-cal foe. But this need not be the case, and as it happens, it hasn’t always been.

The “industrial problem” besetting the working class today is nothing new, nor are its features unique to the age in which we live. Radical libertarians of the 19th century were alert to the very same problem, undertaking to critically engage the insights of classical political economy in order to finally unravel it.

The result in the United States, at least in part, was a distinctly American, free-market labor movement, an idea that sought to obliterate privilege and monopoly — forever intertwined — through respect for individual rights and free, mutual exchange. Commerce, these libertarians argued, was not necessarily entangled with exploitation, at least not without the state to protect unfair advantages for capital. And those advantages, completely irreconcilable with genuine free markets, are ubiquitous in the contemporary economic system of global capitalism.

So-called “intellectual property” laws allow giant multinational corporations to forcibly monopolize the technologies that give us the tools for survival, right down to patents on the DNA of plants we eat. State-enforced barriers to market entry — built through rules and regulations that inflate the costs of doing business — allow a handful of players to operate absent worries of real competition.

Subsidies, direct and indirect, grant billions of dollars in pure welfare to politically connected and favored companies which invade Washington’s Beltway with armies of dedicated lobbyists. The net result of the state’s influences on the economy is a system in which the average wage earner is systematically handicapped.

As Benjamin Tucker related it, “Capitalists … have placed and kept upon the statute books all sorts of prohibitions and taxes … designed to limit and effective in limiting the number of bidders for the labor of those who have labor to sell.”

Once the reasoning of individual sovereignty is fully understood, the soritical move to anarchism, the absence of rulers or external authority, seems natural, hardly unreasonable or fanatical. I endorse market anarchism precisely because it is rational, accounting for basic assumptions about power and human nature that almost everyone at least implicitly accepts.

Were its popular caricatures accurate — were it either the violent philosophy of unhinged, antisocial maniacs or else the starry-eyed dream of naive utopians — I wouldn’t spill a drop of ink in its defense. Anarchism inures to the benefit of labor in that it benefits every individual who does not hope to live at the expense of anyone else, barricaded behind the protections of coercive privilege.

This May Day, take a moment to reflect upon the questions of who actually bene-fits from the game of politics and what kind of economy we actually have. Have ordi-nary people seen most of the benefits of state involvement in the economy? Do we have a free market, or a very unfree one?

The answers may surprise many of those in both the mainstream labor and libertar-ian movements. They may even bring new meaning to the phrase “workers of the world unite!”

David D’AmatoDaily Lobo reader

by Devon Stevens Daily Lobo columnist

Just today, as I was preparing to laze about in the single weekend reprieve before study-ing for finals became important, I noticed a moth banging itself into my lamp until it was a senseless pulp. Breaking out of my reverie, I noticed I had not one, but 60 moths fluttering around my bedroom.

Because this is unusual, I began to do some research. Upon consulting the Internet, I made a truly horrific discovery. This is the year 2012. The exact year that the Mayan calendar predicted to be the end times. Normally I would ignore such dire predictions, if only because when our calendar ended in Y2K, nothing happened either, so why trust an ancient civilization over our own? But with the plague of moths descending on the city — well. The end times must be near.

Yes, readers, the mothpocalypse is real and I have discovered the cause. We have not sacrificed anything to the moth gods and they are angry. They have sent us warnings periodically over the last few years and we have never heeded them. In 1997, we were visited by a similar miller moth invasion and we ignored the signs, but this time we won’t be so lucky. The Mayans knew, you see, and they placed a warning in their calendar making it end before the year was out. This, combined with the moths, proves that the moth gods are real.

Now, you may be asking yourself whether we can avert disaster, and the answer is yes, but only if we act now. Typically, ancient and evil deities need a sacrifice to appease them, and Albuquerque luckily has the West Mesa volcanoes ready and willing to take any sacrifice we wish to throw into them.

Because these volcanoes are extinct, we will need to wake them up. I suggest a giant drilling apparatus capable of drilling down some 20 miles to the Earth’s mantle, allowing magma to flow up. This should be sufficient to reawaken the dead volcanoes, allowing sacrifices to be made.

The next step will be to determine what shall be sacrificed. I suggest virgins myself, but because they are in short supply around here, I suggest importing them from Utah. We can petition the governor to create giant robots — like in the last “Terminator” film — to walk across the Four Corners to kidnap large numbers of Utahans for our volcano sacrifices. After a quick search on the Internet, I have found that because we have something like 77 percent of the U.S.’s nuclear stockpile here in New Mexico, the Utahans are unlikely to be capable of stopping us.

After we toss the Utahans into the volcano, we must pray to make sure that the wrath of the moth gods has abated, otherwise we will face a nightmare invasion of Acronicta leporina, i.e., miller moths, the likes of which we will never see again, mostly because they will eat us. A giant miller moth will climb out of Mount Taylor and make a beeline to Albuquerque, eating everything in its path.

Nuclear weapons won’t work and neither will air-dropped insecticide bombs. The U.S. government will collapse within a few days.

I urge you to consider the steps I have suggested.

I know some of you might be skeptical, but remember that skepticism is a terrify-ing disease of the mind and that only prayer, wanton sacrifices and blind blithering belief in my crazy predictions will save the world from mothy doom.

Editorial Board

Elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

danielle ronkosManaging editor

alexandra SwanbergOpinion editor

Svetlana ozdenNews editor

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.

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mothy mayhem means the end is nigh

Market anarchy best serves human nature

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Wednesday, May 2, 2012 / Page 5New Mexico Daily lobo news

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Foster finally passed out, but he still didn’t come down from his perch. Eventually, firefighters turned a hose on him until he tum-bled down onto the edge of the in-flatables below.

The bear, about a year old, wasn’t hurt, though he did land in between a blow-up castle and the other inflatable house — kind of “like if you get something stuck between the wall and the bed,” as Woodruff put it.

Spectators who had been watching the bear in the tree for hours cheered and clapped, Woodruff said.

“Foster was fine, just knocked out,” she said.

Wildlife officials plan to release the bear somewhere in the Ozark Mountains.

Police said the bear’s big-city ad-venture in Conway, about 30 miles

north of Little Rock, started before he moseyed up the tree on Foster Drive. Someone had spotted the bear in a different tree on a nearby street before dawn Monday.

“Somehow, he crawled down out of the tree without them seeing him and got away,” Woodruff said.

Then, he managed to climb into another tree and inspire a Twitter feed, where someone posted updates — from the bear’s perspective — into the night.

“You ever have that dream where you’re falling and then you wake up with a dart in your butt?” one post read.

Another tweet summed up the bear’s day out.

“The cops want to shoot me,” one post read. “Fire dept says I’m too big for their cat getter-downer and 75 townies are below cheering my name.”

Bouncy bear from page 3

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by Steve Karnowski The Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS — Pat LaFrieda Jr. can’t get enough chicken thighs. If his family business featured on the new Food Network series “Meat Men” orders 100 cases of boneless, skinless thighs, his supplier might deliver only 60.

That’s because consumers have discovered something chefs have long known about dark meat: “It was always the least expensive protein that you could buy, but it had the most amount of flavor,” LaFrieda said.

Poultry industry experts agree TV food shows are helping to spur demand as chefs talk up dark meat and give home cooks new ideas. Dark meat is more forgiving than white and doesn’t dry out as easily, La Frieda said. So thighs are great on the grill, while ground dark meat works well shaped into burgers, stuffed into ravioli or stirred into a Bolognese sauce and served over pasta, he said.

“If you’re looking for what the next trend is … always ask the butcher what he takes home,” said LaFrieda, whose company, Pat LaFrieda Meat Purveyors of North Bergen, N.J., sup-plies restaurants in the New York City area and along the East Coast.

The convenience and great-er availability of boneless, skinless thighs is another major factor in the dark meat craze. New, automated equipment makes it more economi-cal to debone leg quarters, where the work once had to be done by hand.

Dark meat historically has been cheaper than white, but according to U.S. Department of Agriculture statistics, wholesale boneless,

skinless thighs now cost as much as breasts, and sometimes more. Both averaged $1.33 a pound in March, but thigh prices were up 15 percent from a year earlier, while breasts were up only 1 percent. Bone-in leg quarters averaged 53 cents per pound in March, up 26 percent from a year ago.

Melissa Dexter, 27, a student at the University of Arkansas in Fayette-ville, said she noticed recently when buying both boneless breasts and thighs at Wal-Mart that the pack-age of dark meat actually cost about 50 cents more. She said thighs are generally cheaper, though, and help stretch her budget.

“Growing up, whenever we had chicken, whether it was KFC or homemade, the breast meat was always dry,” Dexter said. “I always enjoyed the flavor, not just the juiciness, but the flavor coming out of the dark meat.”

For decades, producers made their money on the front half of the bird but lost money on the back half, said Bill Roenigk, senior vice president and economist with the National Chicken Council. That began changing in the 1990s as the industry found new markets in Russia, Asia and Latin America. While producers still lose money on dark meat, he said, the difference isn’t as great as it once was.

Domestically, chicken compa-nies are becoming more innovative with new products such as chicken sausages, which are mostly dark meat, Roenigk said. At the same time, they’re seeing more sales to Hispanic and Asian immigrants, who have brought their food pref-erences with them.

At Whole Foods Market Inc., the dark meat trend has mainly shown up in sales of store-made chicken sausage, said Theo Weening, global meat buyer for the Austin, Texas-based chain. The varieties vary, but Italian and breakfast sausages are top sellers. Whole Foods had to scramble last year when sausage makers boosted production for the holidays and dark meat became hard to get, but things are back on track now, he said.

The No. 1 U.S. chicken producer, Tyson Foods Inc. of Springdale, Ark., declined to provide sales figures before its earnings report next month, but a spokesman said it has seen strong growth with dark meat and is actively promoting it to “value-conscious customers.”

“Last year, we launched a line of chicken lunch meats, which are packaged deli-style for retailers,” Gary Mickelson said. “Other areas perfect for dark meat chicken include pizza toppings, ground chicken and smoked sausage. These offerings allow value-conscious customers to buy high quality, great tasting all-meat products, but at a lower price point.” While companies wouldn’t release figures, other supermarkets and suppliers also said they’re seeing strong growth in dark meat sales.

Nobody is ready to write off the boneless, skinless chicken breast, however.

“I think we’re still a white-meat nation when it comes to chicken,” said Tom Stone, marketing director for Bell & Evans Chicken, of Fredericksburg, Pa.

“That’s great kid food,” he said. “Maybe it just hasn’t hit yet.”

Dark-meat love on the rise

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Wednesday, May 2, 2012 / Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo sports

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by Thomas [email protected]

Sophomore third baseman DJ Peterson is crushing baseball for the Lobos.

Peterson is near the top in the Mountain West Conference categories of batting average (.437), slugging percentage (.765), on-base percentage (.490), hits (80), RBIs (57), home runs (13) and total bases (140). Thanks to Peterson’s production, the Lobos rank near the top of the MWC in most offensive categories.

This kind of production is nothing new for Peterson. Last year, he led UNM in several offensive categories and was named to the 2011 National Collegiate Baseball

Peterson leads Lobos, MWC

Writers Association Freshman All-American Team and to the 2011 Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American Team. Peterson also set an NCAA record for the most doubles hit by a freshman, with 32.

Senior infielder Kyle Stiner said Peterson is a key cog in the offense because of the way he hits the ball.

“When you have a guy hitting like that, our offense is going to be there whether it’s everyone or him,” Stiner said. “It helps tremendously having a guy like him in our lineup.”

Head coach Ray Birmingham said he doesn’t fret about scoring runs be-cause of hitters like Peterson.

“I don’t worry about hitting so much,” he said. “I only worry about pitching and bunting.”

In the offseason, Peterson made the move from first to third base. He said the adjustment has gone smooth-ly, but thinks there is room to improve.

“The more repetition you get, the more comfortable you get at some-thing,” Peterson said.

This past series against UNLV, Peterson went 6-14 at the plate with 10 RBIs and three home runs. In the series finale, he had his fourth mul-tidinger game and pushed his hit streak to a career-high of 20 games.

Birmingham said Peterson will be fine, but knows the team needs other players to be on point in order for the Lobos to have a chance at claiming the regular-season championship.

“DJ is DJ, but he’s just one part of the lineup,” he said.

baseball

Adria Malcolm / Daily LoboSophomore third baseman DJ Peterson watches home plate in the game against UNLV April 27. Peterson is a key factor to the Lobos’ success this season.

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Page 8 / Wednesday, May 2, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobosports

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CLASSIFIEDS

by Charles OdumThe Associated Press

ATLANTA — Pedro Alvarez and Yamaico Navarro each hit two-run homers, and the Pittsburgh Pirates enjoyed a long-awaited offensive breakthrough as they beat the Atlanta Braves 9-3 on Monday night.

The Pirates, last in the major leagues with 58 runs in 22 games, al-most doubled their previous season high of five runs. Neil Walker had three hits and drove in a run.

It took the Pirates 22 games this season to score more than five runs. That was the longest streak since the 1972 Milwaukee Brewers went a major league-record 31 games into the season without surpassing five runs, according STATS LLC. The last National League team with a longer streak was the 1919 Boston Braves, who went an NL-record 23 games into the season without topping five runs.

James McDonald (1-1) set a ca-reer high with 10 strikeouts as he improved to 3-0 in six career ap-pearances against the Braves. He gave up a two-run homer to Freddie Freeman in the first inning but re-covered to allow only one run in the next six 2-3 innings.

The Braves settled for a split of the four-game series. They haven’t lost a series since being swept by the Mets in three games to open the season.

McDonald gave up three runs on seven hits and two walks in seven 2-3

innings. The right-hander’s previous career high of nine strikeouts also came against Atlanta on July 25, 2011.

Alvarez gave Pittsburgh the lead in the fourth with his third homer in six days. He connected in both games of a doubleheader with Colorado on Wednesday. Alvarez hit only .191 with four homers in 74 games in 2011. His fifth homer came in his 18th game this season.

Navarro homered off Mike Minor (2-2) in the sixth.

Minor gave up a career-high seven runs on eight hits and three walks in six 1-3 innings. He struck out nine.

Navarro, who started in left field, was hitting only .077 (1 for 13) before he singled and scored in the fourth and hit his first National League homer in the sixth. He hit one homer for Boston last season.

Pirates break weak streakmlb

John Bazemore / AP photoAtlanta Braves second baseman Dan Uggla (26) forces out Pittsburgh Pirates’ Neil Walker (18) as he turns a double play on a Pedro Alvarez ground ball in the second inning of a baseball game Monday in Atlanta.

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Wednesday, May 2, 2012 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo sports

Project for New Mexico Graduates of Color

proudly presents the 6th Annual

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The University of New Mexico MSC03 2180 Student Union Building Lobo Lair Room 1046 1 University of New Mexico

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Late

Night Breakfastby Mundo [email protected]

Before the men’s golf team takes on finals next week, it will take on the Mountain West Championship in Tucson.

The Lobos enter the tournament ranked No. 16 in the nation.

Senior James Erkenbeck said there is no extra pressure on the team to per-form well because of the high ranking.

“I don’t think any of us feel pres-sure,” he said. “A lot of us are pretty competitive, so we’re focused on win-ning because we’re competitive, not because we’re highly ranked.”

Head coach Glen Millican said no single player is going to lead the team this weekend.

“We have a lot of different guys that can get it done,” he said. “We’re doing a good job of getting prepared and we’re going to be ready to go to Tucson.”

Although San Diego State is ranked No. 15 in the nation, fresh-man Victor Perez said he is not scared of the Aztecs.

“Our team is the one that scares me the most,” he said. “We definitely have the chance to win and we should just focus on our game and not think about other players.”

Perez is coming off a win at the Aggie Invitational on April 22 in Bryan, Texas. He said that at the beginning of the season, he wasn’t even sure he was going to be competing.

“I didn’t expect to play in a tourna-ment this year,” Perez said. “To win as a freshman is pretty special.”

His win at the Aggie Invitational im-pressed his coaches and teammates.

“He had a really good tournament on a really hard golf course against a lot of good players,” Millican said. “It was exciting for everyone on the team to see one of our new guys get a win.”

Erkenbeck said the freshman has been playing with a lot of poise since the start of the spring season.

“This whole semester, he’s been playing really well,” Erkenbeck said. “He’s comfortable with his game and last week everything fell into place for him.”

Millican said finishing up classes while preparing for the tournament was a challenge for the team.

“We have some guys that have major papers due and we have dif-ferent guys with different schedules right now school-wise,” Millican said. “I think it will be nice for our guys to get through this stretch of school.”

No. 16 prepares for Tucson tournament

men’s golf

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Page 10 / Wednesday, May 2, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobo

ATTENTION CULINARIANS!JOB FAIREMBASSY SUITES HOTEL1000 Woodward Place NE(I-25 & Lomas) Albuquerque

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revised: 03/28/12 – Hours are subject to change without notice. For the most current hours visit: elibrary.unm.edu/hours

University Libraries Hours Spring 2012

Regular Hours | January 17 – April 30, 2012 REFERENCE ASSISTANCE IS AVAILABLE ALL OPEN HOURS. IN DEPTH REFERENCE CONSULTATION IS AVAILABLE BY APPOINTMENT. CALL ASK A LIBRARIAN AT 277-9100 FOR A REFERRAL.

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OR BY APPOINTMENT

VALID UNM ID REQUIRED

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REQUIRED 10PM – 7AM

Tue, May 1 Open 24 hrs 9am-7pm 8am-9pm 8am–9pm 8am-11pm Open 24 hrs

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YOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSYOUR BUSINESSCOULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!COULD BE HERE!

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FOR RELEASE MAY 2, 2012

ACROSS1 Skiing need5 Color Me __:

1990s R&B group9 Wait for a light,

perhaps13 Debate choice15 Hardly __: rarely16 French company?17 __ acid18 Lamebrain19 Behold, to 57-

Down20 2002

DiCaprio/Day-Lewis historicaldrama

23 Ending withstamp

24 U.S.’s Ryder Cupfoe

25 Letters fromGreece

26 The past, in thepast

28 1968Davis/Lawfordspy spoof

32 “Me __”: “Myname is,” inSpain

33 Mrs. Gorbachev34 Big Island city37 Aquarium fish40 Fed. crash site

investigator41 Assured way to

solve acrossword puzzle

43 Moved, as adinghy

45 1940Grant/Russellcomedy

49 First NationalLeaguer witheight consecutive100-RBI seasons

50 Society pageword

51 Pier gp.52 Circle segment55 1962 Rat Pack

remake of“Gunga Din” ... orcollectively, theends of 20-, 28-and 45-Across

59 Island goose60 German crowd?61 Word after dog or

lop62 1-Across vehicle63 Memo words

64 Franklin heater65 Frizzy do66 General __

chicken67 Members of the

flock

DOWN1 Put on2 Wanderer3 Adds one’s two

cents4 Chicken snack5 A headboard is

part of it6 Noted bell ringer7 Rely8 Drafted9 Prefix with

graphic or logical10 Dilapidated11 Like Vegas losers,

so they say12 Program file suffix14 Sportscaster who

wrote “I NeverPlayed theGame”

21 Lash __: attackverbally

22 Belgian river27 Not at all colorful29 As a companion30 __ this world:

alien

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competitor35 Per se36 SiriusXM

Radio subscriber,say

38 Once-in-a-blue-moon events

39 Seed covers42 High card44 Online

connections?

46 Change further,as text

47 Gets the lesson48 Peter of Peter,

Paul & Mary53 Christopher who

playedSuperman

54 Gives up56 Take from the top57 Fabled fiddler58 Can’t stand59 Secretive org.

Tuesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Steven L. Zisser 5/2/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 5/2/12

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Wednesday, May 2, 2012 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo

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Rooms For Rent

NEED A PLACE to live? Take over my lease at Lobo Village from May until Au- gust. $499/mo. 4BDRM/ 4BA. [email protected]

FEMALE NEEDED TO take over Lobo Village lease. $499/mo +1/4utilities.Fully furnished, cable, wifi, pool, work- out facilities. Available May. May rent covered. Contact Courtney 505-412-2780.

FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 2012-2013 lease on Lobo Village room. $517/mo, utilities included. Will pay ap- plication fee, security deposit, and 1st months rent. Contact Kay at 505-331- 1823 or [email protected]

3BDRM 2BA NEAR UNM, nob hill. $364/mo. plus 1/3 utilities. W/D. Two sweet dogs. Call Chae 505-385-1774 or email [email protected]

CLEAN, RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted. Remodeled home 2 blocks from UNM. NP/NS/drugs. 2 rooms: $400/mo or $475 includes utilities andlaundry privileges. 385-3562.

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED FOR 2BDRM on Central and Louisiana. Cin- namon Tree Apartments. $315/mo +electric. 505-231-5955.

FRIENDLY, RESPECTFUL FEMALE roommate needed for the summer at Lobo Village. $500/mo +utilities. Avail- able 5/14. Pool, gym, dishwasher. Call Leann at 575-910-8467 or email [email protected]

SEEKING UNM/ CNM student room- mate male or female: 4BDRM Town- home ONE block from UNM. Freeway Access. W/D. Storage. Parking. Move July 1st! Contact [email protected]

NEED A ROOMMATE? Advertise here! 505-277-5656.

FREE UTILITIES/ WIFI/ BDRM/ laun-dry. Study room. Nice kitchen. Pond, fruit trees, zen/yoga, running/ bike/ bus routes. Serious students only. NS/ND. $475. [email protected]

N.E. HOME, Quiet Carlisle area, parks, bike trails, N/S female only, graduate student preferred, application and lease required. Available 5-1-12. $400/mo. +1/2 utilities. 805-698-5817.

HOUSEMATE WANTED TO share spa- cious 3BDRM house with UNM student just 7 blocks from campus. $475/mo in- cludes utilities, wi-fi, dishwasher, W/D + great yard & quiet neighborhood. Avail- able end of May. Call Richard 505-469-9417.

CASAS DEL RIO: Looking for female to take over lease for shared suite next fal- l/spring semesters. $511/mo. $200 ap- plication fee paid for. Rachael 505-913-9637.

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

• Come to Marron Hall, room 131, show your UNM ID and receive a special rate of 10¢ per word in Personals, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale category.

new mexicoDAILY LOBOCLASSIFIEDs • 30¢ per word per day for five or more consecutive days without changing or cancelling.• 40¢ per word per day for four days or less or non-consecutive days.• Special effects are charged addtionally: logos, bold, italics, centering, blank lines, larger font, etc. • 1 p. m. business day before publication.

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Call 277-5656.• Fax or E-mail: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Fax ad text, dates and category to 277-7531, or e-mail to [email protected].• In person: Pre-pay by cash, check, money order, Visa or MasterCard. Come by room 131 in Marron Hall from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, MasterCard. Mail payment, ad text, dates and category.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230

1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

• All rates include both print and online editions of the Daily Lobo.

• Come to Marron Hall, room 107, show your UNM ID and receive FREE classifi eds in Your Space, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale Category.

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Call 277-5656• Fax or Email: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Fax ad text, dates and catergory to 277-7530 or email to classifi [email protected]• In person: Pre-payment by cash, money order, check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Come by room 107 in Marron Hall from 8:00am to 5:00pm.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Mail payment, ad text, dates and catergory.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

CAMPUS EVENTSHuman Rights and Socail Justice: Work by Taller de Grafica PopularStarts at: 12:00pmLocation: Herstein Latin American GalleryFor more information call: 277-0818.

COMMUNITY EVENTSEdge of ColorStarts at: 9:00amLocation: Tamarind Institute

Edge of Color will showcase Tamarind artists associated with the hard-edge/color-field movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

Hebrew Conversation Class: BeginningStarts at: 5:00pmLocation: 1701 Sigma Chi, NEOffered every Wednesday by Israel Alliance and Hillel.

Jazz ChoirStarts at: 6:00pmLocation: 500 Lomas Blvd. NE

This fun class will help you with vocal techniques and offer opportunities for solos and improvisation. The class concludes with a concert on the last class date.

New Mexico’s Favorite Landscape Plants Over the Past 1,000 Years- LectureStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: 1801 Mountain Rd. NWA short chapter meeting precedes the talk. Native plant books will be on display and available for purchase.

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar

for May 2, 2012Planning your day has never been easier!

Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:

1. Go to www.dailylobo.com

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

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

4. Type in the event information and submit!

Please limit your description to 25 words (although you may type in more, your 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, location and 25 word description! Although events will only publish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.

(505) 226-0168

Low Cost Dental Cleanings, X-Rays & Sealants

UNM Dental Hygiene Clinic

(505) 272-4106

Apply now for our summer training program beginning June 5th.

Application and DSP survey required for immediate

consideration

classifieds

Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 050212

Page 12 / Wednesday, May 2, 2012 New Mexico Daily lobo

Rooms For Rent3BDRM 1.5BA. Near UNM. Share with 2 awesome roommates. Utilities, internet, and cable included. W/D. NP. $430/mo. End of May, early June. 505-974-7476.

PetsRED AND BLUE heeler puppies, 6 weeks, tails docked, $40 OBO Mike @ 382-2516.

For SaleALMOST NEW TARGET microwave. $60 new, asking $40. Other items avail- able. Call after 7pm Mon-Fri, after 12 noon weekends. Call 505-489-8386.

Jobs Off CampusCHILDCARE WORKERS NEEDED for NE Heights church. Sunday mornings and Wednesday mornings for summer. Experience and background check re- quired. Call 856-5040 x120.

SUMMER JOBS TO protect our civil lib- erties. Pay $5,100 - $8,500 for the sum- mer. Work with Grassroots Cam- paigns, inc. on behalf of the ACLU to fight for voter rights and fight discrimina- tion. FT/ career. Call Alex at 505-312-4417.

OFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED in local computer store. Must be good on phones, multi tasking and accounting exp. preferred. P/T $8.00+ DOE. Send Resume to: [email protected]

FALL 2012 TEACH and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean govern- ment.●$1,300/month (15hrs/week) plus air- fares, housing, medical insurance. Must have completed two years of undergrad- uate. Last day to apply: 5/31/12. Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr

NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for sum- mer employment for swimming instruc- tors and lifeguards. Apply at The YMCA 4901 Indian School Rd. NE or call 265-6971.

LIGHTING DESIGNER & Equipment wanted! Small dance recital at AHS 5/17, 5/19, 5/20. Creative fun opportu- nity. Patient and professionalism. 440- 6864 or [email protected]

EARLY BIRD LAWN service now ac- cepting applications for PT mowing jobs. Able to work with some student schedules. Call Bob at 294-2945 for in- formation.

OLO MASCOT. $8/HR;5hrs/wk. Tell us why you want to be our mascot email: [email protected]

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

PRODUCT SUPPORT SPECIALIST: Re- sponsible for technical sales support of new and existing products. Entry Level. Business degree or Technical Degree, sales experience preferably in the solar market. Ability to communicate in verbal and written situations involving cus- tomers. Understand of PV Solar system structural is a plus. Contact Loyda 505-889-3585.

ADVERTISE HERE to potential student employees! Students are looking for summer employment, so call us now! 505-277-5656 or email [email protected]

CLERICAL EMPLOYEE NEEDED for catering company. Knowledge of Quick- books and computers necessary. Has car and customer service experience. Flexible PT hours. Beginning end of May. 505-804-8000 or 505-880-0057.

FALL 2012 ENGLISH Program In Korea (EPIK).●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, air- fare, medical insurance, paid vacation. Must have BA degree. Deadline: May/ 12 **this date is tentative and could change depending on circumstances** Please visit the website www.epik.go.kr

LICENSED SPEECH LANGUAGE Pathologist (CCC’s preferred) for 2012- 2013 with East Central BOCES mem- ber school districts. PreK-12th, competi- tive salary, excellent benefits. Access to vehicle or mileage reimbursement and possible tuition reimbursement. Contact Tracy at 719-775-2342, ext. 101 or email [email protected] ECBOCES is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

WANTED: EGG DONORS, Would you be interested in giving the Gift of Life to an Infertile couple? We are a local Infer- tility Clinic looking for healthy women between the ages of 21-33 who are non- smoking and have a normal BMI, and are interested in anonymous egg dona- tion. The experience is emotionally re- warding and you will be financially com- pensated for your time. All donations are strictly confidential. Interested candi- dates please contact Myra at The Cen- ter for Reproductive Medicine of NM at 505-224-7429.

SUMMER FIREWORKS SALES. Make 2- 4k in ONE week. Locations still avail- able. [email protected] 505-504-2127.

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

PERFECT FULL TIME Summer Job.Alpha Alarm. 505-296-2202.

Jobs On Campus

MAKE-FREE-INCOME.com Connection2Clouds.com 2Save4Ever.com

Volunteers

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

COME HELP BEAT cancer in a GRAND way! The Leukemia and Lymphoma So- ciety is celebrating its 4th annual Grand Finale Gala on Saturday 5-19 from 4-10pm and we need your help! Retail experi- ence a plus. If interested contact Judi Hines @ 872-0141x228.

INTERN OPPORTUNITY - Consult with college radio social network. Knowl- edge of internet radio/facebook integra- tion a plus. E-mail resume: [email protected]

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR Agora Helpline’s Special Summer training! Ap- plication Deadline: May 29th. Apply early, Apply now at AgoraCares.org

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED! AGORA Helpline. Help others-class credit-great experience! Just a few hours a week! 277-3013. Apply online! www.AgoraCares.com

LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS? Call the Daily Lobo Classifieds today at 505-277-5656 Monday-Friday 8am- 5pm or email [email protected] to

place an ad in this section!

DAILY LOBOnew mexicoCCLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

• Come to Marron Hall, room 131, show your UNM ID and receive a special rate of 10¢ per word in Personals, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale category.

new mexicoDAILY LOBOCLASSIFIEDs • 30¢ per word per day for five or more consecutive days without changing or cancelling.• 40¢ per word per day for four days or less or non-consecutive days.• Special effects are charged addtionally: logos, bold, italics, centering, blank lines, larger font, etc. • 1 p. m. business day before publication.

CLASSIFIED PAYMENTINFORMATION

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Call 277-5656.• Fax or E-mail: Pre-payment by Visa or Master Card is required. Fax ad text, dates and category to 277-7531, or e-mail to [email protected].• In person: Pre-pay by cash, check, money order, Visa or MasterCard. Come by room 131 in Marron Hall from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, MasterCard. Mail payment, ad text, dates and category.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEADLINE

UNM IDADVANTAGE

UNM Student Publications MSC03 2230

1 University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM 87131

CLASSIFIEDS ON THE WEB www.dailylobo.com

• All rates include both print and online editions of the Daily Lobo.

• Come to Marron Hall, room 107, show your UNM ID and receive FREE classifi eds in Your Space, Rooms for Rent, or any For Sale Category.

• Phone: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Call 277-5656• Fax or Email: Pre-payment by Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express is required. Fax ad text, dates and catergory to 277-7530 or email to classifi [email protected]• In person: Pre-payment by cash, money order, check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Come by room 107 in Marron Hall from 8:00am to 5:00pm.• Mail: Pre-pay by money order, in-state check, Visa, Discover, MasterCard or American Express. Mail payment, ad text, dates and catergory.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Find your way around the Daily Lobo ClassifiedsAnnouncements

AnnouncementsAuditions

Event RentalsFun, Food, Music

Health and WellnessLooking for YouLost and Found

ServicesTravel

Want to BuyYour Space

HousingApartmentsCo-housing

CondosDuplexes

Houses for RentHouses for SaleHousing WantedProperty for SaleRooms for Rent

Sublets

For SaleAudio/VideoBikes/Cycles

Computer StuffDogs, Cats, Pets

For SaleFurniture

Garage SalesTextbooks

Vehicles for Sale

EmploymentChild Care JobsJobs off CampusJobs on Campus

Jobs WantedVolunteers

Now Hirin

g!

The GREAT Academy

The GREAT Academy is now hiring full and part-time junior, senior, and graduate level Marketing, Business Administration, Computer

Science/Software Developers, and Secondary Education Majors.

The GREAT Academy is a FREE, public charter high school with a mission to ensure that all students gain real-world experience through active

transition. For more information visit www.thegreatacademy.org.

Email cover letter and resume to [email protected]

505-792-0306

The GREAT Academy

The GREAT Academy is now hiring full and part-time junior, senior, and graduate level Marketing, Business Administration, Computer

Science/Software Developers, and Secondary Education Majors.

The GREAT Academy is a FREE, public charter high school with a mission to ensure that all students gain real-world experience through active

transition. For more information visit www.thegreatacademy.org.

Email cover letter and resume to [email protected]

505-792-0306

Are you a junior,senior, or graduate level

Marketing, Business Administration, Computer Science, Health Education or Secondary Education

Major?

is now hiring!

505-792-0306

The GREAT Academy is a FREE, public charter high school with a mission to ensure that all students gain real-world experience through active transition. For more information visit www.thegreatacademy.org.

WHAT?FREE

Daily LoboClassifieds

for students?

Yes!If you are a UNM student, you get free classifieds in the following categories:

Your SpaceRooms for RentFor Sale Categories-- Audio/Video Bikes/Cycles Computer Stuff Pets For Sale

FurnitureGarage SalesPhotoTextbooksVehicles for Sale

The small print: Each ad must be 25 or fewer words, scheduled for 5 or fewer days. Free ads must be for personal use

and only in the listed categories.

To place your free ad, come by Marron Hall, Room 131 and show your student ID,

or email us from your unm email account at

COOL!

[email protected]

107

classifieds