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D AILY L OBO new mexico Godzilla approves see page 4 September 26, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 monday Inside the Daily Lobo A right to vote See page 5 volume 116 issue 26 86 | 56 TODAY Still undefeated See page 12 LOCKSLEY SACKED End-game record: 2-26 Butts arrested on DWI charges in coach’s vehicle Lobo football’s ups and downs in last 3 years by Nathan Farmer [email protected] A possible Lobo football recruit, Joshua Butts, was arrested Saturday on charges of aggravated DWI in a car reg- istered to former head football coach Mike Locksley. According to the police report, the vehicle was registered to Michael and Kia Anika Locksley and had a UNM li- cense plate. Butts was also accused of reckless driving, being a minor in possession of alcohol and driving without a license. ree other individuals, Brian Salazar, Desiree Cordova and Ashley Wellito, all under the age of 21, were reportedly intoxicated in the car. Wellito was arrested after being belligerent and hostile to officers. She threatened that she would use her fa- ther’s power to find out where the po- lice officers lived, the report said. Cordova said Wellito is the girl- friend of current Lobo football player Meiko Locksley, Mike Lockley’s son. Salazar and Cordova cooperated with the officers and were released at the scene after being given misde- meanor citations. According to the police report, Butts was pulled over after speeding and nearly hitting a pedestrian in front of University Stadium. After being pulled over, Butts failed a field sobriety test and blew a 0.16 blood alcohol level, twice the legal lim- it, the report said. e vehicle, a 2002 Ford SUV, was towed from the scene. According to the police report, Butts told officers that Mike Locksley brought him in from Chicago to play for the Lobos. Butts was a teammate of Meiko Locksley while they both attended Centennial High School in Champaign, Illinois. Butts attended Joliet Junior College in Chicago last year and played in eight games as a wide receiver. He is not on the Joliet roster for this year, which makes him eligible to be recruited for the Lobos. UNM released a statement saying that Butts was Meiko Locksley’s friend and was borrowing his car. UNM said he was not a recruit and had no Staff Report Mike Locksley is no longer head coach of the Lobo football team. Paul Krebs announced Sunday that Locksley has been relieved of his duties and that defensive co- ordinator George Barlow will take over as interim coach for the rest of the year. Locksley’s Lobo career was riddled with scandals off the field, including an altercation with for- mer assistant coach J.B. Gerald. He leaves the program with a 2-26 record, a winning percentage just above 7 percent. The writing was on the wall af- ter the Lobos started off the sea- son 0-4 with big losses to Arkansas and Texas Tech and an overtime loss on Saturday to Sam Houston State, a Division 1-AA team. On Saturday afternoon a pos- sible recruit was pulled over and charged with a DWI in a car regis- tered to Locksley. The team held a meeting Sunday afternoon, at which Locksley told the players he would no longer be their head coach. Dec. 9, 2008: Locksley is introduced as the UNM foot- ball head coach. May 15, 2009: Adminis- trative assistant Sylvia Lopez quits and files sexual harass- ment and age discrimination suits against Locksley. She claims she was fired because she is not young enough. The case is settled out of court. June 14, 2009: Byron Bell and Quintell Solomon are ar- rested after an altercation at the Library Bar and Grill down- town. They are suspended, but are later reinstated after a plea agreement, in which the football team agrees not go to downtown bars. Sept. 5, 2009: Lobos lose first game under Locksley: Texas A&M 41, UNM 6. Sept. 20, 2009: Locksley is involved in a physical alterca- tion with former wide receivers coach J.B. Gerald. He accuses Locksley of choking and punch- ing him, and Locksley gets a 10-day unpaid suspension. Nov. 21, 2009: Locksley gets his first win: UNM 29, Col- orado State 27. Nov. 28, 2009: Season ends with a TCU 51, New Mexico 10 game. Season ends 1-11. Aug. 25, 2010: Running back Brandon Lewis’ dorm is burglarized. The two suspects are on the football team and, while no one is charged, Julian Blair, a possible suspect in the case, is later kicked off the team for violating team rules. Sept. 4, 2010: UNM los- es to Oregon 72-0 in the first game of 2010. Nov. 6, 2010: Locksley gets his second win: UNM 34, Wyoming 31. Nov. 26, 2010: Lobo football players Joie Harris, Bryant Williams, and Julian Conley are involved in a fight with bouncers at Lotus Nightclub. Criminal charges are brought up on all three and they are suspended for the final home game of the season against TCU. Nov. 27, 2010: UNM loses its final game against TCU 66- 17 to have back-to-back 1-11 seasons. Sept. 3, 2011: UNM loses its opening game of the sea- son to Colorado State, 14-10. Sept. 24, 2011: During a game against Sam Houston State a possible recruit is pulled over and charged with DWI while driving a car registered to Locksley. Sept. 25, 2011: Locksley is relieved of his coaching duties. Junfu Han / Daily Lobo Former UNM football head coach Mike Locksley talks to the players during a timeout during the game against Texas Tech on Sept 17, at the University Stadium. affiliation with the Lobo football team. Salazar, a junior at UNM, said that Butts told him in the car that he was planning on playing at UNM. “He said in the car that he was a re- cruit from Chicago and that he was go- ing to be a player for UNM,” he said. “He also said that he was Locksley’s son’s best friend.” Salazar said he lived close to the stadium, and for the short time that he was in the car he did not see Butts show any signs of being intoxicated. “I live only a five-minute walk away from the stadium, but took the ride as opposed to walking,” he said. “I didn’t know he was drinking and he did not seem drunk. He played it off really well. He seemed perfectly fine.” Cordova, also a UNM student, said Butts left with Wellito from the Sun Village Apartments and then picked her and Salazar up. She said she did not notice Butts driving erratically. “I did not see him driving badly, but they pulled him over and did a Breathalyzer test and he ended up getting arrested,” she said. “Ashley wasn’t cooperative with the police and they ended up arresting her, too.” Defensive coordinator George Barlow to coach for interim “I didn’t know he was drinking and he did not seem drunk. He played it off really well. He seemed perfectly fine.” ~Brian Salazar eyewitness George Barlow Age: 43 Position: Interim head coach/ defensive coordinator Experience: three years at UNM Alma Mater: Marshall University, 1990
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Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 092611

DAILY LOBOnew mexico Godzilla

approvessee page 4

September 26, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895monday

Inside theDaily Lobo

A right to vote

See page 5volume 116 issue 26 86 | 56

TODAYStill

undefeated

See page 12

LOCKSLEY SACKEDEnd-game record: 2-26Butts arrested on DWI

charges in coach’s vehicleLobo football ’s ups and downs in last 3 years

by Nathan [email protected]

A possible Lobo football recruit, Joshua Butts, was arrested Saturday on charges of aggravated DWI in a car reg-istered to former head football coach Mike Locksley.

According to the police report, the vehicle was registered to Michael and Kia Anika Locksley and had a UNM li-cense plate.

Butts was also accused of reckless driving, being a minor in possession of alcohol and driving without a license.

� ree other individuals, Brian Salazar, Desiree Cordova and Ashley Wellito, all under the age of 21, were reportedly intoxicated in the car.

Wellito was arrested after being belligerent and hostile to o� cers. She threatened that she would use her fa-ther’s power to � nd out where the po-lice o� cers lived, the report said.

Cordova said Wellito is the girl-friend of current Lobo football player Meiko Locksley, Mike Lockley’s son.

Salazar and Cordova cooperated with the o� cers and were released at the scene after being given misde-meanor citations.

According to the police report, Butts was pulled over after speeding and nearly hitting a pedestrian in front of University Stadium.

After being pulled over, Butts failed a � eld sobriety test and blew a 0.16 blood alcohol level, twice the legal lim-it, the report said.

� e vehicle, a 2002 Ford SUV, was towed from the scene.

According to the police report, Butts told o� cers that Mike Locksley brought him in from Chicago to play for the Lobos.

Butts was a teammate of Meiko Locksley while they both attended Centennial High School in Champaign, Illinois.

Butts attended Joliet Junior College in Chicago last year and played in eight games as a wide receiver. He is not on the Joliet roster for this year, which makes him eligible to be recruited for the Lobos.

UNM released a statement saying that Butts was Meiko Locksley’s friend and was borrowing his car. UNM said he was not a recruit and had no

Sta� Report

Mike Locksley is no longer head coach of the Lobo football team.

Paul Krebs announced Sunday that Locksley has been relieved of his duties and that defensive co-ordinator George Barlow will take over as interim coach for the rest of the year.

Locksley’s Lobo career was riddled with scandals off the field, including an altercation with for-mer assistant coach J.B. Gerald. He leaves the program with a 2-26

record, a winning percentage just above 7 percent.

The writing was on the wall af-ter the Lobos started off the sea-son 0-4 with big losses to Arkansas and Texas Tech and an overtime loss on Saturday to Sam Houston State, a Division 1-AA team.

On Saturday afternoon a pos-sible recruit was pulled over and charged with a DWI in a car regis-tered to Locksley.

The team held a meeting Sunday afternoon, at which Locksley told the players he would no longer be their head coach.

Dec. 9, 2008: Locksley is introduced as the UNM foot-ball head coach.

May 15, 2009: Adminis-trative assistant Sylvia Lopez quits and fi les sexual harass-ment and age discrimination suits against Locksley. She claims she was fi red because she is not young enough. The case is settled out of court.

June 14, 2009: Byron Bell and Quintell Solomon are ar-rested after an altercation at the Library Bar and Grill down-town. They are suspended, but are later reinstated after a plea agreement, in which the football team agrees not go to downtown bars.

Sept. 5, 2009: Lobos lose fi rst game under Locksley: Texas A&M 41, UNM 6.

Sept. 20, 2009: Locksley is involved in a physical alterca-tion with former wide receivers coach J.B. Gerald. He accuses Locksley of choking and punch-ing him, and Locksley gets a 10-day unpaid suspension.

Nov. 21, 2009: Locksley gets his fi rst win: UNM 29, Col-orado State 27.

Nov. 28, 2009: Season ends with a TCU 51, New Mexico 10 game. Season ends 1-11.

Aug. 25, 2010: Running back Brandon Lewis’ dorm is burglarized. The two suspects are on the football team and, while no one is charged, Julian Blair, a possible suspect in the case, is later kicked off the team for violating team rules.

Sept. 4, 2010: UNM los-es to Oregon 72-0 in the fi rst game of 2010.

Nov. 6, 2010: Locksley gets his second win: UNM 34, Wyoming 31.

Nov. 26, 2010: Lobo football players Joie Harris, Bryant Williams, and Julian Conley are involved in a fi ght with bouncers at Lotus Nightclub. Criminal charges are brought up on all three and they are suspended for the fi nal home game of the season against TCU.

Nov. 27, 2010: UNM loses its fi nal game against TCU 66-17 to have back-to-back 1-11 seasons.

Sept. 3, 2011: UNM loses its opening game of the sea-son to Colorado State, 14-10.

Sept. 24, 2011: During a game against Sam Houston State a possible recruit is pulled over and charged with DWI while driving a car registered to Locksley.

Sept. 25, 2011: Locksley is relieved of his coaching duties.

Junfu Han / Daily LoboFormer UNM football head coach Mike Locksley talks to the players during a timeout during the game against Texas Tech on Sept 17, at the University Stadium.

a� liation with the Lobo football team.Salazar, a junior at UNM, said that

Butts told him in the car that he was planning on playing at UNM.

“He said in the car that he was a re-cruit from Chicago and that he was go-ing to be a player for UNM,” he said. “He also said that he was Locksley’s son’s best friend.”

Salazar said he lived close to the stadium, and for the short time that he was in the car he did not see Butts show any signs of being intoxicated.

“I live only a � ve-minute walk away from the stadium, but took the ride as opposed to walking,” he said. “I didn’t know he was drinking and he did not seem drunk. He played it o� really well. He seemed perfectly � ne.”

Cordova, also a UNM student, said Butts left with Wellito from the Sun Village Apartments and then picked her and Salazar up.

She said she did not notice Butts driving erratically.

“I did not see him driving badly, but they pulled him over and did a Breathalyzer test and he ended up getting arrested,” she said. “Ashley wasn’t cooperative with the police and they ended up arresting her, too.”

Defensive coordinator George Barlow to coach for interim

“I didn’t know he was drinking and he did not seem drunk.

He played it off really well. He seemed perfectly fi ne.”

~Brian Salazareyewitness

George BarlowAge: 43Position: Interim head coach/defensive coordinatorExperience: three years at UNMAlma Mater: Marshall University, 1990

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 092611

PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboMoNday, SepteMber 26, 2011

volume 116 issue 26Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

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

Printed by Signature

OffSet

Editor-in-ChiefChris Quintana Managing EditorElizabeth ClearyNews EditorChelsea ErvenAssistant News EditorLuke HolmenStaff ReporterCharlie ShipleyPhoto EditorZach GouldAssistant Photo EditorDylan Smith

Culture EditorAlexandra SwanbergAssistant Culture EditorNicole PerezSports EditorNathan FarmerAssistant Sports EditorCesar DavilaCopy ChiefCraig DubykMultimedia EditorJunfu Han

Design DirectorJackson MorseyDesign AssistantsConnor ColemanJason GabelElyse JalbertStephanie KeanSarah LynasAdvertising ManagerShawn JimenezSales ManagerNick ParsonsClassified ManagerRenee Tolson

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

by Charlie [email protected]

Several bike rental programs currently exist at UNM, and more may be on the way.

UNM Recreation Services’ rent-al program allows students to rent bikes, U-locks and helmets for $40 per week or $10 per day. Park-ing and Transportation Services allows UNM departments to rent bikes for free to faculty and staff under its Lobo Bikes program.

UNM bike shop coordinator Noel Ortiz said he started Recreation Service’s bike rental program two years ago to fill a need he saw in Albuquerque and on campus.

“When I tried to find a local bike rental program, I couldn’t find one,” he said. “The closest

place to go if you wanted to rent a bike was Taos. The response is quite amazing, but we have to do constant promotions to make people aware there are bikes for rent.”

Student Matthew Wilder, along with his business partner Richard Rivas, developed LoboBike, different than Lobo Bikes, which repairs and recycles bikes that would have been thrown away.

“I want to recycle bikes,“ Wilder said. “There are a lot of bikes going through the recycling center that need homes, kind of like puppies, and I want to give them a good home. I’d rather them be recycled and ridden rather than just end up in an arroyo or landfill.”

Wilder said another goal of LoboBike is to promote alternative transportation across campus. He

advertises his program to students in UNM’s sustainability studies program.

“There’s about a dozen bikes every month that come through to give away, so I can’t advertise this too loudly to everyone,” he said. “I’m mainly targeting the sustain-ability studies classes right now.”

Wilder said he hopes to work

with PATS to make his LoboBike program a permanent fixture on campus.

He said over the last semester and a half, about 25 students have gotten a bike from the program.

ASUNM president Jaymie Roybal is also trying to get a bike rental program going. She said she hopes to create a similar model to one she saw while studying in England.

“We’re working with Parking and Transportation right now to see where we want these bikes, and how many of them, how much it’s going to cost, and how safe it is,” she said. “We’re still in the very early stages, but we’re working on pulling in some sponsors to help fund the initial costs of the program and figure out the recurring costs to keep it

on campus for the future.” Roybal said the idea involves

bike kiosks located throughout north, central and south campus. Students would swipe their Lobo Cards or their credit cards and rent the bikes for an as-yet un-determined period of time, she said.

“My hope is to charge students no more than $1 or $2,” Roybal said. “But those are all things to be determined.”

Ortiz said students could ben-efit from a kiosk-based system, but there are factors that need to be taken into consideration.

“A really conscious study has to be put in place as to what are the demographics, the availabili-ty and access to maintenance,” he said. “How are they going to bud-get for that?”

Pedal peddlers: rental bike boom on campus

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. No one correctly guessed last week’s location, which was taken outside the new biology building.

where are we?

Dylan Smith / Daily Lobo

“Two years ago, when I tried to find a local

bike rental program, I couldn’t find one,”

~Noel Ortizbike shop coordinator

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 092611

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news Monday, SepteMber 26, 2011 / page 3

by Luke [email protected]

Poorly designed directories and website systems combined with a lack of funding are stopping some students from reaching faculty and staff.

“It’s ridiculous, I can’t get ahold of anyone,” said student Matthew Santos. “And then when you go to look someone up in the directo-ry, they either aren’t listed under the correct number, or because you can’t exactly remember how to spell their name nothing comes up.”

Santos said trying to find indi-vidual departments through the search feature is even worse.

“The most hilarious thing is that if you type in Scholes Hall in the UNM website search bar, the (phone) number for the hall isn’t even on the first page, last time I checked,” he said.

The directory has not been updated to reflect changes at the University, especially at the administrative level.

For example, the directory still lists Wynn Goering as vice provost of Academic Affairs, but Goering said in an email that he is no lon-ger a part of the organization.

Recent budget cuts have

forced some departments, such as English and political science, to cut teachers’ office phones, making many professors available only through email.

Teacher assistants for several classes in the music and biology department have no offices, no listed office hours on syllabi and the phone numbers listed for them on the directory are sometimes for a departmental office phone rather than a personal contact number.

Senior University communica-tions representative Carolyn Gon-zales said faculty and staff, not IT or departments, are responsible for keeping things updated.

“(It’s) a battle that we have fought for years,” she said.

Gonzales said UNM used to print a paper directory and ad-ministrators would verify contact information for their departments. She said the print directory was discontinued years ago, and now individuals are responsible for their own information.

“Not too helpful, is it?” she said. “No person within a depart-ment has access to or responsibil-ity for individuals’ information on Banner, so if someone fails to keep his or her info current, it becomes useless.”

Senior University communica-

tions representative Karen Went-worth said there is no standard, university-wide website design.

Departments are left to con-struct and maintain their own sites with no consistency from site to site, making them somewhat diffi-cult to navigate.

The ASUNM website still reads “have a good summer” and lists the election results from last year, but doesn’t have biographies up for any current student leaders aside from the webmaster.

“No one at the University forces departments to maintain and up-date their websites,” Wentworth said. “University Communications and Marketing … offers a paid ser-vice to update websites for depart-ments who want to outsource their website work.”

Some professors are putting students first by skipping the Uni-versity’s communication system altogether.

C.K. Barlow, an instructor in the music department, said she gives her personal cell phone number to students.

“In the years I have been teach-ing, I’ve never had a student abuse it and I would like students to be able to contact me sooner rather than later if they are having a prob-lem,” she said.

Communication breakdown

by Russell ContrerasThe Associated Press

The number of illegal immigrants apprehended along the Mexico-New Mexico border is expected to drop again and is following a steep decline that began five years ago, according to officials at U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The fiscal year ending Oct. 1 will see another big decrease in arrests from the prior year, and is likely a result of more border patrol agents and new technology infrastruc-ture, said agency spokesman Doug Mosier.

Mosier said the arrests are a 90 percent drop from five years ago in the El Paso sector, which covers New Mexico and two Texas counties. He said that in the early 1990s the sector was sometimes experiencing 1,000

apprehensions per day. Today, that number is around 20 to 30, he said.

“We have better systems in place … new agents and new technology that are helping,” he said. “We are trying to remain proactive.”

Final apprehension numbers are expected to be released after the fis-cal year.

Last year, Randy Hill, chief of the U.S. Border Patrol’s El Paso sector, said officers apprehended 7,800 im-migrants during the 2009-2010 fis-cal year in New Mexico. More than 76,000 immigrants were arrested in New Mexico during the 2004-05 fis-cal year.

Hill said last year that officials acknowledged slightly less than three-quarters of the sector’s 268 miles of border to be “under control” by Border Patrol standards.

Cristina Parker, a spokeswoman

for the Border Network for Human Rights, an immigrant advocacy group based in El Paso, Texas, said she feared that the drop in apprehensions showed that would-be immigrants are foregoing trying to cross through urban areas, instead aiming for more remote, deadly terrains.

Border arrests continue to fall

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 092611

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

September 26, 2011

Page

4

In the story “19-year-old driver arrested for drunk driving in car registered to Locksley,” a possible football recruit was arrested on charges of drunk driving in a vehicle registered to former head coach Mike Locksley. Readers at DailyLobo.com responded:

by ‘Loboserver’Posted on Sunday

“Can we please cut football already? It’d be a very smart move that only true visionary leaders on our campus could see. � e BCS football pow-ers are consolidating their power, and it’ll be-come pretty obvious to us and the rest of the mar-ginalized programs in the country that football is never going to be a consistent stream of revenue for us. Furthermore, it’d allow us to truly show a commitment to our academic mission by divert-ing resources and attention towards the true pur-pose of the University of New Mexico.”

by ‘Lobo Fan’Posted on Sunday

“What an embarrassment to our school! Enough with keeping the football coach on. It’s time to let him go. He’s embarrassed UNM enough, and the damage is already done. Fire the athletic director for hiring him and � re the football coach. You can’t help but won-der how the football team must feel having to play for this loser. It’s time to let your voices be heard and demand changes! We deserve better representation!”

by ‘UNM Student ‘14’Posted on Sunday

“I agree with Lobo Fan. When I was younger and Rocky was the coach, my father and I would attend almost every game. Now that it is my 2nd year here, Locksley’s the coach, I have no hope for our team. Last year, I went to many games, only to be very disappointed. � e fact that hardly any students showed up to the homecoming game, and on the same night underage students are ar-rested for driving the coach’s car (how did they come into possession of his car?) only increases my dislike of the Lobos. Not of the students, but of Locksley. Lastly, if his record with us is 2-22, and UNM knew we were going to lose, I think it’s about time to buy out. We need a new coach who can help the Lobos get their wins back!”

by Elaine S. PlotkinDaily Lobo Guest Columnist

I’m sitting here at my computer in Houston, Texas and wanted to let you all know that this morning, I “Took One for Raymond” by hav-ing my annual � u shot.

For those of you who may be new to the UNM campus or have no idea what I’m talking about, I’d like to explain.Raymond is my son. He was a freshman nu-clear engineering major in the fall of 2009. He was from Houston and a student in the engi-neering living/learning community, living on campus at the Redondo Village apartments.

He absolutely loved everything about be-ing a student at UNM: eating at La Posada, taking 18 hours of classes that were very chal-lenging and taught by enthusiastic faculty, and meeting other students from all over the state of New Mexico, the United States and the world.

Like many of you, he belonged to campus organizations such as HESA, ANES and Hillel, and he attended athletic games and residence hall events. He made many new friends, with whom he shared great times. Everything was going great … until he caught the � u. � at’s when life as we knew it changed forever.In the fall of 2009, there was a � u pandemic. Even if you had taken your seasonal � u shot (which Raymond had), you needed an ex-tra immunization for protection against the H1N1 virus.

� at vaccine was unavailable to those who weren’t high-risk patients. Even then, one couldn’t � nd the vaccine until well into December 2009 and January 2010. Unfortunately, that was too late for our Raymond. Within � ve days of contracting the H1N1 virus (swine � u), he died at UNM Hospital on Nov. 11, 2009 despite the valiant e� orts of the sta� of physicians and nurses of the ECMO team in the ICU.

� e H1N1 � u virus attacked Raymond’s lungs and heart, doing irreparable damage that ultimately led to his sudden death.Since that time, our family has done a number of things to forever link Raymond (and our family) with UNM, because that is what Raymond would have wanted us to do.

In his memory, we began the “Take One for Raymond” initiative last year, which is now the Take One for Raymond Foundation and is in the process of becoming a non-pro� t organization.

Last year, the � nal � u clinic on the UNM campus was a “Take One for Raymond” event, and almost 600 faculty, sta� and students were immunized for the � u within a four-hour period.

� is year, all four on-campus � u clinics will be “Take One for Raymond” events. � e � rst one will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 28, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the SUB Atrium (shac.unm.edu/in� uenza.htm for more details). It is the goal of the UNM Student Health and Counseling Center, the UNM Hospital and the Plotkin family for all students, faculty and sta� who are 18 years of age and older to go and receive their free � u shot for Raymond this � u season.

Our family wants to particularly reach out this year to all those students living in the residence halls, as our Raymond did. � e � u is a very serious virus. Even in a non-pandemic year, one can become quite ill and miss days of school or work. It is also contagious. College students are not invincible and do get sick.

If you have had � u shots in the past or have been advised by your families and hometown physicians to get one this year, please listen and do so. You will not only help protect your-self, but you will be protecting those around you as well.

All we ask is that everyone considers taking a � u shot, and if you’re on the fence about it, please think about it again. No family wants to hear that a loved one is sick in bed with the � u.It is our intent to educate and inform every-one about the importance of � u immuniza-tion. We do this because we wouldn’t want any other family to have to go through what our family has these past (almost) two years now without our son. � at is why we will do everything we can do to ask each of you to take the � u shot, if you are able to do so.

If you aren’t sure or have questions about whether you can take a � u shot, don’t hesitate to ask your family physician, health provider, student health clinic or just come by and ask at the � u clinic. � e � u shot this year does have protection against several � u strains, including H1N1.We hope that everyone on the UNM campus will come out in large numbers to “Take One for Raymond” this � u season because Raymond is no longer able to take one himself.

When you see the “Take One for Raymond” logo, please know that it was specially designed with UNM in mind (note the colors), the way that Raymond would have wanted, forever to be associated with the University of New Mexico.Here’s hoping that UNM students, faculty

LAST WEEK’S POLL RESULTS:

THIS WEEK’S POLL:

How do you feel on campus when approached by a homeless person?

Head football coach Mike Locksley was relieved of his coaching duties on Sunday. How do you feel about his departure?

Perfectly safe, I have no reason to be afraid.

Good, he didn’t win games and was hurting the Lobo’s reputations with his o� -� eld actions.

Annoyed, I know I am not in danger, but I also don’t like being harassed.

Indi� erent, I don’t follow the football team or anyone involved with it.

Uncomfortable, you never know what anyone, homeless or not, might be capable of.

Bad, he isn’t to blame for the football team’s in-ability to win a game, and he was never given a fair chance.

Afraid, I have been harassed into giving money because of fear of physical violence.

14%

19%

60%

7%

GO TO DAILYLOBO.COM

TO VOTE D D L

Out of 101 responses

FROM THE WEB

Student’s legacy inspires vaccine drive

EDITORIAL BOARD

Chris QuintanaEditor-in-chief

Elizabeth ClearyManaging editor

Chelsea ErvenNews editor

“We hope that everyone on the UNM campus will come

out in large numbers to “Take One for Raymond” this flu season because Raymond is no longer able to take one

himself.”

and sta� will “Take One for Raymond” this � u season.

Elaine S. Plotkin is Raymond Plotkin’s mother and Co-Founder of the “Take One for

Raymond” Foundation

Editor’s Note: To make a donation to the endowed Raymond E. Plotkin Engineering Scholarship on the UNM campus, checks should be made payable to the UNM Foundation (memo Raymond Plotkin Scholarship) and mailed to Courtney Ganstine, UNM School of Engineering, MSC01 1140, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131. For more information, please call 277-0664 or email [email protected]

LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY

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

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Monday, SepteMber 26, 2011 / page 5newsNew Mexico Daily lobo

*Offer ends 10/31/11. Offer available to qualifying residential customers. PURE rate of $29.95/mo. requires a 9-month term agreement (after which the rate reverts to the then-current standard rate), and applies to up to 12 Mbps service. An additional monthly fee (including professional installation, if applicable) and a shipping and handling fee will apply to customer’s modem or router. General – Services and offers not available everywhere. CenturyLink may change or cancel services or substitute similar services at its sole discretion without notice. Offer, plans, and stated rates are subject to change and may vary by service area. Requires credit approval and deposit may be required. Additional restrictions apply. Terms and Conditions – All products and services listed are governed by tariffs, terms of service, or terms and conditions posted at www.centurylink.com. Taxes, fees and surcharges – Applicable taxes, fees, and surcharges include a Carrier Universal Service charge, National Access Fee surcharge, a one-time High-Speed Internet activation fee, state and local fees that vary by area and certain in-state surcharges. Cost recovery fees are not taxes or government-required charges for use. Taxes, fees, and surcharges apply based on standard monthly, not promotional, rates. Call for a listing of applicable taxes, fees, and surcharges. Pure Broadband – Unless eligible customers properly exercise satisfaction guarantee described above, as determined by service location, an early termination fee will apply equal to the applicable monthly recurring service fee multiplied by the number of months remaining in the term, up to $200. Connection speeds are based on sync rates. Download speeds will be up to 15% lower due to network requirements and may vary for reasons such as customer location, websites accessed, Internet congestion and customer equipment. Direct connection and/or consistency claim(s) is based on providing High-Speed Internet customers with a dedicated, virtual-circuit connection between their homes and the CenturyLink central offi ce. © 2011 CenturyLink, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The CenturyLink mark, pathways logo, the mark PURE and certain CenturyLink product names are the property of CenturyLink, Inc. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. LM.000.CENLADA.0711

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by Erica WernerThe Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is testing out his newly combative message on the liberal West Coast, aiming to re-energize faithful Democratic voters who have grown disenchanted with him.

The trip, which begins Sunday and includes fundraisers from Seattle to Hollywood and San Diego, comes as Obama has shifted from seeking compromise with Republicans on Capitol Hill to calling out House Speaker John Boehner and others by name. The president has criticized them as obstructionists and demanded their help in passing his $447 billion jobs bill.

This approach is a relief to Dem-ocratic activists fed up by what they viewed as the president’s ceding ground to the GOP on tax cuts and other issues when the economy has stalled and unemployment is stuck above 9 percent.

Obama’s three-day trip offers him the chance to try to reassure some of his most liberal and deep-pocketed

supporters with his aggressive new message as the 2012 campaign revs up.

He can probably look forward to a friendly welcome from invited fund-raiser guests, including those at pri-vate events with ticket prices as high as $35,800. But liberal activists are making plans to greet Obama along the way with demonstrations criticiz-ing his policies or reminding him they want him to do more.

“We want to see Obama stand up as strongly as he can to fight for the people of this country who are working out there to make ends meet,” said Kathy Cummings, communications director for the Washington State Labor Council. The council was helping organize a demonstration outside Seattle’s Paramount Theater, the site of an Obama fundraiser Sunday.

Obama and the Republican presidential candidates are working overtime to raise campaign cash ahead of an important Sept. 30 reporting deadline that will give a snapshot of their financial strength. Obama’s West Coast visit is heavy

on fundraisers: two each in Seattle and the San Francisco area Sunday, followed by one in San Diego on Monday and two in Los Angeles.

The expected haul: $4 million or more.

He scheduled a town hall-style event for Monday in the Silicon Valley hosted by social networking company

LinkedIn. The trip ends Tuesday with a speech to supporters in Denver, where he accepted the Democratic nomination three years ago.

Obama will work to sell the job proposal, which combines tax cuts, unemployment benefits and public works spending. The bill faces a hos-tile reception on Capitol Hill, partic-ularly because Obama wants to pay for it with tax increases opposed by Republicans.

If he can’t persuade Congress to pass the bill, Obama has said he wants to make sure the public knows who’s standing in the way.

Jobs are a major concern in California, where unemployment stands at 12.1 percent, the highest of any state except Nevada.

Mark DiCamillo, director of California’s Field Poll, said that has contributed to a softening of support for Obama among Democratic and independent voters. Obama’s job approval rating dropped to 46 percent among Californians in a Field Poll this month. Among Democrats it is 69 percent, but that is down 10 percentage points from June.

“Californians voted for him by 24 points in 2008, and the Democrats and nonpartisans were the backbone of his support and he’s losing some of that now,” DiCamillo said. “I think there’s a lot of frustration in California about Washington. … They’re looking for Obama to do something.”

The summer’s nasty debate over raising the government’s borrowing limit turned off voters. Many liber-als bemoaned the deal that cleared the way for a higher debt ceiling, with Obama agreeing to Republican de-mands for steep budget cuts without new taxes.

But Democratic supporters are heartened by the jobs plan and Obama’s insistence that Congress must raise taxes to pay for it. They’re hoping that the confrontational Obama they’re seeing now is the same one they’ll see through the 2012 campaign.

“We wish that his fighting spirit had been there a few months ago, but it’s here now,” said Rick Jacobs, head of the Courage Campaign, a progres-sive online organizing network in California.

by Abdullah Al-Shihri and Maamoun YoussefThe Associated Press

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi King Abdullah announced Sunday that the nation’s women will gain the right to vote and run as candidates in local elections beginning in 2015 in a major advancement for the rights of women in the deeply conservative Muslim kingdom.

In his annual speech before his advisory assembly, or Shura Council, the Saudi monarch said he ordered the step after consult-ing with the nation’s top religious clerics, whose advice carries great weight in the kingdom.

“We refuse to marginalize the role of women in Saudi society and

in every aspect, within the rules of Sharia,” Abdullah said, referring to the Islamic law that governs many aspects of life in the kingdom.

The right to vote is by far the biggest change introduced by Abdullah, considered a reformer since he became the country’s de facto ruler in 1995 during the illness of King Fahd. Abdullah formally ascended to the throne upon Fahd’s death in August 2005.

The kingdom’s great oil wealth and generous handouts to citizens have largely insulated it from the unrest sweeping the Arab world. But the king has taken steps to quiet rumblings of discontent that largely centered on the eastern oil-producing region populated by the country’s Shiite Muslim minority.

Mindful of the unrest, which

reached Saudi Arabia’s doorstep with street protests and a dead-ly crackdown in neighboring Bahrain, King Abdullah pledged roughly $93 billion in financial support to boost jobs and services for Saudis in March.

Seizing on the season of protest in the Arab world, Saudi women’s groups have also staged public defiance of the kingdom’s ban on female driving. Saudi authorities went relatively easy on the wom-en, who took to the roads earlier this year and gained worldwide at-tention through social media.

Abdullah said the changes an-nounced Sunday would also al-low women to be appointed to the Shura Council, the advisory body selected by the king that is cur-rently all male.

Obama heads west to start off 2012 campaign

Saudi women to vote in 2015

“We want to see Obama stand up as

strongly as he can to fight for the people of this country who

are working out there to make ends meet,”

~Kathy CummingsWash. labor council

communitcation director

Associated PressA Saudi Arabian woman attends a traditional Arda dance, or war dance, during the Janadriyah Festival of Heritage and Culture on the outskirts of the Saudi capital Riyadh.

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 092611

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Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Monday, SepteMber 26, 2011 / page 7New Mexico Daily lobo coupon bonanza

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Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Page 8 / Monday, SePteMber 26, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobosports

CongratulateLast Week’s

Lobo Winners!

Men’s Soccer defeated Loyola Marymount 2-0

Women’s Soccer defeated Oklahoma 2-1 New Mexico State 4-0

by Cesar [email protected]

The UNM Volleyball team won game one, and then it was done.

The Lobos (7-4) fell to Texas Christian University (14-1) in three of four games: 25-18, 16-25, 21-25, 19-25, in front of 2,272 fans on ‘Jam Johnson’ and ‘Love Red, Live Green’ night Friday at Johnson Center.

Early on, the Lobos took con-trol defensively as they held the Horned Frogs to a -.027 attack percentage in the first game.

TCU came out in game two, turned it around and never looked back.

“We lost focus a little bit,” freshman middle blocker Chantale Riddle said. “We need to play a little harder. They came out ready to play and we didn’t.”

The Horned Frogs took game two after a 12-2 start. In game three, the Lobos went up 15-6, but TCU’s blocking and ability to find gaps in the Lobos’ defense helped them finish on a 19-6 run.

TCU finished off the Lobos in game four, with the Horned Frogs’ best hitting percentage of the night at .341.

The Lobos have made it a habit of starting conference play on a bad note and now have lost nine straight conference openers.

Outside hitter Kelly Williamson, who led the team offensively with 16 kills, said the passing and defense could have been better.

“They came out and did a good job, and we didn’t necessarily have a response for them,” Williamson said.

Middle blocker Ashley Rhoades finished the match with 13 kills,

lobo volleyball

Loss a matter of lost focus

Isabel Hees / Daily LoboChantale Riddle sprints towards the ball in a game at Johnson Center on Friday. The Lobos lost their home conference opener to TCU 3-1.

but she struggled getting the ball past the TCU blockers.

“In scouting us, they knew she (Rhoades) was going to out the go-to hitter, and they did a good job with that,” Williamson said.

Senior Allison Buck led the Lobos defensively with 26 digs and setter Mariah Agre finished with 33 assists.

The Lobos take on Texas Tech tonight at Johnson Center. The Red Raiders are 13-2 this sea-son and, like the Lobos, are com-ing off a conference-opener loss against Iowa State.

Head coach Jeff Nelson coached Texas Tech from 1995-2003 and left the program as the second most successful coach in the school’s history. This will be the first time Nelson coach-es against the Red Raiders since leaving.

“It’s going to be exciting for him to see how Texas Tech has been doing since he’s been gone,” Buck said.

Williamson said the team has to bounce back after the TCU loss.

“We know how to play volleyball,” Williamson said. “We’re going to go practice and we’re going to get it done. We just need to want it more.”

“We know how to play volleyball.

We’re going to go practice and we’re

going to get it done. We just need to want it more.”~Kelly Williamson

outside hitter

Up Next

Volleyball vs. Texas Tech.

Today

7 p.m.

Johnson Center

Page 9: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Monday, SepteMber 26, 2011 / page 9New Mexico Daily lobo sports

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Chavurat High Holiday Service Schedule

Erev Rosh Hashanah-Wednesday, September 28 6:30-8pmRosh Hashanah I- Thursday, September 29 9:30am-1:30pm Children‛s Service at 11am Tashlich at approx. 1:30pm following services at UNM Duck PondRosh Hashanah II- Friday September 30 9:30am-1:30pm

The Following services are all at the Alumni Chapel on the UNM campus (childcare will be available for all services)

Jenny Marie Ames Scholarship Six (6) $500 scholarships

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DAILY LOBOnew mexico

by Mundo [email protected]

Former UNM head football coach Mike Locksley was very emo-tional after what would be his last game with the Lobos.

“It was unacceptable to lose that game,” Locksley said. “Right now we’re not a really good team. We’re not doing what it takes to win foot-ball games.”

The team lost in overtime 48-45 to the Sam Houston State University Bearkats.

UNM sent the game into over-time with a 20-yard touchdown pass with only 27 seconds remaining but could only score a field goal in over-time. SHSU scored a touchdown on its first possession to win the game.

The Lobos weren’t supposed to lose to SHSU, an FCS (Football Championship Subdivision) school, formerly Division II.

SHSU was put on the schedule and paid to travel to UNM as an easy win for the Lobos.

lobo football

Blunders mar ‘gimme’ game

Laurisa Galvan / Daily LoboDevonta Tabannah tries to block Brian Bell of the Sam Houston Bearkats in University Stadium on Saturday. The Lobos fell to Sam Houston State in overtime 48-45 in what was Mike Locksley’s last game as head coach.

It looked good for the Lobos in the beginning of the game, when wide receiver Deon Long returned the opening kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown.

After that, the Bearkats scored two unanswered touchdowns. With 6:35 left in the first quarter, SHSU running back Tim Flanders scored on a 61-yard rush, the longest play from scrimmage that the Lobos have given up all season.

Despite the Lobos being out-worked on offense, they didn’t let the Bearkats get too far ahead. The teams scored touchdowns one right after the other. At halftime, the score was tied at 21.

The second half of the game was more of the same story, with SHSU running the ball and UNM having trouble on offense.

Quarterback Tarean Austin was benched in the third quarter for B.R. Holbrook.

With 7:33 left in the game, SHSU’s Flanders scored another touchdown on a 53-yard run, mak-

ing the score 42-28 in their favor. UNM running back Crusoe

Gongbay scored a touchdown on a 1-yard rush, making the score 42-35, with 5:56 left in the game.

On the final drive of the game, Holbrook drove the team 80 yards down the field and capped it off with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Deon Long with 27 seconds left, to tie the game at 42.

After being unable to get into the end zone, the Lobos settled for a field goal from James Aho, giving them a three-point lead.

The Bearkats then scored a touchdown on their first possession, immediately giving them the win.

Freshman Deon Long had the best game of his young career. He had 378 all-purpose yards, which is a new Mountain West Conference record.

Despite being in the game for hardly more than a quarter, Holbrook threw for 289 yards and had two touchdowns.

Page 10: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Page 10 / Monday, SePteMber 26, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo

CAMPUS EVENTSUNM Out Womyn meeting Starts at: 6:30pmLocation: Unm Lgbtq Resource CenterChalking and board games! Wooh-wooh!!! For more detailed information like us on facebook “unm out womyn”

COMMUNITY EVENTSYoung Lungs, Austin Morrell, Chombe, Freak the Mighty at WinningStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: Winning Coffee Co.One time showing, Facebook event page at-tached. All local bands, free, all ages.

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar

for September 26, 2011Planning your day has never been easier!

Please limit your description to 25 words (al-though 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 ap-pear with the title, time, location and 25 word description! Although events will only pub-lish 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.

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Get published in UNM’s premiere non-fiction review, Best Student Essays.Submissions due October 7th, 2011.

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a hint to the starts of 18-, 23-, 38- and 50-Across64 Carryalls65 Out of port66 What to add when the 59-Across gets low67 Create, as a statute68 Back at the track69 The USA’s 5070 Takes in tenants

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dailycrossword

Capricorn—This week should prove to be a tamer version of the week to follow when the Sun moves into Libra. Right now, you are reaping all the benefits of last week’s hard work, and the celebration is only going to escalate. You may feel as if you’re beginning to spiral out of control and groping for firm ground will be especially difficult. Your best bet is to lie low and focus on constructive activities like physical labor when the fervor overwhelms you.

Aquarius—I encourage you to pamper yourself this week. You’ve established a strong hold on your circumstances, but the even keel you’re enjoying is only transitory. Expect the unexpected, but don’t let caution ripen into fear. Finding pleasure and relaxation is not off the menu, but considering the unsteady planetary influences, you are best sleeping with one eye open.

Pisces—While you’ve raised your threshold for madness considerably in the past month, the difficulty of looking past all the ridiculousness of society may be more than you can handle this week. The problem is that you recognize some of this in yourself. Rather than criticizing what you see and becoming more resentful, view the world as a stage for these actors to flaunt their best and worst aspects. It’s healthier to release the inner monster than let it stew in your innards.

Aries—You have come to a stopping point it seems. Mercury and Mars in nervous-prone, critical signs have rendered you introspective, digging and picking apart at yourself. Now, you look around at your findings, but your vision is too narrow to get a complete idea of what it all means. Look for reflections of these characteristics in others and find how they can build or destroy a person. Try on minds

until you find one that fits.Taurus—“The world does

not stop and start and start at your convenience.” Remember this when you’re struggling to make the right decision. You’ve been operating under the false understanding that there will be time to fulfill obligations and take care of business. This week, you will need to take the universe up on opportunities the minute they are apparent. If you don’t feel ready, you will be as soon as your momentum builds to meet that of the universe.

Gemini—Reflect on the person or issue in your life that has played the part of the incessant fly. My feeling is that rather than leaping for the fly swatter, you’ve resigned yourself to dividing your energy between work and becoming annoyed. While this sounds ridiculous, people do it all the time thinking some problems will resolve themselves. If you’re having trouble breaking away from this notion, think about what you could be spending that energy on, and motivate yourself to become proactive.

Cancer— Your nervous energy is likely to manifest itself physically this week, making it almost impossible to be still. Because you’ve just wrapped up the latest project or issue, you see nothing on your plate and panic. Rather than scrambling to fill what you perceive to be a void, the more worthy challenge to take up is in centering this energy. Sit, breath, and pay close attention to your every action. Treat your body as a tool that needs to be shaped to better facilitate your daily life.

Leo—Venus’ transition into Libra last week probably sparked up some flames in your love life. The prospect of diving into a whirlwind romance is compelling, but I would encourage you to detach and survey

all the possibilities, present and future. Choose a worthy lover and take time building this flame into a raging fire. Mars in Leo shrouds you in excessive charm and physical appeal, so you will want to be careful how present yourself to everyone.

Virgo—Your tried-and-true ways avenues of playtime seem to be failing you. It will be an exercise in futility to search for satisfaction in the material world or by falling into old, comfortable patterns. The realm of possibility looms untapped, likely because it is unknown to you. Create your own possibilities, and indulge in sessions of fantasy and absent-mindedness. As your spirit skates across a frozen sea of thought, look down and tap into your favorites. Manifest the possibilities of your choosing.

Libra—You feel effortlessly at ease and balanced this week, the result of hard labor and tedious analysis the past month. With Leo and Libra influences replacing earthier, detail-oriented ones, it will be easy to talk yourself into breaking away from reality. This is not a bad route to follow, but if you feel snared by obligations and pending tasks it would be extremely unwise to ignore these factors. In the larger scheme, there is no pleasure in returning to Earth to find your life a mess.

Scorpio—You will be grappling with a tension between your imagined life and the reality of your circumstances. It would be impulsive to let yourself scatter energies to keep both alive. However, you are not doing either justice this way. Shake the dusty complacency and weed out the non-essential silliness in your life, replacing it with your favorite fantasies. Find a way to bridge the gap.

Sagittarius—When the loose ends are all tied up, it’s hard to believe you’re actually finished dealing with the mess. This is your current position, though it is fairly certain that you can breathe that sigh of relief now. You don’t want to completely abandon care while you celebrate, or you risk undoing all your hard work. Party with a co-mingling of your most responsible and most foolhardy friends and you’ll absorb a conglomeration of energies that will serve you best throughout this week.

“Not periscopes for wolves”

Page 11: NM Daily Lobo 092611

Monday, SepteMber 26, 2011 / page 11New Mexico Daily lobo

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NEED SOME HELP working things out?Call Agora! 277-3013. www.agoracares.com

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

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

MISS THE FLYER? chuck.hanslinux.net

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

EDITOR: NEED SCHOOLWORK edited?Contact Lori at [email protected] Pricenegotiable.

MATH/ CHEMISTRY TUTOR. Excellentcommunicator. K-College. 505-205-9317.

ABORTION AND COUNSELING Ser-vices. Caring and confi dential. FREEPREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd,MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242-7512.

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THANKS ST.JUDE for transport. -Marian.

ApartmentsAPARTMENT HUNTING? www.keithproperties.com

CLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE,2BDRM $750/mo utilities included. 3blocks to UNM, no pets. 262-0433.

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Houses For RentGREAT LOOKING, SMALL guesthouse.GREAT location and common yard.Graduate students. Fully furnished, utili-ties included. $500/mo. 414-2684.

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COCKATIEL FOR SALE. Beautiful andfriendly with different color. For more in-formation call 730-2176 or 323-2176.

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For SaleBOOKS*BOOKS*BOOKS Bird Song Used Books:best price + selection in UNM area1708 Central SE/268-7204.Specializing in Lit-Mystery-SF!Daily Facebook Updates!

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Jobs Off Campus

COME JOIN US. espor.com has an op-portunity for a well motivated softwaredeveloper to join our team. We offerfl exible hours and work environment.As part of our core development teamyou will be involved in the latest techni-cal initiatives for our customers. Readmore and apply at www.espor.com

EARN $1000-$3200 A month to driveour brand new cars with ads. www.FreeCarJobs.com

PUEBLO OF ISLETA (POI) is seekingan energetic and talented individual toprovide leadership and support to theHead Start/ Early Head Start and ChildCare program. This position is responsi-ble for the educational services, com-prehensive family services, and man-agement for the programs serving chil-dren age birth to 5 years from thePueblo of Isleta. POI is a Native Ameri-can Community overseeing services toover 500 Native American children andfamilies. We offer great benefi ts includ-ing health, dental, and vision, 410K,company paid life insurance andSTD/LTD, vacation, sick, personal andholiday time and many paid training op-portunities. Requirements include aMaster’s or Bachelor’s Degree in EarlyChildhood Education or related area aswell as experience with Head Start Per-formance Standards. Salary DOE. Fora complete position description log onto www.isletapueblo.com, career sec-tion of the home page. Submit a POI ap-plication/resume with names/phonenumbers of three professional andthree personal references to HumanResources Department, Pueblo ofIsleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM87022. Fax 869-2812, or email [email protected] closingdate: open till fi lled. The POI is a drug-free workplace and requires back-ground checks.

GUITARIST (ELECTRIC) NEEDED toprovide entertainment in After SchoolPrograms in NE, NW and University ar-eas. PT M-F 2:30 pm, 10-15 hrs/wk. Ex-perience with children preferred. Applyonline www.campfi reabq.org or in per-son at 1613University NE.

THE PUEBLO OF Isleta Head Start &Early Head Start Program is hiring forEHS Education Coordinator – Responsi-ble for curriculum implementation andteacher supervision of enrolled children.Full-Time, 12 months. Salary:$38,300-$54,100 + benefi ts. BA in EarlyChildhood Education plus supervisor ex-perience required. To view full job de-scription: www.isletapueblo.com Submita POI application/resume with names/-phone numbers of 3 professional and 3personal references to: POI Human Re-sources Department, Pueblo ofIsleta, P.O. Box 1270, Isleta, NM 87022, or fax to: 505-869-2812, oremail to [email protected],Background checks are routinely con-ducted on prospective employees in or-der to certify compliance with minimumbackground standards established bythe Pueblo of Isleta. Pueblo of Isleta isan equal employment opportunity em-ployer. Closing dates: until fi lled.

FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES$15 Base/Appt.

PT/FT schedules available, continue inthe spring, customer sales/service, noexperience necessary, cond. apply, allages 18+, call now. ABQ: 505-243-3081; NW/RR: 505-891-0559.

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

FULL TIME LABORATORY Technolo-gist needed for andrology and embryol-ogy procedures at the Center for Repro-ductive Medicine of New Mexico, in Al-buquerque. A bachelor’s of science de-gree is required, experience with cellculture required. Fax a complete re-sume with references to: Laboratory di-crector 505-224-7476.

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

ROMA BAKERY AND Deli downtownlooking for kitchen/counter help Mon-Fridays. Please fi ll applications at 501Roma Ave NW, 7am-2pm.

!BARTENDER TRAINING! BartendingAcademy, 3724 Eubank NE.www.newmexicobartending.com 292-4180.

RIGHT AT HOME is looking for UNMstudents to help seniors with house-keeping, meal prep, transportation andpersonal care assistance. We offer fl exi-ble, student-friendly schedules. This ex-perience is great for nursing or pre-med students. Please apply online atwww.rightathome.net/albuquerque

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VOLUNTEER TO BE on a Chase Crewat Balloon Fiesta! Register Thursday,September 29th from 9-4pm or Friday,October 30th from 9-7pm at Balloon Fi-esta Park.

UNM IS LOOKING for adult women withasthma for asthma research study. Ifyou are interested in fi nding out moreabout this study, please contact Teresaat [email protected] or 269-1074 (HRRC 09-330).

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Display Advertising RepresentativeStudent Publications 09-22-2011 SP - $10.00 minimum to $55.00 midpoint(Units)

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Page 12: NM Daily Lobo 092611

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

Lobo Monday September 26, 2011

Page

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

SoccerSports Editor / Nathan Farmer

by Nathan [email protected]

The UNM women’s soccer team scored late, but still beat the Sooners on Friday.

The game looked to be headed to overtime after Oklahoma’s Dria Hampton tied the game with 10 minutes left, but Lobo forward Jennifer Williams scored her second goal of the game with five minutes remaining to beat the Sooners 2-1.

“We fought the whole entire game,” Williams said. “We knew we weren’t going to walk away with a tie or a loss. We knew we were going to win.”

Just 12 minutes into the game, the Lobos had the lead after Williams got the ball from Natalie Jenks, beat a de-fender and � nished past the goalie.

� e Lobos had chances to add to their lead during the � rst half, but could not � nd a way to score.

Head coach Kit Vela said it was hard to see her team not up by

more goals, but she said she was happy with the result.

“We had some opportunities in the � rst half where we could have easily been up two or three but we weren’t,” she said. “It was a little frustrating, but

we found a way to come back.”� e Lobos came out and

dominated the second half, out-shooting the Sooners 8-2, and forced Oklahoma’s Kelsey Devonshire into three saves, while Lobo goalie Kelli Cornell wasn’t tested. Against the run

of play, Hampton picked up the ball at the top of the box and let out a tame shot with 10 minutes left.

It looked to be an easy save for Cornell, but the ball de� ected o� of a Lobo defender and landed in the back of the net to tie the game at one.

� e Lobos immediately pushed forward for the win, and got it with � ve minutes left.

Sophomore Brooke Ellison played a ball over the top to Williams, who calmly � nished past the onrushing Sooners’ goalie.

“When she (Ellison) played that ball through, it was the perfect ball,” Williams said. “� e keeper came out a little bit early and it was easy to put away.”

Williams said Oklahoma was a tough team, but that the challenge will help the team when conference play begins this weekend.

“� ey were a very physical team,” Williams said. “Once you touched the ball they were right on you. Actually, it’s going to help us for conference

by Nathan [email protected]

The UNM men’s soccer team has finished its non-conference schedule undefeated.

The Lobos, ranked No.11 in the nation, beat Loyola Marymount 2-0 on Friday night to take UNM to 6-0-2 for the season.

Forward Devon Sandoval took over the game in the second half, providing the assist for midfielder Giovanni Rollie’s goal before scor-ing one of his own with a volley.

“It was good to get the win, and the real positive was we got a win when we were not playing our best,” head coach Jeremy Fishbein said. “The first half, we were real tense, and the second half was a lot better, and we scored some nice goals.”

The L obos kept poss ession from the start in front of more than 2,600 fans, but failed to find a breakthrough when they got to the attacking third of the field.

Sixteen minutes in, UNM junior Blake Smith dribbled through five defenders but shot right at Lion goalkeeper Jack McCormack.

As the half wound down, Loyola found itself on a three-on-one counter attack, but failed to get a shot on goal.

Fishbein said his team didn’t play as well as it could have in the first half.

“We were a little slow in con-necting passes, the first touch was off a bit,” he said.

The second half began with a flurry of chances for both teams as the Lions’ Phil Da Silva and David Ponce almost scored while McCormack saved a shot from Sandoval.

Juan Labreche/ Daily Lobo

Victor Rodriguez steps onto the � eld at University Stadium last Friday. The Lobos beat the Lions 2-0 to extend their unbeaten start to the season.

Victory colored by lost opportunities

Daily Lobo Sports ReportMen’s Soccer at Home

UNM 2 Loyola Marymount 0

Friday

Women’s Soccer at HomeUNM 2

Oklahoma 1

Volleyball at HomeUNM lost to

TCU 3-1

Saturday

Football at HomeUNM 45

Sam Houston State 48

Sunday

Women’s Soccer in Las CrucesUNM 4NMSU 1

because you know the pressure is a little di� erent in conference, and we need to play quick.”

The Lobos have gone to over-time four times this season but have a 0-2-2 record in those games.

Vela said she was happy that her

team scored in regulation to save them from playing another overtime game.

“It’s nice to save your legs when you don’t have to play overtime,” she said. “It’s just good to score that second goal, in overtime or in regulation.”

� e win takes the Lobos to 5-4-2 for the season, while Oklahoma fell to 4-5.

Belated goal ends fight for win

Juan Labreche / Daily Lobo

UNM’s Jennifer Williams traps the ball as the Sooners’ Brianna Turang looks on Friday at University Stadium. The Lobos beat Oklahoma 2-1 thanks to a late goal from Williams.

In the 63rd minute, Sandoval dribbled down the left wing and his pass found Rollie at the top of the six-yard box for an easy tap in to give the Lobos the lead.

With 15 minutes left, Sandoval doubled the Lobos’ lead when he got the ball 25 yards from goal and fired a volley past the diving McCormack into the far corner.

The goal was Sandoval’s third in the last two games, and Rollie said that Sandoval’s goal-scoring form of late has really helped the team.

“He is on fire,” Rollie said. “He means a lot to the offense, and he has been a big part of this team through preseason and through this entire non-conference s eas on.”

The Lobos could have scored more goals as the game wound down.

Senior Lance Rozeboom had two easy chances to score, and Smith missed a wide-open goal as well. Fishbein said that when the games get more difficult, his team will put away those easy chances.

“I think it’s a different mind-set,” he said. “We are not happy with it, but they are quality play-ers, and I feel when it comes to crunch time we are going to take our chances.”

The Lobos out-shot the Lions 19-13 and forced McCormack into seven saves, while UNM keeper Victor Rodriguez had six.

“We had two great goals and we pushed forward for a third and a fourth,” Fishbein said. “It’s a situ-ation the guys are going to have to adjust to. They played a very good team, but if we play to our ability we are going to be successful.”

Fishbein: we got a win when we were not playing our best

“We fought the whole entire game. We knew we were

going to win.”~Jennifer Williams

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