new mexico daily lobo 031011
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Daily lobonew mexico
Gimme a breaksee page 6
March 10, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
volume 115 issue 116thursday
by Chelsea [email protected]
The Lobo Village clubhouse was up, running and fully furnished for its opening Wednesday, but Lobo Village is still under construction and won’t open until August.
Residents can’t move in until August 17, but Lobo Village Gen-eral Manager Brent McPherson said residents have to pay for the entire month of August, not a pro-rated portion. He said it’s unclear whether future residents will be al-lowed to use the clubhouse before moving in.
“They probably won’t be able to use it,” he said. “We’re still trying to figure that out because of insur-ance requirements and things of that nature.”
Only Lobo Village residents will have access to the clubhouse when it opens, McPherson said, but guests are allowed if accompa-nied by residents. He said the Lobo Village project costs $63 million, and construction is running about a month ahead of schedule.
More than 60 people showed up to tour the clubhouse. The build-ing features Apple computers and TVs, pool and air-hockey tables, a 44-seat movie theater, and a gym. Construction workers were finish-ing up the swimming pool Wednes-day, which is located west of the clubhouse.
“I’m moving in next semester and I wanted to get a first look at where I’ll be living,” student Alissa James said at the event. “I like it a lot. It’s really modern-looking and beautiful.”
Lobo Village is organized into four-bedroom units. Residents pay
Marching on
Fees for Lobo Village Residents:
$499 per month per bedroom*+ $75 application fee+ $150 damage deposit**+ $125 transportation fee (paid to UNM)+ monthly electric bill+ undisclosed fees for late payment for rent= At least $850 for first month at ACC= At least $6,000 per year*Rent is not prorated for the month of August, even though residents can’t move in until August 17.**Additional fees may apply for damage costs exceeding $150. McPherson said he is unsure whether ACC will withhold students’ transcripts if they have outstanding fees at Lobo Village.
Clubhouse unveiled, but apartments not finished
Dylan Smith / Daily Lobo
Lobo Village officials toured students around the facility’s clubhouse Wednesday. The clubhouse may or may not be accessible to students before construction is finished. The housing project should be completed by August.
$499 a month to lease one bed-room. UNM will charge residents a one-time $125 fee for shuttle trans-portation to and from main cam-pus. ACC charges a $75 application fee and $150 deposit fee to all resi-dents. Residents must pay monthly electric bills for their units, which run entirely on electricity. McPher-son said residents would be charged late fees for past-due rent, but he refused to say how much.
McPherson said he is optimis-tic that the grand opening would
encourage students to live at Lobo Village, even though the apart-ments aren’t ready for viewing.
“We’re trying to hype it up, and we want people to be excited,” he said. “Lobo Village is already 83 percent filled, and we’re only sell-ing paper. Now that we have some-thing tangible to sell, and they can see what the product is about.”
Elizabeth Cleary contributed to this report.
Rent and fees allow for exclusive amenities
Long Nguyen / Daily LoboPorche Torrance skies for a rebound during the UNM women’s MWC quarterfinal game against Wyoming. Torrance had 10 rebounds in the Lobos’ 67-61 upset over the Cowgirls.
by Ryan [email protected]
LAS VEGAS — Call them the flavor of the month.
Forward Porche Torrance had two key blocks on Wyoming’s Au-brey Vandiver in the final 1:59, and the seventh-seeded Lobo women’s
basketball team leaned on stin-gy, physical de-fense to shut down third-
seeded Wyoming 67-61 Wednes-day, setting up an improbable semifinals matchup against sec-ond-seeded TCU.
Senior Jessica Kielpinski said the Mountain West Conference tournament venue becomes the Lobos’ home away from home.
“Well, I guess they call it Pit West,” she said. “I guess when we’re here, we just gel together. I don’t know — it’s the atmosphere or something, but something clicks when we’re here.”
Vandiver, the conference’s MVP who led the league in regular-sea-son scoring with 18.5 points per game, finished with 26 points. Fifteen of her points came in the
second half, but head coach Don Flanagan credited Torrance for coming up with stops when the Lobos needed them the most.
“Porche did an excellent job,” he said. “Now, we put three or four people on her, but Porche did the best out of anybody. I was just worried that Porche would foul out, but she did a real nice job of staying in the game.”
UNM’s defense flustered Van-diver all night. Wyoming was down as much as 13 points in the second half. With 5:19 remaining in the game, Vandiver had the ball swatted away from her by UNM’s Jasmine Patterson.
Frustrated, Vandiver yelled at guards Amanda Best and Patter-son after the play and received a technical foul. Best took to the line and hit both free throws to take a 59-54 lead.
Best said she didn’t know
what Vandiver said to get a tech-nical foul.
“I just saw her yelling at Jas-mine,” she said. “I was like, ‘Ref, check it out.’ I didn’t really know, but she was yelling though.”
Wyoming finally figured out UNM’s defense, and with 3:31, cut the Lobos’ lead to 59-56.
However, Patterson got fouled and hit two free throws with 1:58 to go up 61-57.
Wyoming head coach Joe Legerski said that UNM deserved all the credit in the world for slow-ing down his team.
“One of the things that I talk about is that New Mexico has developed a tradition to win at the tournament,” he said. “You get that with good players, and they’ve been able to do that. So for us, we’re still trying to accomplish that.”
Four Lobos finished in double figures. Kielpinski finished with 11, Patterson with 14 and Best with 15. Guard Lauren Taylor scored 13 points and found her shot in the
UNM 67
61WYO.
Stalwart defense keys unforseen tourney run
see Winners page 3
Wyoming head coach Joe Legerski said that UNM deserved all the credit
in the world for slowing down his team.
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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboThursday, March 10, 2011
volume 115 issue 116Telephone: (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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DAILY LOBOnew mexico
Jeremy Catanach peruses the sports section in Wednesday’s paper. If a Daily Lobo staff catches you reading on campus, you’ll win a prize and have your photo in the Page Two Feature.
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Capturing �e Dragon:An Intimate Look Inside Contemporary ChinaBSE managing editor Ryan Tynan sits down with Daily Lobo photogra-pher Junfu Han for an interview and photographic tour of Han’s home town, Hangzhou, China. Read the interview. See the work that made the cover of the Fall 2010 issue of BSE.
Considering Cultural Identity: What Does It Mean to Be an Indigenous Woman in Mondern Times?BSE managing editor Ryan Tynan sits down with photographer Nina Freer to discuss her photo essay, “Indigina,” and her unique take on con-structions of cultural identity.
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NEWS THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 2011 / PAGE 3
second half.“I thought Lauren played a good
game, not only offensively, but de-fensively,” Flanagan said. “Then in transition she hit one, might have hit two, and then Best hit one. All of the sudden we’re playing re-laxed, we’re feeling comfortable, and we’re thinking in a positive way.”
The Lobos’ two tournament wins have come against teams that swept them in the regular season. Wyoming swept the season series
by beating UNM by double-digits both times (63-53 and 78-65).
With the win over the Cowgirls, the Lobos advanced to the semifi-nals for the ninth time in the last 11 years.
Flanagan said he didn’t pack enough clothes for an extended trip, but his team has come togeth-er at the right time.
“Coming to the tournament, I didn’t feel comfortable,” he said. “I only brought one sport jacket. But I got different ties, so I’m OK.”
UP NEXT
Women’s basketball vs.
TCU
Friday, 3:30 p.m.� omas & Mack
Center
Winners from PAGE 1
by Diego [email protected]
State workers and public school teachers might have to pay more than 12 percent of their salaries toward re-tirement starting July 1.
HB 628, which extends an increase of 1.5 percent and tacks on an addi-tional 1.75 percent to workers and teachers, passed the House in a 43-26 vote Monday. � e measure is now in the Senate Finance Committee.
Bill sponsor Rep. Donald Brat-ton originally proposed a permanent 1.5 percent increase, but said his col-leagues preferred a temporary dra-matic increase. Next � scal year, con-tributions will drop to 10.75 percent, and the year after that, contributions will level out at almost 9 percent.
“� ey would want it to be tempo-
rary,” Bratton said. “� ey would not want the employee to carry the bur-den for the employer on a permanent basis.”
State employees already have to make economic sacri� ces through mandatory furloughs, and now they will also have a smaller paycheck. With the 3.25 percent increase, teach-ers would pay about $49 per week to-ward their retirement funds, which
comes out to $2,548 a year.No more paddlingHB 172 passed the House 36-31
Tuesday. If passed by the Senate and signed into law by Gov. Susana Marti-nez, the bill would not allow teachers to paddle.
Rep. Rick Miera (D-Bernalillo) in-troduced the bill, and he said that Re-publicans and Democrats weren’t di-vided on the issue.
“It was a bipartisan pass,” he said. “It shows that it was not a political issue.”
� e bill is now in the Senate Ju-diciary Committee. A study found 223,190 students nationwide — in-cluding at least 41,972 students with disabilities — were paddled at least once in the 2006-07 school year, ac-cording to the U.S. Department of Education.
“I hope the Senate will pass this bill,” Miera said. “� ere are better ways of dealing with a student other than with physical discipline.”
“I hope the Senate will pass this bill.There are better ways of dealing
with a student other than with physical discipline.”
~Rep. Rick Miera
More retirement, less paycheck
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[email protected] / Ext. 133Opinion editor / Nathan New The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Thursday
March 10, 2011
Page
4
by Danny HernandezDaily Lobo Guest Columnist
Have you noticed UNM classrooms and public spaces are slightly dirtier than usual?
I have. It hit me while sneaking behind some
cabinets to catch a phone call in the library. Our school isn’t being maintained the way it was just a year ago. There was a thick film of dust on those cabinets — the kind that begs for someone to write, “Clean me.”
There’s a reason that UNM public spac-es look unkempt: In the past two years, the Physical Plant Department (PPD) lost 69 positions to attrition. That’s 69 mostly low-paid custodial positions.
To further explain what’s going on, I need to go back two years when the regents insti-gated a UNM-wide hiring freeze to stave off a projected budget shortfall because of the recession.
The freeze required the administration to approve filling vacated positions. That freeze trimmed UNM’s faculty, staff and other resources to the bone. UNM is run-ning on a skeleton crew.
Imagine being an out-of-state prospec-tive student calling the registrar’s office. The phone continues to ring, but you’re never transferred to voice mail. This could hap-pen because Student Services, a showcase office in the south complex, has cut its staff to bare minimum and discontinued voice mail as a cost-cutting measure.
“We’re trying to do more with less,” said Merle Kennedy, UNM Staff Council Presi-dent and a manager in the registrar’s office.
He said that services to students aren’t suf-fering while admitting that record-high en-rollment combined with lowered staffing levels and fewer professors means larger classes and fewer staff providing services to more students.
UNM Faculty Senate President Richard Wood said that UNM is down 12 faculty positions from a year ago. Including pro-posed reductions, the cumulative funding cuts UNM gets from the state add up to 20 percent. He said that a $9 million cut is on the table and reminded me that $5.6 million was cut last fall. He doesn’t think services to students have suffered to date, but believes more cuts will cause them to.
As with most governmental agencies, the majority of UNM’s operating expenses are wages. These series of cuts mean more peo-ple will lose their jobs. This either means fewer people providing the same services or fewer services.
If the past two years are indicators of the future, we know that the lower an employee is on the human resources food chain, the easier it is to cut that position. This means vice presidents, department directors and other highly paid administrator positions are relatively safe while custodians, of-fice assistants and highly skilled graduate student employees are fungible. We’ve al-ready seen this in how graduate assistant positions were the first on the chopping block and in the 69 PPD positions that have
disappeared.The question isn’t: How much more cut-
ting can UNM afford before its mission to educate New Mexicans is compromised? I believe we passed that milestone last fall. The real question is: Why have our leaders led us down this path?
The Roundhouse group-think is stuck on “cut the budget to the bone” — but that kind of anorexic thinking is now cutting vital ser-vices in the quest of closing a $200 million budget gap.
But cost-cutting only addresses one side of the ledger.
In an editorial published in Sunday’s Albuquerque Journal, Sen. Tim Keller (D- Albuquerque) writes: “Tax expenditures, the tax subsidies, incentives, exemptions and deductions are all forms for tax carve-outs for various industries, special inter-ests and population segments. Together all 107 of these make up an estimated $1 bil-lion in annual taxes we choose not to col-lect each year.” In other words, close the tax loopholes that have been bleeding potential state revenues.
Sen. Gerald Ortiz y Pino (D-Albuquer-que) has another idea. He proposes the state borrow from the State Permanent Fund to offset the projected shortfall and pay it back, with interest, from future reve-nues — presumably when the economy gets better.
Of course, the Legislature could also bring tax rates back to pre-2003 levels when those making $100,000 were taxed at a slightly higher rate than the rest of us.
The DFA estimates this would increase revenues by half a billion dollars per year.
UNM, like the rest of New Mexico gov-ernments, has been trimmed as much as possible. Further cuts will only reduce ser-vices beyond functionality. It’s time for the Legislature to consider the revenue side of the equation.
Editor,
I am happy to see that at least the � rst three responses to Don Schrader’s letter are positive and civil.
John Newton wrote one of the most pop-ular hymns in the world — even in venues that do not hold to Christian principles or doctrines. � e man had a conversion ex-perience that caused many to seek God and turn to Jesus as the world’s savior.Yes, even the most wicked sinner — slave sell-er and buyer alike — can be saved.
For this reason, one should search his or her heart before passing judgment on those who are considered “di� erent” among us. Being Christian does not give us the right to condemn others to damnation.
Rev. Mary E. Woods UNM alumnus
Editor,
What’s next?Let’s see. On Jan. 21, when the Supreme
Court granted corporations at least the rights that persons have in this country, that result-ed in persons not having any say in who gets elected to public o� ce. Corporations have gained the right to spend unlimited money to elect whoever favors them gaining more pow-er or block the election of whoever is opposed to them gaining more power.
� at was January. Now, in March, there are e� orts in several
states to deny persons collective bargaining rights.
It makes one wonder — what is next? Free speech, unless one’s speech is in support of more money and power being given to the al-ready rich and powerful?
Have we become a nation that allows only money to � ow from the poor to those who al-ready have the majority of wealth and power?
Some actually claim that for the rich and powerful to o� er anything for the less fortu-nate, even jobs, is socialism, which would de-stroy this country.
It is my opinion that our strong middle class has fueled our economy and made us the envy of countries around the world. Now that the rich and powerful have been able to de-stroy our middle class, where are we headed?
Robert Gardiner Community member
What happens once the rich destroy the middle class?
LETTERS
Being Christian doesn’t give you the right to condemn
EDITORIAL BOARD
Pat LohmannEditor-in-chief
Isaac AviluceaManaging editor
Nathan NewOpinion editor
Elizabeth ClearyNews editor
LETTER SUBMISSION POLICY Letters can be submitted to the Daily Lobo offi ce in Marron Hall or online at DailyLobo.com. The Lobo reserves the right to edit letters for content and length. A name and phone number must accompany all letters. Anonymous letters or those with pseudonyms will not be published. Opinions expressed solely refl ect the views of the author and do not refl ect the opinions of Lobo employees.
UNM runs on a ‘skeleton crew’COLUMN
There’s a reason that UNM public spaces look unkempt: In the past two years, the Physical
Plant Department has lost 69 positions to attrition.
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Visit Unmjobs.unm.edu to fi ll out an application.
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by Shaun [email protected]
LAS VEGAS — Wyoming, pack the bags and go home; TCU, stay an-other day.
The ninth-seeded Horned Frogs defeated eighth-seeded Wyoming
70-61 Tuesday to advance to face top-seeded BYU in the Mountain West Conference
tournament quarterfinals. Led by J.R. Cadot, who finished with 13 points and 13 rebounds, TCU had three players in double figures.
“We had some guys do some things they haven’t done in similar situations,” TCU’s head coach Jim Christian said. “Take charge, get a big steal, show composure and finish in the end. Really proud of them.”
The Horned Frogs entered Tues-day’s contest with a 13-game losing streak and had bowed out in the first round of the tournament the last three years. TCU improved to 11-2 this season when scoring 70 or more points. Cadot reached double digits for the seventh consecutive game.
“I challenged him with one thing,” Christian said. “I pulled him aside in the hotel and said, ‘The only thing I want you to be is the hardest-playing guy on the floor.’”
Wyoming played catchup the entire first half and was down 24-27 going into the second. But TCU had trouble breaking away and allowed Wyoming to take a 42-41 lead with 13 minutes left.
TCU answered with a 9-0 run and led by 13 points late in the game.
TCU’s Hank Thorns scored 13 points and responded with tena-cious leadership after Wyoming claimed the lead.
“Basketball is a game of runs, so we knew they’re (Wyoming) going to make a run, but we have to make
a run, too,” Thorns said. “For me to be a team leader, I have to be pa-tient. I have to show the team by ex-ample. I can’t just say it. I have to go out there and show it as well.”
For Wyoming, the loss ends a disappointing season, in which its head coach Heath Schroyer was fired midway through the confer-ence schedule.
Francisco Cruz led Wyoming with 14 points.
“We turned the ball over a lot,” Cruz said. “In the end, I think they played harder than us. I think that was the difference in the game.”
The Horned Frogs immediately turned their attention toward pre-paring for National Player of the Year candidate Jimmer Fredette. BYU beat TCU by 17 at home and 23 on the road this season.
“We have to come out, execute our game plan,” Christian said. “They’re very good in zone, and they have a lot more depth than we have. I’ll trade ’em. I’m just kidding.”
by Ryan [email protected]
LAS VEGAS — War is how the UNM men’s basketball team is describing it, but for those tired of the oft-used com-parison, it’s more appropriately a game of Risk.
On the line: an appearance in the Mountain West Conference tourna-ment quarterfinals, and a likely date with No. 1 BYU. First though, the fifth-seeded UNM men’s basketball team opens with fourth-seeded Colorado State today at the Thomas & Mack Cen-ter. UNM is looking to avenge a Febru-ary loss in Fort Collins, Colo.
Freshman guard Kendall Williams said it’s going to be an all-out dog fight.
“It’s war, and I’m not going to un-derstate it,” he said.
The Lobos split the season series with the Rams and defeated CSU 68-62 on Jan. 12. It was UNM’s first MWC win of the season. Exactly a month later, the score was almost identical at CSU, this time in the Rams’ favor.
Before the Lobos duke it out with the Rams, they need to get healthy. As far as head coach Steve Alford is con-cerned, the final conference stretch took a toll on the Lobos.
Tony Snell, who suffered a sprained ankle, sat out Saturday’s regular-sea-son finale against Air Force, and for-ward Drew Gordon broke his nose in the game.
Gordon said, however, the broken nose isn’t slowing him down.
“I’m dealing with that,” he said. “Fortunately it doesn’t have anything with my legs or my arms.”
It’s a good thing it’s just a nose problem, because Gordon said he’s not wearing anything but his uniform in the tournament. The 6-foot-9-inch forward form San Jose, Calif., said he doesn’t plan to wear a mask today.
“I’m really not looking forward to wearing a mask because I had to wear one in high school,” Gordon said. “It was so uncomfortable. I tore it up, and it ended up not working anyways.”
Snell, on the other hand, has no choice. He will need a taped ankle.
Snell made a name for himself with a breakout game against BYU at The Pit. In scoring 16 second-half points, Snell helped the Lobos erase a 13-point point deficit against the Cougars.
If Snell can contribute against the Rams, it would be another weapon in Alford’s arsenal.
So it’s good news for the Lobos be-cause Snell looks like a go against CSU.
Injuries notwithstanding, the Lobos have to worry about defending the MWC’s second-leading scorer. Se-nior forward Andy Ogide beat up the Lobos in the paint at Moby Arena in the Rams’ 68-62 win.
Ogide forced Gordon to foul out, and he scored a game-high 17 points and nabbed four boards. He was 7-of-11 from the field.
Alford said the Lobos have to shut down Ogide in the tourney.
“Colorado State is a much-im-proved team,” he said. “They’re a vet-eran-laden team that’s trying to get (to the NCAA tournament), where they haven’t been in a while. Those are very difficult matchups for us.”
Gordon said he can’t foul out in the MWC tournament.
“I didn’t really perform well,” he said. “My team and I didn’t have the best game, and I think that everyone is kind of rallying behind this game because we got beat, and that’s not a good feeling, especially because they handle us pretty well.”
As for going to war in Vegas, Gor-don said anytime he steps on the court, it’s a test of will.
“It’s your army versus theirs,” Gor-don said. “Whoever wins, they’re the victor that day, and you always go out and fight. It’s not a game of, ‘OK, your turn then my turn.’ You got fight for ev-ery rebound, blocked shot and every basket. (War is) a perfect way to de-scribe it.”
Hoping for an extended Vegas tourney stayMarch magic still alive for lower-seeded team
TCU 70
61WYO.
Men’s basket-ball vs. CSUToday, 3:30 p.m.Thomas & Mack
Center
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You’re a nature person, which means 95 percent of the
population doesn’t like you. You spend all your time away from society, so here are interesting scenic locations to get your Mother Earth on.
You’re into the less conventional paths life has to offer, and you
would be exploring the deepest trench-es of the sea this week, but you already blew your money on a telescope look-ing for Tralfamadorians. In the mean-time, satisfy your quest for knowledge and the strange with these events.
You like to watch things instead of par-ticipating — which is cool. But if you are
going to be stuck in New Mexico, you might as well watch something you like. Here’s a good list of things to hit up.
Y ou are stuck in New Mexico, but that doesn’t mean
you can’t dull your mind with the arts in the meantime. Check out these exhibits, and maybe you’ll see you don’t need New York’s art scene.
If you like warm water, but can’t get to Cancun, try Ojo Caliente Min-eral Springs Resort and Spa. Two hours north of Albuquerque, it of-fers 10 pools with mineral properties and varying temperatures. The pools remedy ailments. You’ve got the sau-na, steam room and a row of ham-mocks to ensure rejuvenation. Inces-sant stress and tension are sure to acquiesce to extraordinary bliss that can stay with you for days.
Spring marks the end of winter, which means all that sledding you did in the Sandias is done. Except you didn’t do that, because there was no snow. Mother Nature, however, has heard the plight of desert yetis and offered a comparable substitute. The vast dunes at White Sands, three and a half hours south of Albuquerque, are sledding Shangri-La. Unlike snow, the sand’s friction entails a quest for a mound with an optimal slope. The seeker who succeeds in this quest will be rewarded with a titillating taste of reckless abandon.
You know it’s March if, in tak-ing a short walk, you risk having your hair blown out of its follicles. The galling gales seem to be a malevolent force, harassing anyone who braves the gusts. But you can make the wind your punk by forcing it fl y a kite for you. In a week void of obligations, you could make a day trip of show-ing Mother Nature what’s up. Try the West Mesa because it’s free of ob-stacles. You could also try Johnson Field, if you want to come to UNM on break, or go hang out by the near-est power lines to electrify your day.
~Alexandra Swanberg
While it’s normally overrun by children who always hog the dam ex-hibit or legit airplane simulator, Al-buquerque’s science center Explora hopes to remedy this problem by of-fering adults-only night. It’s March 18 and sponsored by 100.3 The Peak. Ex-pect free food, a live band, plenty of hands-on experiments and activities, roof star-gazing and an Albuquerque-driven theme of “local science.”
You can also hit up the National Park Service and Aztec Ruins National Monument if you are more into look-ing at dead people’s defeated culture while thinking that it’ll never happen to us. That being said, it only costs $5 to get into the park for a week, so you could hypothetically be set for break. What you do there is your own busi-ness, and the government’s, but if Native American folklore has taught us anything, you should avoid anger-ing the ghosts of spirits long since passed.
If you prefer a more practical knowledge, hit up the Red Cross Save a Life on Saturday. It takes place at the SUB ballrooms at 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. The course is ded-icated to Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, but don’t fret. It’s free, so that seems like a pretty good reason concerning these courses can get expensive.
~Chris Quintana and Antonio Sanchez
If your imagination is the only part of you that’s able to “wander” this spring break, check out art-ist Archer Dougherty’s “In the At-tic” free exhibition at the Matrix Fine Art gallery. Running till March 26, the Matrix Fine Art is display-ing Dougherty’s latest solo exhi-bition, revealing the artist’s latest mixed-media works. “In the Attic” features paintings that highlight the artist’s fondness for the surreal and the fantastic, blending oil and graphite to create dream-like imag-es. Dougherty is a UNM graduate.
If you won’t be able to travel to India this week, experience the clos-est thing to the Taj Mahal by visit-ing Earth Treasures at the Corona-do Mall in Albuquerque on March 19 from 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m. for Hen-na tattoos. For only $5, local Henna artists apply intricate Eastern de-signs, with tattoos lasting about two to three weeks. Dating back to the Bronze Age, Henna has been used to emphasize luck and beauty in many cultures, with no Henna tat-too being completely alike.
If you are looking to learn more about the fairer sex this spring break, forget the bikinis and the sun-tan lotion and attend the Cervantes Institute at National Hispanic Cul-tural Center’s photography exhib-it, “Mujeres y Mujeres” (Women & Women). From now to the end of March, visitors may attend the exhibit and see infl uential Spanish women photographers such as Isa-bel Muñoz, Gabriela Grech and Be-atriz Moreno.
~Juanita Martinez
ThursdayMarch 10, 2011
Page
7Culture editor / Chris QuintanaCulture editor / Chris Quintana
LoboCulture
You’re a nature person, which means 95 percent of the
Even if you can’t get to New Orleans to enjoy Mardi Gras, you at least have the opportunity to be presented with Louisiana at Albuquerque Little Theatre’s production, “Steel Magnolias.” It wraps Sunday. Just re-member if you cried watching it at home alone on Lifetime, you are probably going to cry in the theater.Even if the rest of the world has left
you in the dust, Blackout Theatre feels your sorrow and promises to be there for you. Perhaps you even have family visiting you in our tiny desert getaway, young cousins and all. Whatever the case, you have a perfect op-portunity to see “The Sparrow’s Daughter: A Cuento,” a New Mexico-infl uenced Black-out original directed by Heather Yeo. And of course, it wouldn’t be Blackout if they weren’t doing something extra special and crazy. The mystical setting incorporates extensive shad-ow puppets underlining the ghostly journey of the young protagonist. If theater isn’t what you’re looking for,
that’s cool, too. That’s because Nob Hill’s Guild Cinema would more than happily be your pal and show you all the sweet movies you might miss if you were off doing some-thing cool. Monday and Tuesday mark the showing of “The Kids Are Alright,” the sec-ond fi lm in the Guild special on The Who.
~Graham Gentz
So you blew all your money on illegal cock fights, genetically enhanced green chile and alcohol. Always with the alcohol, you alcoholic. Anyway, you have to stick around New Mexico for spring break, and you’ll probably try to drink away the pain — again.
We are not here to judge, but offer helpful solutions to your vacation-less plight. Be-low, you’ll find all kinds of things to make your break suck less:
“A vacation is having nothing to do and all day to do it in.”
-Robert Orben
Illustration by Emily GolinkoPhoto by Daniel Hulsbos/ Daily Lobo
Page 8 / Thursday, March 10, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobothe hapsmo
nday
2:00pm - 7:00pm$2.50 Blue Moon
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Blue Moon; Shiner BockHardcore; Alien
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$5.00 9” 1-Topping Pizza$5.00 Cheeseburger w/ FF
saturday
11:00am - 7:00pm$2.75 Well Drinks
$2.50 Bloody Marys$2.25 Domestic Bottles
5:00-7:00pm$3.00 Drafts on Patio:Marble IPA; Widmer
Hefeweizen; Blue Paddle 7:00pm - Close
All drafts $2.50 everywhere$6.75 Chicken or Ground Beef
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tuesday
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The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee ad for daily specials
Korean BBQ/Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Outpost Performance SpaceGerald Clayton Trio
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Burt’s Tiki Lounge *THE UNIVERSAL!* *The Original
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The Library Bar & GrillHAPPY HOUR 4pm-7pm
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Outpost Performance SpaceA Hawk and a Hacksaw
7:30pm“successfully straddles itself between
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Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour 7 Days A Week!
4-7pm$1 off all drinks (excluding beer)
I Kissed a Girl Contest$3.25 Absolute & Jim Beam
$3.50 90 Shilling Bottles$5.50 Jager Bombs
Blackbird Buvette$3.00 Nevada Pale Ale & Seasonals
ImbibeMWC Basketball - LOBO vs. Colorado
State 2:30pm$1 Draft during Game!
PROVING GROUNDS Premiere PartyDJ LD 9pm
Downtown DistilleryEvery Thursday $2.75 All Drinks!
FREE POOL Great Drink Specials Everyday
Check out our new games!
ExhaleExhale Thursdays
18+ EventDoors at 9pm
Friday
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee ad for daily specials
Korean BBQ/Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-10
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*The Fertile Crescent* *Then Eats
Them* *Glowhouse*
The Library Bar & GrillHAPPY HOUR 4pm-7pm
$3.00 U-Call-It’sHalf Priced Appetizers
$1.00 Tacos
Maloney’s TavernVideo Game Tournament!
Play to win a free wii!!$3.25 Skyy Infusions
Blackbird BuvetteLate Night Happy Hour
11pm- Close
ImbibeHappy Hour till 7pm + $5 Jose Cuervo
Margaritas ALL DAYMWC Basketball 6pm
Downtown DistilleryGreat Drink Specials Everyday
Check out our new games!
ExhaleDance Night
18 to enter, 21 to Drink
Saturday
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Library Bar & Grill11am-2am
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee ad for daily specials
Outpost Performance SpaceA Hawk and a Hacksaw
7:30pm“successfully straddles itself between
their adopted home of Eastern Europe and their true home in the Southwest”
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Ya Ya Boom’s SXSW Send-Off!*
*Muffalo* *The Blacks*
Korean BBQ/Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Blackbird BuvetteLate Night Happy Hour
11pm- Close
ImbibeMWC Basketball 4pm
+ Happy Hour till 7pm: $2 Drafts, $3 Wells, $4 Wine, $4 Long Island Tea &
$5 MartinisDJ Poppn’ Bottles 10pm
Downtown DistilleryGreat Drink Specials Everyday
Check out our new games!
ExhaleDance Night!
$1 Drafts7-10pm
Sunday
Blackbird BuvetteLook for the Week’s End
See you on the back patio!
Thursday, March 10, 2011 / Page 9New Mexico Daily lobo the haps
Open @: 11 am Mon-Fri, 12 noon Sat-Sun
Happy Hour(Tues-Sun) 4 pm - 8 pm
$3 Local Pints (Marble, Santa Fe, Tractor)$3.50 Single Shot Well Drinks
Liquid MondayHappy Hour All Day!Blackbird Karaoke w/DJ Kammo 9 pm
Tuesday Geeks Who Drink - 7 pmAll Pints $2.50 9 pm - Midnight
Wednesday 9 pm - Midnight$1 off Vodkas$3 Marble Pints
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Friday/SaturdayLate Night Happy Hour11 pm - close
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WEdnesday
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee ad for daily specials
Korean BBBQ/ Sushi SakeOpen 11:30-2:30, 5-9:30
Maloney’s TavernKaraoke Wednesdays
$1 off Absolute & Absolut Flavors9:30-1:30
Happy Hour 4-7 EVERYDAY$1 off all drinks (excluding beer)
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Vinyl and Verses* *Underground
Hip Hop* *UHF B-Boy Crew* *$2.50 Select Pints*
Blackbird Buvette9pm - 12am
$1 off Vodkas$3.00 Marble Pints
ImbibeWINE DOWN 6-7pm with Wine
Tasting & FREE Appetizers$1 Draft til Keg runs dry 9pm
Downtown DistilleryFREE POOL
Great Drink Specials EverydayCheck out our new games!
ExhaleKaraoke Night
$2.50 Bacardi Breezers
Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour 4-7 EVERYDAY
$1 off all drinks (excluding beer)
Blackbird BuvetteHappy Hour All Day
Blackbird Karaoke w/ DJ Kammo - 9pm
ImbibeHappy Hour ALL DAY: $2 Drafts, $3 Wells, $4 Wine, $4 Long Island Tea &
$5 Martinis
Downtown DistilleryFREE POOL
Great Drink Specials EverydayCheck out our new games!
Tuesday
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee Ad for daily specials
Korean BBQ/Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Tiki Tuesdays!* *Lousy Robot*
*American City* *$4 Tiki Drinks All Night*
Maloney’s TavernHappy Hour 4-7 EVERYDAY
$1 off all drinks (excluding beer)
Blackbird BuvetteGeeks Who Drink - 7pm
All pints $2.50 9pm-12am
ImbibeSPRING BREAK PARTY
Drink Specials ALL NIGHT!DJ Automatic & Drummer Camilio
Quinones 9:30pm
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungeCLOSED
The Library Bar & Grill11am-12am
Korean BBQ/Sushi and Sakeclosed
Maloney’s TavernSplit Shift Sundays
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ImbibeHappy Hour ALL DAY: $2 Drafts, $3 Wells, $4 Wine, $4 Long Island Tea &
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Downtown DistilleryFREE POOL
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ExhaleKaraoke Night
$2.50 Bacardi Breezers
Monday
TNA Smokeshop3716 Central
Monday Special: Buy 1 Get 1 Anything!
15% Student Discount35% Off Anything in the Store
FREE Hookah Toboacco of Your Choice with Purchase of any Hookah
The Copper LoungePatio Open Tues-Fri NightPatio Opens at 4:30 on Sat
Package Liquors 11am-11:55pmSee ad for daily specials
Korean BBQ/Sushi and SakeOpen 11:30-2:30; 5-9:30
Burt’s Tiki Lounge*Two Wheel Mondays!* *The Glory
Bumps* *The Shivas* Marble Drafts*
The Library Bar & GrillEXTENDED HAPPY HOUR
3pm-8pm$3.00 U-Call-It’s
Half Priced Appetizers$1.00 Tacos
Page 10 / Thursday, March 10, 2011 New Mexico Daily loboculture
Take advantage of our 10%
student discount on service!
Spring Classic SALE STARTS MARCH 5th
Located in the Foothills Shopping Center - Juan Tabo & Menaul11145 B Menaul Blvd NE, ABQ., NM • www.thekickstand505.com • 505.299.2624
Spring 2011 Field Research
Grants For travel to Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain, and Portugal
The Latin American and Iberian Institute (LAII) announces the availability of Field Research Grants (FRGs) for graduate students and faculty. FRGs support research projects in Latin America and Iberia that require limited time in the field, such as four to eight weeks. Awards typically cover round-trip airfare, and some in-country travel and per diem. Visit http://laii.unm.edu/node/16 for application forms and guidelines.
Deadline: Monday, March 21, 2011 by 5pm in the LAII (801 Yale Blvd NE)
Questions? Contact Alexandra Blodget at [email protected] (277-7049)
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The University of New Mexico Student Publications Board
is now Accepting Applications for
2011-2012 Daily Lobo Editor
Apply at: unmjobs.unm.edu
Application Deadline: 1 p.m. Friday, April 1, 2011.
Term of Office: May 2011 through April 2012.
Requirements: To be considered, the candidate must be a student enrolled at the University of New Mexico, have been enrolled 6 hours or more at UNM the preceding 2 semesters, and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.5 by the end of the preceding semester. The editor must be enrolled as a UNM student in a degree-granting program for at least 6 credit hours throughout the term of office. Some publication experience preferable.
For more information call 277-5656.
CAMPUS EVENTSReturning Women Students Walk-in HoursStarts at: 9:00amLocation: Women’s Resource Center, 1160 Mesa Vista HallThinking about returning to school? Have some questions about how to get started? Come by the WRC and get some answers.The Tribal Law Journal presents Culti-vating Native Intellect and Philosophy: A Community Symposium Recognizing and Discussing the Contributions of Christine Zuni CruzStarts at: 1:00pmLocation: UNM School of LawThis is a FREE event. All are welcomed to attend. RSVP for dinner please contact Mitzi Vigil at (505) 277-0405 or [email protected].
SGI Buddhist ClubStarts at: 2:00pmLocation: SUB, Isleta RoomCome join us to our weekly buddhist meeting on campus. Chanting, discussion and small refeshments will be provided. Healthy Relationship ForumStarts at: 2:30pmLocation: Women’s Resource Center, 1160 Mesa Vista HallThe Forum is a space to explore the nature of healthy romantic relationships in college and beyond, with an emphasis on expectations, conflict resolution, and communication. MWC Tournament Watch Party: Lobos vs. RamsStarts at: 3:30pmLocation: SUB AtriumJoin Lobospirit in cheering on the Lobos as they take on the Colorado State Rams in Las Vegas, NV.
Changeling the LostStarts at: 8:00pmLocation: Student Union Building, Upper Floor Santa Ana A&BPlay a character as part of White Wolf Pub-lishing’s ongoing official worldwide chronicle.Please call Marco at 505 453 7825 for infor-mation/confirmation.
COMMUNITY EVENTSCarbon Free, Nuclear FreeStarts at: 6:00pmLocation: ABQ Center for Peace & JusticeCatch up on the nuke scene and the latest on moving into an alternative energy future. Carbon Free, Nuclear Free, a talk by Mark Doppke. Information: 505-242-5511.The Intentional Marriage: A Seminar for CouplesStarts at: 7:00pmLocation: 217 Locust St. NE
This seminar will equip you with meaningful rituals to keep the flame burning strong in your relationship. FREE. Space is limited.REGISTER TODAY! (505) 247-1511. www.HealthyMarriagesNM.org
LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar
for March 10, 2011Planning your day has never been easier!
Placing an event in the Lobo Life calendar:
1. Go to www.dailylobo.com2. Click on “Events” link near the top of the page.
3. Click on “Submit an Event Listing” on the right side of the page.4. Type in the event information and submit!
Please limit your description to 25 words (although you may type in more, your description will be edited to 25 words. To have your event published in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, submit at least 3 school days prior to the event . Events in the Daily Lobo will appear with the title, time, 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.
Future events may be previewed at
www.dailylobo.com
by Alexandra [email protected]
Global DanceFest artists are chal-lenging spoken language’s limitations.
The production kicks off its three-weekend-long, eclectic compilation Friday. Together, the three sets, spaced out over three weekends, compose dance’s Rosetta Stone — a cultural-bridging, body-language experience that gives audiences a glimpse at Afri-can, New York, and Latin and Hispan-ic dancers from Los Angeles, Mexico, Brazil and Mozambique.
Contemporary dance opens eyes to foreign spheres and ways of think-ing, said Marjorie Neset, VSA Arts New Mexico executive director.
“Global DanceFest is intended to represent the world and has a real kind of cultural base, not in the sense of pro-jecting heritage particularly, but in the sense of taking a look at the world as it exists,” she said.
Celebrating diversity, the produc-tion disavows ethnocentricity by merg-ing around-the-globe dance numbers.
The first dance — from Mozam-bique’s Panaibra Gabriel Canda — “Time and Spaces: The Marrabenta So-los,” is accompanied by marrabenta, a form of Mozambican dance music.
Canda’s country has been in con-stant political turmoil since civil war erupted and waged from 1977-92. He said the piece evolves because of the country’s shifting political beliefs, so it doesn’t offer a solution or conclusion because his people don’t know what the future holds.
“If you feel it’s strange, that means that it provoked something in you,” he said. “It revitalizes something. From the difference, you can start to ques-tion yourself or even to just understand yourself. But the presence of this differ-ence — it’s like you give yourself a bet-ter understanding of your own choices as a human being.”
And choices are truly what these performance sets are about.
Performers/choreographers from Los Angeles, Mexico and Brazil col-laborated to produce “El Sueño de la Razón/Slumber of Reason,” a piece from the Latina Dance Theater Project that features 10 interpretations of Fran-cisco Goya’s seminal caprichos, or etch-ings. It runs March 25-26 at the Nation-al Hispanic Cultural Center.
Collaborator Licia Perea said the
etchings departed from what artists were doing around 1799. On that note, she said, the etchings’ subject matter of corruption, war, or beauty and the su-pernatural is still relevant today.
Like Canda’s piece, “Slumber of Reason” explores parallels between two cultures, though it looks at shared themes of time periods, not societal change.
“So we take some of those things and we’re applying them to contempo-rary issues that are really the same,” she said. “Each one of them is like a little story, so that’s what we’ve done as well.
The second week features a per-formance called “I Drink the Air Be-fore Me,” choreographed by Stephen Petronio. Neset said this performance is about unadulterated body movement.
“I think the work of all three of the artists, it’s hard to describe,” she said. “(Petronio’s) is pure, fast, powerful, strong contemporary dance.”
An abstract, weather-inspired per-formance is how Petronio described it. He said he looked at pictures of weath-er patterns to develop body move-ments. Dense with music and move-ment, Petronio recommends taking it in from an intuitive, not intellectual, standpoint.
“There is a very vivid sense of dis-orientation and reorientation along the course of the evening,” he said. “I tried to use that sense of orientation because a part of what’s so beautiful about a storm is there’s this incredible calm, then there’s a crazy swirling.”
Neset said dance, movement and body language are universally under-stood communication, so the perfor-mances broaden the audience’s world
view.“I think the reason we have the
modest, but really devoted audience that we do have, is because people see this way of looking at the world — that this is one of the ways of looking at the world,” she said. “Then, dance is fun. Movement is interesting and beauti-ful, but I suppose that idea of connect-ing with the world (is what) I find really important.”
And theworld comesdancingChoreographers explore civil war, Goya, the body
Courtesy of StephenPetronioCoDancers from the Stephen Petronio Company perform “I Drink the Air Before Me,” a storm-inspired piece. The piece will be at the National Hispanic Cultural Center on March 18-19.
Global DanceFest sprinG 2011
“time anD spaces: the marrabenta solos”
Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m.N4th Theater
4904 Fourth St. N.W
“i Drink the air beFore me”
March 18-19 at 8 p.m.National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 Fourth St. S.W.
“el sueño De la razón/slumber oF reason”
March 25-26 at 8 p.m.National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 Fourth St. S.W.
$20 general admission$12 students/seniors
Thursday, March 10, 2011 / Page 11New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features
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FOR RELEASE MARCH 10, 2011
ACROSS1 Calrissian of “Star
Wars” films6 Playground
rejoinder11 Down14 Center of Florida?15 Pageant prop16 __ mater17 Negotiation
obstacle19 Gallery opening?20 PDQ relative21 Palindromic
fashion model22 Surgeon’s
patient, perhaps23 Recovery sites27 Chip away at30 Paint choices31 A and B, at times32 Holdup note?36 ’70s-’80s
televangelist show“The __ Club”
37 Vinegary prefix39 Be in the running40 State capital
component, often43 Old fallout source45 Apollo 11
destination46 Trading places48 Most agree it
should bereduced
52 Skunk’s weapon53 “Children of the
Poor” author54 Reason for the
downfall of manykings?
58 __-secret59 Street weapon,
and a hint to thecircled letters in17-, 23- and 48-Across
62 Rollover subj.63 Turn away64 Kitchen tubes65 Turk’s topper66 Fills (up)67 Germs may lead
to them
DOWN1 Yeats’s “__ and
the Swan”2 Copies3 Sweet Sixteen
initials4 7-Down athlete5 Place to play
favorites, briefly
6 Score directionafteraccelerando,perhaps
7 Home of a 4-Down
8 Words ofdefiance
9 Rush find10 Galley tool11 Fifth wheel12 Broadcast13 Some are blind18 Doctor’s
suggestion22 Kitchen meas.24 Come-__: lures25 Bronco or
Charger26 “Taking
Woodstock”director
27 “House” actorOmar
28 WasatchMountains resort
29 One way tostand
32 First name incomics villains
33 Say and mean34 Speedy
Gonzales assent35 __ precedent37 Loads
38 Cops’ favoritebirds?
41 Dubai big shot42 Jack of “Barney
Miller”43 NYPD broadcast44 Beyond repair46 Orders from
above47 Screen door
material48 “__ you paid me!”49 Hold precious
50 Birthstone afteropal
51 Petrol unit55 Mr. Peanut prop56 Tracy Turnblad’s
mom in“Hairspray”
57 Gets it59 Show age, in a
way60 Sen. Byrd’s state61 Electronic storage
density meas.
Wednesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Pamela Amick Klawitter 3/10/11
(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 3/10/11
Dilbert
dailysudokulevel: 1234 solution to yesterday’s puzzle
dailycrossword
Page 12 / Thursday, March 10, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo
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