NM Daily Lobo 101612

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Bullying Biden see Page 4 October 16, 2012 The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895 tuesday Inside the Daily Lobo 8675309 See Page 7 volume 117 issue 40 78 | 51 TODAY I am the walrus See Page 3 by Svetlana Ozden [email protected] @SvetlanaOzden UNM President Robert Frank and the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce have publicly expressed support for the proposed $146 million addition to UNMH. e proposed addition will cre- ate an adult-care hospital that will include 96 hospital beds to decrease emergency waiting room time, which is about 24 to 36 hours on average, by making space available for patients who require inpatient care. e hos- pital, which will be located near Lo- mas Boulevard and I-25, will allow emergency room beds to be used ex- clusively for emergency cases. On Sept. 17, UNM representatives sent a letter to the State of New Mex- ico Board of Finance asking to post- pone final approval of the expansion after members of New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access and the Rio Grande Foundation said the purpose of the hospital was unclear and that approval for the hospital did not in- clude sufficient public conversation. e adult-care hospital was ap- proved in public meetings by the Board of Regents and its Finance and Facilities Committee, the Health Sci- ence Center Board of Directors, the UNM Hospital Board of Trustees and the New Mexico Higher Education Department. Approval from the State Board of Finance was on the agenda for the Sept. 18 State Board of Finance meet- ing, but was postponed. In response, the Board of Regents and members of UNMH set up four public meeting dates this month to address the concerns. In a letter to the Albuquerque Jour- nal on Sunday, Frank said an increase in hospital beds and jobs are critical to the health of New Mexicans and the economy. He said that, according to the UNM Bureau of Business and Economic Research, the construc- tion of the hospital may employ about 1,000 workers and the hospital may include about 530 new jobs. e approval of UNM’s proposed adult-care hospital would be a shot in the arm to both,” he said in the let- ter. “e expansion of the hospital … would provide 96 inpatient beds to ease the chronic backlog in our emer- gency room.” Frank said that as long as he is president of UNM, standard business practice will include preference for employing in-state workers for future projects. He said about 95 percent of the money the University has spent on subcontractors has been paid to subcontractors within the state. “We are partners in building this economy and community that is so vital to us all,” he said. “Working to- gether to promote employment op- portunities for New Mexico as we strengthen the health care delivery infrastructure is a win-win for the citi- zens of our state.” In a letter to Regent President Jack Fortner on Sunday, Greater Al- buquerque Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Terri Cole said the chamber supports the new adult-care hospital because the addition is nec- essary to fulfill UNMH’s mission to provide ample patient care. She said the occupancy rate forces some pa- tients to seek care out of state and that the project will ensure that patients stay within New Mexico. “New Mexico’s health care sys- tems are an important part of creating a competitive community,” she said in the letter. “e Chamber’s prin- ciple health care focus has been and continues to be to support projects and policies which promote the qual- ity of health care and its affordability.” But in a press release on Oct. 2, New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access spokeswoman Kim Moss said UNMH representatives’ claims re- garding high occupancy rates are false and that the national standard hospital occupancy rate is 75 per- cent, which is higher than UNMH’s by Ardee Napolitano [email protected] e psychiatrist who identified himself as a UNM professor in a peti- tion to remove post-traumatic stress disorder from New Mexico’s Medi- cal Cannabis Program (MCP) says he did not know that his contract with UNM had been terminated. William Ulwelling said he was not notified by the University that his appointment as a volunteer pro- fessor expired in 2007. He said he learned about his termination only after a television reporter told him about it during an interview after news about his controversial peti- tion broke. “Unbeknownst to me in 2007, they didn’t send me the request to remove letter, which they usual- ly do,” he said. “I really don’t know why it lapsed. Certainly if I had known, I would have changed my letterhead.” Ulwelling said the University may have failed to contact him if they tried to reach him at his office number, which was already deacti- vated at the time. He said he closed his medical practice in 2006. “I think it was just a communica- tion oversight,” he said. But UNMH communications di- rector Billy Sparks said Ulwelling was notified by the University in writing shortly after his position expired. “e correspondence sent to him stated that his voluntary po- sition expired on Dec. 31, 2007,” Sparks said. Sparks would not say whether the University confirmed that Ulwelling received the letter. He declined to comment further and ended the interview. Ulwelling said he did not intend to represent UNM’s stance on the use of medical marijuana for PTSD patients in his petition by signing it as an assistant professor of the Uni- versity. He said he only used the ti- tle to establish the legitimacy of the petition. “I never claimed in my petition that I endorsed (the University),” he said. “I just wanted to show that I’m in good standing with my fellow professionals, and that I’m board certified.” e Daily Lobo cited on Oct. 5 a letter that psychiatric nurse practitioner Bryan Krumm sent to Ulwelling challenging Ulwelling’s petition. In the letter, Krumm cited Estate of Eric Haar v. Ulwelling and quoted from the appellate judge’s opinion in the case, saying “…Eric Haar described you (Ulwelling) as ‘cold, impersonal, and didn’t really care or didn’t want to take the time to care.’” Ulwelling said that, contrary to what the Daily Lobo reported in an Oct. 5 article, the claim he filed a lawsuit against his former patient Eric Haar is untrue. He said Haar’s estate filed the 2003 lawsuit against various medical practitioners in New Mexico after Haar committed suicide in 2000. Ulwelling said that because the Medical Cannabis Program was not legalized until 2007, he was not able to prescribe medical marijuana to Haar. According to case detail from the New Mexico Courts, Haar’s family and friends filed against Ulwelling and six other medical practices and practitioners for “wrongful death.” Judge Valerie Huling removed Ul- welling from the lawsuit in June 2007, according to court records. Ulwelling said the main reason behind his petition is that studies suggest that PTSD patients are more vulnerable to substance abuse. He said 60 percent of PTSD patients become addicted to a specific sub- stance, which causes psychotic symptoms, such as paranoia and hallucinations. But Ulwelling said that, despite having sufficient experience treat- ing PTSD patients, he never pre- scribed medical marijuana to his patients because he closed his med- ical office before the MCP was legal- ized in 2007. “I certainly have had plenty of experience with PTSD patients, but I stopped seeing patients before medical marijuana was legalized,” he said. “Any treatment needs to be shown as safe and efficacious before it should be used for patients.” Ulwelling said he is working on an action paper that urges the American Psychiatric Association to adopt his point of view about the in- eligibility of PTSD for medical mar- ijuana prescriptions. He said the paper was approved by the APA’s Council on Addiction in April, and by the New Mexico Psychiatric As- sociation and the National Assem- bly of the APA in May. For his paper to be officially ac- cepted by the APA, Ulwelling said he has to attend a hearing before orga- nization’s board of trustees. He said he plans to get the board’s approval at its next meeting in December. Ulwelling said that on Wednes- day, he will pitch his case to the MCP’s Medical Advisory Board. “I think it would be a harmful thing to keep PTSD in the MCP,” he said. “It’s important that I present this as a doctor. After that, it’s out of my hands.” Ulwelling said he will continue to push through with his petition and his action paper, despite threats by other practitioners to file a com- plaint against his medical license. He said he is positive his initiatives will succeed. “It’s not a good idea to experi- ment with the people of New Mex- ico to determine whether the treat- ment is safe and efficacious,” he said. “Just because people disagree with me and threaten me doesn’t mean I will withdraw the petition.” Adria Malcolm/@adriamalcolm/ Daily Lobo UNM senior forward-guard Chad Adams takes a break from answering questions at the media day Monday afternoon at The Pit. The Lobo men’s basketball team held a practice open to the media to share players’ thoughts on the upcoming season. Following two exhibition games on Oct. 31 and Nov. 5, UNM begins the season with ESPN’s 24 Hours of College Basketball marathon. The Lobos will host Davidson at The Pit for a midnight tip-off on Nov. 12. UNM enters the season after winning the Mountain West Conference regular-season and tournament titles last year. The Lobos also earned a berth in the NCAA national tournament, making it to the second round. Despite its recent success, UNM is not receiving as much attention as other teams in the MWC. According to the MWC website, UNM has 11 televised games. UNLV has 23 and San Diego State has 20. The Lobos are embracing their role as a dark horse. “We’re feeling real confident,” redshirt junior guard Demetrius Walker said. “Everybody’s counting us out, which is perfect. We’re the underdogs, and that’s exactly where we want to be.” ~J.R. Oppenheim MEDIA DAY Doctor speaks on petition controversy Ulwelling explains letterhead, motivations Frank backs planned hospital see UNMH PAGE 3 “This clearly shows that UNMH does not have the need for another hospital at taxpayers’ expense” ~Kim Moss spokeswoman New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access

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NM Daily Lobo 101612

Transcript of NM Daily Lobo 101612

Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 101612

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

BullyingBidensee Page 4

O c t o b e r 1 6 , 2 0 1 2The Independent Student Voice of UNM since 1895

tuesday

Inside theDaily Lobo

8675309

See Page 7volume 117 issue 40 78 | 51TODAY

I am the walrus

See Page 3

BullyingBullying

by Svetlana [email protected]

@SvetlanaOzden

UNM President Robert Frank and the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce have publicly expressed support for the proposed $146 million addition to UNMH.

� e proposed addition will cre-ate an adult-care hospital that will include 96 hospital beds to decrease emergency waiting room time, which is about 24 to 36 hours on average, by making space available for patients who require inpatient care. � e hos-pital, which will be located near Lo-mas Boulevard and I-25, will allow emergency room beds to be used ex-clusively for emergency cases.

On Sept. 17, UNM representatives sent a letter to the State of New Mex-ico Board of Finance asking to post-pone � nal approval of the expansion after members of New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access and the Rio Grande Foundation said the purpose of the hospital was unclear and that approval for the hospital did not in-clude su� cient public conversation.

� e adult-care hospital was ap-proved in public meetings by the Board of Regents and its Finance and Facilities Committee, the Health Sci-ence Center Board of Directors, the UNM Hospital Board of Trustees and the New Mexico Higher Education Department.

Approval from the State Board of Finance was on the agenda for the Sept. 18 State Board of Finance meet-ing, but was postponed.

In response, the Board of Regents and members of UNMH set up four public meeting dates this month to address the concerns.

In a letter to the Albuquerque Jour-nal on Sunday, Frank said an increase in hospital beds and jobs are critical to the health of New Mexicans and the economy. He said that, according to the UNM Bureau of Business and Economic Research, the construc-tion of the hospital may employ about 1,000 workers and the hospital may include about 530 new jobs.

“� e approval of UNM’s proposed adult-care hospital would be a shot in the arm to both,” he said in the let-ter. “� e expansion of the hospital … would provide 96 inpatient beds to ease the chronic backlog in our emer-gency room.”

Frank said that as long as he is president of UNM, standard business practice will include preference for employing in-state workers for future

projects. He said about 95 percent of the money the University has spent on subcontractors has been paid to subcontractors within the state.

“We are partners in building this economy and community that is so vital to us all,” he said. “Working to-gether to promote employment op-portunities for New Mexico as we strengthen the health care delivery infrastructure is a win-win for the citi-zens of our state.”

In a letter to Regent President Jack Fortner on Sunday, Greater Al-buquerque Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Terri Cole said the chamber supports the new adult-care hospital because the addition is nec-essary to ful� ll UNMH’s mission to provide ample patient care. She said the occupancy rate forces some pa-tients to seek care out of state and that the project will ensure that patients stay within New Mexico.

“New Mexico’s health care sys-tems are an important part of creating a competitive community,” she said in the letter. “� e Chamber’s prin-ciple health care focus has been and continues to be to support projects and policies which promote the qual-ity of health care and its a� ordability.”

But in a press release on Oct. 2, New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access spokeswoman Kim Moss said UNMH representatives’ claims re-garding high occupancy rates are false and that the national standard hospital occupancy rate is 75 per-cent, which is higher than UNMH’s

by Ardee [email protected]

� e psychiatrist who identi� ed himself as a UNM professor in a peti-tion to remove post-traumatic stress disorder from New Mexico’s Medi-cal Cannabis Program (MCP) says he did not know that his contract with UNM had been terminated.

William Ulwelling said he was not noti� ed by the University that his appointment as a volunteer pro-fessor expired in 2007. He said he learned about his termination only after a television reporter told him about it during an interview after news about his controversial peti-tion broke.

“Unbeknownst to me in 2007, they didn’t send me the request to remove letter, which they usual-ly do,” he said. “I really don’t know why it lapsed. Certainly if I had known, I would have changed my letterhead.”

Ulwelling said the University may have failed to contact him if they tried to reach him at his o� ce number, which was already deacti-vated at the time. He said he closed his medical practice in 2006.

“I think it was just a communica-tion oversight,” he said.

But UNMH communications di-rector Billy Sparks said Ulwelling was noti� ed by the University in writing shortly after his position expired.

“� e correspondence sent to him stated that his voluntary po-sition expired on Dec. 31, 2007,” Sparks said.

Sparks would not say whether the University con� rmed that Ulwelling received the letter. He declined to comment further and ended the interview.

Ulwelling said he did not intend to represent UNM’s stance on the use of medical marijuana for PTSD patients in his petition by signing it as an assistant professor of the Uni-versity. He said he only used the ti-tle to establish the legitimacy of the petition.

“I never claimed in my petition that I endorsed (the University),” he said. “I just wanted to show that I’m in good standing with my fellow professionals, and that I’m board certi� ed.”

� e Daily Lobo cited on Oct. 5 a letter that psychiatric nurse practitioner Bryan Krumm sent to Ulwelling challenging Ulwelling’s petition. In the letter, Krumm cited Estate of Eric Haar v. Ulwelling and quoted from the appellate judge’s opinion in the case, saying “…Eric Haar described you (Ulwelling) as ‘cold, impersonal, and didn’t really care or didn’t want to take the time to care.’”

Ulwelling said that, contrary to what the Daily Lobo reported in an Oct. 5 article, the claim he � led a lawsuit against his former patient Eric Haar is untrue. He said Haar’s

estate � led the 2003 lawsuit against various medical practitioners in New Mexico after Haar committed suicide in 2000.

Ulwelling said that because the Medical Cannabis Program was not legalized until 2007, he was not able to prescribe medical marijuana to Haar.

According to case detail from the New Mexico Courts, Haar’s family and friends � led against Ulwelling and six other medical practices and practitioners for “wrongful death.” Judge Valerie Huling removed Ul-welling from the lawsuit in June 2007, according to court records.

Ulwelling said the main reason behind his petition is that studies suggest that PTSD patients are more vulnerable to substance abuse. He said 60 percent of PTSD patients become addicted to a speci� c sub-stance, which causes psychotic symptoms, such as paranoia and hallucinations.

But Ulwelling said that, despite having su� cient experience treat-ing PTSD patients, he never pre-scribed medical marijuana to his patients because he closed his med-ical o� ce before the MCP was legal-ized in 2007.

“I certainly have had plenty of experience with PTSD patients, but I stopped seeing patients before medical marijuana was legalized,” he said. “Any treatment needs to be shown as safe and e� cacious before it should be used for patients.”

Ulwelling said he is working on an action paper that urges the American Psychiatric Association to adopt his point of view about the in-eligibility of PTSD for medical mar-ijuana prescriptions. He said the paper was approved by the APA’s Council on Addiction in April, and by the New Mexico Psychiatric As-sociation and the National Assem-bly of the APA in May.

For his paper to be o� cially ac-cepted by the APA, Ulwelling said he has to attend a hearing before orga-nization’s board of trustees. He said he plans to get the board’s approval at its next meeting in December.

Ulwelling said that on Wednes-day, he will pitch his case to the MCP’s Medical Advisory Board.

“I think it would be a harmful thing to keep PTSD in the MCP,” he said. “It’s important that I present this as a doctor. After that, it’s out of my hands.”

Ulwelling said he will continue to push through with his petition and his action paper, despite threats by other practitioners to � le a com-plaint against his medical license. He said he is positive his initiatives will succeed.

“It’s not a good idea to experi-ment with the people of New Mex-ico to determine whether the treat-ment is safe and e� cacious,” he said. “Just because people disagree with me and threaten me doesn’t mean I will withdraw the petition.”

Adria Malcolm/@adriamalcolm/ Daily LoboUNM senior forward-guard Chad Adams takes a break from answering questions at the media day Monday afternoon at The Pit. The Lobo men’s basketball team held a practice open to the media to share players’ thoughts on the upcoming season. Following two exhibition games on Oct. 31 and Nov. 5, UNM begins the season with ESPN’s 24 Hours of College Basketball marathon. The Lobos will host Davidson at The Pit for a midnight tip-o� on Nov. 12.UNM enters the season after winning the Mountain West Conference regular-season and tournament titles last year. The Lobos also earned a berth in the NCAA national tournament, making it to the second round. Despite its recent success, UNM is not receiving as much attention as other teams in the MWC. According to the MWC website, UNM has 11 televised games. UNLV has 23 and San Diego State has 20. The Lobos are embracing their role as a dark horse.“We’re feeling real con� dent,” redshirt junior guard Demetrius Walker said. “Everybody’s counting us out, which is perfect. We’re the underdogs, and that’s exactly where we want to be.”

~J.R. Oppenheim

MEDIA DAYDoctor speaks onpetition controversyUlwelling explains letterhead, motivations

Frank backs planned hospital

see UNMH PAGE 3

“This clearly shows that UNMH does not

have the need for another hospital at taxpayers’ expense”

~Kim Mossspokeswoman

New Mexicans for Equal Health Care Access

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volume 117 issue 40Telephone: (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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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily loboTu e s d ay, o c To b e r 16, 2012

Correction The article “Psychiatrist proposes no pot for PTSD patients,” published in the Oct. 5 Daily Lobo, incorrectly cited a source. The Lobo reported that in a letter

sent to psychiatrist William Ulwelling from psychiatric nurse practitioner Bryan Krumm, “…Krumm cited a 2007 lawsuit Ulwelling had against a patient, Eric Haar, to whom he allegedly refused to prescribe medical cannabis. In the lawsuit, Haar allegedly described Ulwelling as ‘cold, impersonal, and didn’t really care, or didn’t want to take the time to care.’” The article should have stated that the lawsuit was filed against Ulwelling by the estate of Eric Haar, who was diagnosed with PTSD and committed suicide in 2000 before medical cannabis was legalized in 2007, and that the case did not involve the prescription of medical marijuana. Harr’s opinion of Ulwelling was taken from the appellate judge’s opinion issued on Feb. 1, 2007, which stated that Harr shared his opinion with his mother prior to his death. The Daily Lobo regrets the error.

Presidential Debatetoday

Follow ourDailyLobo.com

at 7 p.m.

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 101612

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news Tuesday, OcTOber 16, 2012/ Page 3

occupancy rate as reported to the New Mexico Hospital Association.

According to NMHA, the occu-pancy rate at UNMH is 63 percent, which is less than the 90 percent oc-cupancy rate that UNMH representa-tives have used as reasoning behind the need for the addition.

According to the New Mexico Hospital Association Market Share Data, UNMH and the UNMH San-doval Regional Medical Center, which contain a total of 652 patient beds, are occupied by an average of about 413 patients daily.

“This clearly shows that UNMH does not have the need for another hospital at taxpayers’ expense,” Moss said. “UNMH wants to take money from the fund for the uninsured and use it for a boutique hospital that it doesn’t need.”

Moss said UNMH should recon-sider the new hospital and use tax-payer money to fund clinics that will help New Mexicans.

The proposal for the hospital will go before the State of New Mexico Board of Finance meeting today.

UNMH from page 1

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A 234-pound baby walrus is coming to the Wildlife Conservation Society’s New York Aquarium in Brooklyn.

The 15-week mammal was rescued from the ocean off Alas-ka in July. The aquarium is set to welcome the walrus, named Mi-tik, on Thursday.

The Coney Island aquarium is only one of a few institutions in the country that exhibit walruses. It has two other walruses. Nuka is 30 years old and Kulu is 17.

Mitik was found by a hunt-ing vessel several miles offshore. Initially, he suffered from blad-der problems and was unable to take a bottle. The Alaska Sea Life Center says he’s now putting on a pound a day.

He will spend the first month in quarantine at the aquarium’s medical facility. He will join the exhibit next spring.

Big baby walrus coming to NYC

Sybille Castro /AP photoIn this September photo provided by the Alaska SeaLife Center, the baby walrus Mitik is seen at the Alaska SeaLife Center in Seward, Alaska. The 234-pound male, rescued from the ocean off Alaska in July, is on his way to the New York Aquarium in Brooklyn.

State of New Mexico

Board of Finance Meeting

Today 9 a.m.

Governor’s Cabinet Room

Fourth floor State Capitol Building

Santa Fe

Page 4: NM Daily Lobo 101612

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

October 16, 2012

Page

4

Editor,

Overheard at the Homecoming game Oct. 6: “I’m so glad the Lobos don’t suck anymore.”

Aren’t we all? And yet, even though the Lobos played an incredible football game against Texas State, winning their Homecoming game 35-14, that’s not worthy of front-page news? Not only did the win deserve the headline, the names and a photo of the students crowned Homecom-ing King and Queen also deserved to be pub-lished. Two stories full of stats about the game, and no mention of the Homecoming court? Disappointing.

Karen GardnerUNM sta�

Editor,

I love the Frontier Restaurant and I have many fond memories eating there. But a recent incident has left me with a bad taste in my mouth — literally.Last Wednesday, I used the restroom, think-ing nothing of the fact that an employee was cleaning it at the time. While I was in the stall, he proceeded to spray Lysol continuously. Now, the restroom is a con� ned space, and Lysol is a poisonous chemical. Why would he continue to spray this chemical for the full � ve minutes I was in the restroom?

Feeling angry and confused, I asked him. His response was “� at’s how I get people to leave the restroom.” I asked him why he didn’t block the restroom and not let people in while he was cleaning. “� at would be rude.” Apparently forcing people to breathe poisonous chemicals is not rude.So go enjoy the Frontier — just be sure to use the restroom somewhere else.

Benjamin KrugerDaily Lobo reader

Editor,

Let me just say that I am truly o� end-ed at the crass behavior of cars and other motorized vehicles. Do they even realize how insanely dangerous they are? � ese idiots careen around corners, their beady eyes � xed on their iPhones or the innocent old ladies slowly maneuvering the cross-walk. Let me just say that I have had several near-death experiences from these crazed gas-guzzlers, and if they would only follow the law, we would not have such an issue.Everyone else should have the right of way to those lunatics in WMDs. Where I’m just

Editor,

� e majority of the letters to yourself that are published are typically written by peo-ple who are angry, have a superiority com-plex, hate Republicans, hate presidential candidate Mitt Romney, love Obama, hate the University’s president, provost, regents, etc., make insupportable statements, lack either knowledge of the topic they’re writ-ing about or the ability to express it, don’t know how to open dialogue about touchy topics without ad hominem reasoning (e.g., “Romney is stupid”) or believe that being vulgar will make them seem “nonconform-ist” and highly intellectual. Opinion pieces and political articles in your paper are ei-ther pro-Democrat or anti-Republican. And your political cartoonist likes to create a sensation for laughs.

It’s kind of funny that I can read articles all over the internet about bullying, but the bullies I see the most are the ones you pub-lish. Juan Tabone characterizes Republicans in his cartoons as backwater hillbillies who act like cavemen and spew hate-� lled sen-timents. Letters about politics often follow the same line of thought as last Wednes-day’s letter to the editor, “How do I loathe the GOP? Let me count the ways…”

A few weeks ago, I heard someone say that the reason there are so few letters pub-lished that contrast this point of view is be-cause no Republicans have written to the Daily Lobo, or because they’re too dumb to write a cohesive argument. If this isn’t bullying, then the de� nition has changed.Bully v.

1. To treat abusively2. To affect by means of force or

coercion3. To use browbeating language or

behavior Bully n.

1. A blustering, browbeating person, es-pecially one habitually cruel to others who are weaker

2. Pimp3. A hired ru� anWhen people are bullied, they usually

prefer to avoid putting themselves in a posi-tion that would open them up to more ridi-cule; hence, your lack of Republican letters and articles.

It’s strange to read a paper that can be so full of venom toward a political party, but also places an article about a man wearing dresses on the front page in an e� ort to sup-port him. Apparently it’s okay to try to stop him from getting bullied, but it’s also okay to print articles that target a large group of people. It seems to me that this kind of jour-nalism is extremely irresponsible, either be-cause nobody is trying to maintain balance or because articles are purposefully being chosen in order to create a sensation.

If it’s the first, then please pay more attention. If it’s the second, then I won-der if you’ve considered the impact you’re making, because it definitely isn’t a positive one.

Paige MowrerUNM student

Editor’s note: � is letter is in response to the article “UNM says doctor lied in propos-al,” published Oct. 8 in the Daily Lobo. � is letter’s author was the subject of the article, which talks about his proposal to keep medi-cal cannabis from PTSD patients. According to a UNM spokesman, Ulwelling misrepre-sented himself as a UNM professor. � e arti-cle was a follow-up to “Psychiatrist proposes no pot for PTSD patients,” published Oct. 5 in the Daily Lobo.

Editor,

I’d like to respond to a few claims laid against me by the Daily Lobo, to which I was never given a chance to respond. After graduating from UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute, I began my practice of psychiatry in Albuquerque, and am proud to have vol-unteered my services to UNM as a clinical assistant professor beginning in 1984. Un-beknownst to me, my appointment expired in 2007. Unfortunately, I was not noti� ed of

EDITORIAL BOARD

Elizabeth ClearyEditor-in-chief

Danielle RonkosManaging editor

Alexandra SwanbergOpinion editor

Svetlana OzdenNews editor

LETTER

LETTERS

Daily Lobo singles out, bullies conservatives

Psychiatrist clarifi es, refutes reporting errors

Careless drivers imperil themselves and others

Employee wields Lysol to ruin restroom visit

this change. My business letterhead should also be updated to note that I am now a Dis-tinguished Life Fellow in the American Psy-chiatric Association.

Errors on the part of the Daily Lobo are far more signi� cant, and are harmful to both my former patient and me. Your Oct. 5 arti-cle states that I had � led a lawsuit against a former patient and refused to prescribe him medical cannabis. Both claims are bizarre and ridiculous. I have never in my life � led a lawsuit against a patient, and I have never had any dealings with any patient regarding prescribing medical marijuana. Of note is that I closed my o� ce and patient practice in July 2006, and prescribing medical mari-juana was not legalized in New Mexico until April 2007.

I have � led a petition with the Depart-ment of Health because it represents the overwhelming consensus of professionals and organizations in the � elds of PTSD and addiction psychiatry. � ere is no good scien-ti� c evidence that marijuana treats PTSD. As a physician, I am obligated to protect PTSD patients, who are at special risk for develop-ing substance abuse. As many as 60 percent of PTSD patients carry the added burden of a substance abuse disorder. We cannot lead our recovering veterans and PTSD patients down the wrong path, and I hope the com-munity realizes that we are hurting, not help-ing, these patients in a very vulnerable time.

� ank you for giving me the opportunity to respond.

William Ulwelling, MD, MPH

Former UNM School of Medicine clinical associate professor of psychiatry, 1984-2007

a squishy piece of � esh, these cars are tanks of death, destruction and dismemberment, and if these drivers can’t control their car, they shouldn’t be allowed to drive at all.

I believe these drivers are what’s wrong with this nation. � ey drive and speed through school zones with an air of entitle-ment. � e road belongs to them, and they are the only ones who seemingly exist in their � eld of view — everyone else is but obstacles.

Just the other day, while I was walking through campus, a scooter zipped past me with no regard for puppy dogs, children or toes. � e driver simply looked dead ahead, hunched, with a vapid and stupid expres-sion on their face. Be warned, ye drivers: Your behavior will come back to bite you, whether through tickets, accidents, severe injury or death.

Max McguireUNM student

Homecoming coverage neglected king, queen

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 101612

New Mexico Daily lobo culture Tuesday, OcTOber 16, 2012/ Page 5

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Mayor Richard J. Berry’sApp Development Contest

for the City of Albuquerque!

Students and DevelopersDevelop an app for the following categories

° Cultural Resources

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° Outdoor Fun & Healthy Living

Deadline: December 3

AppsCompetition

UNM Where’sMy Bus ABQ Ride App

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Examples

Win your share of $30,000

by Nicole [email protected]

I packed my backpack full of buttery burritos, a Nikon D100 camera and a few steak knives; I was ready to hitchhike until the soles of my shoes wore through.

My friend and I parked her ‘78 Datsun at Jerry’s Market in Isle-ta and left a Sharpie note on the windshield: “Don’t tow!!! Will be back Saturday or Sunday or next week. Car broke down.”

We trudged beside the guard-rail, thumbs jutting out, and of-fered ourselves to the unfor-giving, tangled bowels of the universe.

When you tell people you’re hitchhiking in 2012, the reactions aren’t usually positive. “Why?” “Don’t be surprised if you are raped.” “You’re a dirty hippy. Get a haircut and a real job.”

I guess I have more faith in humanity than the average Joe, but I proved my point — the people who picked us up were more normal than your average UNM professor.

Ryan from Belen was the first person to stop. He had heavy-

duty equipment in the back of his truck, and strapped our bags to the machines. He had about 10 starched and pressed slacks and shirts in the cab of the truck, just in case he entered a rodeo at the last minute, unprepared. “I think there’s enough light to rope to-night, Dad,” he twanged into his phone. He dropped us off at the

last exit in Belen, gave us his last cigarette and told us to call him if he needed to beat someone up for us.

There’s something humiliat-ing about hitchhiking. Everyone stares at you as you walk back-wards, smiling, trying not to trip. Sometimes they honk. It was unclear what the honkers were trying to say; either “Get off the road” or “I’m not picking you up, but you’re cool enough to de-serve a honk.”

And then there are the people who only pick you up because they think you’ll die otherwise, such as Doris, a former pottery teacher at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. Do-ris was heading to Socorro from Albuquerque after doing her monthly shopping. She smoked, listened to NPR and talked about

the dire state of science-heavy education. We got out in Socorro and hiked our way along white pavement lines past billboards for Sleepy Inn and McDonald’s.

As the sun went down, so did the traffic flow. Our previ-ous rides had picked us up with-in 20 minutes, but we walked for three and a half hours — six miles — in pitch darkness. We screamed at the stars, pleaded with semitrucks and flipped peo-ple off when they blew past us

going 90 miles per hour. Eventu-ally, we just sat on the guardrail, thumbs out, holding a beer in the other fist.

We looked for a place to camp, but the fields were strung with barbed wire. Just as we were about to camp by the highway, a car pulled over a couple hun-dred yards away. We sprinted toward it and met gifted-educa-tion specialist Geoffrey. Geof-frey laughed louder than I can shout, talked about his 5-year-old daughter and pronounced the “j” in Jornada.

Geoffrey dropped us at the “backstage” parking lot of the Black Keys concert in Las Cru-ces, where a friend found us, cov-ered in blisters and goatheads. We drove to Silver City in a cloud of stale cigarette smoke, jokingly cursing at everyone who passed us and telling stories of crushed billboards, dead prairie dogs and abandoned tires.

A hitchhiker’s guide to New Mexico

“When you tell people you’re hitchhiking in 2012, the reactions

aren’t usually positive.”

Culture editor hung out with her thumb out during fall break

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 101612

Page 6 / Tuesday, OcTOber 16, 2012 New Mexico Daily loboculture$2.50 Coronas

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IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDINGUNM’S FREE SURVEY TOOL - OPINIOOpinio, UNM’s esurvey application,has changed its URL to esurvey.unm.edu

The old Opinio platform and URL,esurvey6.unm.edu, will no longer

be available after Oct. 31st, 2012

See ‘Esurvey News’ at: esurveyinfo.unm.edufor more information and New Account Info

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MOVIEWEDNESDAY

“The Hi-Lo Country” is a New Mexico-based flick, and it’s apparently a western “buddy ol’ pal” type of mov-ie — your favorite. The movie plays at the KiMo The-atre in celebration of New Mexico’s centennial — yes, we’re still celebrating. Most of the filming was done in New Mexico, plus Penélope Cruz is in it, which is rea-son enough alone. The film starts at 7 p.m. at the KiMo Theatre at 423 Central Ave. N.W.

HIKING BASICSWEDNESDAY

If you’ve always wanted to hike the Sandias in the fall but didn’t know where to start, your savior is here. No, it’s not me; it’s REI. REI holds a class in which you can learn about trip planning, essential equipment and places to visit. The class is at 6 p.m. at 1550 Mercantile Ave. N.E.

KNITTINGTHURSDAY

It’s getting chilly out, but you poor students can’t af-ford new warm clothes. Why not make your own in-stead? It might take a while, but knitters at the North Valley Library will teach you. The event starts at 2 p.m. at 7704-B Second St. N.W.

FIESTASATURDAY

A baby llama will help you celebrate your cultural di-versity at the Coronado State Monument this weekend. The Fiesta of Cultures starts at 10 a.m. and features mu-rals, a craft table and a gift shop. The monument is at 485 Kuaua Road in Bernalillo.

PAPER MARIGOLDSSATURDAY

Día de los Muertos is coming up, so a slew of events are headed your way. Altars: History, Traditions and Sym-bols teaches participants about altar construction and paper marigolds. The event starts at 1 p.m. at 803 La Vega Dr. S.W. at El Jardín Enterprises Studios.

~Nicole Perez

unmjobs.unm.eDu

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Apply to be a reporter at:

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 101612

Tuesday, OcTOber 16, 2012/ Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

‡ Please set all copy in upper and lowercase, flush left as indicated on artwork at these point sizes: Consultant name in 11-point Helvetica Neue Bold; Independent Beauty Consultant in 9-point Helvetica Neue Light; Web site or e-mail address in 9-point Helvetica Neue Light; phone number in 9-point Helvetica Neue Light. To the Independent Beauty Consultant: Only Company-approved Web sites obtained through the Mary Kay® Personal Web Site program may be utilized.

Tammy BoneIndependent Senior Sales Directorwww.marykay.com/Tam1(505) 315 - 1600

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Year ZeroLos Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

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FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 16, 2012

ACROSS1 Foursome times

two6 “And there you

have it!”11 Barnyard bleat14 Supercharged

engine, for short15 Like much bar

beer16 Foul up17 Ice cream

headache19 Theology subj.20 Of the state, to

Sarkozy21 Fur from a weasel23 Woolly mama25 Whistle-blower?28 Soon, to

Shakespeare29 Dieter’s progress31 Written

permission toskip school

34 Campbell’s line36 Old Russian

leaders37 Support, as a

cause40 Response

provokers44 Earthy tone46 Soothes47 Elmer Fudd, at

times52 Old Nair rival53 Concert reed54 Flight school

finals56 “King Kong” studio57 Proficient in60 Corn Belt resident62 Google Earth

offering63 “What a dumb

idea!” (or whatyou might sayabout thebeginning of 17-,31- or 47-Across)

68 Put away somegroceries?

69 Holy ark contents70 Citizen under

Caesar71 Cold War state:

Abbr.72 __Sweet:

aspartame73 Agriculture giant

celebrating its175th anniversarythis year

DOWN1 Gambling letters2 Unfriendly dog3 Swaps for a

better model4 “__ Baby”: “Hair”

song5 No-nos6 Whirlpool7 Dollar bill8 Suburban suffix9 Lounge around

10 Simon Saysplayer

11 Sheep prized forits wool

12 “Am too!” retort13 “What’s My

Line?” panelistFrancis

18 Kismet22 Macho guy23 End of a vague

threat24 Goes a-courting26 Pretense27 Tousle30 Scared, as

horses32 Warmed the

bench33 Albany-to-Buffalo

canal35 The like38 Moo __ pork

39 White-tailedshorebirds

41 Loginrequirement

42 Onion’s cousin43 Comparison

words45 DDE’s command47 Articles of faith48 German subs49 “The Last of the

Mohicans” author50 Cuthbert of “24”

51 Aussie bounders55 Weapon used with

a shield, maybe58 Memo abbr.59 What you used to

be?61 Mother Nature’s

burn balm64 Getty display65 Street cover66 Deface67 U-turn from

WSW

Monday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Marti DuGuay-Carpenter 10/16/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 10/16/12

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 101612

Page 8 / Tuesday, OcTOber 16, 2012 New Mexico Daily loboclassifieds

Announcements

ABQ INDOOR SOCCER. Home of the fastest game in town, close to campus. www.abqindoorsoccer.com

EDUCATION MAJORS (UNDERGRADU- ATE/GRADUATE Degrees). Elemen- tary, Secondary, Special Education. Regional Accreditation. NMPED Ap- proval/ Licensure. Tuition Commensu- rate with UNM. Wayland Baptist Univer- sity (Albuquerque Campus). 2201 San Pedro Dr. NE (505-323-9282) mccall [email protected] http://www.wbu.edu/col l e g e s - i n - a l b u q u e r q u e / e d u c a tion12-13.pdf

Lost and Found

MONEY FOUND ON campus in the early evening of Thursday, October 4. Call 889-3678, EXT 101 and leave a message identifying.envelope and amount.

Services

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

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

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

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

2 TUTORS NEEDED English/Writ- ing/SAT/ACT and Math/Science. Pay is DOE. Send resume/CL to info@aplus coaching.com

Apartments

UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 2BDRM $675/mo. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets allowed. Move in special! 573-7839.

BLOCK TO UNM. Large, clean, 1BDRM, $575/mo, includes utilities, no pets. Move in special! 255-2685.

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

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

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

1BDRM, 3 BLOCKS from UNM, Presby- terian. Hardwood floors, beamed wood ceiling, new windows. 114 Sycamore. $585/mo. +utilities, +dd, cats okay. NS. November 1st. Call 550-1579.

LARGE (700 SQ foot) 1BDRM mother- in-law unit for rent. Separate entrance, kitchen with breakfast bar, living area, and BA. Downtown location. Available immediately. $650/mo + deposit. Email Julia at fitzsimmonsconsulting@ya hoo.com.

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

SEETHE BEST TODAY! Fabulous 1 Bedroom Guest House with Private Courtyard near the UNM Architectural Building. No need for car. Move in To- day. Perfect for 1 responsible, clean, quiet tenant who will pamper it. Com- pletely furnished, even with dishes. Just bring books. References, Lease. No Drugs/Pets/Smoking/Parties. Crime Free Policy property. Only $493 to lucky person chosen to live here. 505- 220-8455 [email protected]

1 BEDROOM $350 utilities included, NS, no pets. Single $150 deposit VIctor 505-266-5132.

Rooms For Rent3BDRM/2BA HOUSE. 4 blocks to UN- M/CNM. Serious, quiet student only. $425/mo. including utilities/HSI. N/S. 239-0570.

ROOMATE WANTED, TO share a 3BDRM 2BA house with 2 female stu- dents. $450/mo including utilities. Close to UNM, Carlisle and Contitution. Text Kaitie at 459-7583.

FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED: 18-22 age preferably. 3BDRM house, four block from UNM/CNM. $300/mo +utili- ties. Call Addie to see, 505-331-2457.

QUIET MALE ROOMMATE to share 4BDRM house. Girard and Silver. $310/mo. +utilites. Ken 604-6322.

FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED for con- temporary town house near UNM. Fur- nished, $500/mo +cable, utilities in- cluded. Call 502-648-7147.

ROOMMATES NEEDED FOR 3BDRM house on west side. Close to I-40. $350/rm utilities included. Victoria 505- 463-2076.

ROOMMATES WANTED - 3BDRM, 2BA house in Summit Park. All new, 1700sqft, carport & garage. Email [email protected]

ROOM FOR RENT. Close to UNM. Large House. W/D. $285 plus utilities. Deposit req’d. Call or text: 260-615-7206.

LESS THAN 1 block from UNM! Two fe- males in house on Stanford. Seeking clean quiet female student for attached room $300/mo. Call/Text Jenny: 505- 400-1901.

Houses For Rent

UNIVERSITY AND EASTERN Remod- eled in gated mobile home park 3BDRM, 1.75BA, shed, dishwasher, GS, fridge, W/D $800/mo $775dd $35 app 298-7353.

Houses For Sale

FOR SALE CLEAN 1BDRM 1BA. 610sqft condo with pool near UNM/KAF- B/VA. William at 505-553-3489.

For Sale

VINTAGE HORNS: 1921 J.W York C melodie sax $230, 1951 Buescher Aris- tocrat Allto Sax $500. Conn French Horn (student) $225. Martin Cornet $150. Jimi 480-7444.

$215. 32 GB iPod touch (4th genera- tion) iOS 6. In perfect condition. I will also include the USB adaptor and new headphones. Interested? Text 505-362- 2041.

Vehicles For Sale

2002 TOYOTA SEQUOIA for sale! Call/- Text 604-6637 or 908-5208.

‘94 RED DODGE Shadow. Runs well. $1200 OBO. Call/text 505-859-5340.

Jobs Off Campus

EXPERIENCED PARALEGAL FOR San- doval Law Firm. Bilingual prefered. Fax resume 247-1120 or email in [email protected]

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

ATTORNEY OFFICE ASSISTANT. PT for future attorney wanting hands-on law office experience. Word processing required, excel proficiency a plus. $9.50- /hr. [email protected]

FEMALE NUDE MODELS needed for art photography. 433-9948.

ACTIVITY LEADERS AND Reading Tu- tors needed for before & after school programs in NE & NW, ABQ. PT $10.50- /hr. Apply online at www.campfireabq.- org or in person at 1613 University Blvd NE.

BEAUTIFUL, SHAPELY, AND sexy young female (18 or older) wanted for a very artistic, extremely tasteful, and 100% non explicit nude photoshoot. Will pay $300 for a 2 hour session. Must not have any tatoos or body pierc- ings. May bring escort. If interested, please call Thomas at 296-1661 before 1 PM.

LOOKING FOR SPANISH tutor, begin- ner to intermediate level. Two hours a week. Please call 250-9246 if interested.

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

TEN STUDENTS NEEDED $10/hr will work around schedule.4118 Central SW suite B. Call 505-907-0898.

BE IN MOVIES no experience needed. 505-884-0557. 24 hour hotline: 505-796- 6464. www.A1StarCasting.com

TUTOR FOR 2 hours each Monday 4:30- 6:30 in my Bernalillo home. 10th grade student needs help in Biology, Geome- try and French. Should be great at edit- ing work as well. $30 per week. Email: [email protected]

SPRING 2013 ENGLISH Program In Ko- rea (EPIK). $1,600-2,500/month plus housing, airfare, medical insurance, paid vacation. Must have BA degreeDeadline: Sometime in November **this date is tentative and could change de- pending on circumstances**. Please visit the website www.epik.go.k

GET CORPORATE MONEY out of poli- tics. $8-13/HR, full and part time. Call 505-255-6061.

Jobs On Campus

RESTAURANT SERVERS WANTED for UNM Psychology research study. Seek- ing healthy women aged 18-35 who work at least 20hrs/wk as servers in full service dine-in restaurants. To compen- sate for their time, participants will re- ceive a $100 Visa gift card that can be used wherever debit cards are ac- cepted. If interested, please call or email Professor Geoffrey Miller at [email protected], 505-277-1967, for more information.

Child Care

EDUCATOR/CAREGIVER FOR TOP- quality after-school and summer child care program. Play sports, take field trips, make crafts, be goofy, have fun and be a good role model. Learn, play, and get paid for doing both! $9/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 296-2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org UNM Work-study encouraged to apply.

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR: JOIN a won- derful and supportive team of people providing top-quality afterschool pro- grams for 5-12 year olds. This is a train- ing and leadership development posi- tion. Associate Directors work under di- rect supervision of Program Directors who prepare them to be promoted to Program Director. Starts at $10/hr plus paid holidays, paid planning time, paid preparation time, and great training with pay raises. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE or call 296-2880 or visit www.chil drens-choice.org

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

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2.2 miles to UNM, close to Rapid Ride,

convenient freeway access, quiet community w/ pool,

covered parking & on-site laundry& on-site laundry& on-site laundry

MOVE-IN SPECIALS AVAILABLE!

268-86865700 Copper NE

[email protected]

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

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

The Transformative Surface10:00am - 4:00pmUNM Art Museum 203 Cornell Dr. NEThe fi rst group exhibition of its kind at the UNM Art Museum to feature innovative new media, video, and sound works of art by nine faculty artists from the departments of Art; Art History and Interdisciplinary Film and Digital Media, and six guest artists from San Francisco and Santa Fe.

Ted7:00pm – 10:00pmSUB TheaterMid Week Movies

Disney’s The Lion King7:30pmPopejoy hall

Fresh Competitions3:00pm – 6:00pm

Johnson FieldFreshman Week- Activities on Johnson Field for the class of 2016!

Communication Skills Workshop3:30pm – 5:00pmStudent Health & Counseling (SHAC)Improve your communications and relationships with the skills taught in this one-part workshop. No charge to UNM Students!

Art & Music Theater & Films

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Presents their 2012Halloween Cabaret

My Big GayUNDEAD WEDDING

EFFEX NIGHTCLUB420 CENTRAL AVENUE SWALBUQUERQUE, MM 87102

October 19 & 20 - 7:30 pmOctober 21 - 3:00 pm

$20-General $15-Students/Seniors/Military/VeteranPurchase Tickets at: www.nmgmc.org/tickets