NM Daily Lobo 033011

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D AILY L OBO new mexico Keepin’ it real safe see page 5 March 30, 2011 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895 Inside the Daily Lobo Poor little guy See page 4 volume 115 issue 125 69 |43 TODAY Get to Know See page 2 wednesday by Alexandra Swanberg [email protected] Ever since he was young, Jake Well- man was groomed for responsibility — and that doesn’t seem to be changing. e recently appointed student re- gent said having a seat on the board gives him a chance to be a “servant leader.” He said he was a Boy Scout in middle school, and that experience motivated him to take on leadership roles. “I learned the rewards of helping other people and doing a job that I had to get done well,” he said. “I think that satisfaction in that service just re- ally caught on with me, and it’s some- thing I want to continue with.” Wellman applied for the student regent position early last semester, and said he felt he met the board’s needs. For two years, he was the class president at his high school. He helped establish a chapter of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity as a freshman at UNM. He was the former president of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and ASUNM Chief of Staff and Attorney General. Over spring break, the board appointed him to the New Mexico Educational Assistance Foundation Board, the Lobo Energy Board and the UNM Hospital Board of Trustees. Over the past few weeks, Wellman said he has spent time with students, constituency groups, faculty and staff to hear concerns. He said that increas- ing tuition has been a recurring fear. “Right now I think tuition is prob- ably No. 1, just because of the timing and the nature of the economy,” he Robert Maes / Daily Lobo UNM rugby player Nick Hernandez waits for his turn at drills on Johnson Field on Tuesday. The team is two wins away from qualifying for the National Competition, where it would first play Stanford. The team will hold a fundraiser April 6 at Lucky 66 Bowling. Alumnus lectures on atomic bomb by Diego Gomez [email protected] In spring 1953, 600 people at the site and another 15 million television viewers watched an atomic bomb explode in the Mojave Desert. UNLV professor Andrew Kirk said scientists coordinated the atomic explosions to demonstrate the eerie effects on a house and the mannequins set up inside it. In the UNM alumnus’ lecture, “Doom- town: Picturing Home on the Ne- vada Test Site,” Kirk said the test site was thought to be nothing more than an empty space in Nevada, but in reality, hundreds of thousands lived there, including the Paiute and Western Shoshone tribes. “e West is a complicated place,” Kirk said. “What appeared to be blank spots are full of history. Empty landscapes, supposed waste lands, are loaded with human his- tory of forgotten people and forgot- ten stories.” e day of the demonstration, Native American tribes protested at the site’s gate, but the scientists proceeded. Kirk showed images of a house built 3,500 feet from ground zero. It was filled with furniture, consumer goods and mannequins, which sci- entists positioned to look like they were performing everyday tasks. At various locations, dummies sat in cars and trucks. Photographer Vernon Jones cap- tured the blast amd depicted the house bending from the nuclear wind force before it was engulfed in flames three seconds later. Hundreds of dogs, pigs and mice dressed in human clothing were placed at the Nevada Test Site, Kirk said. Kirk said pigs are anatomi- cally similar to humans, so they made perfect test specimens for the project. see A-Bomb page 3 Speaker outlines radiation’s far-reaching devastation Student regent eyes tuition, energy said. “I guess University spending has kind of tied into that, but I think one of the issues that I’ve heard a lot, from students specifically, is asking the Uni- versity to cut wherever they can with- out raising tuition.” Second to tuition, Wellman said, is the need to evaluate the positions in the top-heavy administration. He said it’s important to consider how decisions will affect the University’s academic mission and the student experience. “It’s not one or two things we can do to say, ‘OK, check, check, educa- tion’s better — move on.’” he said. “It continues and should be at the core of everything you do, and moves for- ward in enriching that experience that students get when they come to the University.” A student in the Sustainability Studies program, Wellman said he plans to go to law school and focus on American energy use. “I’m interested in looking at how America deals with the climate change we’re going through — right now in Congress or in state or private sectors, trying to help the public cope with the changes in energy that we’re experi- encing and are coming,” he said. Robert Maes / Daily Lobo Junior Jake Wellman relaxes at hiis office in the SUB. Wellman was appointed by Governor Susana Martinez to serve as Student Regent until December 2012. TRY, TRY AGAIN “The West is a complicated place. What appeared to be blank spots are full of history.” ~Andrew Kirk UNLV Professor, UNM Alumnus

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nmdailylobo033011

Transcript of NM Daily Lobo 033011

Page 1: NM Daily Lobo 033011

DAILY LOBOnew mexico Keepin’ it

real safesee page 5

M a r c h 3 0 , 2 0 1 1 The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895

Inside theDaily Lobo

Poor little guy

See page 4volume 115 issue 125 69 |43

TODAYGet to Know

See page 2

wednesday

by Alexandra [email protected]

Ever since he was young, Jake Well-man was groomed for responsibility — and that doesn’t seem to be changing.

� e recently appointed student re-gent said having a seat on the board gives him a chance to be a “servant leader.” He said he was a Boy Scout in middle school, and that experience motivated him to take on leadership roles.

“I learned the rewards of helping other people and doing a job that I had to get done well,” he said. “I think that satisfaction in that service just re-ally caught on with me, and it’s some-thing I want to continue with.”

Wellman applied for the student regent position early last semester, and said he felt he met the board’s needs.

For two years, he was the class president at his high school. He helped establish a chapter of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity as a freshman at UNM. He was the former president of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars and ASUNM Chief of Sta� and Attorney General. Over spring break, the board appointed him to the New Mexico Educational Assistance Foundation Board, the Lobo Energy Board and the UNM Hospital Board of Trustees.

Over the past few weeks, Wellman said he has spent time with students, constituency groups, faculty and sta� to hear concerns. He said that increas-ing tuition has been a recurring fear.

“Right now I think tuition is prob-ably No. 1, just because of the timing and the nature of the economy,” he

Robert Maes / Daily LoboUNM rugby player Nick Hernandez waits for his turn at drills on Johnson Field on Tuesday. The team is two wins away from qualifying for the National Competition, where it would � rst play Stanford. The team will hold a fundraiser April 6 at Lucky 66 Bowling.

Alumnus lectures on atomic bomb

by Diego [email protected]

In spring 1953, 600 people at the site and another 15 million television viewers watched an atomic bomb explode in the Mojave Desert.

UNLV professor Andrew Kirk said scientists coordinated the atomic explosions to demonstrate the eerie e� ects on a house and the mannequins set up inside it. In the UNM alumnus’ lecture, “Doom-town: Picturing Home on the Ne-vada Test Site,” Kirk said the test site was thought to be nothing more than an empty space in Nevada, but in reality, hundreds of thousands lived there, including the Paiute and Western Shoshone tribes.

“� e West is a complicated place,” Kirk said. “What appeared to be blank spots are full of history. Empty landscapes, supposed waste lands, are loaded with human his-tory of forgotten people and forgot-ten stories.”

� e day of the demonstration, Native American tribes protested at the site’s gate, but the scientists proceeded.

Kirk showed images of a house built 3,500 feet from ground zero. It was � lled with furniture, consumer goods and mannequins, which sci-entists positioned to look like they were performing everyday tasks. At various locations, dummies sat in cars and trucks.

Photographer Vernon Jones cap-tured the blast amd depicted the house bending from the nuclear wind force before it was engulfed in � ames three seconds later.

Hundreds of dogs, pigs and mice dressed in human clothing were placed at the Nevada Test Site, Kirk said.

Kirk said pigs are anatomi-cally similar to humans, so they made perfect test specimens for the project.

see A-Bomb page 3

Speaker outlines radiation’s far-reaching devastation

Student regent eyes tuition, energysaid. “I guess University spending has kind of tied into that, but I think one of the issues that I’ve heard a lot, from students speci� cally, is asking the Uni-versity to cut wherever they can with-out raising tuition.”

Second to tuition, Wellman said, is the need to evaluate the positions in the top-heavy administration. He said it’s important to consider how decisions will a� ect the University’s

academic mission and the student experience.

“It’s not one or two things we can do to say, ‘OK, check, check, educa-tion’s better — move on.’” he said. “It continues and should be at the core of everything you do, and moves for-ward in enriching that experience that students get when they come to the University.”

A student in the Sustainability

Studies program, Wellman said he plans to go to law school and focus on American energy use.

“I’m interested in looking at how America deals with the climate change we’re going through — right now in Congress or in state or private sectors, trying to help the public cope with the changes in energy that we’re experi-encing and are coming,” he said.

Robert Maes / Daily LoboJunior Jake Wellman relaxes at hiis o� ce in the SUB. Wellman was appointed by Governor Susana Martinez to serve as Student Regent until December 2012.

TRY, TRY AGAIN

“The West is a complicated place.

What appeared to be blank spots are full of

history.”~Andrew Kirk

UNLV Professor, UNM Alumnus

Page 2: NM Daily Lobo 033011

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PageTwoNew Mexico Daily lobowedNesday, March 30, 2011

volume 115 issue 125Telephone: (505) 277-7527Fax: (505) [email protected]@dailylobo.comwww.dailylobo.com

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

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Editor-in-ChiefPat Lohmann Managing EditorIsaac Avilucea News EditorElizabeth ClearyAssistant News EditorShaun Griswold Staff ReportersChelsea ErvenAlexandra SwanbergKallie Red-HorseHunter Riley

Online and Photo EditorJunfu HanAssistant Photo EditorRobert Maes Culture EditorChris Quintana Assistant Culture EditorAndrew Beale Sports EditorRyan TomariAssistant Sports EditorNathan Farmer Copy ChiefTricia Remark

Opinion EditorNathan New Multimedia EditorKyle Morgan Design DirectorNathan NewProduction ManagerKevin KelseyAdvertising ManagerLeah MartinezSales ManagerNick ParsonsClassified ManagerDulce Romero

DAILY LOBOnew mexico

Daily Lobo: What do you see as the big-gest issues facing the graduate community?

Patricia Caballero: How do we come to-gether as a unified body, how do we iden-tify goals and priorities, and how do we go after them strategically? We need to work on determining what the plan is so we are not caught in reacting to crisis, but that in-stead we pursue a common agenda. … We all know the issues that are affecting us, but we need to focus on how to go about pull-ing together that common agenda. When you stand united, you stand to achieve and accomplish a lot more.

DL: If elected, how will you work to ad-dress these?

PC: I would decide what the common agenda is going to be and work with ASUNM and other organizations to develop that. We have already begun the process with the joint discussions with ASUNM on how we can come together to pull a joint-working commission together.

We should pull together a planning meeting and talk about the common issues that we have — identify two or three — and then we can enter into a joint agreement for the year. That agreement is going to propel us into action so that we can accomplish what we have identified.

Also, the departments and schools should

be surveyed on a regular basis to determine from them what their needs are. The survey instrument is a wonderful way to engage with students and elicit information.

DL: What are some problems with cur-rent GPSA workings?

PC: There has been a disconnect the

past couple years between the legislative and executive branches. This is due to the current style of leadership. I have always been a team player. I have never assumed that because I have the position of presi-dent that I am in charge, and because I am in charge, I am going to create an agenda

for everyone. If elected, I would make sure we all come together, distribute tasks, have timelines to report and measure outcomes to see if we are on target.

DL: Why is it important for student governments like GPSA to be active on campus?

PC: Our daily lives as students are affect-ed by decisions that are made on our behalf. It is important for us as students to not only have a say but to be part of that decision-making process. We have to be the decision makers. Self-reliance is a fundamental right and principle of a democracy. There should be citizen engagement and participation at all times.

We are the consumers on campus, but the mission of this institution is to provide education so we can be propelled into our professional careers. It makes sense that we should be dictating how the institution is going to be run.

DL: How have the debates been going?PC: The debates are tough because I’m

not the type of person that sits in front of the room and talks. I like to sit in circles and talk that way. It is so rigid, but it has to be how it is because it is a professional debate.

~Kallie Red-HorseAmie Zimmer / Daily Lobo

Get to Know Patricia caballero GPSa PreSidential candidate

Page 3: NM Daily Lobo 033011

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news Wednesday, March 30, 2011 / Page 3

The pigs were strapped to tables at incremental distances and cov-ered in sunscreen to see if it would reduce deadly chemical burns from the blasts. Some animals died im-mediately, while others lived and were tested over time.

After the tests, unprotected sol-diers went to the blast site and rum-maged through vehicles, the house and land. Some soldiers suffered immediate effects from the blast, and others endured long-term health problems from the radiation, he said.

Kirk said the project had unin-tended consequences for Nevada

desert inhabitants, many that irre-versibly changed their lives.

‘Civil effects’ was the euphemism coined by federal defense planners to describe nuclear weapon strikes on civilian targets,” he said.

UNM history professor Virginia Scharff said that Kirk’s presentation was compassionate and sympa-thetic to all afflicted by the atomic demonstration.

“Whether they were proponents or opponents of the testing, whether they were the workers or ranchers, I thought he really entered imagina-tively into their world and had a real sympathy for them,” she said.

Contrary to the headline, “KNME sues UNM over missing funds,” the station is not suing the University, but a former KNME associate general manager is suing UNM over missing funds she alleges were taken by the institu-

tion from the station.

correction

Photo Coutesy by the National Nuclear Security AdministrationNuclear scientists set up this model house, truck and car at the Nevada Test Site in the Mojave Desert in the 1950s. Scientists then set off an atomic bomb near the models to test the effects of atomic. Alumnus Andrew Kirk presented a lecture last week to discuss the test and its long-term effects in the state of Nevada.

A-Bomb from page 1

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[email protected] / Ext. 133Opinion editor / Nathan New The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895LoboOpinionLoboOpinion Wednesday

March 30, 2011

Page

4

EditOriaL BOard

Pat LohmannEditor-in-chief

Isaac AviluceaManaging editor

Nathan NewOpinion editor

Elizabeth ClearyNews editor

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

Editor,

Once again, the people in authority positions at UNM refuse to acknowledge that they work for UNM students.

We have passed the time when a balanced student population would have stormed the buildings and demanded a ”regime change.”

The “chosen” elite have ignored our cries. They have marginalized our complaints, and they have now used campus police to remove one of us from meeting our University president.

When the University president has neither time nor the inclination to meet with a student living in campus housing, discuss a minor problem and come to a reasonable resolution, then the time has come to politely remove him from campus.

When he no longer represents the meekest of us, he has voluntarily forfeited his position and responsibilities to represent any of us.

This is intolerable. It is indecent. This is why we have the Board of Regents, and this is a matter that should be brought to its attention.

We are the future leaders of industry, politics and even universities. We pay or borrow more money than we have to get an education — an education designed to prepare us for the future.

We are told that our moral compass, ethics, personal responsibility and education will guide our decision-making. Are we to believe that the decisions made by our president are in line with his moral compass? Were his actions ethical? Are we to believe that his decisions are founded on personal responsibility?

Think about the decision not to accept a student’s phone calls or return them.

Think about the decision to misrepresent his location and encourage staff to lie about his whereabouts. And then think about the decision to avoid a face-to-face meeting with the student waiting down the hall, and instead have the student’s own campus police remove him from the premises without an acknowledgement?

Is this the manner in which we should run corporations, govern our country or oversee the daily operations of a university?

Sorry but we’re way, way beyond apologies and teachable moments.

Shame on you Mr. President, and shame on campus police for believing that their actions were within their jurisdiction. They also work for us!

Matt WatersUNM student

LEttEr

Editor,

I cannot be the only person who finds the password requirements for MyUNM infuriating.

I’ve learned to accept that I have no choice about changing my password — that is a good habit, after all. However, during a forced password change, I am required to re-enter five challenge responses. Five?! My bank has laxer security. If we must change our passwords, how about letting the challenge questions stand?

And how about a “test this password” button before submitting? Note: MyUMM doesn’t make it easy to give feedback. It must not want any.

Mark Justice HintonUNM student

Editor,

First, I’d like to thank the students who protested at Monday’s budget summit.

And despite the prolonged meeting, many returned to speak their minds during public comment and did so eloquently, intelligently and successfully. The regents asked that the increase be kept to 5 percent, a more reasonable number than the originally proposed 8.6 percent, and it’s thanks to those students.

On that note, I’d like to say that I was disappointed to see next to nothing in the

Daily Lobo that mentions the success of the protest. Last year, no one showed up to protest a tuition increase, and tuition went up 7.9 percent.

A successful student protest regarding budget is nearly unheard of as far as I know, and the people who showed up did so because they believe in the integrity of this school’s mission and in students’ rights to have a say in where their money goes.

When I went around campus asking people to join in protesting the student tuition increase, I was amazed by the number of people who didn’t seem to care about paying hundreds if not thousands of dollars more.

Sure there were plenty of people heading to class, work, etc. But I heard people say, “I don’t care. I’m graduating,” or worse,

“I don’t care. I get the Lottery,” and more often, “It won’t do any good.”

I’m not here to point blame, but I am saying wake the hell up.

The students who showed up to protest know that this is not just about tuition increases. It’s about accountability, honesty and ensuring students are seen and heard when it comes to major decisions about our financial and educational futures.

Thanks to those students, we can look forward to a much more reasonable tuition increase next year. They were there; they stood up for you; they stood up for the future of this school, and they made a difference.

Randi BeckUNM faculty

UNM President shouldvoluntarily forfeit position

More students should be like budget summit protesters

MyUNM requires too much effort to update passwords

LEttErs

by Emily GolinkoDaily Lobo Guest Columnist

I’ve always been confident and outspoken, but recently, instead of speaking in class, I sunk down in my chair.

I was afraid to state my opinion for fear of ridicule, and afraid to answer questions for fear of being wrong. I’ve become a master of avoiding eye contact with my professors, who gaze with hopeful eyes over the classroom, soliciting responses.

“Which strategy should I use today?” I’d ask myself. The “pretend I’m furiously finishing up the notes from the last point the professor made” tactic usually works. But I used that last time. What about the “reaching into my bag with my head down aimlessly fondling the loose bits of tobacco at the bottom” approach?

Or should I just squint my eyes, looking past her to the board, and pretend to read

the small text on the PowerPoint slide? Those strategies have worked for me in the past and often saved me from potential embarrassment.

The weird thing about it is I usually know the answers. Nine times out of 10, I find myself regretting not answering. I have interesting and pertinent opinions. I do the readings, and I take excessive (some call them obsessive) notes.

So what’s my problem? And how do I fix it? Why did I let the class know-it-all (you know, the woman who answers every question before anyone else can get a word in) take credit again?

It took till this semester for me to realize that the classroom is just a microcosm of what we have all been preparing for four years: the office, the boardroom, the lab, the eight-way video conference call.

And your classmates? They are your future coworkers, research partners, or, better yet, your competition! Once I

realized that, I was less intimidated by my peers. I’m no longer am I afraid to state my mind in class, ask a question or expand on a thought.

I now relish shooting my hand up before the professor has completed his or her sentence. And you should, too.

Classes can be intimidating. Professors can be, too. Just remember, your professors are there to help you overcome fears. That’s what they get paid for.

Speaking up in class is just another way to practice and prepare for the next step: graduate school, competing for that research grant, vying for the top position at the glue-stick factory you’ve been eyeing.

I have newfound respect for the class know-it-alls. Sure they may be annoying (and steal everybody’s thunder), but most of them are going to be the ones giving real-world orders. So why not put yourself in the position to compete?

cOLumn

Don’t let peers become your boss

Page 5: NM Daily Lobo 033011

Wednesday, March 30, 2011 / Page 5New Mexico Daily lobo

Junfu Han / Daily LoboChris Reisz sits in his Art Building lair Tuesday. The chicken above is a reminder of what can go wrong in the metal and wood working shops.

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by Chris Quintana [email protected]

The most dangerous place on campus may not be the nuclear re-actor, but the wood and sculpting shops in the art building.

They have band saws, sanders, open flames and tools capable of re-moving a finger, arm, or head — if someone gets careless.

And it’s Chris Reisz’s job to pro-tect students from these lethal tools that can produce groundbreaking art or break bones.

“I’ve been lucky in the six years that I have been here,” said Reisz, the 3D lab manager. “I have only seen one major injury. Somebody cut the meaty tip of their finger off. I think one accident in six years is pretty good, though.”

Apparently a safe haven from the whirling madness, Reisz’s office is home to objects like a severed rub-ber chicken and a piece of rebar with a blade-like object attached to it.

An alumnus, Reisz said students who want to work in the shop have to take a safety class, which he said re-duces injuries. He said he has rules that protect the students. For exam-ple, students can’t stand behind a piece of wood when pushing a strip of lumber through a table saw.

Instead, they have to stand to the side, and guide the wood through the machine so they can avoid a kickback from the piece they’re cut-ting. A kickback, to put it in per-spective, can crush internal organs and break hips. Kicked-back wood pieces left at least four silver-dollar-sized dents in a solid steel door 10 feet from the table saw.

Between the metal shop and the wood shop, the woodworking shop is more dangerous, Reisz said, be-cause the human mind is hard-pressed to recognize the hazards of

a rotating saw. “We are evolutionarily scared of

fire,” Reisz said. “A whirling blade, though. I don’t think we have gotten quite used to those.”

Coincidentally, Reisz failed to mention that fire is one of the main tools in the metal workshop. More interestingly, Reisz said the biggest machines aren’t the most danger-ous to use.

Even though it shakes the space, Reisz said the giant band saw in the middle of the woodworking shop is probably safer than a smaller band saw in the corner. “With the big one, you just want to get away from it as soon as you can,” he said.

But keeping everyone safe is get-ting trickier as the modern era be-comes more digitalized.

Reisz said in previous years stu-dents came in knowing how to use simple tools like a hammer or a hand saw. Now some come in with no ex-perience, and he said phones likely have something to do with that.

“Texting on the phones proba-bly does the opposite of preparing students to work with these sort of tools,” he said.

That, he said, doesn’t keep stu-dents from producing unique art work. Recently, he saw a student construct a six-nippled green mon-ster that oozed slime. It was set up outside of the art building with a sign that begged for help. He said he also sees a lot of “obscene” sculp-tures, but that’s part of the process.

Given the chance, Reisz wouldn’t change his occupation, even though others don’t understand why he chooses to battle danger on a daily basis.

“Some carpenters or students who have worked with tools think I am crazy,” Reisz said. “Sure you lose mobility, but this is a lot safer.”

Lab manager gives a hand to save a finger

Page 6: NM Daily Lobo 033011

Page 6 / Wednesday, March 30, 2011 New Mexico Daily loboculture

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by Verena DobnikAssociated Press

Each morning, and again in the afternoon, the blades of three bread-slicing machines are count-ed carefully. Only then does the bakery let workers go home — to their jail cells on Rikers Island.

Twenty inmates of one of the nation’s largest jail complexes are part of a team that bakes 36,000 loaves of bread a week to feed the city’s entire population be-hind bars — about 13,000 people. Employees in orange-and-white-striped jumpsuits and surgical caps earn $31 a week churning out whole wheat bread. There’s not an apron in sight.

The prison bakers say they are learning skills that may keep them gainfully employed once they get out.

“I’m learning teamwork,” says prisoner Nikos Alexis, 24, as he walks off in black leather boots caked with flour. He’s serving a four-month sentence for posses-sion of a forged instrument, ac-cording to correction records.

It’s a privilege to get this work assignment; only inmates already sentenced to one year or less in jail are considered. Most of the other Rikers residents are awaiting trial on charges including murder.

The bakers behind bars get up before dawn and climb into a van for the ride to the other side of the 413-acre island in the East River between Queens and the Bronx.

Passing a double row of razor wire-topped fences, they enter the mammoth, single-story bakery around 6 a.m., guarded by correc-tion officers with a captain and a deputy warden.

By the loading dock, a sign in the glass window of a supervisor’s

office reads: “FAKE & BAKE” — a small try at making people smile in this grim community.

More than culinary discipline is needed in this kitchen — part of a jail system where arguments be-tween inmates or with guards can erupt in a flash, resulting in stab-bings and slashings. In Decem-ber, a Rikers correction officer had part of his thumb bitten off by an inmate.

So far, the bakery itself remains violence-free.

But it’s a dynamic, noisy place. Dangers include fast-moving in-dustrial machinery tagged with hands-off warning signs and blink-ing yellow lights.

The baking process starts in gi-ant metal tubs where 1,600 pounds of dough are mixed for each batch — half white flour and half the darker one — and hoisted with a lift into a machine that divides it into balls that are shaped and fed into corn-oiled pans.

The finished bread is stored in a walk-in refrigerator with the words “Fort Knox” whimsically chiseled into its steel door.

The soothing smell of warm, freshly baked bread drifts across

the 11,000-square-foot space, a labyrinth of white-coated metal machines mixing, shaping, baking, slicing and packing the loaves.

The men take turns at various stations, from mixing the flours in the tubs — “an awesome kind of combination,” says Alexis — to working the ovens.

The brows of three young men drip with sweat as they gently load 240 risen loaves into a giant oven — a sea of dough that emerges golden a half hour later.

In summer, with only fans whir-ring overhead, the air is hotter than the bread.

“Man, it gets hot — sometimes up to 120 degrees!” says Aubrey Simpson, the supervising baker and a civilian who was once an army officer in his native Guyana.

Above a conveyor belt is a sign in Gothic script that reads: “Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread.” And the Rikers bakery does — tens of thousands of wax-paper-wrapped loaves that fill two storage rooms, ready to be trucked out.

The bakery’s products are not for sale to the public — even though prisoners agree it’s tasty enough to succeed outside the island.

“I would definitely give it a thumbs up and say it’s better than the bread I buy at the store,” says inmate Taiwan Taylor, 32, who’s serving an eight-month sentence for criminal trespass.

Taylor loves to bite into a fresh slice on his 10 a.m. break.

“It’s delicious when it’s warm, when it first comes out of the oven,” he says.

At about 1 p.m., the day’s baking is done. Then comes the cleanup and maintenance of equipment, most of it dating to the 1960s.

Rising bread raises spirits

“I would definitely give it a thumbs up

and say it’s better than the bread I buy at the

store.”~Taiwan Taylor

Inmate

Page 7: NM Daily Lobo 033011

Wednesday, March 30, 2011 / Page 7New Mexico Daily lobo lobo features

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SPONSORTHE DAILY LOBO

CROSSWORD505.277.5656

SPONSOR THISSUDOKU

Get your name out there with the Daily Sudoku505.277.5656

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

FOR RELEASE MARCH 30, 2011

ACROSS1 Beginning for the

birds?4 Shaq on the court9 Beat __ to one’s

door14 Vietnam Veterans

Memorialarchitect

15 Ramadi resident16 Local cinemas,

colloquially17 Whip-cracking

cowboy of oldfilms

19 Weight roomsound

20 Venetian archshape

21 Ethel, to Lucy23 Canyon-crossing

transport26 Fridge raider28 Hong Kong

harbor craft29 Field for the fold31 Remote power

sources?32 Thing to blow off34 Sign before

Scorpio35 Sky blue38 Postgrad hurdle40 “Cosmos” host41 Lotto relative42 Assure, with “up”43 Titan is its largest

moon48 Most foxy50 Landmass

encompassingthe Urals

51 Wax-filledillumination

54 Bombast55 Artist’s topper56 Victor’s chuckle59 Conductor Previn60 Came up61 Sargasso or

Coral62 Parks and others63 Zellweger of

“Chicago”64 Prince Valiant’s

son

DOWN1 Doles out2 Cialis competitor3 Tailor’s measure4 Van Gogh work

5 Gun lobby org.6 Ahead of time7 Shade in the

Caribbean8 Bank holding9 Saxon start

10 Chute above thebeach

11 Persian Gulfemirate

12 Like somemortgages

13 DDEpredecessor

18 Rope fiber22 Paternity proof,

briefly24 Mud nest

builders25 Naysayer27 It surrounds

Lesotho: Abbr.29 ’80s-’90s legal

drama, and thispuzzle’s title

30 The Daily Beast,e.g.

33 To be, to Brutus34 Like the Islamic

calendar35 Refs’ whistle

holders36 Natural burn

balm

37 Pitts of “TheGale StormShow”

38 Signs off on39 Chile __: stuffed

Mexican dish42 N.L. team

managed byTony La Russasince 1996

44 Scarlett’s home45 World Cup

chant

46 Horseshoes feat47 Revolutionary

Hale49 Fully fills50 Hewlett-Packard

rival52 Banned orchard

spray53 Full-grown filly55 Setting for many

a joke57 Taoist Lao-__58 Majors in acting

Tuesday’s Puzzle SolvedBy James Sajdak 3/30/11

(c)2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 3/30/11

Dilbert dailycrossword

dailysudokusolution to yesterday’s puzzlelevel: 1234

Page 8: NM Daily Lobo 033011

Page 8 / Wednesday, March 30, 2011 New Mexico Daily lobo

AnnouncementsBRADLEY’S BOOKS. MWF.

GLOWKICKBALL.COM - Do it!

WORRIED? LOG ON to Spirituality.com

NOT IN CRISIS? In Crisis? Agora listens about anything. 277-3013. www.agoracares.com

AuditionsVOCALIST WANTED. SOPRANO and alto. $50.00 or more paid per recording at a home recording studio. For love bal- lads and/or rock songs. Call Jim 797- 8119.

ServicesABORTION AND COUNSELING ser- vices. Caring and confidential. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING. Curtis Boyd, MD, PC: 522 Lomas Blvd NE, 242-7512.

ANGEL’SA highly personalized cleaning service. Serving the professional household. Thorough, Careful, Honest, Discreet. FREE Estimates, Excellent References. 307-0887.

FREE INITIAL CONSULTLaw office of Alvin R. Garcia, LLC.Civil, Criminal Defense, Personal Injury242-8888

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ApartmentsCLEAN, QUIET, AFFORDABLE, 1BDRM $575, 2BDRM $750; utilities in- cluded. 3 blocks to UNM, no pets. 262- 0433.

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UNM NORTH CAMPUS- 1BDRM $515. Clean, quiet, remodeled. No pets al- lowed. Move in special! 573-7839.

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WALK TO UNM. 1BDRM. $450/mo not including utilities. No pets. Call Scott 505-401-1076.

1BDRM 1BA DOWNTOWN. $525/mo + gas, electric, & deposit. Hardwood Floors. Available now. Call Clay 480- 9777.

NEAR UNM/ NOB Hill. 2BDRM 1BA like new. Quiet area, on-site manager, stor- age, laundry, parking. Pets ok, no dogs. 137 Manzano St NE, $650/mo. 610- 2050.

AFFORDABLE PRICE, STUDENT/FAC- ULTY discount. Gated Community, Salt Water Pool, pets welcomed. 15 minutes UNM. Sage Canyon Apartments 505- 344-5466.

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

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

Rooms For RentINTERESTED IN LOBO Village? Earn $100 dollars by taking over my 12 mo. lease starting Aug.17!!! Call: 505-417- 3387 today!

FURNISHED BASEMENT ROOM. QUIET MALE STUDENT only. Share kitchen/ bath. $330/mo, includes utili- ties/ wi-fi. Available 4/1. 243-0553.

2 PREMED STUDENTS looking for fe- male roommate to share 3BDRM 2BA house w/ backyard on Gibson/ Maxwell 1 mile from UNM. $316.67/mo +utilities. Anju 505-480-7828.

Computer StuffDELL DESKTOP COMPUTER. Excellent condition. 15” sceen Microsoft Windows XP Professional, INTEL Pentium/4cpu 2.80GHz 27.9GHz, 512MB RAM. $200.00 OBO. 620-0175.

PetsPYGMY GOATS, CHICKENS (roosters), rabbits, fresh eggs. Call: 220-0358 or Email: [email protected]

For SaleBRAND NEW BLACKBERRY Curve 3G cell phone. AT&T phone, silver. Comes in original packaging with charger and accesories. $250 OBO. Email tmo [email protected]

D&G JEWELRY (MEN’S). Pendant and cuff. Sold together or separate. Contact [email protected]

7’X16’ ENCLOSED CARGO Trailer. Easy to hook up & tow. Side & Rear ramp doors. Just moved, not needed. Protect/Secure your load. $4,000 obo. 385-3422.

Jobs Off CampusSTUDENTS/ TEACHERS NEEDED. Manage Fireworks Tent w/TNT Fire- works for 4th of July! 505-341-0474. [email protected]

EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars with ads placed on them. www.AdCarDriver.com

PR INTERN. 4 national author. [email protected]

EARLY BIRD LAWN service now hiring for PT mowing jobs. Able to work w/ some student schedules. Call Bob at 294-2945 for information.

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NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS For Licensed Servers. Apply within, ask for Dennis or Nick, 3718 Central Ave SE Serafin’s Chile Hut. 266-0029.

GRADUATE STUDENT, GRAPHIC ARTIST 4 book cover design. [email protected]

NEED PHD OR grad student chemist for short term consulting position. Call Jim at 203-9873 or Randy at 307-1292.

PUBLISHING/ WRITING GRAD Student to work with author on a national book proposal. 12 hrs/wk. Please email re- sume (in the body of the email) to [email protected]

LEADERS/ CAREGIVERS FOR an awe- some school-based summer day camp and year-round child and youth develop- ment organization. This is a “foot in the door” job – a training and leadership de- velop position to prepare you for promo- tion within the organization. Learn, play, and get paid for doing both! $9/hr with some benefits during the summer, $11/hr upon promotion to Associate Di- rector, and an annual salary staring at $27,040 with full (great) benefits upon promotion to Program Director. Degree completion or students very close to de- gree completion preferred. Apply at 6501 Lomas Blvd NE, 9:30 – 2:30 M-F. Call 296-2880 or visit www.childrens-choice.org

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MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE. THIS position requires excellent communica- tion skills, reliable transportation, and a positive attitude. Earn $10-$15/hr w/o selling involved. Call 881-2142ext112 and ask for Amalia.

TEACH ENGLISH IN Korea!2011 Teach and Learn in Korea (TaLK) sponsored by Korean government.●$1,300/month (15hrs/week) plus air- fares, housing, medical insuranceMust have completed two years of un- dergraduate.Last day to apply: 6/29/11Please visit the website www.talk.go.kr2011 English Program In Korea (EPIK)●$1,600-2,500/month plus housing, air- fare, medical insurance, paid vacationMust have BA degreeLast day to apply: 6/29/11Please visit the website www.epik.go.krJai - (213)386-3112 [email protected]

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FEMALE ASSISTANT SOCCER Coach. Nine year old girls team. Practice T, TH, F afternoons. Games on Sat. E- mail [email protected]

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

LITTLE LIGHT’S CHILD Care is hiring PT both morning and afternoon posi- tions. Call 255-8918 for information.

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

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CAMPUS EVENTSHealth and Wellness event, hosted by the Nutrition ClubStarts at: 9:00amLocation: Cornell Mall in SUB plazaVisiting exhibitors will be promoting nutrition and health. Including nutritional consultants, massage therapists, fitness experts, sports clubs and grocery stores reps. De-Stress & RelaxStarts at: 12:00pmLocation: Student Health & Counseling Free stress reduction program on Wednes-days for students. Do not have to attend all sessions. Sign Up: 277-4537 Info: http://shac.unm.edu/events.htmWolf RallyStarts at: 12:00pmLocation: UNM Bookstore

UNM Wilderness Alliance (UNM Wild) and Animal Protection of New Mexico (APNM) to sponsor a public rally for the five wolves illegally poached in 2010.ADHD: Managing Focus & AttentionStarts at: 1:00pmLocation: Student Health & CounselingFree educational workshop for students! Di-agnosis of ADHD or other learning difficulty is not required. To sign up, call 277-4537. Info:http://shac.unm.edu/events.htm Library Research for Graduate Stu-dentsStarts at: 4:00pmLocation: Zimmerman Library, Rm 254Zimmerman Libraries and the Graduate Resource Center present Chris Desai provid-ing and introductory research for graduate student workshop.

The Challenge of Mexican Wolf RecoveryStarts at: 3:30pmLocation: UNM School of Law, Rm 240An in-depth panel discussion on the chal-lenges of reintroducing UNM’s mascot, the Mexican gray wolf, into the wild. Featuring panelists from US Fish & Wildlife Service, environmental groups, and UNM.

COMMUNITY EVENTSDissertation Proposal WorkshopStarts at: 1:00pmLocation: Robert Wood Johnson Center for Health PolicyDissertation Proposal Workshop provides Ph.D. students the opportunity to learn and share experiences on how to prepare, orga-nize, and defend a dissertation proposal.

Hebrew Conversation Class: BeginningStarts at: 5:00pmLocation: The Aaron David Bram Hillel House, 1701 Sigma Chi NEOffered every Wednesday by Israel Alliance and Hillel. Phone: 505-269-8876.

6-Week Relationship Class Series for CouplesStarts at: 6:30pmLocation: Healthy Marriages Class-room, 217 Locust St. NEStrengthen your relationship by getting equipped with the KEY TOOLS to keep your relationship growing on a positive track. A value of $250.00 for FREE. Space is limited. 247-1511

LOBO LIFEDAILY LOBOnew mexico Event Calendar

for March 30, 2011Planning your day has never been easier!

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 de-scription! Although events will only pub-lish in the Daily Lobo on the day of the event, events will be on the web once submitted and approved. Events may be edited, and may not publish on the Web or in the Daily Lobo at the discretion of the Daily Lobo.

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!

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