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Lobos Basketball Tournament

Head Lobo basketball coach Craig Neal, right, looks on in disbelief as Colorado State University's Gian Clavell sinks away after a jump shot on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017 at WisePies Arena. The Lobos lost to the Rams, 68-56.
Sports

Men's Basketball: CSU deals Lobos their fourth home loss of the season

Struggles on the offensive side of things turned into a 68-56 loss for the UNM men’s basketball team on Tuesday night against Colorado State, a defeat that dropped New Mexico to fifth in the conference standings with two games left. Three Lobos saw double-digit figures when it came to scoring, but even Elijah Brown’s 20 points weren’t enough to slow the Rams offense, which also had three players score at least 10 points, led by Gian Clavell’s 24 points. "We ran into a team that is playing extremely well. You've got to give them credit,” said UNM head coach Craig Neal after the game. “They played harder. They played with something. They played with a lot better pace, a lot better urgency. Our guys didn’t look like they had it tonight.”


The Setonian
Sports

Women's Basketball: Lobos face tough road test against top-ranked MW team

“The race is over for first, but it's a big opportunity for us to get another quality win under our belts for postseason play.” UNM head coach Mike Bradbury had that to say about the upcoming challenge against Colorado State, the top ranked team in the Mountain West. And Bradbury is probably right as the Rams have a firm hold on first place with a 20-12 overall record, going 12-2 in conference. CSU has just four games left in the season, and though it doesn’t appear the team will miss a step. But if the Lobos can pull off an upset in Fort Collins, Colorado, it could provide a welcome boost of confidence before the Mountain West Tournament begins.


UNM student Bill Wible studies at Zimmerman Library Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017. Wible is a 82-year-old student at the university who says he takes classes to keep up with his overall health. 
News

Non-traditional students embrace education, even in retirement

Though most UNM students are Millennials, a dedicated group of non-traditional students take to campus every week, each with their own story. For Bill Wible, going to class is about more than just getting a degree — it’s about keeping up his health. Wible, an 82-year-old U.S. Navy veteran, has been attending UNM for eight years and currently audits two classes, meaning he doesn’t receive a grade or credit for his time in the classroom. In all his time on campus, he said he has yet to have any close calls with bikes or skateboards. “The skateboards avoid me,” he said.


The Setonian
News

Acting UNM prez holds second town hall, reiterating many messages of the first

UNM acting President Chaouki Abdallah held a second town hall in the Domenici Auditorium on North Campus on Monday, reiterating many of the same messages that he had in his first town hall last week. Abdallah reiterated his three areas of focus as acting president, a position he will hold through the end of the semester: campus climate, student academic success and the financial challenges facing the University. Unlike the previous town hall, people sent in questions for Abdallah online beforehand. It was better attended than the previous forum.


The Setonian
Sports

Men's Basketball: Lobos, CSU Rams meet for first time since tense January game

When it comes to rivalries and drama, Tuesday night should be as intriguing as any show on TV. The Lobos are back at home this week to host the Colorado State Rams, a team that inarguably has more than one reason to be craving a victory. PREVIOUS MEETING Last month, the Lobos walked away with an 84-71 victory over the Rams at Fort Collins, Colorado. But that wasn’t the big story. With a little over two minutes remaining in the match, a fight nearly broke out after Lobo forward Joe Furstinger set a hard, but legal, screen on CSU guard J.D. Paige.


Courtesy: UNM Men's Tennis Team
Sports

Men’s Tennis: Lobos Sweep in Utah

In a whirlwind of a weekend for the UNM men’s tennis team, the Lobos faced three of their most difficult regional opponents on the road in Utah — and came out on top. New Mexico (4-5) surged to the three-match win streak by topping BYU on Friday, Nebraska on Saturday and finally Utah on Sunday. The Lobos were 1-5 coming into the weekend, a record that the team hoped to improve.


The Setonian
Sports

Baseball: Zoellner named MW Player of the Week after strong opening series

Jack Zoellner, the UNM baseball team’s first baseman, was awarded Mountain West Player of the Week honors after a solid performance in a three-game series against Binghamton over the weekend. Zoellner hit a pedestrian .200 in game one, going 1-for-5 at the plate and striking out once, but had banner numbers by the end of the series. He rebounded to hit a whopping .500 over three games, going 6-for-12 and driving in eight runs. But that’s not all. Half of those hits came by way of the long ball. The slugger blasted three home runs, driving in eight RBI and scoring five runs.


The Setonian
Opinion

Column: Why the anger in comment sections?

When it comes to online comment sections, I break the rules. Even my browser tells me: never read the comments. Roommates remind me not to feed the trolls. I just want to read, respond and reimagine the people on the other side of my screen. Different comment sections have reputations: Facebook is mundane if somewhat surreal, Imgur sas the same five jokes in the first 10 comments, and YouTube has the comment section the devil would avoid if he had high speed internet (we all know the devil has dial-up, that has to be part of hell). YouTube comments are Bad with a capital B. Some of these tropes are true, but not universally. And even when they are true, I feel compelled to scroll. In my experience, the quality of comments has more to do with what content the commenters are responding to than what platform they’re responding on. Undeniably, though, anonymity does something to people. They get braver; they get meaner.


A note is posted on a door at the LGBTQ Resource Center indicated that a Sexually Transmitted Disease test is taking place on Saturday, Feb. 18, 2017. Backgroundchecks.org has placed New Mexico as the the fifth-most sexually diseased state in the U.S.
News

Report: New Mexico is the 5th-most sexually diseased state

Chlamydia infection rates reached an all-time high in New Mexico, earning it the not-so-distinguished spot as the fifth-most sexually diseased state in the country, according to a recent report. Backgroundchecks.org, an online database and resource for public records, compiled data from state and county health agencies, the Center for Disease Control, and social media surveys to assign each state an “STD score” based on the gonorrhea and chlamydia rates per 100,000 residents. New Mexico received a score of 411.14, following Mississippi, North Carolina, Louisiana and Alaska.




The Setonian
News

Bill battles to save lottery scholarship

Students receiving the lottery scholarship can plan on an $800 tuition spike, pending the outcome of legislation in Santa Fe, according to Terry Babbitt, the associate vice president of the Enrollment Management Division. For nearly 10 years, the lottery tuition fund has received a third of its funding from the taxation on liquor sales in the state. June 2017 marks the end date for channel of funding, and without renewal, the scholarship will drop from 90 percent tuition coverage to 60 percent.


The Setonian
News

Yale prof discusses the Constitution at UNM

“The Constitution is more than just a text,” said Yale professor Akhil Reed Amar said during his speech at Thursday evening. Amar is a distinguished professor of law and political science at both Yale Law and Yale College, where he teaches constitutional law. “(The Constitution) is an act of ordainment and establishment,” Amar said. “It lets people speak, lets people vote, even before the freedom of speech and freedom of the press are put in the words of the First Amendment.”


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: In reality, pot is completely harmless

Editor, Brad King wrote, "NM liberal lawmakers seem to be clamoring to climb on the pot legalization bandwagon, just like our ill fated neighbor to the north."  Here in the reality-based community, "Colorado’s GDP increased by 3.6 percent in 2015, the fourth most of any state in the country.


The Setonian
News

New group aims to connect students to political process

A new student group is coming to campus, centered around enabling students to build leadership skills while bridging the gap between political parties to create a safe environment to discuss political issues. The Young American Leaders Initiative practically formed itself, when wave after wave of distraught students approached 21-year-old UNM student Christopher Haquani with concerns about the results from November’s election, resulting in one of the most surprising outcomes in election history. Many students didn’t feel safe and were worried about what was going to happen to them, their families and their friends, Haquani said.


Associate Scientist Geetanjali Sharma works in Eric Prossnitz’s lab on Friday, Feb. 17, 2017 at the Cancer Research Center. Prossnitz and his team are conducting research related to aging and cancer, and how to slow down the development of both.
News

HSC battles aging and cancer

The path to a cure for cancer and aging may be littered with beauty products and vitamins, but the true advances in this realm can’t be seen with the naked eye. Eric Prossnitz, a professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at the Health Sciences Center, has spent his career studying the invisible and complex business of cell signaling. Taking place in his lab at UNM’s Comprehensive Cancer Center is a foray into the study of how one gene, GPER, plays an important role in the body. A recent discovery by Prossnitz and his team has found that this gene holds some of the secrets into the processes of aging and cancer.


Performers stand on stage during "Our Glass Animals" on Friday, Feb. 17, 2017 at The Cell Theater. The show focuses on issues centered around womanhood in America.
News

Local show places spotlight on women's issues

“Our Glass Figures,” a show produced by the Mud&Wine theater collective, explores intersectionality, rape culture, empowerment, and the struggles and nuances of womanhood in contemporary America. The show ran for one week each at the Tricklock Performance Laboratory and The Cell Theater. “The show is a combination of dance, song, sketch comedy, poetry and personal narrative,” writer Caroline Graham said. “Its structure is cyclical and fragmented, and the content ranges from the darkly humorous to the deeply personal and tragic.”



The Setonian
Opinion

Column: The history of "fake news"

In a world where the legitimacy of news is constantly called into question by politicians and readers alike, whose responsibility is it to determine what is "fake news" and what is not? It is both the reporter's job to write factually accurate news, and the reader's responsibility to check the legitimacy of their choice in news outlets, whether this outlet is online or through a news network. But all news has one measurement in common that is ultimately connected to its value and newsworthiness: the ability of news in any form to catch the eye of a reader, a viewer or a listener.


News

UNM student remembered by friends, teachers

For friends and colleagues of UNM student Juan Romero, who passed away last week, the reality hasn’t sunk in. “I’m still partly in the shock phase. I haven’t fully accepted it,” said Armando Martinez. “I feel compelled to text him still.” When Martinez met Romero seven or eight years ago at a birthday party, he said the two became fast friends with a lot in common, including their musical tastes and a similar, “goofy” sense of humor. “He was a very loyal friend, and the type of person you only meet once in a lifetime,” Martinez said. “Definitely a character for sure.”

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