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Lobos Basketball Tournament


The Setonian
Opinion

Right drugs could lead to better lives

Recreational drug use is, rightly or wrongly, a part of college life. Experimentation with illicit substances can be very enlightening or incredibly destructive, depending on the circumstances and the individual.



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Culture

Tibetan monks share past to preserve future

Tibetan monks, though driven out of their homes, still find a way to keep their native culture and religion. The Gaden Shartse Cultural Foundation is bringing monks from the Gaden Shartse Monastery in India to Albuquerque this week for a series of cultural events including dances, rituals and purifications.




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Sports

Strong start equals strong finish

The men and women of Lobo cross country started off the 2011 season in good form last Saturday in their first meet of the season. Senior Nicholas Kipruto won the men’s 8,000-meter at the Lobo Invitational, held at UNM’s North Golf Course, for the second year in a row while the women’s team placed six runners in the top 15 in the 5,000-meter race with Ruth Senior placing second. Head coach Joe Franklin said since it’s early in the season half of his runners, including returning All-American Natalie Gray, didn’t compete.


The Setonian
Sports

Taking a loss with heads held high

The Lobo football team lost its season opener, which might make it easy to dismiss it as the team with no improvement from last year. Not so fast, though — there were a lot of positives from Saturday’s game. Sophomore Linebacker Dallas Bollema, for example, led the team in tackles with 13.


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Sports

Club sport boasts cool record

Yes, there is a hockey team at UNM. The UNM hockey team is a recognized club sport through the University and plays in the Pacific Division of the American Collegiate Hockey Association. The club was relatively unknown until a group of UNM students decided to see if they could make the team bigger. “It’s something that we have started off from basically nothing,” the team president Nick Madrid said.


The Setonian
Opinion

Duck Pond service not without sin

On Aug. 28 the Aquinas Newman Center was allowed to hold a public mass at the Duck Pond. The University granted permission and held the event in spite of protesters condemning the ceremony. Unknown to those who missed this gloating occasion was the presence of several attendees who gracefully worshiped in the middle of campus, many of whom did know the annoyance and controversies that they were producing. This ultimately raises the question: Can the Catholic Church, or any church, hold spiritual ceremonies in public areas?


The Setonian
Opinion

US funds murderers to feed oil addiction

Editor, I compliment and I thank many the Jews of conscience in the United States and in Israel who have spoken out loud and clear — publicly damning the Israeli government’s brutal oppression and mass murder of Palestinians.


The Setonian
Opinion

New signs benefit peds and pedalers

Editor, Kudos to the University for installing signs around campus to remind bikers, in the most cordial words, to respect pedestrians and to share the roads.


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News

More applicants, higher standards

Students who wish to obtain graduate degrees face more competition and more challenges since last year when applying and attending graduate school. Terry Babbitt, UNM vice president for enrollment management, said he estimates graduate applications have increased nearly 2 percent and registration for new graduate students has increased nearly 5.5 percent since fall 2010. But at a time when graduate degrees are becoming more important, students are facing more rigorous admissions tests and a political climate where funding for education is dwindling. In August, the Education Testing Service announced changes to the Graduate Record Examination General Test (GRE), which is a critical component to many graduate applications.


The Setonian
News

UNM’s homeless seek food, relief

The homeless population in the UNM area has led some students, faculty and staff to feel unsafe, but City and University officials said policies and programs exist to keep the campus secure and take care of those in need. UNM student Joshua Niforatos sent the Daily Lobo a picture on Aug. 29 of a homeless man, whom he said was drunk, urinating on the side of the Communication and Journalism building that faces the bus stop.


The Setonian
News

Athletics: make do with two

ASUNM heard a proposal last Wednesday that encourages reducing the number of Lobo Basketball tickets available to each student. Kim Goodson, business manager for UNM Ticketing Services, said each year students can pick up tickets on scheduled distribution dates. Each student is allowed four tickets, provided he or she has a valid student ID and can verify he or she is enrolled in at least six credit hours. UNM Associate Director Brad Hutchins said the measure, which would reduce the number of sales to two per student, would ensure more students have a chance to get tickets.


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News

Art Building sinks into a depression

The UNM Art Building is slowly sinking. The three-story building, which is home to the art department’s faculty, staff, labs and classrooms, has experienced worsening structural problems for nearly two years, according to art professor Adrienne Salinger. “The Art Building doesn’t appear to be structurally sound,” she said. “Several of the workers who insisted on anonymity were shocked that we are still occupying the building in this condition when I spoke with them over the last couple weeks.” Salinger said the building is dangerous to students and staff.


The Setonian
News

Students query national experts

Las Cruces — Experts in economics, health care, national security, technology and education converged at the fourth annual Domenici Conference where they painted a bleak future for America.They worked with students from UNM and three other state schools to explore critical problems facing the nation and ways to fix them.


The Setonian
News

NMSU students protest Hayden

Las Cruces — Gen. Michael Hayden, former director of the National Security Agency and the CIA, spoke about issues related to cybersecurity and the rapidly changing face of the Internet during the Domenici conference last week, but a group of New Mexico State University students said he had no right to be on campus. NMSU Aggie Solidarity is a new student organization that seeks to raise the level of progressive political consciousness at the university.


The Setonian
News

Provost’s cost-cutting plan fails

UNM Interim Provost Chaouki Abdallah promised to re-structure the Provost’s office and save the University thousands of dollars, but it looks as though that plan will cost the University more money.


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Culture

Busking for the love of blues

In an era when Auto-Tune and heavily produced music reign, PK Dwyer is an anomaly. You won’t find him on MTV or VH1, you’ll see him singing and playing the blues on the street with his guitar case full of dollar bills and loose change.

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