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Lobos Basketball Tournament


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News

Styrofoam can fizzles trash campaign

The oversized soda can in the SUB is meant to demonstrate how small pieces of trash can turn into big problems, but the soda can is made of material that isn’t environmentally friendly. The soda can, which stands about 10 feet high, is made of Fiberglass and Styrofoam, said Adam Greenhood, the creative director of the Albuquerque-based Esparza Advertising firm.


The Setonian
News

Alcohol at dorms stirs up debate

Lobo Village plans to allow alcohol for of-age residents when the dorms open in August, but no one ran that policy past the City Council. “It was never revealed to anyone here,” Councilor Isaac Benton said. The City Council in November denied UNM’s requests for a liquor license at The Pit.


The Setonian
News

Candidates debate Athletics, budget

The GPSA presidential race kicked off Wednesday with the first of four debates, and candidates discussed student fee allocation, departmental cuts and student government transparency. Candidate Katie Richardson said GPSA should set an example as an open, inclusive government for the University.




The Setonian
News

Salary Sacrifices

UNM teachers may not receive a pay cut after all, since top UNM administrators are willing to take the cut on their behalf. The state Legislature passed a mandate that would force state employees to pay an extra 1.75 percent from their paycheck into their Educational Retirement Board (ERB) pensions. Faculty Senate President Richard Wood said Tuesday that the University could cover the ERB costs if the Board of Regents approves budget recommendations. “UNM proposes to cover the full 1.75 percent additional hit to salaries permanently,” Wood said. “Except administrative vice presidents and above will not be covered.”


The Setonian
Sports

Hope springs for Locksley’s Year 3

With off-season house-cleaning over, the UNM football team hopes to spring forward the next four weeks, so it doesn’t fall back to the bottom of the Mountain West Conference. Third-year head coach Mike Locksley added new faces and reshuffled his staff, patching personnel holes with coaches from last year.


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Sports

Bearcats mauled in 14-point rout

Every game this season is a learning experience for the UNM baseball team. So says head coach Ray Birmingham. But Tuesday at Isotopes Park showed that the future looks bright for the Lobos. UNM put up nine runs in the second inning, seven before the Bearcats could get a single out.





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Culture

Polo requires poise, balance

A bike polo game looks kind of like a dance — a dance on bikes, with mallets. The players ride their bikes back and forth on a basketball court, trying to hit a ball the size of a large egg into the goal. The most important skill for a bike polo player is patience, and being able to ride with one hand, two-year bike polo veteran Sebastian Beers said.


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Sports

Heels overcome in chaotic finish

The Pit was inundated with Carolina blue on Monday. The fifth-seeded North Carolina women’s basketball defeated fourth-seeded Kentucky 86-74 in the second round of the women’s NCAA tournament.


The Setonian
Culture

An exhausting trip

It took Odysseus 10 years to get back to his wife, and while it took me only 12 hours on a Greyhound bus to get from Oklahoma to Albuquerque, the ride was just as much an odyssey.



The Setonian
Opinion

Media focuses more on Japan nuclear tragedy, not heroism

Editor, We are members of UNM’s Student Chapter of the American Nuclear Society. Our organization is dedicated to the study and application of nuclear processes as applied to the service of human energy needs and to other fields of study. As you know, the earthquake and tsunami affecting Japan served as the initiating cause for an accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Generating Station, about 235 miles north of Tokyo.



The Setonian
News

Tuition bump on the horizon

ASUNM senators held an emergency meeting Monday night about UNM’s $5.4 million budget shortfall and subsequent measures to bump up tuition costs. The Board of Regents is expected to recommend an 8-10 percent increase on top of a 3.2 percent increase mandated by the state Legislature, a tuition increase of roughly $300 per student.


The Setonian
Sports

Heel! Bulldogs submit to Tar Heels in 82-68 stomp

The North Carolina women’s basketball team was just plain bigger than Fresno State. And the basket, at least for the Bulldogs, seemed as small as a golf hole. The 12th-seeded Fresno State Bulldogs took 50 3-pointers, missing 36, and their best player Jaleesa Ross made just four of the 20 3-pointers she launched.

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