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The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Sexuality is more beautiful when it's not manipulated

Editor, On Aug. 24, 2006, the Food and Drug Administration decided to allow the emergency contraceptive drug levonorgestrel, commonly called Plan B, to be sold over-the-counter to people at least 18 years old. Advocates of this decision say that easier access to Plan B will decrease the number of unwanted pregnancies.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Academics should work on hunger, not weapons

Editor, UNM will host a nuclear think-tank meeting at the SUB to promote weapons on Friday. This is incongruous with the fundamental role of a university in promoting peace and free thought. People all over the world are sick and tired of science and technology being used for profiteering and conquest.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: UNM should join in effort to rid the world of nukes

Editor, It is a shock to read about the conference this Friday hosted by UNM and Sandia National Laboratories to discuss their collaboration on the reliable replacement warhead. The announcement of this event sounds almost celebratory. Of course, we a


The Setonian
News

Ex-assassin visits campus

An 82-year-old man trained as an assassin visited UNM on Wednesday to speak to students about his intelligence operations during World War II. Professor Ferenc Szasz said he invited John Smith to speak to a World War II history class because of Smith's background with the Office of Strategic Services during the war. "It brings authenticity," Szasz said. Smith has experience with things younger generations only read about in books, Szasz said. The Office of Strategic Services was the predecessor to the CIA. Although Smith was speaking to a history class, he said he wanted to impart his philosophy of life to students. "Everything goes in circles all the time," he said. Smith said the journey to his position at the Office of Strategic Services started when he worked on a commercial fishing boat. While on the boat, which would be gone for months at a time, his captain taught him how to be a locksmith and open safes.


Student Elizabeth Stauss picks up a free copy of USA Today in Dane Smith Hall on Wednesday. The New York Times is also now available for free on campus.
News

New York Times free for students

The New York Times joined USA Today this week as one of the newspapers available to UNM students for free. Students can find the newspapers in high-traffic areas on campus. Mary Bowannie, a lecturer in Native-American Studies, said having the New York Times and USA Today is good for UNM, because students have access to information that might not otherwise be available to them. Student Spencer Cousins agreed. "It's definitely a good idea to have two newspapers on campus keeping the student body informed," Cousins said. The free newspapers are part of the Collegiate Readership Program, organized by the UNM Office of Student Affairs. Eliseo "Cheo" Torres, vice president of student affairs, said he decided to bring the Collegiate Readership Program to UNM at a conference he attended for the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators. "I've talked to the other universities at NASPA," he said. "All the people I've talked to have been very pleased with the readership program." The program began offering USA Today last year. Torres said students benefit because they become more prepared for class.




The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Alliance with weapons labs makes money, not sense

Editor, As a two-time UNM graduate, I send condolences to my alma mater for gross misjudgment, amorality and nuclear madness. All of my immediate family went to UNM, but we will not be going down that path again and recommend that other parents choose schools with a more solid ethical base.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: UNM shouldn't be host to weapons development

Editor, I concur with Robert Anderson's letter in Monday's Daily Lobo, especially the significant alarm that nuclear weapon development and its imminent use is readily accepted in this post-9/11 world. I am intellectually, morally and spiritually saddened that UNM would host a playground for nuclear weapons - the same weapons the Bush regime is telling many countries they cannot have.


Mary Nakigan, front, dances with the Casadimanza dance troupe in front of Carlisle Gym on Wednesday.
Culture

African dance group hopes to raise spirits

For the members of Casadimanza, dancing is more than a hobby. "It's all about making noise and bringing good spirits to people," said Kobiana Nakigan, the troupe's co-founder. "They have sickness, sadness - they can just get up and have happiness in the moment."


Culture

Column: Wu-Tang members resurface

It's hard to explain the Wu-Tang Clan. Nine African-Americans obsessed with Chinese culture, Italian mafia lore and the blaxploitation films of the '70s don't exactly scream mainstream acceptance.



The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Campus coalition to hold forum on smoking policy

Editor, The Coalition for a UNM Smoke-Free Campus will host a forum to address amending the UNM policy and creating a smoke-free and tobacco-free campus. The forum will take place Oct. 4 from 3 to 4 p.m. at the plaza east of the SUB. The panel members will be Dona Upson, a doctor in the UNM internal medicine program; Don Soderstrom from the American Lung Association; Jane Bowes from UNM patient education; and Cynthia Serna from New Mexicans Concerned About Tobacco.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: 'Pro-life' phrase covers up dangers of illegal abortion

Editor, Abortion-rights advocates should not cede the terms "pro-life" and "right to life" to the anti-abortion advocates. It is a woman's right to her own life that gives her the right to terminate a pregnancy. First, it is absurd to compare a mass of cells to the equivalent of an infant.


Pashur House paints Sharon Mae with an airbrush during the New Mexico Body Painting Festival on Sunday at the Embassy Suites by Lomas Boulevard and I-25.
Culture

Putting on the paint

When Mark Reid's second grade teacher asked him what he wanted do when he grew up, he told her he wanted to paint naked women. "I got sent to the office," he said.



The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: New Sigma Chi members not responsible for past

Editor, In 2000, while I was a junior at UNM, the infamous Sigma Chi incident occurred in which a member of the fraternity duct-taped a swastika onto a car parked illegally on the frat's property. That member was appropriately disciplined. Two years later, the fraternity managed to egregiously violate its own charter and its terms with UNM.



UNM football player Quincy Black takes a break on the sideline during Tuesday's practice at the Lobo football practice field.
Sports

Lobos prep to resist the Falcon force

Rocky Long can't say enough to endorse the triple-option offense that Air Force will be running against the UNM football team Saturday. So how can the Lobos stop, or at least slow down, an offense that is invincible? Without a little luck, you can't, Long said.

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