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The Setonian
News

Regents approve 2017 University budget

A request for nearly $8.9 million in research and project funding was approved by the Board of Regents, and will next go the New Mexico Higher Education Department, according to a University press release. The document stated that the list of proposals is “a preliminary step in developing the University’s fiscal year 2017 budget”. More than a third of the total requested amount – $3,060,000 – would go toward UNM’s Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO), which “improves access to specialty care for underserved patients in rural New Mexico”.


Sophomore midfielder Claire Lynch clears the ball away from Fort Lewis during Monday evening's exhibition at the UNM Soccer Complex. UNM won 3-1.
Sports

Lobos win exhibition vs Fort Lewis

The UNM women’s soccer team was dull to start its exhibition Monday night at the UNM Soccer Complex, but the Lobos hit their stride as the game progressed and took a 3-1 win over Fort Lewis. The Lobos controlled the ball for much of the first half, keeping the ball in their offensive end for large periods of time.


A protester put together the protest signs on Wednesday afternoon as part of the Black Lives Matter movement. Party of the Socialism and Liberation organized the rally.
News

Movements unite against police brutality for #BlackLivesMatter campaign

On Wednesday, protest chants, car horns and red-and-yellow picket signs appeared in front of the UNM bookstore to draw attention to police brutality. The event, coinciding with the one-year anniversary of Michael Brown’s fatal shooting by a Ferguson, Missouri officer, was held by the Answer Coalition and Red Nation in support of what has been dubbed the #BlackLivesMatter movement. The three movements are social justice campaigns founded on the initiative to end racism and promote peace and equality. This particular event at UNM focused on police brutality and accountability, with each speaker at the event voicing their opinions and relating their experiences of police actions that were directed at their person. One speaker, Joel Gallegos, a coordinator for the Answer Coalition, recalled times in his life when he said he was hassled by law enforcement.


UNMs Ashley Kelsey hits the ball during UNMs match against UC Irvine on Nov. 13, 2014. UNM currently has three slots open for outside hitter candidates.
Sports

Volleyball: New, returning players alike vie for starting positions

New Mexico’s three starting spots for outside hitter are up for grabs. Head volleyball coach Jeff Nelson said junior Cassie House is the front-runner to fill Chantale Riddle’s big shoes on the right side. However, Nelson said nothing is set in stone, and each of the five outside hitters has a real shot at claiming the position. House, along with fellow juniors Julia Warren and Devanne Sours, is a returning starter from last year’s big hitting position. While Warren switched to libero mid-season, where she earned first team All-Conference honors, she will likely return to her natural position above the net.


Culture

Five and why with Jacob Lemon

With another new semester beginning, finding time to delve into a new book might be troublesome. Jacob Lemon, a junior architecture major, said his solution is to switch between long-form narratives and less daunting short stories. The shorter stories help balance his schedule.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Support for Trump's hatred of immigrants not backed by facts

ntolerance is courageous? I grieved to read Rev. Mary Woods’ letter “Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments.” As director of the NM Faith Coalition for Immigrant Justice, I dread ministers promoting intolerant messages so disconnected from Christianity. The heart of Rev. Woods’ message — that recent events have ignited discussion around racism bringing us to a crossroads — holds truth. Our country has skirted race for too long, and the imperative to address it is now. For someone experienced with racism to justify supposed “protective racism” is counterintuitive.


News

A vaccine to remember

Researchers at the UNM Mind Research Network have developed a vaccine that presents the possibility of a cure for Alzheimer’s disease. Assistant professor Kiran Bhaskar and senior research specialist Nicole Maphis at Molecular Genetics and Microbiology have worked on several projects that relate to Alzheimer’s pathology, including the new vaccine development. Alzheimer’s affects 5 million people nationwide, Maphis said, because it is an age-related disorder and develops over time. The number of Alzheimer’s patients is expected to triple by the year 2020, due largely to the “baby boomer” generation.


The Setonian
Opinion

Column: Don't just vote - you are ASUNM

Who honestly cares about ASUNM? What do they even do (aside from wearing bright colors and harassing people twice a year asking them to vote)? We know that student government can seem irrelevant, and the work we do sometimes doesn’t quite reach the student body in the way we hope it to. But we wouldn’t stand out there in heels, getting sunburns and creepily approaching strangers, if we didn’t believe in something bigger.


UNM midfielder Simon Spangenberg defending the ball from Air Force on Saturday at the UNM Soccer Complex. UNM plays against Grand Canyon on August 19 at the Soccer Complex at 7 P.M
Sports

Lobos down Falcons in rainy preseason match

The UNM men’s soccer team kicked off the 2015 fall sports season with a 2-1 win over Air Force during an exhibition game Saturday. Light rain was frequent, and a 42-minute lightning delay interrupted the first half of the match. However, unpleasant weather was not enough to stop the 1,180 fans who came to support their team. “That was awesome,” head coach Jeremy Fishbein said. “People are behind this team, and you can feel their energy.”


UNM midfielder Alyssa Coonrod defends the ball against Wyoming on October 26, 2014. Despite a new coaching staff UNMs soccer team hosts experienced returning players.
Sports

Women's soccer: New coaches, veteran athletes

Women’s soccer looks forward to strong season behind returning starters While the New Mexico women’s soccer team features a brand new coaching staff, the Lobos have plenty of experience returning for the upcoming campaign. The team will bring back 10 of its 11 starters from a roster that finished third in the Mountain West Conference. Three of those players — redshirt senior goalie Cassie Ulrich, senior midfielder Dylann O’Connor and redshirt sophomore defender Emily Chavez — earned all-conference recognition a year ago.


The Setonian
News

GPSA dams flow of paper and ink

Some graduate students at UNM are perturbed by the Graduate and Professional Student Association council’s decision to no longer provide free printing services to students. The Graduate Resource Center and GPSA provided graduate students the facility to print their assignments and class readings for free. But effective immediately, as a result of the council’s decision, they will have to pay for printing. Adnan Bashir, a computer science graduate student, said that the decision will increase the burden on students. It will be especially hard on those students who are studying at UNM while financially independent, he said.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: It's only a matter of time before Trump backers are disappointed

It was with a great deal of disgust that I read Rev. Mary E. Woods’ letter entitled “Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments.” Trump’s focus and forte center on only political non-correctness. Just because he can yell and scream like a brat, a certain segment of the population thinks that’s cool.


Bryan Lambe, a staff member at the Witchs Brew, helps a customer on Saturday afternoon. The Witch's Brew offers its Kick Down Coffee program that allows customers to pay for a homeless persons lunch.
Culture

A pick-me-up for those down on luck

As the weather begins to cool, people who are homeless and looking for a place to warm up now have somewhere to go for free hot coffee. The opening of a new coffee house, called Witch’s Brew, has brought an Italian concept to the table that will impact the community. The Kick Down Coffee program allows customers to pay for food and coffee for a person who comes into the coffee house, but cannot afford to make a purchase. “People want to help, and this way people can,” store manager Cory Minefee said. “If there is someone who is needy that comes into the coffee shop or any other place and asks for food, usually they get turned away.”


The Setonian
Sports

Football: QB at wideout shows intellect

It didn’t take long for Patrick Reed to realize there wouldn’t be much playing time as quarterback for him. All Reed had to do was take one look at the depth chart to see that he was behind incumbent redshirt sophomore starter Lamar Jordan, redshirt junior transfer Austin Apodaca and redshirt freshman JaJuan Lawson. That prompted Reed to propose a position switch during spring football practice: He told head coach Bob Davie that he wanted to go from quarterback to wide receiver. Davie accepted Reed’s proposal, and the redshirt freshman has proven that he’s a capable wideout thus far.



The Lobo Volleyball team huddles together after its game against Colorado State at Johnson Gym on Thursday night. The Lobos lost to Colorado State 0-3.
Sports

Lobos adapting to life after Riddle

New Mexico will sport a completely different look this year than in recent years. After five years, UNM’s dominant right side hitter Chantale Riddle had her NCAA eligibility expire and the volleyball team must find a new identity. A season ago, Riddle was chasing two prestigious milestones in UNM history.


Lobo sophomore midfielder Ruth Bruciaga keeps control of the ball at the UNM Soccer Complex against Florida on Sunday, Sept. 14. Last week, Burciaga scored three goals against New Mexico State and with this, she was named Mountain West Offensive Player of the Week.
Sports

Players ready to put soccer hazing scandal behind them

One year removed from a hazing scandal that rocked the New Mexico women’s soccer program, two returning players said Tuesday the team has put the events behind it and is ready to move forward to its 2015 campaign. Both senior goalkeeper Cassie Ulrich and midfielder Dylann O’Connor said they and the rest of the team take responsibility for their actions when upperclassmen hazed freshmen last August. UNM’s investigation uncovered underage drinking and the spraying of a “soap and water” mixture on the freshman.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Donald Trump shows courage in illegal immigrant comments

Recent events in America have ignited some serious discussions around racism and placed our country at the crossroads of social and political divide. As a Christian, providentially called and ecclesiastically ordained minister and board-certified chaplain, I am impelled to pen my sentiments during this trying time in the history of these United States of America. From my vantage point as an African-American of Cherokee and Blackfoot Indian descent, raised in the Jim Crow city of Birmingham, Alabama, I have always viewed racism as overt and covert; that there could be no reasonable rationale for this social stigma. Yet the remarks attributed to Donald Trump regarding Mexican immigrants led me to entertain the idea of “protective” racism, which can fall into either category cited above. In stating that “Mexico sends its rapists, drug dealers, et. al., to the United States,” I contend that he was speaking out of the realization and concern that steps need to be taken to rein in runaway immigration practices by our neighbors to the south, who somehow feel that they have an entitlement to the services and benefits that we citizens have struggled for years to enjoy.


News

Students rank UNM among nation's best

UNM has been profiled in the seventh annual edition of The Princeton Review’s “The Best 380 Colleges”. The organization, an educational service that rates colleges based on performance in different fields, did not profile the 380 colleges in order. It provided ratings of performance in 62 categories, The Princeton Review officials said in a press release. It surveyed 136,000 students who rated their schools on scale of 1-99 in 62 different categories. Only schools that received a score of 60 or higher in all categories made the list. UNM was rated 62 in quality of life, 64 in Academics and 77 in Admissions.


First-time apartment seekers often overlook the important factors that may become problems over time -- such as a noisy neighborhood  and faulty air conditioning.
Culture

Column: Good questions key to apartment hunting

The excitement of getting your first apartment may cause you to overlook certain important factors. Viewing an apartment for the first time, you may overlook little problems that will become big issues later on. Here are some tips to help you find a great first place. Did you notice that the cars in the parking area for tenants have expired tags, or have no license plates at all? How long will you entertain your friends if all the parking is taken up by abandoned cars? How noisy is the crowd in this apartment building? Most managers like to show apartments around 10 a.m.; drop by on the night before to see how your potential neighbors behave. Being on your own for the first time doesn’t mean you must live in a place where there are no lights in the hall or on the stairs. Check the lights the night before.



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