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New Mexico's Antiesha Brown works the ball against Fresno State's Alex Furr during the Mountain West Basketball Championship semifinals Wednesday night at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
News

Lobo women reach Mountain West title game

LAS VEGAS – It’s been a few years, but the New Mexico women’s basketball team climbed its way back into the Mountain West Basketball Championships. The Lobos knocked off the defending tournament champion in the process. Senior guard Antiesha Brown scored a game-high 18 points Wednesday night and did not miss from the free throw line, leading the Lobos to the championship game following a 64-53 victory over last year’s title winner Fresno State.




The Setonian
Sports

Women's basketball: Win at Wyoming would lock second place for UNM

New Mexico controls its destiny for the number-two spot in the conference, but a share of the Mountain West title is not out of the question. A win tonight in Laramie, Wyoming guarantees the Lobos can do no worse than second in the conference. “We just have to focus on how we can get a win in Wyoming,” head coach Yvonne Sanchez said. “We’ll focus on that first, and then we will know by Friday night where we finish.”


Sam Costales, retired from APD after 20 years, speaks at the 2015 Police Violence and Social Control lectures on Thursday at the SUB. Costales spoke about topics such as excessive force, police involved sexual assault and how hard it was for him to speak out about things he witnessed.
News

Retired officer talks APD abuses

In 2006 veteran Albuquerque Police Department officer Sam Costales testified in court against Bernalillo County Sheriff’s officers in a high-profile case involving the unjustified and abusive arrest of racecar driver and local celebrity Al Unser, Sr. After the case against Unser was thrown out, then-APD Chief Ray Shultz opened a new investigation — into Costales, for breaching the “blue wall of silence” and turning on fellow law enforcement agents. Costales said he was forced into retirement, but was eventually awarded $662,000 in a lawsuit against the city. Since then, Costales has become an activist, speaking out against the brutality and abuse of power he witnessed during his 20-plus years as an APD officer.


The Setonian
Sports

Men's basketball: Rough season doesn't tarnish Greenwood's legacy, coach says

New Mexico senior guard Hugh Greenwood will play his final home game in Cherry and Silver while trying to avoid the Lobos’ first losing season in his tenure at UNM. Greenwood’s legacy will not be defined by this season’s struggles, head coach Craig Neal said at a press conference on Thursday. When asked what Greenwood’s legacy would be, Neal gave a definitive answer: “Winner.” Greenwood will have one more chance to go out a winner on the WisePies Arena floor when UNM hosts Wyoming in both teams’ regular season finale on Saturday.


The Setonian
News

Legislature moves two lottery bills

Two bills that could affect UNM’s lottery scholarship recipients are making headway in the state Legislature. Senate Bill 286, which would send forfeited lottery prizes to the scholarship fund, will advance to the Senate after the Senate Finance Committee approved the bill. And Senate Bill 355, approved with a 25-16 vote, would allow debit cards to be used to purchase lottery tickets. Supporters of SB 355 said it could increase lottery ticket sales and lead to larger prize amounts, which would in turn boost funding to the scholarship in the long run. However, the bill would also eliminate the requirement that at least 30 percent of lottery revenue be dedicated to the scholarship fund.


The Setonian
Opinion

Column: It's high time New Mexico legalized pot

New Mexico should be next in line to legalize marijuana for recreational use. We can’t afford not to do it: Full legalization would provide tens of millions of dollars in economic benefits for the state at a time when the dwindling local economy needs a major boost. Colorado and Washington State legalized recreational use of marijuana in 2012. Oregon voters approved legalization in July 2014, and in February Alaska became the fourth U.S. state to legalize recreational marijuana.


Members of Muslim Student Association, Omkulthoom Qassen, left, Sarah Hassan, middle and Ihsan Wadud, right, attend ASUNMs meeting on Wednesday. ASUNM passed Resolution 6S, which supports Islam in the UNM Community.
News

ASUNM to UNM: Proclaim support for Muslim students

In the wake of recent attacks targeting Muslims on American college campuses and around the world, ASUNM unanimously passed a cautionary resolution at Wednesday’s meeting urging UNM administration to state their opposition to Islamophobia. Sen. Udell Calzadillas Chavez, who introduced Resolution 6S, said there is a widespread culture of fear and ignorance that perpetuates violence against Muslims. The purpose of the resolution is to provoke better understanding of Islam in the UNM community. “This is a proactive approach to events in the United States and around the world,” he said.


The Setonian
Sports

Baseball: Lobos take rare underdog role against SDSU

The New Mexico baseball team isn’t usually considered an underdog in the Mountain West, but the underdog role is what UNM will play this weekend when it hosts a San Diego State team that heads into Lobo Field on a seven-game winning streak. Part of the reason SDSU is favored in the three-game series is because of its experience in the field. The Aztecs have eight hitters with two years of Division I experience or more. In comparison, UNM has just two batters — junior second baseman Sam Haggerty and junior shortstop Jared Holley — with two years of Division I skill. “Just by experience alone we’re the underdogs,” head coach Ray Birmingham said. “I consider us underdogs these next two weekends. That doesn’t mean we’re not going to win them.”


The Setonian
Culture

Column: Studying abroad bestows many benefits

Studying abroad is expensive and entails some culture shock. However, making the difficult decision to leave my family and friends for a year to live in New Mexico was the best decision I have ever made. While everyone else is back home in rainy England, I get to wake up to the best sunrises in the world, live an American lifestyle and experience every day the vibrant New Mexico culture. I highly encourage anyone to live abroad at one moment in their life.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: People must address addiction issues before legalizing cannabis

Your cartoon on March 4 exemplifies how complicated the issue of cannabis legalization has become. To unravel the resulting confusion among users of this drug, there must first be broad agreement among all levels of government that cannabis is physically addictive, with serious consequences such as loss of working memory, cognitive impairment, even schizophrenia, and dangerous withdrawal symptoms like physical aggression.


The Setonian
News

ASUNM resolves to replace holiday

The fight to replace university observation of Columbus Day with the official celebration of Indigenous Peoples’ Resistance and Resilience Day garnered momentum on Wednesday with the unanimous passing of an ASUNM resolution urging UNM administration to make the change. Resolution 7S states that the move is actually in concordance with what the University stands for. “This resolution is in farther accordance with UNM’s mission statement, which commits to ‘discover and disseminate new knowledge and creative endeavors that will enhance the overall well-being of society,’” the document states.


The Setonian
Culture

Review: 'Big Hero 6' a surprisingly fresh Disney effort

Disney is one of the six corporations who control 90 percent of American media. Disney owns ABC, ESPN, Pixar, Miramax, Lucasfilm and Marvel Entertainment. The main way this has changed American media is the shaping of the thunderously lucrative Marvel Cinematic Universe. “Big Hero 6,” which recently came out on DVD, is probably the most creative use of Disney’s ownership of everything Marvel. “Big Hero 6” was originally a 90s comic series failure. I’m a huge comic book nerd and even I hadn’t heard of it before — it is essentially the artistic dregs of the Marvel’s comic history. But since Disney purchased Marvel Entertainment in 2009, this provided an opportunity to deconstruct and reinvent.


Around 200 students wearing cherry and silver participated in the annual student body photo that will hang in the SUB for a full year. UNM celebrates its 126th birthday this year.
News

Lobo Day celebrates UNM birthday with bash

ASUNM’s Lobo Spirit group threw the University a 126th birthday party at the Student Union Building on Wednesday. Around 200 students wearing cherry and silver participated in the annual student body photo that will hang in the SUB for a full year, ASUNM officials said. “Lobo Day is basically composed of a couple different parts,” said Ryan Lindquist, associate director for Students Activities Center. “We take the big large picture that hangs in the Student Union Building for the entire year. We sing the birthday songs. We have the photo booth and a couple of giveaways.”


Deborah and Justin Coston watch as Mary Saunders forms a swan out of many intricate folds at the Explora Museum Wednesday Feb. 25, 2015. Saunders and Hollie Lovely, with funding from The Education Plan of New Mexico, put on writing workshops for K-3 children to kick start the students imaginative storytelling abilities.
Culture

PBS puts spotlight on childhood literacy

Getting kids to read can be an obstacle, but New Mexico PBS is tackling the challenge through writing workshops. The PBS Kids writing workshops, offered through the month of March, feature an appearance by a local children’s book author and teach the basic elements of creating and organizing a story. Hollie Lovely, PBS early childhood outreach coordinator, said she organizes the workshops to address literacy and reading proficiency in New Mexico.


The Setonian
Culture

Five and why: What Lobos love to hear

Facing an unusual challenge, choral director Maxine Thévenot said she did not expect it to be so hard to pick her five favorite musicians. “This list is most certainly not an exhaustive one, but I will be taking these to my desert island, when that day comes,” she said.


Professor Edl Schamiloglu discusses lab projects Wednesday afternoon at the Electrical and Computer Engineering lab. Dr. Schamiloglu recently received the Nuclear and Plasma Society?s Pulsed Power Science and Technology Committees Peter Haas Award. The award is given to individuals whose efforts have benefited research, education and information exchange.
News

Professor acknowledged with esteemed award

A UNM professor has won a prestigious award for a lifetime’s work in physics, as the laboratory he started at UNM celebrates its 25th year. Edl Schamiloglu, a professor of electrical and computer engineering, was recognized for his contributions to the field of pulsed power and was awarded the 2015 IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Society’s Pulsed Power Science and Technology Committee’s Peter Haas Award. According to the NPSS website, The Peter Haas Award “recognizes individuals whose efforts, over an extended period, have greatly benefited the pulsed power field through the development of important applications or areas of activity including research, education and information exchange.”


The Setonian
Sports

Column: Yvonne Sanchez deserves new deal

In a season swimming in a whirlpool of doubt, head coach Yvonne Sanchez stood tall in the final year of her contract and produced one of the best women’s basketball teams to come out of the New Mexico program. Sanchez is deserving of a short-term deal to retain her position as head coach for UNM. The first three years were rough, which is why a long-term deal is not likely. However, the head coach should be allowed to prove this season was no fluke.


The Setonian
Sports

Season may end on nine-game losing streak

New Mexico players and fans have grown accustomed to 20 or more wins from the men’s basketball team, but the 2014-15 season will have a different outcome – including the longest losing streak in more than 50 years. This season, the Lobos got off to a 9-4 start before the turn of the calendar. Since Jan 1, UNM has had a downfall for the ages and it won’t get any easier the remainder of the season.



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