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The Setonian
News

Athletics budget situation improving

Every year since 2010, UNM’s athletics budget has spent more than it has brought in, although its situation has improved as of late. According to University documents, UNM Athletics was in the red by more than $1 million in 2012. But by 2013 that number was shaved to $800,000, and was $23,000 last year.


The Setonian
News

Regents approve funds for branding agency's research phase

UNM is in the beginning stages of a comprehensive rebranding process after signing with branding agency 160over90, in a new effort to change how UNM is viewed nationwide. Chief Marketing and Communications Officer Cinnamon Blair presented 160over90’s model and previous work to the Board of Regents last Friday, along with Vice President for Enrollment Management Terry Babbitt.


News

University of New Mexico, Mississippi Valley State partner for cultural exchange

UNM and Mississippi Valley State University have formed a partnership to facilitate cultural exchange, joining the two institutions to provide students with the opportunity to visit the other college campus and experience what they have to offer. “(The partnership) will allow our students to attend a historically black university,” said Dr. Jozie De Leon, UNM's vice president of equity and inclusion. “What we’re going to do is alternate, so the first year MVSU students will come here in the summer for four to six weeks.” MVSU and UNM differ greatly in diversity enrollment. Last fall, MVSU had a total of 1,722 African-American undergraduate students, and only 22 Hispanic students, according to the university's website. While UNM had 4,728 Hispanic and only 558 African-American undergrads, according to the division for equity and inclusion.


New Mexico junior Calli Thackery (184) and freshman Alice Wright (186) run side-by-side at the NCAA Mountain Region Cross Country Championships at UNM North Golf Course on Friday.  Wright went on to take first with a time of 20:51.10.
Sports

Cross Country: Lobo ranked No. 1 in women's poll

New Mexico is the No. 1 women’s cross country team in the nation, according to the latest U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association poll. UNM overtook Iowa State sits for the top spot in the poll, which was released Tuesday. The Lobo women accumulated 354 points, including eight first-place points, for the top ranking.


Institutional bonds
News

UNM Regents approve selling $100M in institutional bonds for renovations

On Friday the UNM Board of Regents voted in favor of selling $100 million in institutional bonds beginning next year, which is the first step in funding several improvement projects on campus, including Johnson Center renovations. The bonds will be split in two portions: $55 million, which will be used to fund renovations to Johnson, Anderson School of Management and Smith Plaza, will be sold in January; the other $45 million, which will be allocated toward a new Physics and Astronomy Interdisciplinary Science building and expansions to the children’s care center, will be sold a year later.



UNM head women’s soccer coach Heather Dyche, second from left, walks to the field with her assistants. 
Sports

Sports Issue: Coach constructs culture for new Lobo soccer

Heather Dyche never coached a NCAA Division I soccer team before the 2015 season, but that doesn't diminish her qualifications. She’s been around the game for quite a while. A coach licensed with organizations like the U.S. Soccer Federation, CONCACAF, the National Soccer Coaches Association of America and the U.S. Youth Soccer Association, the Albuquerque native also served as an assistant for the U14 U.S. national team. Her playing days included a stop at Florida State University.


UNM students exercise at the bottom level of the Johnson Center’s weight room during Friday night’s open hours. The multilevel weight room carries some equipment but during busy times during the week students have trouble finding open spaces.
News

Sports Issue: Johnson Center in dire state, administrators say

Hundreds of UNM students visit the Johnson Center every day, either to attend a class, practice personal fitness, participate in recreational activities or practice and play for a school sport. For the amount of students using the building daily, the limited amount of space, outdated circuitry, confusing floor plan, and not-so-Americans with Disabilities Act-friendly layout are only the most apparent things that prove Johnson Center is in a dire need of a renovation.



A sign hangs at the entrance to the Manzanita Counseling Center. The center offers free services and is ran by graduate students who are under the supervision of licensed counselors.  
News

Manzanita offers other options for counseling service

Many UNM students who seek on-campus counseling are not aware of all of their options. They opt for the more well-known services at Student Health and Counseling or even the Counseling, Assistance and Referral Services; but few use the Manzanita Counseling Center.


The Setonian
News

Campus briefs for Sept. 11

The Office of the Chief Information Officer at UNM is collaborating with CNM to sponsor a Mobile Apps Contest. The contest provides students from both schools the opportunity to apply their skills for developing apps for the community.


During Wednesday evening’s ASUNM Senate meeting, Kyle Stepp approaches the ASUNM board in defense of President Jenna Hagengruber’s decision to hire Kyle Biederwolf as the Emerging Lobo Leaders executive director.
News

Things to know from Wednesday's ASUNM Senate meeting

ASUNM held their second full Senate meeting of the fall semester on Wednesday evening, and although no major pieces of legislation were presented, several appropriations and president appointments were presented for approval, and the LoboRESPECT Advocacy Center got an opening date, courtesy of Dean of Students Tomás Aguirre.


Gov. Susana Martinez looks at Wednesday’s panel of speakers during a conference held in the SUB. Martinez was the keynote speaker, addressing challenges the state of New Mexico faces with higher education.
News

Governor addresses UNM on state of education

New Mexico Gov. Susanna Martinez came to UNM on Wednesday to outline some of her initiatives for higher education across the state, in hopes that new policies will be implemented to help college students finish their studies on time. “We are falling far short of one of the key expectations that New Mexicans have of us: to see students graduate and graduate on time,” she said.


News

U.S. urged to take on bigger refugee load

At a time when the European Union is debating plans for dealing with a major refugee influx from the Middle East, a UNM professor is helping refugees feel at home in the United States. Jessica Goodkind, associate professor at the Department of Sociology, is pairing up refugee families with UNM students to help them resettle in the U.S. as part of the “Refugee Well-Being Project.”


UNM alumnus Isaac Neal is a Guidance, Navigation and Control Engineer at the Boeing Company in Albuquerque.
News

UNM alumnus developing technology for military

Isaac Neal, a University of New Mexico alumnus, is helping develop state-of-the-art laser technology designed to protect troops overseas. Neal currently works in the Laser & Electro-Optical Systems organization within The Boeing Company as a guidance, navigation and control engineer for the Compact Laser Weapon System project in Albuquerque, according to a UNM press release. The system will help the military and other consumers track and take precautionary measures against drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles, that may pose a threat, according to the statement.


Linebacker Kimmie Carson walks away from a play during the Lobos game against Wyoming last November. The Lobos’ season opener is this Saturday at 6 p.m. against the Mississippi Valley State.
Sports

Football: Lobos keep expectations high going into season starter

Back when Bob Davie was an analyst for ESPN, there was one aspect of the job that he disliked: making predictions. Davie, entering his fourth year as head coach for New Mexico, said he wasn’t fond of acting like he knew what was going to happen five months into the college football season. Davie was paid to give his opinion much in the same way that he gives his opinion as a head coach. Well, the time for making predictions is over.


The Setonian
Culture

Comic's success encourages arts majors

Grandma is putting down the pruning shears and taking up the shovel. “All the Growing Things” is graphic novel about an elderly woman named Maude that begins with her fighting off the tentacle monsters invading her back garden. In the space of a moment, a sweet old lady with a green thumb turns into a shovel-wielding huntress. Jen and John Myers, UNM art school alumni, used the skills they developed to create “All the Growing Things,” as well as “Terra Farmers,” “Era of Great Wonders” and other comics.


Patrick Pape instructs a class filled with students and law enforcement officials on the basics of cyber security. One topic of the class was how to look through hard drives to pinpoint certain things necessary for investigations.
News

Cybersecurity workshop draws students of various stripes from across state

Students, law enforcement officers, military personnel and others are congregating at the Anderson School of Management this week for a seminar about cybersecurity fundamentals, in hopes that they can apply it to their education or careers. The week-long course, formally called Advanced Digital Forensics, is a mix of lecture and hands-on activities based on the concepts of reverse engineering and network analysis, said Drew Hamilton, professor of computer science and engineering at Mississippi State University.


The Setonian
News

Booming lottery bodes well for New Mexico's college students

New Mexico Lottery scratcher sales increased by 14.54 percent in fiscal year 2015, which means more students at UNM could potentially benefit from the lottery scholarship, according to University Associate Vice President Terry Babbitt. According to a press release from New Mexico Lottery, $1 million in additional money was raised for college students this year from the increased sales.


The Sunport is a product four years in the making by a local Albuquerque team. If all goes to plan, creator Paul Droege said that they could begin shipping out in March.
News

SunPort aims to change how consumers access solar power

According to the Energy Information Administration, 85 percent of all electricity in the United States in 2014 was generated via coal, natural gas and nuclear. Solar barely even gets any love among the seven percent of our power that comes from renewable energy resources – only 0.4 percent of our power came from the sun. The SunPort, a product made by a local Albuquerque startup team, is looking to change all of that on a global scale, and it’s as easy as just plugging it into an outlet, and the consumer is using solar.

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