Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
NEVADA SAGEBRUSH
SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, RENO SINCE 1893
THE
NEWS in REVIEW
By Marcus Lavergne
INTERNATIONAL
EU and Turkey hold talks over
refugee crisis
The Turkish government is reportedly asking that the EU double aid
to Turkey to more than $6 billion,
around 4.6 billion Euros. The
request stems from the current
refugee crisis afflicting the nation.
Syrias civil war has forced millions
of refugees to enter neighboring
countries like Turkey, which currently houses more than 2.7 million,
according to the BBC.
The EU promised to provide more
than $3 billion in aid on Sunday, Nov.
29, 2015, but according to Turkeys
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
they have yet to deliver on it.
A large number of migrants also
pass through the country to find
shelter elsewhere, but the EU has
asked the countrys leaders to take
refugees who do not qualify for
asylum back within its border.
The EU has also asked for Turkey
to more efficiently patrol its waters.
Turkeys officials are looking for
facilitated EU membership as well
as sped-up progress of plans that
would allow Turks to travel throughout Europe without visas.
NATIONAL
US congressman points out
Navy SEAL rifle shortage
Monday, March 7, Rep. Duncan
Hunter, R-Calif., told reporters that
SEAL teams are being forced to
share rifles. Hunter, a former Marine, told the AP hes been contacted
by several SEALs about the shortage.
They want their rifles, Hunter
told reporters. Its their lifeline,
so let them keep their guns until
theyre assigned desk jobs at the
Pentagon.
One SEAL who contacted Hunter
placed the blame on a slow, pennypinching bureaucracy that rarely
seeks input from the service members who use the gear.
The M-4 carbine is the standard
combat rifle used by the military
branches and costs less than $1,000
when bought in a bulk package,
according to Defense Department
budget
documents.
However,
Hunter alleges that the problem
isnt a lack of money in the military
budget.
According to the AP, U.S. military
officials said they were looking into
the shortage.
ASUN ELECTIONS
VICE PRESIDENTAL
CANDIDATE
GREATNESS AWAITS
Mind of the
machine: UNR
students work
to optimize
through AI
By Marcus Lavergne
Marissa Crook
PRESIDENTAL
CANDIDATE
Polls set to
open after
a month of
campaigns
VICE PRESIDENTAL
CANDIDATE
Austin Mathias
By Jacob Solis
LOCAL
Carson City starts construction
on new Downtown Corridor
Project
The Carson City Public Works
Department broke ground Monday
morning on the citys $10-11 million Downtown Streetscape project.
Officials say the construction
will narrow Carson Street, while
making more room for pedestrians
and bicyclists. The project will also
replace old utilities under the road
as well as improving its aesthetics
and walkability. Officials hope it
will promote tourism and help
businesses in the area.
Funds for the three-stage project
are being raised through Public
Works funding and an increased
sales tax according to KTNV News.
Q&D construction will head the
roadwork. Streets and sidewalks
along Carson Street wont be accessible during the process.
Carson City Mayor Bob Crowell
hopes the project will be done in
time for the Nevada Day parade in
October.
Jacob Springmeyer
Breanna Denney/Nevada Sagebrush
Beware the
medical dangers of
Black Rock City
By Marcus Lavergne
For the past 30 years, people have
been celebrating whats become known
as radical self-expression through the
burning of a wooden man and several
other practices involving art, drug use,
music, reflection and more. Throughout
the years, Burning Man, a festival now
held in the Black Rock Desert north of
Reno, Nevada, has grown, transformed
and continued to attract thousands of
Burners from across the world.
Burning Mans journey from its modest beginnings in San Francisco to its
enormous presence on the Playa of
Black Rock near the small population
A4
Brandon Boone
PRESIDENTAL
CANDIDATE
See AI page A3
SWEARING IS CARING
A7
A10
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
A2 | NEWS
NEVADA SAGEBRUSH
THE
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adnevadasales@gmail.com
2>=CA81DC8=6BC0554AB
Jordan Berns, Will Compton,
Brandon Cruz, Sean Dodenhoff,
Lindsay Honaker, Hayley Hanger,
Henry MacDiarmid, Ryan Suppe,
Kenny Taboada, Andrea Wilkinson
2>=C02CDB
The Nevada Sagebrush is a
newspaper operated by and for
the students of the University of
Nevada, Reno. The contents of
this newspaper do not necessarily reflect those opinions of
the university or its students. It
is printed by the Sierra Nevada
Media Group.
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For information about display
advertising and rates, please call
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/BPVTQadbWB_^acb
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PRESIDENT
Brandon Boone
2>AA42C8>=B
The Nevada Sagebrush
fixes mistakes.
If you find an error, email
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B>280;<4380
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]ebPVTQadbW
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Dr. Gary G-man Johnson (left) answers questions and talks to a group of people
after his lecture Surviving Burning Man: Notes From a Dusty Doctor on Wednesday,
March 3. Johnson has been attending Burning Man for more than 20 years, and hr
provides medical care on campus and at the festival.
Marissa Crook
Marissa Crook, the current director of
ASUNs Department of Legislative Affairs, first got her start in the association
as a senator for the College of Liberal Arts
during the 82nd session in 2014. There,
she worked on various projects as part of
the committees on Government Operations, University Affairs, and Budget and
Finance.
Her platform is split in four parts,
spelled out in her campaign motto:
serve, lead, vitalize and reorganize. More
specifically, Crook has said she wants
to revamp the This is Nevada app as
VICE PRESIDENT
Austin Mathias
Austin Mathias, like his colleague
Boone, first joined ASUN when he was
elected to serve in the senate, representing the Division of Health Sciences. In
his fourth year, Mathias is pursuing a
degree in health sciences.
His platform has fewer specific promises than his colleagues, but hes made
promises nonetheless, vowing to work
with the president to accomplish goals,
ensure communication between departments, expand the Pack Internship
Grant Program and to ensure that organizations within ASUN come together.
In his presentation to The Nevada
Sagebrush, Mathias added some details
to his plan, saying that he would work to
get more businesses to participate in the
Pack Internship Grant Program. He also
noted a no-nonsense leadership style
Jacob Springmeyer
Jacob Springmeyer, a veteran of
ASUN, served as a programming intern
and programmer proper before being
promoted to his current position as
deputy chief of staff. There, he works
with ASUNs external operations, like
the Pack Friendly Business campaign
and the Sustainable Nevada Initiative
Fund.
His platform boils down into three
goals: unity, sustainability, and creating a business-friendly environment
for students and local businesses alike.
Beneath each of these goals are sub
goals, such as increasing grant funding
for sustainability proposals, increasing
funding for the Pack Internship Grant
Program, and increasing opportunities
for students and businesses to connect.
In his presentation to The Nevada
Sagebrush, Springmeyer elaborated on
his plans for the Pack Internship Grant
Program, noting especially that more
local businesses need to be called by
ASUN and convinced to join the program. Springmeyer also had a detailed
plan to adjust funding for ASUN-funded
publications based on readership and
need (this does not include The Nevada
Sagebrush, which is entirely self-funded).
Jacob Solis can be reached at jsolis@
sagebrush.unr.edu and on Twitter
@TheSagebrush.
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
NEWS | A3
New physician
assistant program
coming to School
of Medicine
Staff Report
University of Nevada, Reno, computer science major Nathan Griffin (left) and Ph.D. candidate Siming Liu (right) pose for a portrait in the Scrugham Engineering
and Mines Building on Friday, March 4. Griffin and Liu work with artificial intelligence in the evolutionary computing systems lab to figure out solutions to different technological issues.
AI
We are trying to generate something that can play as good as human players, Liu said. Thats why
real-time strategy games are hot in AI
research. AI is making the right decision in the right place according to the
existing knowledge.
Liu relates the research to improving the operation of motor vehicles.
Google is now working on perfecting
its driverless car, and Liu is expanding
his expertise by delving into creating
more intelligent, safer automated
traffic and transportation systems.
There, hes optimizing the instruction
provided by traffic signals.
Having the best performance or
beating your opponent is not the only
goal here, Liu said. [Having] different
objectives and using the same tools,
you can solve different problems.
Humans dont have the answer to
every problem, and through different
algorithms and simulations, computers can find solutions that humans
havent considered, and theyre doing
it faster according to Griffin. Thats the
important part.
Instead of trying every possibility
Arts&Entertainment
Q&A
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
A4
PACK N
THE EVENTS
THINGS TO
WATCH OUT
FOR THIS WEEK
By Blake Nelson
2016 SCHOLASTIC
ART AWARDS
EXHIBITION
RECEPTION
DATE: Wednesday
TIME: 7:30 p.m.
LOCATION: The Holland
Project
INFO: Check out the winners
of the Scholastic Art Awards
at The Holland Project.
The artists featured are all
teenagers in the northern
Nevada area, and the art
has been reviewed by many
of judges throughout the
area as well. DJ Tucker Rash
will be spinning tunes while
Rainshadow Community
Charter High School
provides refreshments for
the event. Support young
artists and have a great time
doing it.
EMOTIONAL
CONCERT
DATE: Thursday
TIME: 8:30 p.m.
LOCATION: Monolith
INFO: San Francisco indie
ACOUSTIC
COUNTRY/FOLK
NIGHT
DATE: Saturday
TIME: 6 p.m.
LOCATION: The Hideout
Lounge
INFO: Cool Tapes follows
up their successful festival
with an acoustic night this
Saturday. The small show will
be at the Hideout, a small
bar off Wells Street, and will
feature some local country
talent. The lineup will be
announced this week, but
expect some great acts. Also
be excited that Cool Tapes
is making moves to make
Reno great again with these
wonderful events. No entry
fee and cool tunes, what
more could you ask for?
Blake Nelson can be reached
at tbynum@sagebrush.unr.edu
and on Twitter @b_e_nelson.
CHRISTOPH WEBER
By Blake Nelson
ecently,
Christoph Weber,
a Reno local,
competed and
placed in the
prestigious writing contest
Writers and Illustrators of
the Future. Weber placed
third in the writing portion
of the contest with his
short story Mbius.
The contest was founded
by L. Ron Hubbard in
1983 with the intention
of recognizing up-andcoming speculative fiction
writers. Judges of the
contest include Orson
Scott Card among other
esteemed writers.
Weber, among other
things, is an arborist and
a writer with a knack for
issues facing the future
of the human race. The
Nevada Sagebrush recently
got into contact with
Weber and asked some
questions regarding his
recent success and what
this success means.
Are you a Reno native?
If not, how long have you
lived in Reno, when did you
move here, etc.?
Born and raised!
A&E | A5
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
CONCERT REVIEW
The clock struck 8 p.m. and an unknown DJ took the stage to get everyone
fired up and soon the crowd went wild
as Futuristic, a fast-paced rapper with
energy off the charts, ran out on stage
and took the mic.
He showed off his skill with an a cappella verse from his song Too Easy. He
also lit up a fresh joint and smoked it
without hesitation. Security scoured the
crowd kicking people out for smoking
weed. Futuristic tried to defend a fan
being thrown out to no avail, but at least
he tried.
Singer Devvon Terrell also made an
appearance with Futuristic. Terrell and
Futuristic released an album together
Christmas Day titled Coast 2 Coast.
They both pulled up a chair and sat
down center stage to perform their own
rendition of Justin Biebers hit song Love
Yourself. Terrell sang the ballad, but he
couldnt do the song justice.
They recovered by turning up the
tempo and the crowd started bumping.
To my amazement, the tours crew was
able to set up a human basketball hoop
in the crowd that Futuristic dunked on as
he lunged off the stage.
Next onto the stage was Moosh and
MOVIE REVIEW
Movie Review
THE WITCH
Release Date: Feb. 19
Genre: Horror
Wednesday 3/9/16
Senator Position:
College of Education
For applications please visit UNRSearch.com
First steps, next steps, the right steps. Helping you live greater thats what
matters. And its what Greater Nevada Credit Union does best.
Checking accounts with higher rewards. Savings accounts to start planning
for tomorrow. Flexible loans for when you need a little extra help. Thats
what it means to live greater. And with branches near campus plus access to
more than 30,000 fee-free ATMs nationwide, its easy to access your money
wherever, whenever all backed by real people.
Greater Nevada is a proud sponsor of the Wolf Pack Marching Band.
Were your credit union, here for everyone in Nevada. Go Pack!
COLLEGE
OF EDUCATION
TOWN HALL
Opinion
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
A6
STAFF EDITORIAL
that complemented his ticketed presidential running mate, Boone. Springmeyer has the experience
in the executive department that complements
Boones legislative experience. Springmeyer
currently sits as the deputy chief of staff, and has a
breadth of experience in planning and programming some of the more successful events ASUN has
funded and hosted. Springmeyers recent involvement in the universitys first Biggest Little Festival
is admirable. Being a northern Nevada native,
Springmeyers main focus is not just reaching out to
the student population, but the community as well.
Even though Springmeyer has our endorsement,
his stance on the student run publications is
troubling. When asked about his vision for the
publications, encompassing Insight Magazine, The
Brushfire Literary Arts Journal and Wolf Pack Radio,
his response did not indicate much interest or
knowledge on the subject.
Considering that the vice presidents office has
been expanded to become the liaison between
student run publications and ASUN government, it
stands as a concern for the students who work for
these publications, who are able to use the publications to learn and grow professionally. It should
be noted that The Nevada Sagebrush is entirely
self-funded, and as such will not be influenced by
any policy Springmeyer may introduce in regard to
the publications.
While it may simply be a lack of previous
Consent is a
conversation
that everyone
should be having
OPINION | A7
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
UNR College
Republicans
endorse
candidates for
the ASUN 84th
Session
Photos by Breanna
Denney/Nevada
Sagebrush
Trump supporters
attend his rallyrally in Sparks on
Thursday, Oct. 29.
Columnist, Sen
Dedonhoff feels
Trump has gained a
large following due
to his uncoventional
platform.
TRUMP
A
in the media.
Career politicians such as Cruz and
Rubio are disparaging Trump because
they know if Trump is elected their gravy
train is over. Trump has promised to set
term limits for Congress. This will help
to clean out the corruption in the party
that has been there for years. Americans
are sick of these politicians that they have
elected to be their voice and then have not
followed through with their promises. The
overwhelming support for Donald Trump
proves the people of the greatest nation
are ready for political reform and they
believe Trump will do that. As many know,
Donald Trump is a successful businessman, not a career politician. Many feel he
is the man to clean up all the corruption
in Washington, D.C., and will fight for the
people. They are sick of being ignored and
lied to and are terrified of the direction
this country is headed. If this corruption
continues there may not be a way back.
The RNC is doing everything in its
power to try and tarnish Trumps name
and give the nomination to another
candidate. However, this appears to be
backfiring and because of its stance,
Trump has gained more support. The RNC
Its important that student veterans have their voices heard too
student veterans.
When I was a little girl my mom
would make me go up to men and
women in military uniform and say,
Thank you for your service, to
show appreciation and support for
those who fight for our country. But
research shows this isnt exactly what
student veterans at the university
want from their student and administrative peers.
The student-run campaign found
that student veterans want to be
recognized for continued service in
their families, in their education and
in their community. This reaches the
very heart of the Serve On movement.
If we serve on as a university
community and listen to the needs
of student veterans, we will find that
priority registration, VetSMART and
career programing are at the forefront
of what student veterans want to
see from their administration and
student leaders.
The university is one of the only
colleges in Nevada that does not
have priority registration for student
Court Report
@SagebrushSports | nevadasagebrush.com
A8
WEEKLY TOP 5
NBA Coaches
GREG POPOVICH
Conference
awards
Oliver, Criswell and Coleman represent Wolf
Pack in All-Mountain West media poll
By Jack Rieger
BRAD STEVENS
STEVE KERR
16-2
23-8
Fresno State
13-5
22-9
Boise State
11-7
20-11
Nevada
10-8
18-12
New Mexico
10-8
17-14
UNLV
8-10
17-14
Colorado State
8-10
16-15
Utah State
7-11
15-14
Wyoming
7-11
14-17
Air Force
5-13
14-17
4-14
9-21
SOFTBALL
SDSU
FRANK VOGEL
RICK CARLISLE
Freshman forward Cameron Oliver (0) goes up for a dunk against New Mexico on Saturday, March 5 at Lawlor Events Center. Oliver won
Mountain West Freshman of the Year Award.
WOMENS BASKETBALL
The Nevada womens
basketball team ended the
regular season with a 66-42
loss to New Mexico on Friday.
The Wolf Pack fought the
Lobos through three tough
quarters, going into the fourth
44-39. The fourth quarter was
all New Mexico; the Lobos
scored 22 points and held the
Pack to zero field goals and
three points, which all came
from free throws. UNM shot
46 percent and dominated in
the paint, outscoring the Pack
32-14. Junior Stephanie Schmid
was the only Pack player to
reach doubles, finishing with
11 points. Senior Kelsey Kaelin
dished out four assists to just
one turnover. Nevada will play
as the No. 10 seed and face the
Utah State Aggies in the MW
tourney Monday at 4:30 p.m. at
the Thomas & Mack Center in
Las Vegas.
VS
Neil Patrick
Healy
Jack
Rieger
SDSU
SPORTS | A9
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
MWC Bracket
By Neil Patrick Healy
Fresno State
Boise State
This will be a game will be a defensive coachs dream. You have SDSUs lock-down
post defense vs. Boises efficient zone defense. Each team won on the others home
floor, so this matchup is pretty even. Im giving a slight edge to the Aztecs because of
the points allowed stat. Sixty points per game is an incredible number considering
how basketball is played these days. Its going to be a close one, but the Aztecs will
punch the Mountain Wests ticket to the big dance.
New Mexico
NEvada
Colorado State
UNLV
Wyoming
Utah State
Air Force
SJSU
A10 | SPORTS
Conference tournaments
are stupid and I love them
T
New Mexico State basketball head coach Marvin Menzies holds the WAC Tournament Championship trophy Orleans Arena in Las Vegas back in 2012. As the top seed, Nevada lost in the semifinals of the WAC
tournament against Louisiana Tech, which paved the way for New Mexico State.
OPTIMIST
Marqueze Coleman has five extra days
of rest to heal his severely sprained ankle,
and Nevada absolutely needs Colemans
offensive production to compete with the
likes of New Mexico or San Diego State,
even if its in a limited role. Coleman hasnt
played since spraining his ankle on Feb.
24 against Utah State, giving Coleman
15 days of rest for the game against New
Mexico. Its naive to think Coleman wont
play in what could be his last game in a
Nevada jersey, and the Wolf Pack offense
would improve significantly with its
leading scorer on the floor.
New Mexico swept Nevada during the
season, winning by 12 points in December
and by five points on Saturday night. Who
has the advantage in the third game of that
series? You could make the case Nevada
does, as the Wolf Pack has extra motivation to avoid going 0-3 against the Lobos.
Nevada also couldnt play much worse
than it did on Saturday night, yet the Pack
only lost by five without its all-around best
PESSIMISTIC
Nevada hasnt won a Mountain West
tournament game during its three-year
history in the conference, going 0-3 in the
tournament. The Wolf Pack has also been
performing poorly away from home this
year, winning only five of 13 games on the
road this season.
Along with no tournament wins, Nevada
has a decent chance of not having leading
scorer Marqueze Coleman. Although it
could potentially be his last game of the
season, coach Musselman did not seem
optimistic about Colemans chances of
playing.
Dont count on it, Musselman said.
I have zero hope that he will play. Hes
continually tried; he cannot jog right now.
When a player cant jog on a Saturday, to
get him to play on Thursday in all the years
Ive been around, pretty long road to go.
If Coleman doesnt play you can forget
about winning a tournament game.
Nevadas offense has struggled to create
shot opportunities without Coleman,
especially from outside the paint. Lindsey
Drew is a serviceable point guard but he
Pack Pros
in
the
MY PREDICTION
So much depends on the health of Marqueze Colemans ankle, which Musselman
has zero hope in. You cant win games
without your best player, especially when
that player is your point guard and team
leader. Also, New Mexicos zone defense
gave Nevada fits on Saturday night,
forcing the Pack to take outside shots they
havent been able to hit all year. The glass
is officially half empty. New Mexico 68,
Nevada 65.
Jack Rieger can be reached at jrieger@sagebrush.unr.edu and on Twitter @JackRieger.
SPORTS | A11
@TheSagebrush | nevadasagebrush.com
UP
Stock
with
DOWN
STOCK DOWN
UFC 2
STOCK UP
SPRING TRAININGS SUPER DAD
A routine spring training game on
Saturday, March 5, of the Pittsburgh
Pirates vs. the Atlanta Braves became
center stage for an everyday hero in the
form of a dad. A little boy was sitting in
the stands looking up something on his
phone when the batter had his bat slip
out of his hands, flying right in the boys
direction. In just a split second, the father
reached out his large, vascular wrist and
blocked the bat from colliding right into
his oblivious sons face.
This dad is yet another example of
fathers being superheroes at baseball
games. It seems that something about
the American pastime raises fathers
senses and makes them perform at new
heights. There are countless videos of
fathers catching foul balls (barehanded
and with gloves) while having their infant
strapped to their chest. Ive even seen
one video of a dad catching a home-run
ball with his beer WHILE holding his
infant in his other arm. This dad saving
Nevada third basemen Bryce Greager (1) runs the base path at Peccole Park in
a game last season.
SWEET PORK
:=D3A
#-"$,#&"/4
Elections
General Elections
Voting for President, Vice President & Senator Seats
March 9 & 10, 2016, online via WebCampus
or in person in The Joe, 2nd Floor
Voting Opens: March 9 at 8am
Voting Closes: March 10 at 5pm
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Sports
BEST/WORST
CASE
A10
BRACKET
PREDICTIONS
A10
A9
a12
ITS A LOVE
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