
Breezy winds Friday will bring another round of critical fire danger to parts of New Mexico. Cooler air settles in this weekend, with freezing temperatures possible Saturday morning. Warmer and drier weather returned to New Mexico Thursday, along with breezy winds and elevated fire danger across the eastern half of the state. A Red Flag […]
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Fire danger returns Friday before weekend cooldown
Trump Administration Unveils Up to 100% Tariff on Branded Drugs
Drugmakers or countries that strike pricing deals or make manufacturing investment commitments in the U.S. can secure much lower levies, or none at all.
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Contract personnel announced for 2026 NFR Open at the Pikes Peak Or Bust Rodeo presented by John Deere; National Circuit Finals Steer Roping

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – The PRCA is proud to announce the full contract personnel for the 2026 NFR Open at the Pikes Peak Or Bust Rodeo presented by John Deere and the National Circuit Finals Steer Roping.
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Congo says its mpox outbreak is over after 2 years, more than 2,200 suspected deaths
Congo has declared the end of a two-year mpox outbreak, which is believed to have caused over 2,200 deaths
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Congo on Thursday declared the end of a two-year outbreak of the mpox disease that’s believed to have caused more than 2,200 deaths in the country.
Health Minister Roger Kamba told journalists that the government had made the determination that the outbreak was over and no longer a national emergency.
Congo, a vast country in central Africa, was at the center of an outbreak of the infectious viral disease that spread to neighboring countries in 2024 and prompted the World Health Organization to declare it a global health emergency as it spilled over borders. WHO ended the global health emergency declaration in September.
The Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there were more than 161,000 suspected cases of mpox in Congo during the outbreak between 2024 and this year, with around 37,000 of them confirmed through tests.
The Africa CDC said there were 2,286 suspected deaths but only 127 were confirmed by tests.
Mpox, also known as monkeypox, was first identified by scientists in 1958 when there were outbreaks of a “pox-like” disease in monkeys. Until a few years ago, most human cases were seen in people in central and West Africa who had close contact with infected animals.
In 2022, the virus was confirmed to spread via sex for the first time and triggered outbreaks in more than 70 countries that had not previously reported mpox.
The most common symptoms of mpox, according to WHO, are a rash and fever, but it can sometimes cause serious illness. Most people recover fully.
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For more on Africa and development: https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse
The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Lobos men’s basketball falls in NIT semis to Tulsa

The postseason run for the University of New Mexico men’s basketball team came to end after suffering a five-point loss to Tulsa.The Lobos made the trip to Indianapolis for the NIT semifinals after securing three victories in the tournament. The 74-69 loss marks the end of the first season under head coach Eric Olen, who joined UNM from UC San Diego.The Lobos finish the season with a record of 26-11. Tulsa will play in the NIT championship against the winner of Auburn and Illinois State on Sunday, April 5.Stay updated on the latest sports news with the KOAT app. You can download it here.
The postseason run for the University of New Mexico men’s basketball team came to end after suffering a five-point loss to Tulsa.
The Lobos made the trip to Indianapolis for the NIT semifinals after securing three victories in the tournament. The 74-69 loss marks the end of the first season under head coach Eric Olen, who joined UNM from UC San Diego.
The Lobos finish the season with a record of 26-11. Tulsa will play in the NIT championship against the winner of Auburn and Illinois State on Sunday, April 5.
Stay updated on the latest sports news with the KOAT app. You can download it here.
Under the Skin of America’s Humanoid Robots: Chinese Technology
Tesla and others turn to suppliers in China for components in an industry seen as strategic by both Washington and Beijing.
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Women’s Final Four: South Carolina, in rare position as underdog, to lean on effort vs. UConn
South Carolina is hardly ever considered the underdog, but that’s where the Gamecocks stand ahead of their Final Four matchup against UConn on Friday.
Last year, the two teams met in the national championship game, a game UConn won running away, 82-59. This year’s Huskies team is 38-0 and might be even better than that version. Even with Paige Bueckers graduating, this may be Geno Auriemma’s deepest and healthiest roster in a long time. Sophomore forward Sarah Strong was just named the Naismith Player of the Year and senior guard Azzi Fudd is widely projected as the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming 2026 WNBA draft.
And yet, the Gamecocks, 6.5-point underdogs (via DraftKings) are no slouches. Dawn Staley has guided this program to six consecutive Final Fours and two championships in the last five years. Their improved offense has received a lot of attention this season, and understandably so; they’ll certainly need their guards to knock their shots down to have a shot on Friday. But they will also rely on their defense, post play and an intangible that Staley’s teams always excel in: effort.
South Carolina has toughest defense UConn has faced
Both teams are in the top three nationally when it comes to scoring offense, but there is a bigger difference in rankings when it comes to defense. UConn leads the nation by holding opponents to just 50.1 points per game. South Carolina has the 26th-best defense while allowing just 57.5 points per contest. However, the Gamecocks had a tougher strength of schedule by playing in the SEC.
While South Carolina has faced many top defenses this season, including Texas and LSU, the Gamecocks are a step up in defensive competition compared to UConn’s other opponents. The Gamecocks allow the lowest field goal percentage (34.7%) of any team UConn has faced.
Women’s March Madness predictions: Final Four expert picks for UConn vs. South Carolina, UCLA vs. Texas
Isabel Gonzalez

The Huskies have the advantage in multiple areas, including beyond the arc with an elite 3-point shooter like Fudd. But when it comes to matchups, Auriemma pointed out that this South Carolina team has more size than before and can make it tougher on the Huskies.
This means one of the most interesting aspects of this game could be the battle in the paint. South Carolina is averaging 47 points per game in this area, which is second-best in Division I behind LSU. UConn is averaging 42.2 points in the paint, but does it more efficiently than any other Division I team by shooting 65.7%. UConn also has had the best paint defense this season, holding opponents to just 17.6 points per game.
South Carolina’s post players are leading the way
One of the main pieces of the scouting report is sophomore forward Joyce Edwards, who leads South Carolina in points and steals, while also helping out with rebounds and on defense.
“Joyce is just very skilled,” South Carolina associate head coach Lisa Boyer told CBS Sports. “She really could be a guard if she needed to be but she is very quick, very strong and very good around the rim with getting to the basket. Her outside shot is a little bit better.”
Meanwhile, Madina Okot leads the team in rebounds and blocks. Despite only playing basketball for five years, the 6-foot-6 center has been a quick learner and an impactful part of this team since transferring from Mississippi State. Boyer, who works with the bigs, has seen a lot of growth from Okot.
“You know, we’re trying to get her up to speed as much as possible. She’s very, very talented, though,” Boyer said. “She’s got a lot of natural ability, but I think the things that we’re doing have grown her game, like just the nuances of the game, things that we’ve been able to show her.”
The Gamecocks’ coaching staff is not the only one impressed with how dangerous she could become, even outside of the paint. When South Carolina faced Ole Miss earlier this season, Okot went 3 of 3 from beyond the arc, which is not a common skill from someone her size.
Ole Miss’ Yolett McPhee-McCuin coached against Okot when she was still at Mississippi State. When she saw Okot shooting 3-pointers in February, McPhee-McCuin said the first thing that went through her mind was “we might as well pack it up.”
Boyer said Okot developed this skill during the summer when the team was doing a 3-point shooting drill and Okot showed a lot of potential. From there, her teammates and coaches encouraged her to develop that skill.
“We’re watching her like, ‘oh my God, she’s got really, really good form,'” Boyer said. “She’s got great spin on her ball. And then we started putting her in situations where she was going to get those things in practice so that she would do it in a game.”
South Carolina believes in its intangibles
Boyer said effort shows up in many ways, but especially with defense and rebounding. These have been a signature strength for the Staley-Boyer duo since before they arrived at South Carolina from Temple in 2008. Back then, “effort” was a non-negotiable when their teams were considered the underdogs.
“It’s been our thing even when we were at Temple because we weren’t always the best, the most skilled team offensively, but we were usually very athletic and very quick,” Boyer told CBS Sports. “And so I think that that was the start of our foundation, especially at Temple. and of course, we brought that to South Carolina. I think that’s something that we have, we just spent a lot of time on it.
“[Defense] is all effort. It’s a decision, you know? It’s like rebounding. It’s a decision. You’re either gonna go get the rebound or you’re not. You’re either going to try to get in front of a player, try to hustle and get to a certain spot, [try to] go and be the box out. All of those things, that’s all an effort thing. Like, the shooting is a skill. The passing is a skill, the dribbling is a skill.”
While there is no specific stat for effort, rebounds are certainly a big part of it. The Gamecocks are in the top 10 nationally with 42.5 boards per game. Controlling the glass will be key if they want to pull off the upset against UConn to advance to the national championship game.
Hegseth has intervened in military promotions for more than a dozen senior officers
WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has taken steps to block or delay promotions for more than a dozen Black and female senior officers across all four branches of the military, some of whom are seen as having been targeted because of their race, gender or perceived affiliation with Biden administration policies or officials, according to nine U.S. officials familiar with the process.
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The process within the Army, the Air Force, the Navy and the Marines is structured to ensure the most qualified officers get promoted. Hegseth’s decision to intervene in the process has raised concerns among some officials within those military branches and the White House, the nine U.S. officials familiar with the situation said.
“There is not a single service that has been immune to this level of involvement by Hegseth,” one of the U.S. officials said.
Two of the officials said there are concerns in the military and the White House specifically that Hegseth is blocking or stalling some qualified officers from receiving promotions through the ranks of general and admiral because of their race or gender as he targets diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives at the Pentagon. There is also concern that Hegseth could be singling out military officers whom he views as aligned with officials or policies of the Biden administration, the officials said.
On Thursday Hegseth fired the Army chief of staff, Gen. Randy George, whose term was expected to be four years ending in September 2027. George, the Army’s top officer, was senior military assistant to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin during the Biden administration.
George recently asked to meet with Hegseth to discuss Hegseth’s blocking of promotions for some Army officers, which seemed to focus on women and Black men, but Hegseth refused to meet or discuss his decisions, according to two additional U.S. officials.
Hegseth, who declared an end to “woke” culture at the Defense Department last year, has criticized DEI initiatives adopted by the Biden administration, as has President Donald Trump. Hegseth also has publicly accused the military of awarding promotions based on diversity rather than merit. Not all promotions for officers who are women or members of racial minority groups have been blocked or delayed during his tenure as secretary, four of the U.S. officials familiar with the process said.
The U.S. military branches either did not respond to requests for comment or referred questions to the Pentagon. A spokesperson for the Defense Department did not respond to multiple requests for comment for this article.
The White House also did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Two officials said that among the attributes Hegseth has cited for removing officers from promotions are past support for Covid vaccines or mask mandates for troops, which were enacted during the Biden administration, or whether officers were affiliated with DEI programs, potentially being women or members of racial minority groups, or promoted or worked on such initiatives.
The officials said an officer’s association with former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley, whom Trump views as a political enemy, can also make an officer who is up for a promotion susceptible to scrutiny from Hegseth’s office.
“I think there is not consistency being applied to the standards” for promotions, another of the U.S. officials said.
In recent weeks, Hegseth blocked three Marine officers who were expected to be promoted or appointed to new roles — two women and a Black man — according to five of the U.S. officials familiar with the decision. None of the Marines were the subjects of internal investigations that might raise concerns about moving forward with their promotions, according to two of the officials. Marine Corps leaders recommended their promotions, but Hegseth refused to allow their selections to move forward despite attempts by the corps’ leadership to intervene, the two officials said.
A list of naval officers who had been selected to be promoted to one-star admiral has been held up for more than a month as it sits on Hegseth’s desk, according to three of the officials. A list of promotions typically would move through the process more quickly, according to the three officials who expressed concern that some of the Navy officers on the list could be removed because of their race or gender.
Hegseth has also blocked promotions for a handful of more senior naval officers, the three officials said.
Other officers have been pulled off a list of Air Force promotions at the direction of Hegseth’s office, according to two of the officials familiar with the process.
Some of the naval and Air Force officers whose promotions have been blocked are also women or members of racial minority groups, according to officials.
When it decides promotions, each branch of the military typically convenes a board, which comprises service members from that branch, to review possible candidates to advance. The boards select candidates to move up in rank, and lists are created for promotions to one-star and two-star general and admiral.
Those lists are sent to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the defense secretary’s office and then to the White House. Ultimately, the Senate votes on the lists for each military branch.
Promotions to three-star and four-star general and admiral are typically conducted individually, not via lists, but they also are sent from each military branch to the Joint Chiefs chairman and the defense secretary’s office, then to the White House and to the Senate for votes.
Defense secretaries typically do not remove officers from promotion lists or reject individual recommendations from the service branches, according to three U.S. officials familiar with the process.
By law the president has the most authority to block a military promotion, either an individual recommendation or a name on a list. If a recommended promotion is pulled before it is transmitted to the White House, a reason must be provided, such as an ongoing investigation or an allegation about an officer’s conduct, and the defense secretary typically does not make those decisions. Candidates for promotion have been removed in the past if there were allegations against them or military investigations into them. The people removed from promotion lists did not have open investigations against them, U.S. officials said.
The Army’s list of promotions this year included about 30 officers to become one-star generals and went to the White House around mid-March, then to the Senate on Monday, but only after Hegseth struck the four names from it, according to five U.S. officials.
While Hegseth removed two women and two Black officers from the Army’s list, the list that progressed to the Senate did include some women and racial minority officers, according to the five officials, who said they believe race and gender played a role in Hegseth’s removal of the other officers.
“If there are no open allegations or investigations, what was the reason they were removed from the list?” one of the officials said. “They have all deployed and done their jobs, and all are all combat-tested.”
The New York Times first reported Hegseth was blocking promotions for female or minority officers in the Army.
According to Defense Department data from 2024, the most recent available, 80% of active-duty members of the military are male. Overall, 67% are white; 18% are Black. Roughly 80% of active-duty officers are male. Overall, 74% of officers are white; only 9% are Black.
During Hegseth’s tenure, several top military officers have been removed, including former Joint Chiefs Chairman CQ Brown Jr., a Black man, and former Chief of Naval Operations Lisa Franchetti, a white woman. From the perspective of Hegseth and his staff, they were not aligned with the Trump administration’s priorities, according to two of the U.S. officials.
A retired senior military officer described the promotion process as rigorous and said any meddling by the defense secretary could diminish trust in it.
“Our officer corps trusts our promotion process,” the retired officer said, adding that intervention in the process without an explanation “will certainly cast a shadow across our officer corps that everything they have said, done and written about during their careers could be politicized in a career-ending manner with the stroke of a pen.”
Albuquerque Police and UNM Children's Hospital hold conference on handling child abuse cases

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – The Albuquerque Police Department and University of New Mexico Children’s Hospital are teaming up for Child Abuse Prevention Month. On Thursday, both groups hosted a conference welcoming 60 agencies within law enforcement, health care, education, and more. The topics presented were surrounding child welfare and identifying signs of abuse. APD said the conference […]
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Tariffs Strained U.S. Aluminum Supplies. Now the Iran War Is Making It Worse.
The recent attacks in the Persian Gulf could further constrain supplies of industrial metals.
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