ASUNM forum seeks input from students about Master Plan
Students will soon have the chance to voice concerns to ASUNM senators about everything from campus lighting to new dorms.
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Students will soon have the chance to voice concerns to ASUNM senators about everything from campus lighting to new dorms.
The Arts and Sciences Advisement Center is moving to a bigger and better location this week.
I never planned on joining a sorority. When I was a senior in high school, my aunt would plague me with stories about the sorority she was in, how much it could change my life, blah, blah, blah.
Computers in one of UNM’s largest departments were hacked last semester, disabling hundreds of terminals and shutting down online services for a week. But no personnel or student information was stolen, said Chris Vallejos, Institutional Support Services spokesman.
“Was I the only one who put glue on my hands and peeled it off for fun when I was a kid?”
The grammar in Facebook postings or instant messages might make some teachers cringe, but not North Carolina State University Professor Chris Anson.
Mike Westervelt, ASUNM vice president, is planning to pass legislation to provide more lighting on campus to make sure a repeat of Monday’s student attack doesn’t happen again.
The UNM community has faced tough subjects lately, including looming budget cuts and the nationwide recession, but one UNM department decided it is the perfect time to chase away stress with some kindness.
Some residents of Hokona Hall have gotten used to flipping on their heaters and smelling the 1950s.
If you’ve ever accidentally coasted through a yellow light below a red-light camera, the anxiety you once felt might be a thing of the past.
The UNM community donated a record amount to United Way this year.
President Schmidly announced today the creation of a team of advisers who aim to help the administration consolidate its budget during times of economic hardship. The “President’s Strategic Advisory Team” will be made up of unpaid students, staff and faculty. Schmidly said he’s drawing on input from the entire campus community on how to help “contain costs.”
Students might not know that the 100 tall, blue columns around campus house emergency phones. When the red button on the column is pressed, the phone connects directly to UNM Police Department.
The Queer Resource Center is one step closer to becoming a reality at UNM. The Graduate and Professional Student Association unanimously passed a resolution Saturday in support of the center.
With no national health care plan in America’s immediate future, the Student Health and Counseling Center is working to reduce insurance costs for students.
It has been 60 years since the first class of UNM School of Law students graduated. To celebrate, the school is creating a colorful book recognizing 60 special people, accomplishments or legislation, named 60 for 60.
About six months ago, a female UNM student walked into Care Net Pregnancy Center on Candelaria Avenue expecting to get a pregnancy test.
More than 200 UNM students and community members came to the UNM School of Law last Thursday to decide which Democratic lieutenant governor candidate they would support.
The UNM administration is waiting with bated breath to hear what cuts or increases will come out of the New Mexico legislative session, which begins today. Tom Clifford, chief economist of the New Mexico Legislative Finance Committee, made sobering budgetary predictions during a presentation to the Board of Regents at its meeting Jan. 12.
Daily Lobo: Do you know what you want to study in medicine yet? Megan Brown: I’m pretty sure I want to do family practice. DL: Is that because there is a shortage of those doctors, or because you really like it? MB: No, that’s what I’ve wanted to do. DL: When did you realize you wanted to be a doctor? MB: It was a couple years ago. I’d been working at home and overseas and I realized that the skills that people wanted really needed to be better than what I could offer. As a physician, I think I can offer more of what people would like. DL: What were you doing overseas? MB: I was a Peace Corps volunteer. DL: Where did you volunteer at? MB: In El Oro, Ecuador. I was in Ecuador. DL: Did you see anything crazy down there? MB: Well I got to live in the Andes. I stayed in the Amazon. They have the Galapagos Islands. It’s an amazing country. DL: Do you think you’ll return after you become a doctor? MB: I think I’m going to join the Peace Corps again. I don’t know where I’ll go, though. I don’t think it’ll be Ecuador. DL: How long were you a part of the Peace Corps? MB: The service term is two years, so I stayed three quarters of that. I left a few months early to come back and stay with my grandparents who passed away. I just wanted to spend time with them. DL: What did you do over break? MB: I hiked. I cooked. I played tennis. DL: Did you get anything neat for Christmas? MB: I got a car. DL: What kind did you get? MB: A Camry. If I graduate from medical school I get to keep it. DL: How long do you think you’ll be in school? MB: A long time. Seven years. School is four of it and then we have residency. DL: So, would you do your residency in family practice? MB: Yeah, I hope so. But, it’s so far away I don’t want to think about it right now. DL: So why are you on campus on a Sunday at 5 p.m.? MB: I was studying.