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News

UNM to terminate internet service at SFH

The University of New Mexico provided internet service at the Student Family Housing (SFH) apartment complex will be terminated in July 2020 —  leaving residents to pay for their own internet.  SFH is an off campus UNM Resident Life & Student Housing complex of 200 apartments designed specifically for “UNM students, both undergraduate and graduate, with spouses, domestic partners or families,” according to the UNM housing website. According to an internal survey conducted by the SFH community, most of the residents at the SFH are graduate students and are employed by the University as teaching assistants or graduate assistants.


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News

ART open house shows off new bus system

ABQ RIDE hosted an “Open Bus” for the Albuquerque Rapid Transit bus system on Wednesday, as ART's Nov. 30 launch date nears.  On the corner of Cornell Drive and Central Avenue, the event encouraged students and people passing by to familiarize themselves with the controversial city project.  “A few months ago, when we were looking at establishing service sometime during the winter before the end of the year, we wanted to bring the bus to folks so that would familiarize themselves,” ABQ RIDE Public Information Officer Rick De Reyes told to the Daily Lobo. 


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News

Nob Hill Flying Star reopens after renovations

The anticipation is over. The Nob Hill Flying Star — the closest Flying Star to campus — has just reopened its doors to hungry and eagerly waiting for Burquenos. After a three-month remodel period, the local establishment is resuming regular business at its location in 3416 Central Ave. SE. The Flying Star originated as a Double Rainbow Ice Cream in the bright age of 1987, and this location operated consistently until Aug. 1 of this year.


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News

Asbestos found in the Humanities Building

The Humanities building in between the Student Union Building (SUB) and Woodward Hall, and opens out to Smith Plaza, is sometimes overlooked. However, an asbestos alert sent out via email took some students pause and raised questions about transparency and safety of the building.  At around 3 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 14, English graduate students were sent an email notifying them that an asbestos abatement team would begin working on the second floor of the building the following day. In the email, Sandy Rodrigue, a department administrator for English Language and Literature, said it was confirmed: “that there is asbestos in the drywall” and that the drywall would need abatement before the previously planned hallway construction could start. 


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News

Crime Briefs: November 21, 2019

Editor's Note: The weekly crime briefs are to give the students, faculty and staff at the University of New Mexico a quick look into the crimes reported on campus. They do not provide all perspectives of the incident. All of the information is retrieved through UNM police department incident reports.  


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News

UNM Money-Makers

The Executive Vice President and Chancellor for the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center Paul Roth announced his retirement this month, setting an end date to the school's highest-paid employee.  In addition to Roth’s other duties, he also wore the hats of the dean of the School of Medicine and chief executive officer of the UNM Health System.  According to the UNM sunshine portal, Roth makes a total of $676,127 per year as of 2019 — about 50,000 dollars more than the next highest-paid University employee.  The Daily Lobo took a look at the highest annual salaries at UNM and the jobs connected to them.


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News

New Mexican-grown Capitol Christmas Tree makes way to D.C.

Cut out of the Carson, the Capitol Hill Christmas tree is currently en route to Washington D.C.  According to the Capitol Christmas Tree website, the tradition of the Capitol Christmas tree began in 1964. Each year since, the Capitol architect pairs with the United States Forest Service in order to provide Christmas trees for U.S. Capitol Building’s lawn.  Capitol Christmas trees are selected from a variety of states. This year, a little piece of New Mexico will be represented in the country's capital. New Mexico has been awarded this honor only two times before. 


The Setonian
News

UNM GEO celebrates international education week

The nation will collectively recognize International Education Week from Nov. 18 to 22.  The week commemorates the significance of international education and exchange across the world and celebrates international students on university campuses, American students studying abroad and faculty members teaching and performing while traveling. The International Education Week initiative is government-sponsored and occurs annually, according to the UC Davis Global Affairs website. The International Education Week initiative has its own website, complete with promotional materials to be distributed in local communities.


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News

Update on UNM football player's death

Editor’s note: This updated story contains discussion of suicide. If you’re feeling suicidal, you are not alone. Please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 or visit Student Health and Counseling at UNM. Nahje Flowers, 21, took his own life on Oct. 5, according to current and past friends of the University of New Mexico football player and Albuquerque Police Department spokesman Gilbert Gallegos. University and Athletics spokespeople did not respond to requests for comment before this story was published. The story will be updated if they respond with a comment


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News

ASUNM holds final committee meetings of semester

Throughout the night, over $2,000 was appropriated, seven pieces of legislation were approved and final term senators gave goodbyes to their fellow committee members in the final Associated Students of the University of New Mexico committee meeting of the fall semester. Of the senators not returning in the spring, Wednesday night was Finance Chair Gregory Romero’s final. Romero notably co-authored the recent advocacy scholarship with Senator Ryan Regalado and Bill 6F, the original failed bill that would have raised student fees by $5.


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News

Campus observatory opened to public as Mercury transited the Sun

Mercury —  the innermost planet in our solar system —  crossed the sun’s path, a rare celestial event. This occurrence won’t happen again until 2032. Students, staff and the surrounding University of New Mexico community gathered at the University Campus Observatory Monday morning to witness the event.  Although the time between Mercury's transits across the sun varies, it only happens 13 times in a century, according to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at NASA. Mercury is only 1/194 the size of the Sun when observed from Earth. Observers need binoculars or a telescope with a certified sun filter to see it.


The Setonian
News

ABQ sees an uptick in undocumented detainments

The City of Albuquerque has seen an uptick in immigration-related detainment in recent months, according to Mariela Ruiz-Angel, the coordinator of the city’s Office of Immigrant and Refugee Affairs.  “I think we’ve always seen a lot of detainment — maybe even 5 a month — but we’ve had about thirty plus just in the last month,” Ruiz-Angel said.  Ruiz-Angel said although raids have not been happening in the city, “targeted” detainment across the state have become more prevalent compared to previous years. 


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News

Cannabis legalization working group issues recommendations

It has been nearly seven months since New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham signed Senate Bill 406 into law. The bill allowed for medical cannabis in schools and licensed manufacturers to process home-grown medical cannabis. Now, the governor’s office announced they will introduce legalization legislation during the second session of the 54th Legislature in January 2020.


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News

Democracy Dollars failed in ABQ but money continues to be heavy influence in elections

Albuquerque voters weighed in on a ballot initiative designed to allow every Albuquerque resident a $25 “coupon” to donate to a local candidate of during 2019 municipal elections. The proposition ultimately failed by just 2,039 votes — approximately 2.5%.  The goal of the “Democracy Dollars” proposition was straightforward — to increase minority electoral participation, to incentivize candidates to connect with the communities they serve, to pave the way for a more diverse candidate pool and to limit the influence of private funding in politics. The path to attaining these goals, however, was a bit more convoluted. 


Paul Roth is set to retire this year.  
News

Paul Roth announces retirement

Paul Roth is planning to retire from the University of New Mexico after serving for 14 years as Chancellor for the UNM Health Sciences Center. Roth has also been the Dean for the School of Medicine for the past 26 years and the CEO of the UNM Health System. Roth has made several achievements during his time with UNMH, including helping set UNM’s emergency medicine residency program in motion. According to the Albuquerque Journal, Roth created a disaster relief team for the attacks on 9/11 and natural disasters. Roth is a board member of the Association of Academic Health Centers and the Liaison Committee on Medical Education. He also served as chair of the Association of American Medical Colleges Council of Deans. Roth is the highest-paid employee at UNM with a salary of $676,127 for this year, according to the UNM sunshine portal. 


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News

UNM Hospital expansion gains traction

Although it has been the works for over a decade, a University of New Mexico Hospital (UNMH) expansion may finally have the momentum it needs to become a reality. HDR Architects and FBT Architects, the firms selected to design the project, posted an announcement on their website which stated the "Replacement Hospital Master Development Plan" is "part of a multi-phase, multi-year project to design, construct and operate a new Modern Medical Facility."


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News

ART buses to begin service on November 30

The Albuquerque Rapid Transit (ART) bus system will begin running on Nov. 30, according to a City of Albuquerque announcement made on Friday. The controversial ART bus lines — which Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller previously called a “lemon” — runs from Unser Boulevard on the west side of the city to Tramway Boulevard near the foothills of the Sandia Mountains. The bus line is set to run buses seven to eight minutes apart from stations placed a half mile apart, according to the City of Albuquerque.


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News

All general obligation bonds pass in city election

During the Nov. 5 Albuquerque municipal election earlier this week, 12 general obligation bonds and two propositions on the ballot.  In unofficial results — with all precincts reporting — all of the bonds passed by a 58% or greater margin. The results keep with past Albuquerque election trends that pass most General Obligation bonds. The bonds total $128.5 million towards services provided by the city.  The bonds go towards various city maintenance and improvement projects for public transportation, parks, libraries and public safety buildings.


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News

Life along the Rio Grande

Over the last century, human development and water diversion from the Rio Grande bosque to the Albuquerque community has greatly changed and diminished its natural ecosystem. Historically, the bosque has been a vast riparian forest of cottonwoods and wetlands — an oasis in the arid climate of New Mexico. The ecosystem was in a constant state of flux, and riverbanks could shift or separate within a single season. Periodic flooding reshaped and reinvigorated the environment, creating a dynamic and unique habitat for the plants and animals that called it home, according to National Geographic. The bosque used to stretch as far up as Old Town in Albuquerque, but human development in the river valley during the 20th century thinned the ecosystem. Water diversion projects in the post-war period, like the Cochiti and Abiquiú dams, further decimated the bosque’s vitality, the National Geographic article continued.


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News

ASUNM elects 10 new senators

1,053 students cast their votes during the Associated Students of the University of New Mexico’s (ASUNM) fall Senate election. Of the 20 candidates that ran, 10 first-time senators and one incumbent senator will take their seats in the Senate next semester. Constitutional Amendment 1 — which clarifies senate vacancy appointments — also passed. ASUNM President Adam Biederwolf said the highlight of the night was that they “diversified ASUNM.” “This incoming group of senators is going to be a lot different from the senators we’ve seen from years past,” Biederwolf said. “So many people talk about how ASUNM is so greek-oriented, and I think the numbers show for themselves that this incoming group really does impact every population on campus — and that’s all I really wanted going into this year (as President).”

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