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The Setonian
News

Firm to test tech in mock town

Pegasus Global Holdings, an international technology development firm, announced plans to build an uninhabited city in New Mexico designed to test self-driving cars, smart energy grids and other new technologies. “Our center is unique,” Pegasus CEO Robert Brumley said.


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News

Comm. director honored for service

Susan McKinsey, UNM’s director of communications, has spent decades working for and with the media. Her impending retirement has now made her the subject of the news, which she said feels odd. “I don’t like the idea of me being the news,” she said.



The Setonian
Opinion

Candidates should check their facts

Editor, In Monday’s GOP primary debate, there were two statements regarding women’s health issues that were both incorrect and detrimental to society. First, the morning-after pill, also known as “Plan B,” is not the abortion pill.





The Setonian
Culture

Symposium looks at visual cultures with new eyes

Graduate students are employing the right hemispheres of their brains to explore the Western Hemisphere of the world. “Hemisphere: Visual Cultures of the Americas,” an annual publication from the Department of Art and Art History, is a compilation of graduate student essays.



The Setonian
Opinion

US health care flawed, needs reform now

Editor, The 2011 Domenici Public Policy Conference, held on the NMSU campus in Las Cruces last week, brought together experts on America’s national debt, economic outlook, national and cyber security, science, technology and health care reform to discuss progress in these areas and what can be done to maintain America’s competitiveness on a global scale. Even though I work for a public policy organization, I attended the conference as one of 14 student representatives from UNM.



The Setonian
Opinion

UNM Dems do it differently this year

Editor, I don’t know what you may think about political organizations, but I could guess that you are probably wrong — at least when it comes to UNM Democrats.


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Culture

Dance club in full swing

The faint sound of swing music wafts from the Johnson Gym basement and mingles with the shouts of sweaty basketball players nearby. The smell of old shoes and sweat is everywhere in the aerobics room, yet the twirling mass of couples there doesn’t seem to notice.




The Setonian
News

Trees grow from change

A handful of nickels may not save the world, but it adds up. The Staff Environs Committee’s Change for Trees program collects spare change to keep UNM green. The program began three years ago when UNM took pruning shears to the landscaping budget. “Keeping the campus green is important to us,” said Karen Wentworth, co-chair of the Staff Environs Committee. “As a committee, we were really bothered by how battered the campus looked, and we thought more trees were the answer. There’s a lot of concrete on campus, and we thought that if we could plant more trees and get them to grow, that would at least provide shade.”


The Setonian
News

Regents approve Master Plan, discuss funding

The UNM Board of Regents on Tuesday officially adopted the University’s Consolidated Master Plan, a 10-15 year development plan intended to help UNM accommodate a projected 10-year state population growth of more than 1 million people. The plan includes increased on-campus housing and a proposed recreation center that would be located along Central Avenue and connected to Johnson Gym via an elevated walkway.


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News

UNM strengthens its roots

The UNM Alumni Association will celebrate the grand reopening of Hodgin Hall, now the UNM Alumni Center, with an evening of music, food and history. Nearly 120 years ago, Hodgin Hall was the entirety of UNM. It stood isolated on a hill two miles from downtown Albuquerque and housed classrooms, faculty and administrative offices.



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News

Old buildings impede learning

Last week, The Daily Lobo surveyed more than 100 students regarding which buildings on campus they thought were the most poorly maintained. Ortega Hall topped the list with 23 percent of the vote, followed by the Art Building with 17 percent and Marron Hall with 15 percent.

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