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The Setonian
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Judge: Professor can keep money

A district judge rejected a University attempt to take back $11,000 in unemployment pay from former English professor Joy Harjo, ruling that the administration effectively forced the Native American author to leave her post.


The Setonian
News

Sharpton to talk about labor, civil rights

Famed racial justice and human rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton will give a free and open-to-the-public speech today at the SUB to advocate for the labor movement. Sharpton’s speech, “The Role of Government,” is sponsored by African-American Student Services and serves as the kick-off event for New Mexico’s African-American Day on Friday.


The Setonian
News

Senator: Grad students deserve benefits

The Senate introduced a bill that would grant graduate assistants employee status and allow them full benefits, but the bill’s sponsor said he doesn’t think the state is in a financial position to pass it. SB 400, sponsored by Sen.


The Setonian
News

C&J students looking for a seat

Just as journalists nationwide are scrambling for jobs in a changing market, UNM journalism students are scrambling for class spots in a transitioning department. Fewer faculty members, an influx of students and accreditation requirements are straining required class availability for journalism students.



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News

Housing reps search for input

Sign-in sheets show that fewer than 40 students attended Lobo Development Corporation’s open-housing forums held since March, prompting officials to try a different approach. The University created a housing blog that allows students to track housing updates, ask questions and communicate more effectively, since just 112 people attended the LDC’s 17 forums, according to documents obtained from the Office of the Custodian of Public Records.


The Setonian
News

Show’s casting call sets bar too high

“America’s Next Top Model” might have walked the catwalk at the SUB Atrium on Monday evening — if she was tall enough to reach the stage. More than 80 women auditioned for the hit reality series at the casting call hosted by Albuquerque’s local CW affiliate, but dozens of others who showed up were told they didn’t measure up.


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News

Student can finally tell about being gay in military

Before she was honorably discharged, Leasa Medina would go out with her girlfriend and tell people about her “cousin” in the military. Her “cousin’s” experiences serving in the Middle East were really her own, since before the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy was repealed, service members were prohibited from being openly gay. “Up until recently, it’s considered a dishonorable discharge if you’re found to be gay in the military, which is the equivalent of a felony, and any money you owe the military, like any tuition assistance, you have to pay back,” she said. Medina is now finishing the last semester of a psychology degree at UNM, and she works at the Women’s Resource Center on campus, where she recently started a Women’s Veterans group with the center’s support. “There’s a lot of abuse that goes on with women when they’re deployed.



The Setonian
News

UNM students search the heavens

UNM researchers and students are setting up radio telescope stations across the state that will open a window to unexplored parts of the Earth’s atmosphere and outer space. The Long Wavelength Array in the San Agustin Plains, the first of the stations, will be completed at the end of next month, Executive Project Director Lee Rickard said.


The Setonian
News

Snow day turns into snow week

UNM canceled classes for the remainder of Thursday afternoon after a statewide gas shortage left residents throughout the state without heat. The University will remain closed through Sunday. At 2:30 p.m. Thursday, University Communications sent out an alert saying UNM was closed the rest of the day, after Gov. Susana Martinez declared a state of emergency. In an executive order, she called for “executive departments and agencies under the Office of the Governor, statewide, effective immediately, to release nonessential personnel in order to reduce energy demand on their facilities” through the end of the day.





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News

Veteran adjusts to life on campus

For some student veterans, navigating through a crowded campus is stressful. Joey Diaz, Student Veterans of UNM president, said he knows a student veteran who refuses to walk across Smith Plaza. “Most people don’t see anything wrong with walking through a crowded area,” he said.






The Setonian
News

Get rid of ‘I’ word, ethnic center says

GPSA unanimously passed a resolution to support the elimination of the word “illegal” in reference to people. The El Centro de la Raza presented the resolution at Saturday’s GPSA Council meeting and asked members to endorse the “Drop the I” campaign.

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