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New Mexico budget plan advances toward Senate vote Follow Us
Question of the Day By - Associated Press - Tuesday, March 16, 2021
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - A budget bill is advancing toward a Senate vote in New Mexico that would boost public salaries, shore up spending on public education and provide at least $400 million in state spending on economic relief measures in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
The Senate finance committee voted 6-4 with majority Democrats in support and Republicans in opposition to endorse amendments to a House-approved budget plan for the coming fiscal year.
State general funds spending would increase by $373 million to $7.45 billion under the proposal for the fiscal year starting July 1.
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By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism. Javaheripour Named Interim President Of Columbia College Dr. G.H. Javaheripour
Dr. G.H. Javaheripour has been named Interim President of Columbia College, the Yosemite Community College District announced on March 10. He takes over for Dr. Santanu Bandyopadhyay, who became Acting and then Interim President of Modesto Junior College earlier this year.
Together, MJC and Columbia serve more than 29,000 students in Central California.
Javaheripour was hired in March 2020 to be the district’s Vice Chancellor of Educational Support Services. In this capacity, he was assigned to oversee IT, HR and Institutional Effectiveness, Planning and Accreditation at the district level.
A thousand years ago, the Ancestral Puebloans in Chaco Canyon crafted cylinder-shaped drinking vessels. They look like tall water glasses decorated with beautiful triangles and zigzag lines. Archeologists think these jars had a special purpose: they were used for drinking chocolate.
File image #3521, AMNH Library, Anasazi pottery, Pueblo Bonito, Chcao Canyon, New Mexico
Credit American Museum of Natural History
Patricia Crown, a researcher at the University of New Mexico, noticed the jars looked similar to vessels used by the Mayans for chocolate drinking. Crown tested pottery sherds from Chaco Canyon, and, sure enough, turned up chemical markers specific to cacao. The finding implies extensive trade or migration between the residents of the Colorado Plateau and their neighbors in Mesoamerica. Chocolate must have been among the goods carried up from the south, along with copper bells and scarlet macaws.