Daily Lobo 3/29/2021

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Monday, March 29, 2021 | Vo l u m e 1 2 5 | I s s u e 2 7

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Dozens gather downtown to protest Atlanta spa shootings, anti-Asian sentiments

By Liberty Stalnaker @DailyLobo Early evening on March 28, around 40 protestors, organizers and speakers gathered in downtown Albuquerque near the Bernalillo County Courthouse. Standing beneath the “View From Gold Mountain,” a large sculpture commemorating a landmark case in Chinese-American civil rights history, they came together to decry the recent string of murders in the Atlanta area. On March 16, six women of Asian descent were killed in multiple shooting sprees, carried out by a single white male at Atlanta spas and massage parlors. Though the suspect told police he was motivated by an addiction to sex, the shootings were nonetheless denounced as anti-Asian and misogynistic hate crimes. Such was the topic of several speakers at the protest, who also condemned an uptick in anti-Asian language and violence occurring since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. In between chants, speakers rallied protestors in

decrying forces of white supremacy, misogyny and capitalism. The protest was one of many nationwide protests organized by the Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER) Coalition. Other organizers and sponsors included the UNM Chinese Students and Scholars Association, the UNM Asian American Students Association and Stop the War Machine, an Albuquerque-based anti-war group. Also in attendance, loaning signs bearing rallying cries such as “U.S. Gov’t & Media: Stop China-Bashing,” was Albuquerque’s local Party for Socialism and Liberation chapter. Beginning around 5 p.m., the rally remained largely stationary at the corner of Lomas Boulevard and Fifth Street, garnering car horn blares and shouts of approval from nearby traffic, before slowly beginning to dissipate after a little over an hour. Liberty Stalnaker is a beat reporter and staff photographer at the Daily Lobo. She can be contacted at news@dailylobo.com or on Twitter @DailyLobo

LEFT: A bystander speaks to the crowd during Saturday’s protest. UPPER RIGHT: A protestor displays a sign condemning racist violence at the “Stop Anti-Asian Racism Now!” rally in Albuquerque on March 27, 2021. LOWER RIGHT: An organizer speaks at the “Stop Anti-Asian Racism Now!” rally held near the “View From Gold Mountain” statue in Albuquerque.

Liberty Stalnaker / Daily Lobo / @DailyLobo

Maxwell Museum sees virtual boost in attendance with new online exhibits By Megan Gleason @fabflutist2716 The Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, located at the University of New Mexico, has seen a boost in attendance after switching to a solely online presence during the COVID-19 pandemic. Three new virtual exhibits have been drawing in visitors: “COVID-19: Concepts of Sickness and Wellness,” “Iconoclasm: Questions of Veneration, Destruction, and Power” and “What We Do at the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology

Part I: Curator Dr. Carmen Mosley.” Carla Sinopoli, the director of the Maxwell Museum, said the COVID-19 exhibit was the biggest and most ambitious one. The exhibit explores the history of how humans deal with pandemics, with themes of sickness, wellness and healing. Sinopoli said the idea was to “create an exhibit that would grow throughout the pandemic, that would really look at how people in other times and places confronted pandemics including, at the time, when Europeans first came to North America and introduced dis-

eases (and) kind of decimated Native populations, or had germanic effects on Native populations.” An addition to the exhibit called “Your Story” invites the public to write about their experiences during the pandemic and submit them to the museum for possible publication. “Part of this is to both to provide people with information and context but also for us as a museum to be able to help curate the history of the pandemic,” Sinopoli said. The Iconoclasm exhibit explores the destruction of icons and monuments, and is actually an exhibit

Inside this Lobo JAISWAL: NM nuclear fallout victims await federal compensation (pg. 2) GLEASON: CAPS sees increase in virtual tutoring during pandemic (pg. 3) MINCKS: LETTER: UNM grad workers pushed to their limit while undergrads suffer (pg. 4)

the museum displayed about three years ago, Sinopoli said, but was renewed in light of George Floyd’s murder and the toppling of racist monuments around the world. “We took what we had done in the physical exhibit, added new content and created a very simple online exhibit,” Sinopoli said. Sinopoli said the final online exhibit is a panel-type feature that shows the work that goes on behind the scenes with Carmen Mosley, the curator of human osteology. According to Sinopoli, two more online exhibits are on the horizon.

These will be put together by students of Devorah Romanek, curator of exhibits, from a recent class she taught at UNM on how to prepare online exhibits. UNM President Garnett Stokes, in her Weekly Perspective newsletter from March 22, reported a 478% increase in visitors after “the team at Maxwell expanded many of its programs to virtual spaces.” Another goal that the Maxwell Museum wants to pursue, according to Sinopoli, is to strengthen its relationship with New Mexico’s

see

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HAVERKAMP: LETTER: Oregon State University has a grad worker union, and UNM should too (pg. 4) PUKITE: Daily Lobo strives to win College Media Madness competition (pg. 6) SCOTT: ‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League:’ Bigger, badder and a whole lot better (pg. 7)


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