Login

Gallup Sun

Saturday, Apr 27th

Last update03:37:16 PM GMT

You are here: News

News

Click it or ticket: Multistate campaign to raise seat belt safety awareness

E-mail Print PDF
Five states join New Mexico to increase seat belt use across state lines

SANTA FE — The New Mexico Department of Transportation and local law enforcement agencies join Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Utah, and Wyoming reminding travelers to buckle up. The ‘State2State Buckle Up’ campaign wants travelers to stay buckled...

WEEKLY DWI REPORT

E-mail Print PDF
Roseanna Tom

Dec. 27, 2020 1:15 am

Aggravated DWI (Second)

A woman who said she had hurt her knee trying to break up a fight was pulled over near First Street and Maloney Avenue.

Gallup Patrolman Julio Yazzie met with Roseanna Tom, 46, of Church Rock, N.M. after being dispatched to Sun Valley Apartments, 201 JM Montoya Blvd.

He reported that he saw a gray vehicle traveling south on Woodrow Drive matching the description of a vehicle that also parked in the middle of the street.

When he met with the driver, Tom admitted to having two mixed drinks about an hour before. Yazzie said he smelled alcohol coming from inside her vehicle.

Based on her failed standard field sobriety tests...

A century of federal indifference left generations of Navajo homes without running water

E-mail Print PDF
PART FOUR: Water within sight, but out of reach

 

The Colorado, Little Colorado, and San Juan rivers wend through red mesas, creating ribbons of green river valleys that run up against the Navajo Nation’s boundaries and occasionally cut through pieces of tribal lands. Water is both right at hand, and unavailable to tribal members.

Navajo people, who call themselves Diné, which means “the people”, have made their homes for centuries in the high desert of what’s now the Navajo Nation by shaping their lives around when and where water became available in a homeland they call Dinétah. For more than a century, they’ve watched water run by, downstream to cities and other...

Earthweek: Diary of a Changing World

E-mail Print PDF
Week ending Friday, May 14, 2021


Royal Breeding

Western monarch butterflies from the Pacific Northwest to California may not be going extinct as earlier feared, but are instead changing their breeding habitats and adapting to climate change. A Washington State University expert says last winter’s count of the colorful insects revealed a sharp drop, especially across much of Southern California, where the number plunged from about 300,000 three years ago to just 1,914 in 2020. But entomologist David James says large populations were observed by citizen scientists in metropolitan Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area, where they had seldom been seen wintering...

Earthweek: Diary of a Changing World

E-mail Print PDF
Week ending Friday, May 21, 2021


Psychedelic Frenzy

Some of the billions of Brood X cicadas that are emerging from the soil in the eastern United States for the first time in 17 years are infected with a fungus that eats away at their abdomens as it increases their sex drive. The Massospora cicadina fungus lies dormant until the 17-year periodical cicadas begin to stir. It’s laced with the same chemical as in psychedelic mushrooms and causes the males to emit the mating sounds of both males and females. This attracts more potential partners and spreads the fungus. Since the fungus effectively castrates the males as it eats away at their bodies, it acts as a natural population...

Page 388 of 1205