The son of one of the workers who cleaned the acequias on April 11 shields his face from the ames of the re used to clear out the debris in the acequia. Miguel Santistevan is the mayordomo, or the organizer, of four acequia systems in Taos.
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The son of one of the workers who cleaned the acequias on April 11 shields his face from the ames of the re used to clear out the debris in the acequia. Miguel Santistevan is the mayordomo, or the organizer, of four acequia systems in Taos.
Kim Cubitt examines a print in the Art Building on Tuesday. The prints will be for sale today from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Proceeds bene t the Art Education Graduate Student Association.
Louis Herring makes an addition to one of his pieces depicting the American flag, the Statue of Liberty and Predator in the Art Building on Tuesday.
Louis Herring is a senior in the College of Fine Arts. He loves horror movies, chemical supplies and doodling on other peoples discarded prints. Adorned in a paint-covered apron, Herring works with print scraps, Sharpies and small cutouts of a blood-splattered Christian Bale.
Activists stands on Menaul Boulevard during the American Tea Party’s Tax Day Rally on Thursday. About 500 people gathered on Menaul for the demonstration.
Denis Doyon, left, Alberto Lopez, center, and Jonathan Hawes inspect a living marsh water treatment tub on April 10. They originally wanted to filter gray water using plants and utilizing their natural processes, but the tub began to stink, so they filled it with pebbles.
Jessica Rowland and others from the gray water harvesting seminar walk down into the basement where Denis Doyon, the owner of the house, has installed a shutoff valve for his bathroom’s gray water system. Another workshop will be held on April 24.
Darington Hobson stares at the oor during Tuesday’s news conference at the Davalos Center. Hobson announced he will forego his senior season in pursuit of his NBA dreams.
The stabbing victim displays the scars resulting from the Feb. 15 assault on campus. The assailant is still at large.
Did you know we are living in an Anthropocene Age? Yep. According to geologists, humans have so messed up our planet in the last 12,000 years that we have created a new epoch of geological time. Marked by monocultures and mass extinction of species, the Anthropocene Age means, “human epoch” and is truly a time to call our own. Geological time is perhaps the slowest and least affected shift of time. Usually marked by millions of years rather than a few lifetimes, it seems ludicrous that the effect of humans could have such an immense force as altering it. But a growing number of scientists say there is substantial evidence that humans have drastically changed the Earth, and the Holocene Age (which we are in now) is over.
Megan Branch, a theater major, sits in the shadows of Theatre X in Popejoy Hall on Monday. Branch will attend The New School in New York City in August to start her graduate degree in drama.
A young woman shivers and prays at the peak of Tome Hill. Hundreds travelled many miles by foot Friday morning for Good Friday.
Zagadka, left, and The Noms tied for first place at UNM’s Battle of the Bands on Sunday in the SUB.
Couples swing dance in the SUB Atrium on Wednesday. Students organized the Peace Fair with dancing, yoga and panel discussions all day.
The mother of a UNM student tosses a ball into a target on Smith Plaza. UNM’s PIRG chapter offered students a chance to relieve frustration, caused by student loans, by hurling juggling balls at the targets.
Meredith Wilder plays guitar outside Zimmerman Library on Monday. She plays folk music at open mic nights and local venues.
Prohibition of any kind doesn’t work, and that is because prohibition is a regulation of morality. It isn’t finding justice, saving money or even keeping people from hurting themselves. Prohibition is the censorship of morality and any government body cannot be successful in that pursuit. The Temperance Movement was a religious movement to drive out the evils of America. At the time that evil was alcohol — people weren’t just opposed to alcohol but also to apples — which were almost exclusively grown to make alcohol. People started taking axes to apple trees all over the country and a campaign was waged against the “devil’s fruit.” Luckily the war against apples was never taken as far as the war against marijuana. I am going to cover the reasons given why marijuana is illegal.
More than 1,500 varieties of hot sauce line the shelves at the Hot Shots booth Sunday at Sandia Casino. The North Carolina-based company has novelty sauces such as “Yes We Can” hot sauce, which pays tribute to President Obama.
Sam McCanless, director of culinary development for Zane and Zack’s World Famous Honey Co., serves spicy honey-based samples at the Fiery Food and Barbecue Show on Sunday at Sandia Casino. It is the largest spicy foods convention in the world.