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Professor Chris Holden talks to students about the educational possibilities of augmented reality programing.
Culture

Augmented Reality provides another medium for innovation

Last week a UNM Honors College professor discussed the potential of mobile media, along with the blossoming augmented reality medium, as part of the Honors College Discovery Series entitled, ”Augmented Reality Games and Learning: More than just Pokemon Go.” Associate professor Chris Holden said the aim of the lecture was to introduce and bring more students into the augmented reality field, or AR.


Joey Wrons passes out flyers encouraging students to register to vote for the 2016 elections. NMPIRG, is a non-partisan organization that stands up for the public interest working on the  campaign called the New Voter's Project.
News

UNM provides outdoor spaces for off-campus faces

The duck pond, the quad, the rose gardens, Johnson Field — UNM Main Campus contains some of the most scenic and useful outdoor spaces in the city. From yoga to APD recruitment to weddings and much more, these locations host a wide variety of functions for students and the Albuquerque community alike. Students, faculty, staff and off-campus organizations in particualr use these venues for the sharing of ideas and a diverse array of events.


The Setonian
News

UNM's LGBTQ community shares experiences

On Sept. 23, the UNM LBGTQ Resource Center hosted a roundtable discussion in honor of Celebrate Bisexuality Day. The LBGTQ Center opened its doors at noon and hosted an hourlong discussion, inviting a diversity of students, both traditional and nontraditional, to participate — regardless of sexual orientation.


The Setonian
News

UNM helps absorb students left in the wind by ITT Tech

On Sept. 6, ITT Technical Institute closed its 138 campuses in 39 states after the U.S. Department of Education found that ITT wasn’t in compliance with accreditation standards, leaving its many students with unfinished degrees. UNM is one of the higher education institutions in the state that will be accepting transfer credits from ITT Tech students as an option for them to continue their education in Albuquerque.


A crowd sits in front of a television in the SUB Atrium Monday Sept. 26, 2016 at UNMs Main Campus. Crowds gathered around various spots on campus to watch presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in their first debate of this years presidential election. 
Culture

UNM reactions to the first presidential debate

Election Day is looming, and passions are high with the voting population. The first presidential debate between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton aired Monday night, and it had viewers in the SUB — most of them UNM students — saying some impassioned things.


Zach Gallegos trains in his home gym Feb. 20, 2015. Gallegos has made it to the top 100 candidates for the Mars One expedition. 
News

Mars One candidate makes another cut

Zach Gallegos has had a love for geology and outer space since he was a child, and thanks to a lifetime of hard work, his dream of becoming an astronaut might become a reality. He is currently one of the top 100 candidates, out of an initial pool of 200,000, to take a one-way trip to the Red Planet, with the goal of studying its geological history and helping humans to someday become an interplanetary species. 16 total will make the trip to Mars; four every two years. “I have a personal interest of being an explorer, traveling to new places and seeing new things,” Gallegos said. “Going to Mars is the ultimate exploration, pushing the frontier.”


The Setonian
News

Former UNM students, football players now suing UNMPD

The attorney for the three men who were accused of sexually assaulting a former UNM student in 2014 before charges were dropped, has filed a second lawsuit, this time against specific UNMPD officers, accusing them of civil rights violations during the original investigation. Earlier this year, the three men filed a lawsuit against the University saying its investigation of the 2014 allegations was flawed.


John Fleck discusses water issues and the importance of water conservation Saturday Sept. 24, 2016 at the Rio Grande River near the Paseo del Bosque Trail. Fleck released a book entitled, "Water is for Fighting Over: and Other Myths about Water in the West" on September 1. 
News

Q & A: Writer discusses why we shouldn't fight over water

As the effects of climate change continue to manifest themselves in the early 21st century, effective water management and conservation should be among our top priorities, said former journalist and UNM Water Resources Program Director John Fleck. The Daily Lobo discussed the ongoing issue of water conservation with Fleck in the wake of his recently published book, “Water is for Fighting Over, and Other Myths about Water in the West."


The Setonian
News

Title IX policy blurs line for UNM faculty on how to both protect students and keep their trust

There has been widespread debate on campus this year about a year-old UNM policy that makes all faculty and staff mandatory reporters of Title IX violations. UNM Title IX Coordinator Heather Cowan said the policy, which was installed in May of 2015, requires all faculty and staff to report any Title IX violations they are told about, unless the violation is part of a class discussion or comes up in academic work.



Redshirt freshman defender Tom Smart looses the ball out of bounds while playing against Grand Canyon University Sunday Sept. 11, 2016 at the UNM Soccer Complex. The Lobos lost this weekend to Kentucky University 1-0 in their first C-USA game this season. 
Sports

Men's Soccer: Lobos lose C-USA opener as 5-game winning streak ends

The Lobos were two offside rulings away from winning their Conference USA opener against the Kentucky Wildcats.Instead, they walked away from Sunday’s match with a 1-0 loss. A loss that broke a five-game winning streak. Less than two weeks ago, Kentucky held the No. 21 spot. A week later, it was the Lobos who inhabited that ranking.


Lockers wait to be used in Johnson Center on Sunday, Sept. 26, 2016. There has been an uptick in locker theft in the rec center in recent weeks.
News

Theft on the rise in Johnson Gym

Over the past two weeks, more people than usual have returned to their lockers at Johnson Center only to find their valuables gone, said Jim Todd, director of Recreational Services and Johnson Center, in a statement last week. After becoming aware of four locker break-ins in the student men’s locker room of the rec center, the gym increased locker room patrols by students and professional staff, Todd said.


Jennifer Thompson speaks about wrong ful convictions in the crim
Culture

Activist shares her experience with wrongful convictions

It is possible to murder a woman without killing her — all you have to do is break her. Jennifer Thompson’s voice quavered slightly during her speech at the UNM School of Law on Thursday evening, as she described the night she lost herself. At 3 a.m. on July 29, 1984, Thompson died while she was raped in her own bed. While not clinically dead, she said she had died on the inside.



Junior running back Richard McQuarley pushes himself into the Lobos end zone to score a touch down Thursday Sept. 1, 2016 at University Stadium.
Sports

Football: Lobo mom beams with pride for her son

New Mexico junior running back Richard McQuarley has been consistent in the running game so far, but he got to do something for the first time earlier this season — play in front of his mother as a Lobo. Head coach Bob Davie said the season opener was special for the running back, because his mother, Sharon McQuarley, flew in from Mississippi to make the game.


Black Lives Matter protesters on Central Ave on September 22nd 2
News

BLM protesters take to Central Avenue

On Thursday evening, students and activists protesting racism and police brutality flooded into the intersection of Central Ave and Cornell Drive, carrying signs and banners and blocking traffic for nearly 10 minutes. The protest was organized by the Party for Socialism and Liberation of New Mexico, and included members of the UNM Kiva Club, the Red Nation and Black Lives Matter.


Culture

Album Review: Local Natives delivers emotion-laden LP

Alternative rock quintet Local Natives released their third full length LP, “Sunlit Youth,” earlier this month to an eager fan base, following up their 2013 release “Hummingbird” which was a driving sophomore endeavor that established the group's artistry within the realm of indie music. On “Sunlit Youth” we are given a dozen colorful, dream-laced indie pop anthems that can be danced or cried to, depending on how your day went. It’s a solid record but doesn’t deliver in a few areas in which I thought Local Natives’ had outdone themselves in previous releases.


Opinion

Column: The Millenial vote is more important than ever

While a candidate will commonly urge voters to vote consistently in almost every election and state — that every individual vote counts this year — they would have a point. 18 to 35 is the age range for the Millennial Generation and, for the first time, the entire generation will have the opportunity to vote, making up to roughly 31 percent of the electorate, close to equaling Baby Boomer generation, which also makes up roughly 31 percent.


Allie Sipe, a Southern Oregon University, demonstrates some of her work for Scribendi this fall. Sipe is the first non-UNM student who was chosen to work on the magazine’s staff in its 30-year history.
News

Historic moment for student publication

For the first time, a non-UNM student has become a part of Scribendi, the annual literary and arts magazine produced by the UNM Honors College. As part of the Western Regional Honors Council National Student Exchange, Southern Oregon University student Allie Sipe is the magazine’s first visiting staff member.


A packet with the seal of New Mexico, was given out to attendees of the governor's Second Annual Higher Education Summit on Friday, Sept. 23, 206 at the Embassy Suites. 
News

Gov. Martinez unveils "Route to 66" Plan

Governor Susana Martinez on Friday unveiled a new long-term plan which envisions 66 percent of working-age New Mexicans having college degrees by 2030. The curtain on the initiative, coined “Route to 66,” was pulled back during Martinez’s 2nd Annual Higher Education Summit on Friday at Embassy Suites. The idea was conceived at a meeting between the governor’s office and higher-ed stakeholders last month, she said.

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