Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of New Mexico Daily Lobo's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
140 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(10/07/10 6:42am)
The Southwest’s premier gay and lesbian movie fest is coming to UNM.
Starting today, the Southwest Gay and Lesbian Film Festival enters its eighth year as the only such film festival in New Mexico. Films will be screened at the Southwest Film Center in the SUB, as well as at Guild Cinema and the National Hispanic Cultural Center.
(10/05/10 4:45am)
Our entire city is an illegal, underground art gallery.
(09/30/10 6:39am)
“La lucha sigue” reads the graffitied wall in Oaxaca, Mexico.
(09/28/10 7:28am)
The artwork adorning the walls on the lower level of the SUB is intended to make the viewer uncomfortable, artist Charles Ellis said. Ellis, a special education major, said he wanted to recreate the uncomfortable feeling video games gave him as a kid. The Daily Lobo sat down with Ellis to discuss Sega Genesis and modern art.
(09/23/10 6:45am)
Festival won’t be fenced by borders
(09/16/10 6:52am)
Eating contests and barf buckets go hand in hand.
(09/14/10 6:24am)
It’s not often a movie with a sophisticated social conscience features the hero using a man’s intestine as a rope to rappel down a wall.
So let’s say “Machete” is not a typical movie.
(09/10/10 6:52am)
If you’ve ever wanted to join in a giant puppet parade or put your mark on a piece of a 1,000-foot canvas, the We Art the People Festival this Sunday is your chance.
(09/09/10 10:37pm)
It’s not often a movie with a sophisticated social conscience features the hero using a man’s intestine as a rope to rappel down a wall.
(09/09/10 7:34am)
The newest religious student group doesn’t represent a religion at all, but a “way of life,” according to its founders.
(09/09/10 7:33am)
*On-campus center offers variety of little-known films *
Chris Quintana
(08/31/10 6:32am)
A new production company is in town, and they’ve got the basement all ready for you.
Firehydrant Records was founded last year by local music fan Sean Smock with help from The Big Spank singer/guitarist Mike Garcia.
Their goal is “to provide resources to money-starved musicians (and) to give opportunities to the amazing talent we have in our city.”
And all of this is done from Smock’s basement, where the recording studio is located.
(08/26/10 7:57am)
Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author.
Our immigration policy is a mess. I know this because I’ve seen its effects first hand.
The Cross-Border Issues Group, a journalism program at UNM, travels every summer to Mexico and Central America to study, well, cross-border issues – that is to say, immigration.
One thing is made clear to everyone who travels with the group: The current immigration policy in the United States constitutes a horrible violation of human rights. Every single day, people are killed trying to enter our country. Their only crime was searching for an honest job.
Many come to our country fleeing violence spread by narco-traffickers and gangsters. Since their passage is made illegal, they are forced to expose themselves to further violence while attempting to cross the border.
The level of violence in Mexico and Latin America is escalating every day, thanks in large part to U.S. policy.
All of this is common knowledge, known by everyone from politicians to pundits. But the Cross-Border Issues Group trip opened my eyes to some more obscure facts of border policy and Hispano American culture:
(08/26/10 6:20am)
Two villagers and a young boy sit in the sun in Polhó, Mexico.
(08/26/10 6:20am)
A child in Polhó (known to priístas as Chenalhó) in the hills of Chiapas. People living in this village lack running water and electricity, and many of the children are malnourished
(08/26/10 6:20am)
Fog rolls into a cornfield in the countryside near Tegucigalpa.
(08/26/10 6:18am)
A small boat floats lazily in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Honduras.
(08/26/10 6:18am)
Revolutionary graffiti is displayed on the wall of a student dormitory in Oventic, Chiapas.
(08/16/10 7:39am)
As school gets ready to resume, Lobo readers are changing habitats faster than hermit crabs. And as we all know, with new habitats come new habitat-buddies, or “roommates,” if you will.
Many people find lifelong friends and confidants in their new roommates. More often, though, they find seemingly normal people who turn out to be certifiably insane. Which is why the Daily Lobo Culture section is bringing you a guide to terrible roommates, each with a bite-sized lesson on how to avoid these awful, awful situations.
Names have been changed to protect street preachers, public urinators, country-music fans and the occasional innocent, but all the content is real.
(08/16/10 7:37am)
Digital Analog Production, the class that built the hanging pods late last spring near the Duck Pond, is back with a project that lights up Central Avenue at night.