Drive turns fur into creature comfort
There’s an animal-friendly way to get rid of the fur coat your grandmother gave you: donate it to Coats for Cubs.
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There’s an animal-friendly way to get rid of the fur coat your grandmother gave you: donate it to Coats for Cubs.
Most bands might not consider getting pegged in the head with a half-full beer can as a sign of musical success.
Albuquerque cyclists might have a little more spring in their step after Self Serve’s third annual Pornotopia, which played at the Guild Cinema over the weekend.
I think we should talk about sex.
UNM’s English Department is rewriting the traditional curriculum for its 101 courses. The department will host its first Celebration of Student Writing on Thursday in the SUB to showcase student projects that incorporate genres of writing beyond essays and stories.
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UNM was founded in 1889, so ghosts have had over a century to come to campus, get an education and decide they like it here. They can stay to haunt the old buildings and the students that dwell in them. The lifeguards at the Olympic Pool in Johnson Gym confessed to the Daily Lobo that one of their locker rooms might be haunted. They tell of hearing faucets and showers turn on even though no one is in the building. Here are some of their personal accounts:
Harvest season is winding down, but students can still buy local food and support the local economy. Nolina Bryant, owner of Nolina’s Heavenly Organics farm, said purchasing locally grown foods is better for everyone all around.
Brother Ali wants to hear what’s on your mind. His new album, Us, looks into social themes, such as racism, homophobia and immigration. Brother Ali is on the Fresh Air Tour with Evidence, Toki-Wright and BK-ONE and will perform in Albuquerque at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Sunshine Theater. Ali said his latest album was made in an “organic” way and isn’t being mass-promoted.
Taking pictures of movies is sometimes frowned upon in the art world, said UNM senior George Richardson.
Johan Bengtsson is the bassist for Swedish band The Sounds. The group released their third album, Crossing the Rubicon, in June. The band proudly states that their latest album was produced on their own without the help of a record label. Right now the band is on a headlining tour, which includes a performance at the Sunshine Theater on Thursday at 7 p.m.
“Farfesha” is Arabic for “laugh joyfully,” said Michelle Morrison, founder and owner of Farfesha Belly Dance.
As guest of honor at Albuquerque’s 10th Annual Solar Fiesta last weekend, the sun made a strong enough appearance to power a solar oven over 20 feet tall.
Hospitals usually aren’t known for high-class art, but cardiologist John Abrams is trying to change that.
Tony Mark, who lives in Santa Fe, produced the film “Georgia O’Keeffe,” which debuted Sept. 19 on Lifetime Television. The film focuses on the artistic and romantic relationship between artist O’Keeffe and photographer Alfred Stieglitz. Stieglitz was showing O’Keeffe’s work without her permission at a gallery in New York when she confronted him and then fell for him.
— Indian Ocean plays a mélange of familiar classical, western and Indian folk music that creates its own genre. The band plays Saturday at Globalquerque in Mayor Plaza at 10:20 p.m. The band consists of guitarist Susmit Sen, percussion player Asheem Chakravarty, bassist Rahul Ram and drummer Amit Kilam. All band members are born and raised in India. “In India, each of the districts has their own extremely diverse, rich folk music with their own dialects,” Kilam said. “We all grew up with it, so it was only natural that we would incorporate it into our music.” The band started in 1990, but Sen and Chakravarty knew each other years before. Kilam said the band used to practice at Sen’s home, and it was his father who suggested the band be called Indian Ocean. The name sounded so appealing that it stuck. Since then, the band’s had great success, going so far as creating the soundtrack for “Black Friday,” a film about the 1993 bombings in Mumbai, India. “What I liked about this project was the freedom to write and sing what we wanted and not so much what the director or producer wanted,” Kilam said. “We enjoyed this experience because we were able to explore new boundaries for a change.”
“Sardines in a tin” is not a phrase people want to associate with dorm life. But in August, 90 students moved in to triple-student dorm rooms.
The Fusion Theatre Company is the first company in Albuquerque to perform “How the Other Half Loves,” a play written by Alan Ayckbourn, who also wrote “Standing Room Only.”
New Mexicans are seeing green: it’s chile roasting season.
To the untrained palate, barbecue is barbecue.