GUESS WHAT...
The real show-stopper in Joe Annabi’s painting exhibit is a cartoon horror cat with an ecstatic grin under a sign that reads, “You are going to die!”
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The real show-stopper in Joe Annabi’s painting exhibit is a cartoon horror cat with an ecstatic grin under a sign that reads, “You are going to die!”
Think you’re doomed to be a starving artist?
This year’s steampunk-themed Bubonicon 43 is one of the Southwest’s oldest multi-genre science fiction conventions, dating back to the Summer of Love — 1969.
In Elizabeth Barrett’s experience doing social work, she found that many patients with mental illnesses were most interested in knowing how to develop meaningful friendships and healthy intimate relationships.
An unusual combination of boards and brushes dominated Warehouse 508’s Extreme Art Show.
Newsland, a magazine-shop staple of the University area for the past 30 years, closed July 17 to the despair of owner Roger Walsh’s customers.
Are you unimpressed by the general public’s take on art and what it is?
For some student veterans, navigating through a crowded campus is stressful.
This marks the last column in the Afro-American Experience series, which has ran since the beginning of the semester. We hope you got some insight from reading these heartfelt installments, and good luck on your final exams.
UNM sophomore Jo Ann Smith sang for President Obama in New York once, which is pretty cool by anyone’s standards. And she doesn’t like the N-word.
Deion Clark(e) is a junior majoring in journalism, with an eye on broadcast opportunities in the entertainment industry. His mother’s maiden name is Clarke, and his father’s last name is Clark, so he uses the different spellings interchangeably. He trims his beard with precision and style, like a piece of art on his face. He said he’s going into journalism because he isn’t an “epiphany writer,” which he describes as fiction writers or essayists who keep drawing inspiration from realizations within their work as they write. “I’m not that type of writer,” he said.
Today will manifest a field of ideas across UNM. Today is for the future.
Family Studies junior Deanna Tompkins came to UNM from Denver on a Daniels Scholarship, which she said is hard to get. She works in African-American Student Services (the Afro) and mentors girls by building their spirits and teaching them how to set goals and put community events together. She said the Afro feels like a home away from home.
This week’s column continues from a talk with student Justin Aderhold that ran Sept. 23. This column is for members of the African American student community to talk about whatever they want to talk about.
UNM science and biology graduate Justin Aderhold works as a research assistant at the Heart Station at UNM Hospital.
Albuquerque native Scott Carreathers has been the director of African American Student Services, or the “Afro,” as the students call it, for eight years. The organization tends to the students’ needs, be them academic, financial, social or spiritual. DL: Even spiritual needs?
_Editor’s note: This semester, the Daily Lobo will feature semi-monthly interviews with African American students. _
Photography junior Lily Robles painted a mural on her bedroom wall from the photo of a naked John Lennon wrapped around a clothed Yoko Ono. But she gave Ono tusks and a tail. “She’s the walrus,” Robles said.
UNM senior Renée Hemsing, a violin-performance major, said violinists are more romantic than the general population because of their zest for lush, sad strings. She began playing when she was 9 and now makes a living performing with the San Juan Symphony in Durango, Colo., the Roswell Symphony Orchestra and the Santa Fe Pro Musica Orchestra. She also subs in the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra and plays in the UNM Symphony Orchestra. Her music mentor is a magician.
On Tuesday, in response to a story in the sports section on Dailylobo.com, someone posted a comment that was legitimately offensive to the African American community. It was about fried chicken, and it was completely unrelated to the article on which it was commenting. Members of African American Student Services were understandably upset at the insensitivity of the writer and the Daily Lobo’s slow response to removing the comment.