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
20 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(04/20/15 9:00am)
Students will have the opportunity to eat locally grown food, watch live music and dance performances, purchase growing supplies and learn about sustainable practices at the 7th Annual UNM Sustainability Expo.
(04/13/15 2:33pm)
The Board of Regents approved a 3.37 percent increase in tuition and fees, as well as a tuition plan that incentivizes four-year graduation, during the annual budget summit on Thursday. Both will take effect in the fall semester.
(04/08/15 9:00am)
Nobel Peace Prize nominee Father John Dear encouraged nonviolent strategies for grassroots peace and justice movements during a speech at UNM’s Student Union Building on Tuesday.
(04/01/15 9:00am)
In 1973, Louise Lamphere went up for tenure at the Department of Anthropology at Brown University. A researcher in the budding field of feminist anthropology, she was one of the few women faculty members in a tenure-track position. At the time, 97 percent of Brown’s tenured faculty counterparts were men.
(03/26/15 9:00am)
Innovate ABQ is moving ahead with its plans to develop a seven-acre site to create an “innovation district” that ties UNM to downtown Albuquerque’s business community.
(03/20/15 9:00am)
Esteban Muldavin gained a passion for the natural world — and its conservation — at an early age. The director and senior ecologist of Natural Heritage New Mexico said spending his childhood on a ranch in northern New Mexico deeply impacted his decision to become a scientist.
(03/03/15 10:00am)
When Rosa Isela Cervantes was a senior at Bernalillo High School, her friend brought her to El Centro de la Raza at UNM — known as Hispanic Student Services at the time — to meet with an advisor and get scholarship information. At the time, El Centro consisted of the director, an administrator and three work-study students.
(02/18/15 10:00am)
In the old Elks Lodge building located on North Campus, a multitude of miscellaneous items are warehoused: computers, old CRT monitors, gym equipment, projectors, furniture, medical tools and framed posters. There are even oddities like a handmade globe, a mysterious medical instrument from the early 20th century and a baby dummy.
(02/09/15 10:00am)
UNM President Bob Frank gave a promising update on his strategic eight-year plan for improving the University during this month’s Board of Regents meeting.
(02/04/15 8:00am)
In 2011, Carl Agee received a rock in the mail from a meteorite collector in Morocco. At the time, nobody knew what it was or where it had come from. Even for Agee, director of UNM’s Institute for Meteoritics, the rock’s origin remained a mystery for quite some time.
(02/03/15 8:00am)
As one of the smallest academic programs at UNM, the School of Architecture and Planning always finds a way to make its limited resources go far in the community. Through projects such as CityLab, Innovate ABQ and the Design and Planning Assistance Center, SAAP’s faculty and students are able to work directly with the city to improve the built environment.
(01/28/15 8:00am)
Before the term “sustainability” was coined, Mary Clark was interested in leading an environmentally-friendly lifestyle.
(01/23/15 10:00am)
When Eliseo “Cheo” Torres was working as a program officer for the state Department of Education in Austin, Texas, he met a man named Juan Morin who would change his life. Morin was a teacher’s aide, but on the side he taught curanderismo, a type of Mexican-American folk healing.
(01/13/15 8:00am)
The recent drop in international oil prices is threatening to limit the funding UNM receives from the state, University officials warned during Friday’s Board of Regents meeting.
(01/12/15 8:00am)
A committee convened by UNM President Robert Frank visited two universities in Colorado during winter break to investigate ways of bringing in more new students, including the possibility of building a new wellness and recreation facility at UNM.
(12/04/14 10:00am)
When David Gutzler applied to the doctoral program in meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he did not know what to expect.
(12/01/14 10:00am)
In May 2013, former National Security Agency subcontractor Edward Snowden leaked information about government surveillance activities, sparking an international debate about the role of government in protecting the privacy of its citizens. For the first time, many people both in the UnitedStatesand abroad became aware of how precarious their internet privacy was.
(11/14/14 10:00am)
Jan. 14, 1984, was an important day for Feroza Jussawalla: Her son was born, and it was her birthday. If that wasn’t enough cause to celebrate, her first published book, “Family Quarrels: Towards a Criticism of Indian Writing in English,” arrived in the mail.
(11/06/14 10:00am)
To anyone else who had spent 20 years serving in unpredictable, often violent circumstances as an officer with the Albuquerque Police Department, a quiet retirement might have been welcome.
(10/30/14 7:00am)
In 2003, the wait to see Dr. Sanjeev Arora for Hepatitis C treatment was eight months long.