Cultural practice reveals dietary wisdom
Editor’s Note: Lobos Abroad is a regular column written by Daily Lobo staff members studying in a different country this semester.
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
16 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Editor’s Note: Lobos Abroad is a regular column written by Daily Lobo staff members studying in a different country this semester.
Editor’s Note: Lobos Abroad is a regular column written by Daily Lobo staff members studying in a different country this semester. “Ay! Cavalo!” My driver gestures at a lunatic driver by smacking his head with his hand and flinging it out toward the windshield. Between cursing at other drivers and making hand gestures, he tells me that he is Italian but lived in England for many years.
A new assessment will determine how UNM students measure up to their peers at other institutions. A group of randomly selected graduating seniors will receive e-mails through April 15 that invite then to participate in the Collegiate Learning Assessment. After this academic year, at least 250 randomly selected first-semester freshmen and 250 graduating seniors can also choose to participate. “The CLA is a measure of student learning in critical thinking, problem solving, analytical and English writing,” said Tom Root, outcomes assessment planning manager at the Office of the Provost.
For those students in the education programs at either CNM or UNM, life just got easier.
Starting a new chapter each semester doesn’t have to be so expensive.
Thanks to a design by students for students, the dirt field outside the Centennial Engineering Building will no longer be an eyesore next semester.
UNM’s race car building team won’t have to skid to a stop after all.
Senior Sarah Melendez participated in the Ronald E. McNair Post-baccalaureate Achievement Program with political science professor Gabriel Sanchez. Through the program, Melendez completed research on the youth vote for the 2008 presidential election.
On Sunday, volunteers around the country united to participate in the largest community service effort in the nation — Make a Difference Day.
The checkered flag might wave early for a team of race car-building students.
UNM junior Kevin Clark started dancing four years ago, thanks to his girlfriend at the time. Now he dances across the nation and is an active advocate for the growing dance scene at UNM.
The Associated Students for Empowerment hosted Disability Awareness Day on Friday to help the UNM community appreciate the day-to-day experience of being disabled.
David Brancaccio is host of NOW, a weekly news and analysis program that airs on PBS. In April, Brancaccio and his team were awarded the 2009 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Television Political Coverage. Brancaccio has appeared on CNBC, on CNN with Anderson Cooper, and on MSNBC with Rachel Maddow. He has a bachelor of arts degree in history and African studies from Wesleyan and a master’s degree in journalism from Stanford.
While most 16-year-olds play Minesweeper on the computer to cure boredom, UNM student Rishin Behl designed a device to aid in the real-world navigation of minefields.
While most 16-year-olds play Minesweeper on the computer to cure boredom, UNM student Rishin Behl designed a device to aid in the real-world navigation of minefields.
Frank Martin, a disabled student veteran, said he may not be able to get to class anymore, now that a thief took his main method of transportation.