Mariachi Tenampa plays in front of the SUB Monday. The show was part of the “Live at Lunch” concert series presented by Student Special Events.
Search Results
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
198 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Pilot Mark Trillanes directs his balloon upward as his son, Anthony, pushes on his father’s gondola during lifto at the balloon esta. Several UNM students said the annual event has lost some of its appeal and many will not attend.
Kevin French, a “Zebra,” gives the OK for two hot air balloon Sunday at the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta. The Zebra Crew serves as ground control for more than 600 balloons during the week long event.
Charles Ellis’ artwork hangs in the lower level of the SUB. The collection aims at displaying surreal scenarios using colors commonly used in video game graphics.
A political science department representative taped a sign onto one of the department’s copiers that reads, “Please see o ce sta for the use of this machine.” Limiting printing and copying is just one of the ways the political science and other departments are coping with budget cuts.
The Duck Pond is one of six major areas on main campus that will be beautified as part of ASUNM’s annual Fall Frenzy. More than 300 volunteers will remove litter and foliage to maintain the campus.
A picker drops a bushel of apples into a large crate that will be moved to the warehouse, where the apples are cleaned, packaged and sold. Dixon’s Apples harvests more than 60 acres of orchard every. They open for harvest Thursday.
A picker moves on to a new tree full of apples to harvest. Dixon’s Apples is home to two unique breed of apples that grow nowhere else in the world: Champagne and Sparkling Burgundy.
Curator Mike Graham looks over of “Grass Roots Narratives in Oaxaca and Cuidad Juarez,” the collection mounted in the second floor of Zimmerman Library. The exhibit depicts strong images of the troubled Mexican region and efforts of its citizens to temper the violence.
Students of Jacqueline Garcia’s Jazz I class practice in Carlisle Gym Tuesday. The moves incorporate musical theater style choreography.
Maya Lucero kicks around shredded paper used to stu Zozobra. The 50-foot e gy is lled with old detention documents donated by the state government.
Santa Fe High School’s Key Club gathered to create “Zozopops” during Stuff Night. Key Clubs from schools across the Santa Fe area gather every year to participate in the event.
David Wallwork stands in front of the skeleton of Zozobra as it is being stuffed during the Kiwanis Club of Santa Fe’s annual Stuff Night event Tuesday.
Seen here is Zozobra’s body. The 49-foot, 7-inch effigy takes four hours and 150 volunteers to stuff with more than 1,500 pounds of shredded documents every September.
Darnell Daniels tailors a 1980s black-sequined cardigan he found at a thrift shop. He said he hopes the sweater will become a wearable vest, using the leftover cloth of the sleeves to lengthen the hem.
Board Chair Jamie Koch talks with Vice Chair Don Chalmers during a break in a Lobo Development Corporation Meeting on Monday. The board met to discuss funding options for various construction projects throughout campus.
Representatives of the LGBTQ Resource Center set an “Open” sign on the door to the building near Dane Smith Hall. The on-campus center, which opened Aug. 27, welcomes students of any sexual orientation to seek support.