6/3_baseball2
First baseman DJ Peterson prepares for an at-bat against New Mexico State on April 17. Peterson was chosen by the Seattle Mariners on Friday as the12th overall pick in the 2013 MLB draft.
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
246 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
First baseman DJ Peterson prepares for an at-bat against New Mexico State on April 17. Peterson was chosen by the Seattle Mariners on Friday as the12th overall pick in the 2013 MLB draft.
Curandeiros, practitioners of the homeopathic art of Mexican folk healing, bless the opening of the “Curanderismo: Healing and Ritual” exhibit at Maxwell Museum Saturday afternoon. The exhibition will run until September, and features a wide array of historical and contemporary artifacts relating to the traditional medicine.
Fields in Tome, New Mexico, show the effects of drought. According to hydrologist David Gensler, the river-flow forecast released April 1 is 30% below normal. He said it has been 36 years since the Rio Grande Valley has seen the canals for local farms run dry.
A rainbow shines above a canal that is used to irrigate the crops throughout the entire Middle Rio Grande region.
A farmer in Valencia County loads bales of alfalfa onto a trailer. Alfalfa is a major source of income along the middle Rio Grande.
A Broad-banded Copperhead’s skin lies abandoned in its cage. Snakes can shed their skin multiple times per year. Copperheads are related to rattlesnakes are both pit vipers that have heat-sensitive loreal pits in their face.
A leucistic rattlesnake peers out of its cage in the rattlesnake museum Wednesday. Most of the museum’s reptiles are venomous, and snakes at the rattlesnake museum are only handled when they need medication. They are transferred from cages using tools and hooks.
A leucistic rattlesnake observes its surroundings at the American International Rattlesnake Museum Wednesday in Old Town. The museum houses about 75 snakes that are often rescued from homes they outgrew, university medical studies or from urban areas.
Museum Director Bob Myers handles a leucistic rattlesnake on Wednesday. Myers was once bitten by a rattlesnake on during a photoshoot for National Geographic, but he said most people don’t die from the bites.
John Linney, left, shakes the hand of New Mexico state Rep. Rick Miera after Miera introduced Linney as the keynote speaker for the state’s first Bullying Prevention Symposium held in the SUB Friday. Educators and students participated in the symposium, which was organized by Albuquerque Public Schools and UNM’s LGBTQ Center, to talk about the causes of bullying and to discuss ways to end bullying in schools around the state.
Senior infielder Kaity Ingram celebrates with sophomore infielder Mia Hignojos after another “one, two, three” inning during Wednesday´s second game against UTEP at Lobo Field. The Lobos won the first game 6-5 and the second 4-2.
Freshman infielder Sam Haggerty slides safely into second base in the match versus New Mexico State last week at Lobo Field. UNM will face UNLV in a three-game series starting today.
Two UNM students in the Department of Theatre and Dance rehearse a duet for the semiannual student choreography showcase. This semester’s show “Inside Look” features dances that explore myriad human experiences from procrastination to dreams. It opens Friday in Carlisle Gym and runs through May 5.
JLS Security staff stands guard following a men’s basketball game last season. Athletics officials said the bombings at the Boston Marathon last week could inspire UNM to review its safety policies for sporting events.