Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
The Daily Lobo The Independent Voice of UNM since 1895
Latest Issue
Read our print edition on Issuu

Lobos Basketball Tournament

The Setonian
Culture

Christian CD not worth saving

Dear Ashlee Simpson fans: Are you ready to graduate to a more mature level of pseudo-angst? If so, you will love Shadows are Security, the latest release from San Diego Christian metalcore band As I Lay Dying. If you are looking for originality and intensity, though, you may be disappointed.


The Setonian
Culture

Former student's film on big screen screen

Aaron Hendren said he is a bad actor. "You know when it's someone's birthday and you have to start singing 'Happy Birthday'?" he asked. "There's that moment in your life where you start singing before everyone else and they all look at you and you feel weird and stupid.


The Setonian
News

Lobo Center ahead of schedule

The Lobo Center at Lomas and University might be finished a few weeks early and under budget. Bill Davis, senior superintendent of the project, said the project might come in under its $10.8 million budget, and UNM will probably get a refund. Andrew Cullen, budget administrator, said the refund will probably be about $700,000, which will go back to UNM building funds.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Terrorist attacks tripled last year thanks to war

Editor, The most senior officer in the United States armed forces, Gen. Richard Myers, said Iraqi insurgents have lost none of their capacity to stage attacks. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said there were 50 to 60 attacks a day - the same level as one year ago.


The Setonian
News

Citizens gather for wage increase

by Katy Knapp Daily Lobo Former U.S. Sen. John Edwards said his father had to borrow money to get him out of the hospital when he was born. "He took me home to a little two-room house in a mill village," he said Tuesday in front of a crowd at Civic Plaza that was rallying for a minimum wage increase in Albuquerque.


The Setonian
Opinion

Letter: Students blinded by their political opinions

Editor, I recently made the agonizing decision to abandon a budding career as an academic in favor of practicing law. The decision was indeed difficult because in more than 30 years of earning wages, I have never had a job as challenging, fulfilling and downright fun as helping college students educate themselves.


The Setonian
Culture

Static-X album reeks of teenage angst

Tap into your inner depressed 14-year-old self. There you'll find Static-X's new album, Start a War, with bland percussion and lacking dynamics. You'll think you are scoring weed, but it is actually oregano. Let's face it - this band is far too insecure to be hard-core.


The Setonian
Opinion

Editorial: Court ruling threatens student publications

What we're about to write may soon be censored by University administrators. Thanks to a recent ruling in the Hosty v. Carter case by the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday, censorship of college media is a new danger to freedom of the press and freedom of speech.


The Setonian
Sports

NM lineman a Lobo at last

Junior college transfer Anthony Kilby knows there's no place like home. That's why he's coming back to UNM to play for the Lobo football team, two years after originally anticipated and despite interest from high-profile schools like the Universities of Southern California and Oklahoma.


The Setonian
Sports

Column: NBA finals lacking excitement

The NBA Finals are going to a seventh game for the first time in 11 years, and I've never been more bored. Pistons versus Spurs. Lots of assists, jump shots and team play. Just what the NBA doesn't need. NBA Commissioner David Stern might have you fooled into thinking that we want teams like this in the finals.


The Setonian
Opinion

Column: Waking up to Welfare

by Lucinda Ulrich Daily Lobo columnist For the majority of my life, I assumed that people on Medicaid and other social welfare programs just lay around all day making up fictitious children and eating taxpayer bonbons. But since life is what happens while you're making other plans, I ended up pregnant.


The Setonian
News

Foster leaves UNM behind

by Katy Knapp Daily Lobo Brian Foster was waiting for a real estate agent to show his house to potential buyers on Tuesday. "I've been spending a lot of time getting ready to move and getting my house ready to put on the market," he said.


The Setonian
News

Dead animals an educational asset

by Caleb Fort Daily Lobo The basement of Castetter Hall is home to several dead animals, whose heads hang from the walls and lie in piles on the floor. All of the animals are stuffed, and all of them are part of the mammal collection of the Museum of Southwestern Biology.


The Setonian
Culture

Civic Plaza sizzles in summer

Summerfest kicked off on a blue note. It was Sizzlin' Summerfest's Rhythm and Blues night at Civic Plaza Downtown on June 18. Summerfest has been funded by the city for more than 20 years and is organized by city events coordinator Ron Garcia. Summerfest boasts not only a line of local and national musical acts, but also magicians, African-themed jewelry booths, voter registration, free children's games, temporary tattoos and a variety of food, including standard festival fare-like cotton candy, funn-el cakes, lemonade, pretzels and, of course, iced lattes.


The Setonian
Sports

Lobo track star leaves for pros

Matt Gonzales' career at UNM ended with no first-place finishes in national championship meets. He came in second at the 2004 NCAA Championship cross country meet and third place in the 10,000-meter run at the 2003 NCAA Track and Field Championships. He's not too happy about it either, especially since he's now an ex-Lobo, Gonzales said.


The Setonian
Culture

Horror film worth an arm and a leg

A brief synopsis of George Romero's latest zombie flick: bang, bang, bang, boom, crash, blood, entrails, exploding heads and so on and so forth. Horror films have been around for almost as long as the movie camera itself. The genre is conducive to snuggling in dark places, so it isn't going anywhere.


The Setonian
Culture

Foo Fighters' album a split success

One would have hoped Dave Grohl would have learned not to separate his two musical leanings by now. Three minutes and 22 seconds into the first disc of his band's new double album, the Foo Fighters' frontman lets loose his first throat-rending howl. On the second disc, it takes only 34 seconds for Grohl to begin the first of the almost-whispered lullabies that make up the second half of In Your Honor, an album split distinctly into loud and not-so-loud halves.


The Setonian
Culture

Aesop puts lyrics to print

Aesop Rock is best known for his rapid-fire lyrics, which are packed with meaning and sometimes hard to understand. He is definitely not a mainstream rapper, but his popularity is beginning to grow as evidenced by the increasingly large venues in which he performs.


The Setonian
News

Students aid candidates

Mayoral hopefuls have been recruiting young people to help get them on the ballot. Brian Eagan, a UNM law student, has volunteered on Mayor Martin Ch†vez's last two campaigns. "I believe in his vision for the city," Eagan said. "I do it for pure love of the cause.


The Setonian
Opinion

Column: Waking up to Welfare

by Lucinda Ulrich Daily Lobo columnist For the majority of my life, I assumed that people on Medicaid and other social welfare programs just lay around all day making up fictitious children and eating taxpayer bonbons. But since life is what happens while you're making other plans, I ended up pregnant.

Powered by SNworks Solutions by The State News
All Content © 2026 The Daily Lobo