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
Opinion

Reader's letter to the editor was mostly plagiarized

Editor, Less than a week ago, the Daily Lobo wrote a piece, “Plagiarism Up, Punishment Down.” The other day, “community member” Jake Shalette “wrote” a piece, too, except the piece was stolen from Donna Gordon Blankinship from the Associated Press. The original article talks about what one cartoonist did.




	UNM freshman quarterback Tarean Austin takes snaps during football practice. Austin is competing with Brad Gruner to replace B.R. Holbrook as the starter against UNLV this Saturday in Las Vegas.
Sports

Winless Lobos try their luck in Las Vegas

The unspoken sense surrounding UNM football is that this week’s game is a little more “winnable.” The Lobos will embark on their second road trip of the season against almost identical foe UNLV (0-3). “We are going to play a team that is very similar to ours,” head coach Mike Locksley said.


News

Backstage: Firefighter

No matter what firefighter José Sedillo is doing at the time, if an emergency call comes in, Sedillo has to sprint to the fire engine and pile into the truck with his coworkers. “The most calls we get are about people having drug or alcohol problems.


	Gary Small sits in the surgical check-in room and fills the check-in form before going to surgery Wednesday morning.
News

Transplant among colleagues a success

Gary Small celebrated his birthday Wednesday in a hospital bed. The UNM Physical Plant Department (PPD) employee agreed to donate a kidney to Alex Garcia, a friend and colleague, with one stipulation: the surgery take place on Sept.


The Setonian
News

Students burrow for artifacts

Beyond the volcanoes near Albuquerque, there is an archeological dig site where UNM students uncovered evidence of one of the oldest cultures in the Americas. It’s called Deann’s site, named after Deann Muller, a student at UNM, who discovered it in 2001 with professor Bruce Huckell while the two were doing a study of the area. Huckell said the site was an old campground for the Folsom people, who date back to the ice age. “We rely on a very distinctive spear point that these guys produced (to identify them),” he said.



The Setonian
News

Seminars help market ideas

Attention students: This fall, STC.UNM offers inventors and entrepreneurs seminars that teach business and marketing skills. Lisa Kuut­tila, president and CEO of STC.UNM, said that seminars, which are free but require registration, help students evolve and understand how to start their own businesses or market their own inventions. “So you have an idea now?


The Setonian
News

The AFRO American Experience

UNM science and biology graduate Justin Aderhold works as a research assistant at the Heart Station at UNM Hospital. He shared his wisdom on the nature of racism from his couch, where he sat with his foot in a post-surgical boot.


The Setonian
Culture

¡Globalquerque!

Festival won’t be fenced by borders ¡Globalquerque! comes but once a year, and this weekend, ’tis the season to hear music from all over the planet. The music and culture festival enters its sixth year and is unique in the Southwest, said Tom Frouge, ¡Globalquerque!


The Setonian
Culture

Nicotine a killer for worldwide bee population

It seems safe to say that filmmaker Kevin Hansen has quite a bee in his bonnet. His 2010 documentary short “Nicotine Bees,” showing at the SUB’s Southwest Film Center from Thursday-Sunday, exposes the root of the pandemic bee population decline that created a buzz in the news a few years ago.


The Setonian
Culture

Albuquerque band mixes melody and metal

Despite having a great name, I really didn’t think I was going to like Music is the Enemy. Take any random track from the band’s new CD, Mr. Murdoch … We’re Ready For Our Target Audience, and the first thing that assaults your ears is a wall of death-metal sound.


The Setonian
Opinion

Schrader's bisexual creed a 'displeasure' to some men

Editor, I am writing this letter in response to a previous letter to the editor in Tuesday’s Daily Lobo, “Social norms repress men’s desire for sexual exploration.” That letter was one of the most ludicrous, maudlin and solipsistic opinion pieces I have ever had the displeasure of reading.



The Setonian
Culture

Play a surrealist triumph

If you want to see something like you’ve never seen before, go to Blackout. The theater company dreams bigger than any other else and that absolutely shows. If you were lucky enough to see “The Circus Plays,” you can appreciate what Blackout Theatre Company brings to the table.


The Setonian
Culture

Japan comes once a year

Burqueños have a chance to immerse themselves in Japanese culture on Sunday at the Japanese-American Citizens League’s Aki Matsuri (Fall Festival). The annual festival, which is anime-themed this year in recognition of the art’s growing popularity in and out of Japan, gives attendees a taste of different Japanese art forms such as origami, calligraphy, martial arts and, of course, cos-play for anime enthusiasts.


	To boost profits, the state fair began closing on Mondays and Tuesdays this year, officials said. So far, state fair official maintain the change hasn’t impacted revenue and attendance figures.
News

State fair closures cut costs

Since most patrons visit later in the week, officials at the New Mexico State Fair decided to close on Mondays and Tuesdays this year, said Craig Swagerty, the fair’s general manager.


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