UNM’s value depends on its mission
August 20There’s been some commentary about whether UNM is a good university.
There’s been some commentary about whether UNM is a good university.
I hope I’m not the only one who found George W. Bush’s moral dilemma regarding stem-cell research amusing.
As you begin to forge in new directions this fall semester, it might be important to examine the nature and extent of your connections with others. For many, this fall represents multiple transitions — interpersonal, geographic, cultural, academic and work.
The editorial in the Aug. 13-19 issue of the Daily Lobo, regarding the campuswide power outage on Aug. 4 is inaccurate.
It’s almost the beginning of another semester, and I’m not surprised to hear that rapes have already been committed.
I am not someone who normally writes response letters, however, I must thank you so much for Sari Krosinsky’s column on following your passions in the July 26-Aug. 12 issue of the Daily Lobo.
Don’t you just feel a chill run down your spine every time you see Amtrak’s Southwest Chief pull into the downtown station bound for Chicago or LA?
Forty years ago, a young man was sent out into the world with a sport coat, tie and the admonition to live long and prosper. Book-ended by the “Can do” and “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” social drives, many a man goosed his engine day and night, living life as if there were no tomorrow, and with rather predictable frequency, there was none.
I’m writing to applaud you for the fraternity rape story you ran in the July 12-18 Daily Lobo.
As a journalism major with a concentration in public relations, I am not amused by the Dean of the Library Migneault’s cavalier reference to the practice of public relations.
In response to the letters to the editor written by Stefanie L. Taylor and other UNM females in the July 26 to Aug. 12 Daily Lobo, we feel that the accusations and the broad stereotyping of UNM males as rapists were totally inappropriate and misleading.
The city and UNM community have been seeing orange for more than a year now, and for the most part, people have adjusted to life under construction.
While I agree with Jocelyn Gamble’s assertion in the previous Daily Lobo that parking fees go up and take a bite out of every raise we get, her mathematics are poorly done.
Just when it looked like big tobacco had run out of reasons to encourage smoking, Phillip Morris comes out with yet another dubious argument. During the last two years, cigarette companies, including Phillip Morris, have been exposed for decades of questionable business practices that included trying to lure children to their products and not going public with the health risks caused by smoking before it became common knowledge.
I’m writing to express my shock at the way the latest campus rape story was presented in the July 12-18 Daily Lobo.
I am writing in response to the most recent addition to the long, and growing, list of reported rapes perpetrated on our campus. UNM administration and campus police should be ashamed of the way they’ve handled these felonies in the past and certainly for the way they are handling this one.
I write this letter in response to Holly Bogenholm’s letter in the last issue of the paper. I agree with Holly that fraternities can be unsafe places for women on campus.
Any true gentleman understands that no means no, regardless of the circumstances or reputation of the lady in question. Any true gentleman would also strive to prevent harm from coming to a lady.
I am surprised that some UNM employees believe that parking is a service that should be free, according to a letter to the editor published in the July 19-25 Daily Lobo. I have investigated other university policies and found that free parking is not the norm.