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

More Sports Teams

Redshirt junior guard Elijah Brown leaps in front of a Abilene Christian player in an attempt to block a shot Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2016 at WisePies Arena. The Lobos went up against New Mexico State this past Saturday and lost 84-71. 
Sports

Men's Basketball: UNM loses to NMSU in Las Cruces for the first since 2007, snap 5-game winning streak in Rio Grande Rivalry

New Mexico State basketball assured that this season’s Rio Grande Rivalry would be split it dealt New Mexico an 84-71 in Las Cruces, New Mexico on Saturday night. The loss dropped the Lobos’ record to 6-4, extending their road losing streak to three games. The Aggies, meanwhile, improve their record to 8-2 overall and remain hot having won six games in a row. Their last loss was on Nov. 18 during the first rivalry game of the season, when the Lobos took a 72-59 contest at WisePies Arena.


Junior guard Cherise Beynon drives past a Minnesota player Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2016 at WisePies Arena. The Lobos played against UTEP this Sunday and won 79-66. 
Sports

Women's Basketball: Lobos find winning ways with dominant first-half shooting

The Lobo women's basketball team looked like a well-oiled machine throughout most of its match against the University of Texas El Paso Miners, taking a 79-66 home victory on Sunday afternoon. The Lobos (4-5) seemed to feed off the positive energy the crowd of 4,596 exuded, especially early on. The first quarter couldn't have gone much better for the Lobos. Senior center Richelle van der Keijl made UTEP (2-6) pay, as she dropped six points down low and continued to do so throughout the half. Lobo guard Cherise Beynon also had a hot hand in the first quarter of play, scoring five points to help UNM go on top 20-12 at the end of the frame.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: Student's daughter helps power her to degree

After 20 years of not going to school, Lisa Mascarenas will be receiving her associate’s degree in criminology from UNM Valencia. “Knowing I got this far, remembering the struggle and realizing just how easy it would have been to quit, I didn't and that makes me happy to know I did it,” Mascarenas said. Over the last three years, Mascarenas has been trying to get her degree. The biggest push for her was her 19-year-old daughter, Renee, who has been there the whole way.


The Setonian
Culture

Grad Issue: Comanche student studies family history for dissertation

After a rigorous career in academia, Eric Tippeconnic, a Comanche doctoral candidate, will be receiving his doctorate degree in history, making him the first professionally trained historian in his tribe’s history. Tippeconnic said that he initially began looking into graduate school and was visiting his tribal headquarters in Lawton, Oklahoma, where the education director asked him what he was interested in pursuing.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: News of mother's cancer motivated student to take college seriously

Mario Armijo graduated in 2010 but didn’t know what he wanted to do with his life until his mother’s battle with cancer inspired him to act. He is now graduating with a bachelor’s in business administration with a concentration in marketing. Armijo said while he had been attending college he didn’t know what degree he really wanted to pursue. He was taking only one physical education class when his mother called to notify him of her cancer. “That's when it kind of hit me like, ‘I really need to get it together,’ so I decided I wanted to go back to UNM. I wanted to actually try to get a degree and actually make an effort,” he said.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: Entrepreneurial hopeful plans to use education to give his children a better life

Throughout Joseph Brasher’s life, he was a doer. Over the years, his titles have included: copier/fax/printer technician at the Duke City Typewriter Shop, service manager at Firestone, chemical equipment repairman for the military, dishwasher at the Sheraton Inn, truck driver, brother, son, husband, father, grandfather. And that’s just a start. But in 2008, he added another title to his résumé: full-time stay-at-home dad to his three sons, and caregiver to his wife who developed muscular sclerosis.


Jessica Lucero sits on the third floor of the SUB on Friday, Dec. 2, 2016. Lucero will be graduating this fall with her bachelor’s degree in liberal arts and hopes to go on to law school.
News

Grad Issue: Unemployment turns into opportunity to pursue education

Many non-traditional students have a difficult time adapting to college life and some never make it to the finish line, but one New Mexico student used a challenging situation as her motivation to graduate. Jessica Lucero, a 28-year-old liberal arts major, said she didn’t start her college career until an age when many people are finishing theirs. As a result, it was all very new to her. Stephen Becerra, Lucero’s stepfather and mentor, joked that she was the “little viejita — the old lady — of the class.”


Chris Wehan juggles a soccer ball at the UNM soccer practice field on Monday, Dec. 5, 2016. Wehan played on the UNM men’s soccer team, netting 31 goals in four years.
Sports

Grad Issue: Lobo hopes to live his lifelong dream of playing professional soccer

New Mexico men’s soccer standout Chris Wehan’s 6-year-old self would be proud. “It’s kind of crazy right now just going through the process of transitioning into possibly a professional career. I dreamed of it but I just never imagined that I would get there,” Wehan said. “I just hope someone believes in me and gives me an opportunity.” Like many younger siblings, his soccer journey began in part after he followed in the footsteps of his two older brothers, who also played. Wehan said he fell in love with the sport as early as 6 years old, and quickly discovered he might have some talent.


Culture

Grad Issue: Answering the call to study music

For the final weeks of the fall 2016, some students are preparing for a month-long break between terms while others are saying goodbye to UNM for the final time. Students from all walks of life will be graduating with a hard-earned degree this December — some even with more than one. Christian Newman, a fine arts student, will be graduating with two master’s degrees after finals week: one in piano performance and one in music composition.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: Lobo springboards from UNM into working with Apple

A short two years after arriving to the U.S., Jorge Moukel — who will graduate this semester with a master’s in computer engineering — has already begun to make a name for himself in the tech industry. The Venezuela native immigrated to the U.S. after political unrest in his home country began. After getting his undergraduate degree in his country, Moukel began developing mobile applications, making around $200 a month. That initial interest has since blossomed into a much bigger opportunity: Moukel will be starting work at Apple next semester, developing debugging software for the technology giant. But his journey to success has been riddled with trials.


The Setonian
Opinion

Op-Ed: Should Trump impose tariffs on China and Mexico?

Should Donald Trump impose a 35 percent tariff on the importation of goods from China and Mexico as he proposes to do once inaugurated? The short answer, for two reasons, is NO. Reason number one has to do with utilitarian ethics. Nearly all studies conducted by unbiased economists have found that trade restrictions are negative-sum games: There are more losers than winners, or the total losses exceed the total gains. For every job saved, two or three jobs are destroyed, depending on the study and the underlying assumptions.


News

Grad Issue: Mom hopes to use her college success as an example for her kids

Angelique Maldonado is a mother of three boys who also worked full-time as she pursued her master’s degree in water resources. This semester. her hard work paid off as she will be graduating, an example of success she plans to use to motivate her kids one day. “(It was) definitely challenging, but rewarding at the same time,” Maldonado said. “It keeps me busy, but I’m pretty driven so it’s kind of nice to be able to set a good example for my kids and let them know the importance of school.” Maldonado works with Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority, which has been flexible as she worked on her studies, she said.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: Student overcomes illness and depression to get degree

Monique Renee Curley, who recently graduated with her Master of Engineering this past summer, is a born and raised Burqueña with a story of persistence. “I'm convinced that anyone can do anything. I wasn't born with the greatest of resources, but I did what I had to do to seek them out and make them my own,” she said. “I've pursued my childhood interest in science and trained myself along the way to become a scientist. You can do anything you want, but you have to want it enough.” Curley said her mother had a drug problem dating back to her teens — putting her in a place where she was unable to care for Curley as an infant — and her father left soon after she was born.


Lyudmyla Kostyk, center, studies at UNM with her two children, who are also attending classes, on Saturday, Dec. 10, 2016.
News

Grad Issue: Mom comes from Ukraine to pursue nursing career

16 years ago, Lyudmyla Kostyk left her home and travelled to New York City in the hopes of pursuing a degree in nursing. At the time, she left her two children, Oksana and Pavlo Vivchar, with her parents in their home — nearly 5,000 miles away in Ukraine. This week, Kostyk will be graduating with a Bachelors of Science degree in nursing from UNM. But she will not be alone. Kostyk’s daughter, Oksana, will be joining her mother on this highly anticipated day, with her own bachelor’s degree in biology.


News

Grad Issue: Iraq veteran uses military experience to get through college

The most outstanding, vivacious rewards in life are seldom material. It takes time, effort and strife to realize ambition and achieve that level of personal satisfaction. On an individual basis, we’re all often trying to achieve the abstract; what is meaningful to one’s self. After serving in the U.S. Army for eight years and persevering through her nephew’s diagnosis of brain cancer, Esmeralda Moreno will be graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in psychology. Moreno was born in El Paso, Texas, and moved to Albuquerque during her middle school years. She joined the ROTC in high school and attended TVI, now known as CNM, to secure a liberal arts degree.


The Setonian
Culture

Grad Issue: Student hopes to use his education to serve his country in the Air Force

Many people who don’t finish college on their first shot usually never go back, but for Christopher Kennedy, his return and graduation has been a long time coming. After six different schools and 16 years since he attended his first college course, Kennedy will be graduating from UNM with honors at the age of 34. Right out of high school, Kennedy first attended the Coast Guard Academy and for several years studied at many other military schools and community colleges. He said he had a job while he was going to school, but when it was too much and his life wasn’t going in the right direction, he decided joining the U.S. Air Force was his best chance at a better future.


Diego Montoya
News

Grad Issue: From mayor of a small NM town to UNM graduate

Diego Montoya, a 29-year-old american studies major, will be receiving his bachelor’s degree after attending school on and off for nearly 10 years. Montoya, in the midst of pursuing his degree, has accomplished a feat most people in their twenties can't say that they've done, or even thought about. At the age of 25, Montoya was elected mayor of Magdalena — a small town located in southwestern New Mexico with a population of roughly 1,000 residents.


The Setonian
Sports

Grad Issue: Basketball coach decides to improve his own game through college education

“It’s time to go home. New Mexico is always a home for me, so too is Minnesota.” Transfer student Douglas Lemon, an English studies major, expected to return to Minnesota after graduating from UNM. Despite living a big part of his life in Minnesota, the transplanted Lobo was actually born and raised in Albuquerque until his early childhood. “I always wanted to come back here to New Mexico,” Lemon said.


Jennie Noriega speaks to a homeless man about getting him back home to Taos on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2016. Noriega is a pastor at ABQ Central Inner City Ministries, where she works to help people in her former community.
News

Grad Issue: Student overcomes addiction to succeed

Throughout most of her life Jennie Noriega was a drifter, searching for a place where she could belong, somewhere she would feel wanted. She said she was the little girl who felt neither Hispanic nor Native American, running away from home to smoke marijuana on rooftops. She was the middle schooler who was dragged to California to live in horrific conditions. She said she was the teenager and young adult who dealt illegal drugs in New Mexico to earn herself a spot on the New Mexico FBI’s most wanted list. Suffice to say, Noriega’s life has been anything but ordinary.


The Setonian
News

Grad Issue: Student pursues his passion for rural medicine

Clement Jose is graduating this semester with his master’s in health education and a concentration in community health. Jose said, while he planned to go to continue his education immediately after finishing his undergrad, he was accepted by four medical schools, but turned them all down. “A week after I graduated my brother passed away,” he said. “All of the schools that I got into were far east. So it was New York, Virginia and then there was Kansas. So I decided, ‘You know, I don’t want to leave my family.’”

Powered by SNworks Solutions by The State News
All Content © 2025 The Daily Lobo