.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ....
The University of New Mexico track and field team is set to have another busy weekend and will first host the Don Kirby Tailwind Open at the Great Friends of UNM Track Stadium on Thursday starting at 9:20 a.m. MT. Fans will be allowed in a limited capacity. Tickets are available at this link or by calling 925-5626,
The Aggies will send a team to Albuquerque and also a number of distance athletes to Phoenix on Saturday for the GCU Invitational. The Lobos will also be participating in the Drake Relays in De Moines, Iowa, on Friday, and the LSU Alumni Gold in Baton Rouge, La.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.– The University of New Mexico hosts the Boise State Broncos in a three-game conference series starting with a Saturday doubleheader starting at 2 p.m. MT. The second game will take place 30 minutes following the conclusion on game one with the third game set for Sunday at noon.
This weekend marks three of the last six chances to watch the 2021 Lobos as UNM has just two home series remaining including this weekend.
All games will be streamed on the Mountain West Network but tickets are still available for those that would like to attend in person.
A LOOK BACK BEFORE LOOKING AHEAD
The University Libraries Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communications (DISC) has created a new online home for the New Mexico Historical Review. The journal is now open access for viewing previous issues from 1926 to 2013 in the UNM Digital Repository. The most recent six years will remain behind a moving paywall.
Founded in 1926, the
New Mexico Historical Review is one of the oldest and most distinguished historical journals in the country. Lansing Bloom, its first editor, brought the
Review to UNM in 1929. The journal publishes scholarly research on New Mexico and the Southwest, including Northern Mexico. Each issue is filled with scholarly articles, book reviews and notes on new publications, news and current events. All issues contain rare photographs, maps and drawings.
co-author of
The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth, assistant professor of Native American studies and American studies at the University of New Mexico and co-founder of The Red Nation. She is a citizen of the Navajo Nation.
co-author of
The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth, an assistant professor of Indigenous politics at the University of Toronto–St. George and a Kanaka Maoli scholar and activist.
This is viewer supported news. Please do your part today.Donate
On Earth Day, we host an extended conversation with two of the two dozen Indigenous scholars behind the new book, “The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth,” described as “not simply a response to the Green New Deal nor a bargain with the elite and powerful. It is a deal with the humble people of the earth; an affirmation that colonialism and capitalism must be overturned for human and other-than-human life to live with dignity. It is a pact with movements for liberation, lif