Academic and Research Symposium Celebrates Student Achievement

The 19th WNMU Academic and Research Symposium and Career Fair was held Tuesday, Nov. 28 and Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023. The symposium, which provides a showcase for student academic and creative achievement, took place in the J. Cloyd Miller Library. Occurring in conjunction with the symposium was a career fair that brought in a number of area employers. Students had an opportunity to learn about working for the various employers and about openings available. According to Assistant Vice President of Academic Affairs and Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Kate Oubre, the symposium provides students with an opportunity to become more confident public speakers. “It is an opportunity for students to practice public presentation in a different way than they do in a classroom,” said Oubre. Oubre acknowledged that presenting one’s work publicly can feel quite daunting, so the organizing committee works to ensure that the symposium brings some levity and fun. “We have a...

WNMU Hosts Town Hall Event to Launch New Food Security and Sustainability Initiative

WNMU held a town-hall style discussion on Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023 to share information and gather input regarding a new initiative on food security and sustainability. The meeting was well attended by community members, including representatives of a number of potential collaborative partners. “While I am pleased by this, I am not surprised by because of the community in which we live,” said WNMU President Joseph Shepard in his opening remarks, “We live in a community that really has a robust care for each other.” The need for solutions to food insecurity are increasingly pressing, said Dave Chandler, the Director of the Commons Center for Food Sustainability and Security, who was asked to speak at the town hall. “We are seeing unprecedented need in the classroom,” he stated. Another guest at the event, Sarita Cargas, Associate Professor of Human Rights at UNM, provided some background on how widespread food insecurity is among college students, faculty and...

Native American Student Alliance—Advocating for Education and Celebrating Indigenous Cultures

Like many student organizations, the Native American Student Alliance (NASA) lost momentum during the COVID-19 pandemic. A new group of students, however, have re-chartered the organization and are already knee-deep in coordinating this year’s activities, according to NASA President and graduate student in Early Childhood Education, Rebekah Stevens (Choctaw). The signature event for the fall semester was Native American Day, held on November 15. NASA worked with dining hall staff to coordinate a lunch of traditional indigenous foods based on recipes provided by NASA students. The day also included a screening of the award-winning film “Smoke Signals.” The highlight of Native American Day was a forum on “Navigating Native American Culture Today.” The panelists for the forum included Dr. Perry James (Navajo), WNMU Adjunct Faculty; Bill Bradford, Chiricahua Apache Nation Attorney General; and Joe Saenz, Chiricahua Apache Nation President. The forum was moderated by NASA...

Aspiring Screenwriter Balances Basketball and Academics

Brooke Rodgers started her college career in San Francisco, California, but when WNMU Head Women’s Basketball Coach Josh Pace reached out to her, she was ready to make a change. She was anxious to leave the big city, to be closer to her family in Phoenix and to find a university that would allow her to better balance her academic life with the demands of playing collegiate basketball. “I knew Coach Pace would get me to where I wanted to be as a player,” she said. The one wrinkle in her plan was not about basketball but about academics and career preparation. “I want to become a screenwriter after I graduate,” said Rodgers. At her previous university, her major was Writing for Film and TV, a program not offered at WNMU. Luckily, she was able to design her own degree program through the WNMU Interdisciplinary Studies program with concentrations in English and Psychology that will allow her to continue developing as a screenwriter. “I was always told that I was a good...

WNMU Museum Director to Publish Book Chapter

WNMU Museum Director Danielle Romero has a chapter in the forthcoming book “Mogollon Communal Spaces and Places in the Greater American Southwest,” published by the University of Utah Press. The chapter, titled “Pipes, Palettes, and Projectile Points: Great Kiva Rituals and Ritual Paraphernalia at the Harris Site,” was coauthored with Professor Barbara Harris of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) and archeologist Ashley Lauzon. Romero explains that “Our chapter focuses on specific artifacts that were found in kivas and domestic pithouses at the Harris Site, a Late Pithouse period (AD 550-1000) village in the Mimbres Valley. Using our excavation data and ethnographic information from the modern pueblos we discuss the links between ritual performance, household sponsorship, and community integration.” The chapter, and indeed the entire volume that includes it, began as a presentation for a conference that was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. One...

Production Crew from “The College Tour” Wraps Up Filming on Campus

A production team from the hit Amazon Prime TV show “The College Tour” wrapped up a week of filming on the campus of Western New Mexico University on Friday, November 10, 2023. The show was in town to film ten WNMU students telling their Mustang stories. The series introduces its audience to colleges and universities across the country. Each episode of “The College Tour” focuses on a single college or university and is hosted by Alex Boylan, who won CBS’s “The Amazing Race” at age 23 and has gone on to have a highly successful career both in front of and behind the camera. The concept for the “The College Tour” was inspired by Boylan’s niece, who, several years ago, was deciding where to attend college but could not afford to take numerous trips around the country to find the right match. “So few students . . . have the resources to travel wherever they want and check out campuses,” said Boylan. He noted that it is ideal if a student can physically...

Alumna Earns PhD, Focuses on Providing Mental Health Resources for Youth

When Violeta “Blanca” Jaure (BA ’06) was pregnant with her first child while living in Albuquerque twenty-two years ago, she knew she had to return to Silver City, where she had grown up and where her family lived. What she did not foresee was how that choice would be pivotal in her educational journey. “I didn’t even go to high school,” said Jaure, “I kind of was a high school drop-out here in Silver City. I didn’t feel like I really belonged in the high school, so I ended up getting my GED.” When her daughter was born, however, Jaure decided to continue her education to provide her daughter with a role model and greater opportunities. “I had to do it for her,” she said of her decision to enroll at WNMU. Her decision was made easier by the presence of the Child Development Center (CDC) on campus, which provides its infant/toddler program and preschool at a reduced cost for WNMU students. Jaure described how she and a friend who also had a young infant...

Alumna Joins the WNMU “Golden Circle” Following a Career in Librarianship

 When Linda Skerritt (now Avery) was looking to attend college over sixty years ago, academics were not the only thing on her mind. “I came for my health,” Avery explained, “I had very bad asthma as a child growing up in New Jersey, and I had a doctor who suggested the dry climate might help.” After looking at schools in Arizona and New Mexico, Avery decided to attend Western New Mexico University (then College), where she majored in English and minored in drama and Spanish. “I came out , and I just felt right at home right away,” she said, “I had never been to the southwest before, but it just felt like this was the right place.” Apparently, the New Mexican climate agreed with her because Avery immediately became involved in numerous activities on campus. “Because I could breathe more comfortably,” she said, “I was excited to do as much as I could . . . I just had the best time exploring different things and being in an entirely new...

Making Art of the Mundane: Sculpture Students Explore Form on a Large Scale

The students in Assistant Professor Erin Wheary’s Appreciation of Sculpture class could recently be found on a sunny Tuesday morning on the Graham Gym patio, arranging their latest creations for a photography opportunity. “Let’s try the Ball jar toward the center,” called the photographer, Jay Hemphill, as the students moved their sculptures, “The Apple watch can go on the bottom step.” The students were arranging oversized sculptures of everyday objects, all painted the same purple hue and ranging in size from large to massive. The sculptures, made of chicken wire and cardboard and covered with a skin of papier-mâché, were the result of an assignment given by Wheary early in the semester. “I like to ground my teaching in contemporary art,” Wheary explained, “And so this piece is inspired by the work of Claes Oldenberg. just went over elements of art and principles of design, and the idea is to transform the scale of an everyday object.” Oldenberg is...