Outreach and Instruction Librarian Provides Guidance to Students Navigating the Research Process

Outreach and Instruction Librarian Madeleine Nittmo has only been with WNMU since last January, but she has been on the path to becoming a librarian since high school. She was mentored along the way by an observant school librarian who recognized her passion when Nittmo was a high school senior. “I have always been a big reader,” said Nittmo, “and the district librarian noticed that, and she came up to me and said, ‘I can tell you how to become a librarian.’ She told me all the steps: this is what you need to do, this is the program you need to be in. So, the minute I went to college, I had a very clear path, and I never diverted from that. I have always had my eye on it from the very beginning.” Prior to coming to WNMU, Nittmo served as the outreach librarian at Tyler Junior College in Texas. When she heard WNMU was hiring, she was eager to apply in order to be closer to her family in Arizona. Now as Outreach and Instruction Librarian at WNMU, Nittmo is helping...

Student Life and Cultural Affairs Plan Events to Welcome WNMU Students Back to Campus

Welcome Week on the WNMU campus will provide plenty to do as fall semester starts. The fun begins Monday, August 19 with a game of Grocery Bingo at 1:00 p.m. in the Student Memorial Building Life Lounge. On Tuesday, students can enjoy the movie “Kung Fu Panda 4” in Light Hall Theatre at 6:30 p.m. The next day is Wing Wednesday, with wings served at noon and Casino Night starting at 7:00 p.m., with both in the Life Lounge. On Thursday, students can enjoy lunch with the WNMU Campus Police at the popular Cops and Burgers, starting at 11:00 a.m., on the SMB Patio, and Friday brings Western Night to the Light Hall Patio, with country and western music and dancing as well as free food starting at 6:00 p.m. The Welcome Back Bash, which is free and open to the public, concludes the week Saturday evening, August 24, on Regents Square. Gates open at 5:30 p.m. This year’s Welcome Back Bash will feature Albuquerque-based band The Mango Cakes, which performs a fusion of pop, soul and...

Fall Semester Brings New Developments to WNMU Gallup and WNMU Deming

The beginning of a new academic year this August will bring renewed activity to the WNMU campus in Silver City, but it will also bring changes and growth to WNMU Deming and WNMU Gallup. The WNMU Gallup Learning Center offers programs in elementary education, secondary education, special education and early childhood, as well as support for online students in any discipline. The Gallup location opened in 2023. At its opening, WNMU President Joseph Shepard said that the university’s decision to reestablish a presence in Gallup was prompted by the area’s educational needs. “Gallup has always had a high need for teachers, as our state has as well,” said Shepard, “Western New Mexico University started its roots as a teacher college and it was a natural fit for us to come to Gallup and continue that tradition.” According to Cindy Martinez, Dean of the WNMU College of Education, the university has three faculty members that work full time in Gallup. “We have a Bilingual...

General Obligation Bond 3 Would Fund Bricks and Mortar Projects Across the State

In a presidential election year, when most voters’ attention is directed to the top of the ticket, it can be easy to overlook other key items that are also on the ballot. This year, one of those items is Higher Education Bond 3, which provides essential funding for New Mexico’s public colleges, universities and specialty schools. This General Obligation Bond would deliver $229,565,000 funding without raising the property tax rate. The projects to be funded by Higher Education Bond 3 range from renovation of the College of Pharmacy at the University of New Mexico to upgrades to the agricultural science and experimentation stations run by New Mexico State University around the state. All of the projects are designed to ensure students have the tools and learning environments they need to excel. As part of Bond 3, Western New Mexico University would receive $9M for the first phase of construction of a new home for the New Mexico Center of Excellence for Early Childhood...

WNMU Alum Becomes New Chief Operating Officer of Navajo Nation Shopping Centers

DuWaine Boone (MBA ’05) has become the new Chief Operating Officer of Navajo Nation Shopping Centers, Inc. (NNSCI). NNSCI operates nine shopping centers across the Navajo Nation. The shopping centers are home to businesses from outside the Navajo Nation, such as Bashas’ grocery stores, as well as Navajo-owned businesses. Boone, who is originally from Monument Valley, AZ, has worked for the past two years as the tribal administrator for the Fort Bidwell Gidutikad Band of Paiutes in northern California. He sought his new position because he wanted to return home. “Two years is a long time to be away from Navajo Country,” he said. Boone has spent his first few weeks on the job getting to know the staff, becoming familiar with the policies of the organization, and learning more about shopping center operations. As Chief Operating Officer, Boone will oversee a number of areas within NNSCI. “We have a board of directors, and they respond to the Navajo Nation Tribal...

Diné Ceramic Artist Leads CLAY Festival Workshop at WNMU

Since its founding in 2011, the Silver City CLAY Festival has offered events and activities for experienced ceramicists as well as those completely new to clay. One of the highlights of this year’s festival was a WNMU-hosted workshop with Diné artist Jared Tso. Tso, who comes from a family of Navajo potters, led participants in an exploration of traditional clay practices that included digging clay at NAN Ranch in the Mimbres Valley, learning forming techniques such as pinching and coiling, and pit firing. Now based in northeastern Arizona, Tso grew up in eastern Washington, and has been in the southwest since 2014. He came to New Mexico to get his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from UNM and worked as an engineer for several years. “I did clay in the background during that time,” he said, “and I started doing so many shows—and doing so much work after work—that I decided to go back for an MFA.” While his art has evolved over time, there are...

WNMU Museum Hosts Archaeology Field School

For six weeks this summer, WNMU is hosting the Preservation Archaeology Museum and Survey Field School, a joint venture between the university, Archaeology Southwest, and the University of Arizona. Twelve archaeology students from across the country are taking part in the field school, which introduces participants to archaeological analysis and field techniques as well as to the methods and approaches used to interpret archaeological data and apply them to anthropological questions. WNMU Museum Director Danielle Romero and Karen Schollmeyer, who is a preservation archaeologist with Archaeology Southwest, are jointly leading the field school. As part of the course, students have a chance to visit NAN Ranch, the site of a Mimbres Mogollon pueblo that was excavated in the 1970s and 80s by a team led by Professor of Archaeology Harry Shafer of Texas A&M University. According to Romero, students at NAN Ranch are “redoing the survey that was done in the 70s, and anything else that the...

Beatty Bids Farewell to WNMU Golf After 27 Years

By Josh Brown Western New Mexico University Director of Golf Operations and Head Men's and Women's Coach, Kent Beatty, has announced his retirement. For the last 27 years the newly titled, "Golf Coach Emeritus," Beatty has directed both the Men's and Women's Golf programs at WNMU and developed a system stressing that great golf, solid classroom performance, and learning people skills, will increase his players chances of success. That success was clearly seen in his tenure, as Beatty has taken his teams to 14 NCAA Championships, has mentored eight All-Americans, 17 academic all-Americans and five PGA golf professionals including DP World Tour Winner Calum Hill. Beatty was also named RMAC Women's Golf Coach of the Century in May 2009, along with numerous Conference Coach of the Year awards from the PacWest, Heartland, RMAC, and most recently, Lone Star Conference. "I just want to thank all those who played for me, coached with me, and to WNMU for allowing me to do...

WNMU Signs Memorandum of Understanding with the Autonomous University of Chihuahua

Western New Mexico University President Dr. Joseph Shepard hosted a delegation of administrators from the Autonomous University of Chihuahua to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the two universities, July 16, 2024. The memorandum provides a pathway for academic, scientific, and technological collaboration between the two institutions, including the opportunity for students at either university to earn dual degrees. The memorandum also provides for research projects and activities engaged in by faculty, staff, or researchers from either institution conducted at the other, and it encourages the joint development of seminars, conferences and workshops. WNMU has dozens of MOUs with international universities, corporations and countries. Other MOUs have led to a number of international students studying at WNMU, WNMU students studying abroad, faculty exchanges with international universities, and collaborative, co-hosted events on the WNMU campus. WNMU President...

WNMU Board of Regents Evaluate President Shepard and Approve Policy Revisions

The Western New Mexico University Board of Regents met on Monday, July 15, 2024, and presented their evaluation of university President Dr. Joseph Shepard for the 2024 fiscal year. They rated his performance as exceeding expectations and meeting the conditions of a retention bonus stipulated in President Shepard’s contract. Regent Vice Chair Lyndon Haviland provided an overview of the extensive review process and shared the board’s conclusions. “We were unified in our assessment of Dr. Shepard,” she said. “We collectively believe that in this time, Dr. Shepard has been extraordinary.” The board also set performance objectives for the coming year. In his report, President Shepard provided updates on a number of university events and initiatives and said that the university’s enrollment numbers for the fall semester showed an increase of approximately 70 students over the same time last year. “Our enrollment continues to track in a favorable direction,” he said....