New Assistant Vice President of Student Life Emphasizes Collaboration

April Burt may have just moved to Silver City, but the new Assistant Vice President of Student Life has already hit the ground running. Originally from Houston, TX, Burt comes to WNMU from the Art Institute of Dallas, where she was Dean of Student Success. Student Affairs—the office that oversees Student Life, the Campus Recreation Center, new student orientation, and events such as the Great Race—is a good fit for Burt, whose undergraduate degree is in psychology and whose interdisciplinary graduate degree included both counseling and education. She has spent many years in higher education working to improve the student experience and looks forward to continuing that work at WNMU. In her first weeks on the job in Silver City, she has already had conversations with faculty and staff about how Student Life can team with the different departments across campus to create a better student experience, and she is eager to hear from students about the kind of programming they want...

Silver City Resident Earns Psychology Degree with Honors Following Personal Tragedy

Margie Gomez has had a complicated path to graduating with honors from WNMU this May. In 2016 her adult son, Thomas, passed away unexpectedly. While still wrestling with what she describes as “complicated grief” she made the decision to finally attend university, as she had wanted to do when she was younger. By doing so, she feels, she is honoring her son’s life while providing an example to her grandchildren by pursuing higher education. A first-generation university graduate, Gomez will be earning her B.S. in Psychology with a minor in Chemical Dependency. In addition, she will graduate as part of the Millenium III Honors Program, which she said gave her the “courage to try harder.” Honors Program Director Phillip Schoenberg, who is an Assistant Professor of English and Philosophy, described Gomez’s academic career as “an amazing success story” that could inspire “other non-traditional students returning to school after a break.” She has accomplished all...

WNMU Works to Make Every Day Earth Day

In recognition of Earth Day, the WNMU Outdoor Program will be hosting a table at the Continental Divide Trail Days x Gila Earth Day Festival in Silver City’s Gough Park on April 22. But that is far from the only environmental initiative to which the university has made a commitment. WNMU aims to be carbon neutral by 2025. As one way to work toward this goal, the university already features a number of solar photovoltaic panels brought to campus through a Community Solar Direct collaboration with PNM. As buildings are renovated or constructed in the future, additional solar panels will be added to capitalize on southwest New Mexico’s sunshine and use it as a source of power. The university also plans to add electric vehicle charging stations aided by a grant from Freeport-McMoran. Another key feature of the commitment to climate change mitigation at WNMU is the Center for a Sustainable Future and Outdoor Programs, spearheaded by Professor Kathy Whiteman, who also chairs the...

Creative Writing Award Winners Announced at Poetry Month Celebration

WNMU J. Cloyd Miller Library hosted a celebration of National Poetry Month on April 12. The event was planned in collaboration with the Humanities Department, with support from the Southwest Word Fiesta. The event opened with welcoming remarks by librarian Arminda Sandoval, followed by an introduction to the importance of poetry by WNMU Writer in Residence, JJ Amaworo Wilson. After this introduction, Assistant Professor Heather Frankland introduced Grant County Poet Laureate Allison Waterman, who joined the event by video to read from her work. A number of WNMU students also read from their poetry, including students in Frankland’s English 099 class, who also read work by published poets that they admire. Also sharing their work were poet and Provost/Vice President of Academic Affairs Jack Crocker and the Silver City River Poets, Elise Stuart, a former Grant County Poet Laureate, and Leonore Hildebrandt. Toward the end of the event, Frankland gave a tribute to the late El Paso...

Future Educator Recognized as Golden Apple Scholar

“Other students would go to me if they didn’t understand the lesson,” says secondary education major Erick Olivas about how his own schooling influenced his interest in becoming a teacher, “They would say to me, ‘You explain this so well.’ That is kind of where it started.” Olivas, who is a first-generation college student originally from Chihuahua, lives in Santa Clara and divides his time between his home town and the WNMU campus in Silver City. While he works with his father on the weekends and enjoys playing pool with friends in the Life Lounge on campus, like most college students he spends much of his time studying. His hard work and potential as a teacher resulted in him recently being named a Golden Apple Scholar. Golden Apple is a non-profit that makes a “material difference in resolving the teacher shortage through its Scholars and Accelerators programs by expanding the pipeline of highly effective, diverse educators,” according to the...

Former Senator Bingaman Analyzes Congressional Dysfunction in Talk at WNMU

Former U.S. Senator Jeff Bingaman gave a talk titled, “The Breakdown in Congressional Governing Norms, and Impediments to Serving the Public Interest” on the WNMU campus of on Friday, March 31. The presentation was based on his book “Breakdown: Lessons for a Congress in Crisis,” published in 2022, and was sponsored by WNMU in conjunction with the 2023 New Mexico History Conference in Silver City. The evening opened with introductions by WNMU President Joe Shepard and History Professor Scott Fritz and concluded with a question-and-answer session and book signing. Bingaman, who grew up in Silver City, was elected to the Senate in 1982. During his time as a Senator, he served on the Finance Committee, the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, the Joint Economic Committee and the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, which he chaired at the time of his retirement from the Senate in 2013. In his presentation, Bingaman summarized the ways that Congress has changed...

Scholarship Luncheon Honors Donors

On March 27, WNMU held a Scholarship Luncheon in Graham Gym. Sponsored by WNMU Foundation, the event serves to celebrate both the students awarded scholarships and those whose generosity supports them. The luncheon provides students an “opportunity to be recognized and to meet the donors, faculty and staff who make scholarship support available,” said Jodi Edens-Crocker, Senior Executive Director of WNMU Foundation and Alumni Affairs. At the luncheon, scholarship students had a chance to personally thank the donors behind the scholarships and to share with them what the support has meant to their academic careers. While traditionally an annual event, this is the first time the luncheon has been held since before the COVID-19 pandemic. Said George Turner, Scholarship Coordinator for WNMU Foundation, “It was great to see all those individuals re-connected and back to an important event of comradery with faculty/staff, donors, and future alums.” Turner noted that the event is...

Graduate Student in Social Work Imagines a Less Violent World

Social work is a calling for Courtney Pierce. Growing up in a civically-minded community in Portsmouth, VA, Pierce expected to go into the business world, and her undergraduate degrees are in that field. But Pierce is now completing her Master of Social Work degree online at WNMU while working in the Anti-Trafficking Department at Samaritan House in Virginia, a large anti-violence organization that serves domestic violence, sexual assault, homelessness and trafficking survivors. Pierce’s research for her MSW program at WNMU stems from this work and is rooted in restorative justice practices. As chair of the Black and African American Committee at Samaritan House, she has hosted Black men in a series of townhall conversations designed to better understand the intersections of gender, race, and power. Topics in these outreach efforts have included power and privilege, domestic partner violence, and vulnerability. Pierce has teamed with fellow committee member Stephenie...

Area Kids Learn Cycling Skills with WNMU Kinesiology Faculty and Students

This semester, the WNMU Kinesiology Department is offering the Kinesiology Kids Bike Club to area youth. The program is led by Assistant Professor Garrett Peltonen and Associate Professor Takahiro Sato, with assistance from students Devin Larsen and Itzela Darkenwald. According to Peltonen, the program is designed to “empower local kids and promote a physically active lifestyle through the bicycle.” Kids Bike was inspired by the success of a program for older adults, Get Fit Seniors, which the Kinesiology Department sponsors in collaboration with the Western Institute for Lifelong Learning. Both programs are consistent with the philosophy of kinesiology that “exercise is better than medicine,” said Peltonen. The program has been rewarding for those involved. “Seeing so many kids on bikes having fun and improving their biking skills is very rewarding,” said Darkenwald, “It’s an amazing opportunity for us Kinesiology students to practice and expand our education in...

WNMU Community Remembers Ron Reed

A celebration of the life of Ron Reed (1958-2022) and dedication of a memorial bench was held Friday, March 31 on the WNMU campus. Reed served as Director of Facilities and Maintenance at the university and was a beloved member of the WNMU community. Originally from Alamagordo, NM, Reed traveled widely, both with the Merchant Marines as a young adult and while living at various times in Pennsylvania, New York, the Bay Islands of Honduras, and Colorado, where he met his wife, Merritt. Reed eventually found his way to Silver City where he became known for his compassion, dignity, and hard work. On Friday, following the dedication service outside Light Hall, family and friends gathered in the Sunset Room of the Student Memorial Building to share remembrances of Reed. The memorial bench dedicated to him, which is located near the Raven sculpture outside Light Hall, will be a lasting testament to his importance to the WNMU...