Year: 2006
December 2006
- December 5 - 3 Positions Open on Local Board
- December 8 - New Mexico Weavings on Exhibit
- December 14 - Two Students Nominated to All State Academic Team
Positions Open on Local Board
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release Dec. 4, 2006
Three positions on the Local Board of the University of New Mexico-Gallup will be open for new four-year terms, starting March 1, 2007.
Position 1, now held by Brett Newberry, will be voted on by those residing in the Gallup McKinley County School District.
Position 4, now held by Ruby Wolf, will be determined by qualified electors residing in the Zuni Public School District.
Position 5, now occupied by Teresa Dowling, will be determined by voters residing in the Gallup-McKinley County School District and the Zuni Public School District.
A declaration of candidacy for a position on the Board must be filed with the McKinley County Clerk between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on December 20. In making a declaration of candidacy, the candidate must submit a sworn statement of intent.
A person who wishes to be a write-in candidate for this election should file with the McKinley County Clerk a declaration of intent before 5 p.m. on January 2, 2007.
“亚色影库 Gallup Branch is a comprehensive community college serving the needs of Gallup/McKinley County residents and businesses. Central to our ability to serve the communities of are the members of our locally elected Board. These five individuals, representing constituencies throughout McKinley County help guide the activities of our campus,” said Larry Sanderson, Director of Community Affairs.
“We encourage all McKinley County residents interested in UNM Gallup to support this election process and, if appropriate, to consider running for the Advisory Board,” he said.
New Mexico Weavings on Exhibit
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release December 8, 2006
A collection of 19th and 20th Century textiles produced by New Mexican weavers who live and work in various Hispanic villages in northern New Mexico is currently on display in Gurley Hall Exhibit Case. The collection belongs to adjunct History Instructor Martin Link.
Besides 12 textiles, there are 10 photographs depicting the steps in weaving, and some samples of dyed wool. One unique item is a Navajo Chief Blanket, woven specifically for Link by David Ortega, a noted weaver from the village of Chimayo. Other items on display are floor coverings, table coverings and a vest. The items range in time of production from the mid-19th century to more recent times, and display a variety of patterns, as well as information on and examples of the use of vegetal dyes.
The exhibit will remain on display through the end of January.
Two Students Nominated to All State Academic Team
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release December 14, 2006
Two University of New Mexico-Gallup students have been nominated to the All USA Academic Team. They are Alvin Harvey and Joel Yazzie. Sixty team members will be selected in May from all the nominees across the nation, to be on the first team, second team and third team.
Alvin Harvey, who is currently working toward an Associate’s Degree in Criminal Justice, was born in Fort Defiance, Arizona. He was brought up in Three Turkey Ruins, near Canyon De Chelly, and attended the Nazlini Arizona Boarding School and Kinlichee Boarding School, and schools in Chinle. He joined the Gallup Army National Guard in 2000 and did a 15-month tour of duty in Iraq, for which he received an Army Commendation Medal for exceptional meritorious service.
He has been on the Dean’s List seven times, and in Spring 2006 received a 亚色影库 Excellence in Student Leadership Award. He also received a Recognition Award from New Mexico Secretary of State Rebecca Vigil-Giron for “exemplary dedication and service in enhancing the quality of life among all the peoples of the Land of Enchantment.”
Currently Harvey is serving at the 亚色影库allup Student Senate President, and helped establish the 亚色影库 Collegiate Veteran Association, along with the Veterans’ Memorial Gallery. One of his plans is to “create a cohort of [student veterans] to acquire funding to assist student veterans that are in financial need to purchase books and other school supplies.” He also established the 亚色影库 Basketball Club in Fall 2004.
The father of a boy, Harvey became interested in the plight of children he saw while in Iraq. Along with his plans for a career in Social Work and Law Enforcement, he says he may focus on working with children. He has already interned with a local government agency to work with children and families. The future may also hold a career in internal affairs with the BIA, he says. His current goal is continue his education and obtain a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Social Work.
A member of the Gallup Sunrise Kiwanis, he has helped with various Kiwanis projects, and also helped plan events with the National Indian Youth Leadership group. He is also a professional Native American jewelry inlayer.
Joel Yazzie is seeking an Associate Degree in the Construction Technology program, with an ultimate goal of earning a Bachelor’s Degree in Business or the Bachelor of University Studies program. His career goal is to be a general contractor.
Yazzie, who attended Jefferson Elementary School, Gallup Mid-School and Rehoboth Christian School, has been on the Dean’s List four times during his enrollment at 亚色影库allup.
He has been active on the campus and the local community, serving as president of the Basketball Club, and also with Habitat for Humanity, helping to build a house for that group during the Spring 2005 semester. He also assisted in renovating a house on First Street as a construction project for his program. He was a supervisor and coordinator for this project. Once this house is finished, the house will be sold by the college.
Other activities include involvement with Special Olympics, helping to coach children and organize a day of competition in May; he was a cook and server to the homeless for Care 66; and, he helped an elderly person with various chores this past year.
November 2006
- November 1 - Guitarist to Perform Nov. 9
- November 8 - Poet to Give Reading Nov. 16
- November 30 - 'Holding Nothing' On View at Ingham Chapman
Guitarist to Perform Nov. 9
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release November 1, 2006
Michael Chapdelaine, acoustic guitarist, will perform in concert at the University of New Mexico-Gallup in Calvin Hall Auditorium on Nov. 9 at 7 p.m.
Chapdelaine is a professor of music and head of guitar studies at the University of New Mexico. He has won first prize in both classical and fingerstyle genres in top competitions, including the Guitar Foundation of America International Classical Guitar Competition and the National Fingerpicking Championships at the Walnut Valley Bluegrass Festival in Winfield, Kansas. He was previously on the faculties of the University of Colorado at Denver and Metropolitan State University. He has given master classes around the world, including China, Thailand, Malaysia, Peru, Venezuela, Taiwan, Indonesia and at institutions such as the University of Miami, Mannes School of Music, University of Texas, and California State University. Among his teachers was the renowned Spanish maestro, Andres Segovia.
The guitarist has played venues from New York’s Lincoln Center to the Cactus Café in Austin, from Milano to Bangkok, and many others. He performs on steel string and classical guitars, and in styles ranging from blues to Bach, country to rhythm and blues.
Chapdelaine is the two-time winner of the National Endowment for the Arts Solo Recitalist Grant, and took first prize in both the Guitar Foundation of Americas and the Music Teachers National Association’s Guitar Competitions. He also won the Silver Medal in Venezuela’s VIII Concurso International de Guitarra “Alirio Diaz.” He has toured four continents while giving hundreds of performances for Affiliate Artists Inc., and various arts promotion organizations.
In 1992 he recorded the Sonata Romantica CD (now re-released as "Mexico"), which many critics and connoisseurs of classical guitar consider to be one of the definitive recordings for the instrument. In 1994 Chapdelaine turned his attention to pop music, arranging, producing and recording Time-Life Music's Guitar by Moonlight collection, which sold 250,000 copies in its first two years in the stores. In 1998, he once again expanded his musical range and gained instant notoriety and credibility in the "acoustic music" world as a "fingerstyle" guitarist and composer, by winning the National Fingerpicking Championships at Winfield.
The concert is free to the public.
Poet to Give Reading Nov. 16
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release Nov. 8, 2006
Joy Harjo, an internationally renowned poet and performer, will read her work on the University of New Mexico-Gallup campus at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 16, in Calvin Hall auditorium. A member of the Creek nation, Harjo is currently Joseph M. Russo Professor of Creative Writing in the English Department of UNM.
Harjo’s poetry has been widely anthologized and she has won numerous awards for her work. Her other titles include: “She Had Some Horses,” and “A Map to the Next World: Poems and Tales.” Paperback copies of “How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems 1975-2001” will be available in the 亚色影库allup bookstore.
Harjo is also a musician. Her audio CD “Native Joy for Real” will also be available.
During the event 30 copies of Harjo's book, "How We Became Human" will be given away, courtesy of the Achieving the Dream grant. Also, the Student Senate of 亚色影库allup will provide refreshments.
This event is free and open to the public. Sponsor is the Cultural Arts Council of 亚色影库allup. Call Gloria Dyc, 863-7566 for more information.
'Holding Nothing' On View at Ingham Chapman
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release November 30, 2006
“Holding Nothing” a new show by Julie Anand and Damon Sauer, is on view at the Ingham Chapman Gallery at the University of New Mexico-Gallup.
The collaborative project features figurative silhouettes made of powder-coated aluminum, and also includes photographic elements.
Anand teaches photography at Arizona State University. Sauer teaches at the Herron School of Art in Indianapolis.
The show will be on view until December 16.
For more information contact gallery manager John Zimmerman at 863-7774. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
October 2006
- October 11 - Woodwinds Concert Set
- October 11 - G.O. Bond Issue to be Voted on Nov. 7
- October 16 - 亚色影库allup to Dedicate North Side Facility
- October 18 - Digital Photography, Artwork on View at Ingham Chapman
- October 24 - Red Mesa Review Wins Award
- October 26 - Spooky Fun Planned
- October 31 - Students Groups to Honor Veterans
Woodwinds Concert Set
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release October 11, 2006
亚色影库-Gallup will present the second concert in its Fall Cultural Series on Thursday, Oct. 19, at 7 p.m. in Calvin Hall Auditorium with the presentation of the University of New Mexico Woodwind Quintet.
The New Mexico Winds originated in 1984 as a faculty Ensemble-in-Residence in the Department of Music at 亚色影库. It is comprised of the woodwind and horn faculty at 亚色影库: Keith Lemmons, Professor of Clarinet and Presidential Teaching Fellow; Kevin Vigneau, Associate Professor of Oboe; Valerie Potter, Associate Professor of Flute; Susie Fritts, Assistant Professor of Horn; and Denise Reig Turner, Instructor of Bassoon.
The artist faculty members of the quintet combine distinguished teaching careers with active solo, chamber music, and orchestral performances, having held positions in chamber ensembles and orchestras throughout Europe, Mexico, Canada, South America and the United States. Individual solo performances have taken them around the world, with concerts in Sweden, Brazil, Portugal, Spain, Canada, Mexico, South Africa, Puerto Rico and the United States.
In addition to on-campus concerts, the quintet is active throughout New Mexico, the Southwest and the United States, presenting frequent concerts and clinics. The New Mexico Winds have been invited guest artists for the College Music Society National Conference, the International Double Reed Society conference, the New Mexico Music Educators All-State conference and at numerous universities and colleges.
The New Mexico Winds offers a variety of programs including music by Arrieu, Danzi, Cambini, Mozart, Klughardt, Beethoven, Milhaud, Sierra, Onslow, Reicha, Poulenc, Fine, Jolivet, Hindemith, Nielson, Ibert, Barber, Schuller, Paquita D'Rivera, Ligeti, Villa-Lobos and many others. Guest artists have included acclaimed pianists George Robert and Maribeth Gunning; renowned saxophonists Carrie Koffman and Eric Lau; and percussionist Scott Ney. You can find their recent release on the Centaur Classical Music label.
Call the Dean’s Office, 863-7679, for more information.
G.O. Bond Issue to be Voted on Nov. 7
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release October 11, 2006
In November, New Mexico voters will once again go to the polls to vote on a Capital Expenditures General Obligation Bond. For McKinley County, which has traditionally supported these G.O. Bond issues, that means voting not only for a variety of improvements to various senior citizen facilities in the Bond A portion of the bill, but also for $2 million on Education Bond B for 亚色影库allup’s proposed Technical Center and Classroom Building as well as $61,703 for acquisitions for the Zollinger Library on Bond C
“This Technical Center and Classroom will do great things for the college and our community,” said Beth Miller, Executive Director of 亚色影库allup. “Primarily, it will allow us to focus our technical training on emerging technologies that will enable our students to secure higher wages in this region. Building this facility will also help our community participate in the statewide initiative to bring New Mexico to the forefront as a high tech state.”
Bond B will be paid for by a property tax assessment of about 32 cents per $1000 of a property’s taxable value. Citizens will pay an average of $10.17 per year on property with an assessed value of $100,000. Those with properties assessed at $250,000 would pay an average of $25.44.
“With more New Mexico voters than ever participating in absentee and absentee-in-person voting, it’s important to get the word out early about this bond issue and how it will directly impact our community if voters approve it,” Miller said. “I hope you will consider this issue carefully and be sure to register and vote either in absentee voting or on November 7 during the general election.”
亚色影库allup to Dedicate North Side Facility
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release October 16, 2006
亚色影库-Gallup will dedicate its newly renovated and expanded North Campus facility on Wednesday, October 25, at 4:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend.
Two large classroom/labs were added, and the foyer was enlarged, doubling the program space in the building.
The facility houses the college’s Adult Basic Education program, and there are plans to look into expanding the education programs there, said Christine Gleason, director of ABE.
The building is located at 425 N. 7th St.
Digital Photography, Artwork on View at Ingham Chapman
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release October 18, 2006
GALLUP-The digital photography and video artwork of Jason Flack, of Rochester, NY, is on view at 亚色影库allup’s Ingham Chapman Gallery and in the Gurley Hall display case.
The work deals with issues of time and self, said gallery manager John Zimmerman.
The artist will give a talk on the work on Monday, October 23, at 10 a.m. An opening will take place that same day from 5-6 p.m.
Gallery hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Call 863-7774 for more information.
Red Mesa Review Wins Award
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release October 24, 2006
Volume 12 of 亚色影库allup’s literary magazine Red Mesa Review has won the Small College Award in the Southwestern Region of the Community College Humanities Association Literary Magazine Competition. The college previously won an award in the same competition in 1999.
RMR is published annually and contains the original artwork and literary compositions of students, faculty and staff.
The editorial board was composed this past year of Arts and Letters faculty Gloria Dyc, Fran Pawlowski, Jeff Beekman, Bill Kaul, Jennifer Boots-Marshall, Norman Smith, Mike Volz and Robert Hoffman, and Transitional Studies faculty Jim Sayers. Design/Layout Editor was Arts and Letters faculty Carolyn Milligan and Student Design/Layout Editors were Dillon Day and Jason Pawela.
The Review is available in Student Services, the Executive Director’s Office, or the Department of Arts and Letters.
Spooky Fun Planned
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release - October 26, 2006
The Student Senate of 亚色影库allup is sponsoring a Halloween Carnival Tuesday, Oct. 31.
Among the events featured will be a Haunted House (downstairs in Gurley Hall Basement 205) at 3:30 p.m., along with face painting, cake walk, tables with Halloween treats for sale and other events in Gurley Hall Commons. There will be a costume contest at 5 p.m. for faculty and staff, and a costume contest at 7 p.m. for students.
Volunteers are welcome, and will be eligible to receive two movie tickets.
Call 863-7553 for more information.
Students Groups to Honor Veterans
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release October 31, 2006
亚色影库-Gallup Student Senate and the 亚色影库allup College Veteran Association will honor student, faculty and staff veterans and their parents on Thursday, Nov. 9, at 10 a.m. in Gurley Hall Commons.
There will be talks by local veterans, a presentation of gifts, a presentation of medals from the Navajo Nation, and patches from the 亚色影库allup Collegiate Veterans. Executive Director Beth Miller and Major Patrick Campos of the U.S. Army will speak. Also, 7 Cities of Gold, a film production company, will videotape the presentation to air on Cable Channel 21 all day on Nov. 11. 亚色影库allup’s Native American Drum Group will also play.
Alvin Harvey, a U.S. Army sergeant and the president of the 亚色影库allup Student Senate, will be emcee.
For more information call the Student Senate at 863-7553.
September 2006
- September 1 - Faculty Receives Tenure
- September 14 - Harp Duo to Play in Concert
- September 22 - Groundbreaking for Health Careers II Building Set
Faculty Receives Tenure
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release September 1, 2006
Our University of New Mexico-Gallup faculty members were recently awarded tenure and promoted to the rank of associate professor.
They are: Carol Frick, chair of the Zollinger Library; Kathy Larason, Business Management and Technology; Kamala Sharma, Mathematics and Science; and Elvira Stahn, Business Management and Technology.
Frick has a Master of Library Science from Emporia State University and a Bachelor of Science degree in Education from Slippery Rock University. She also has her New Mexico Professional Librarians Certification and her School Library Media Endorsement.
Larason has a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics and a Master’s of Library Science from the University of Oklahoma. She participated in a Ph.D. program in Computer Science at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and completed all the coursework except the dissertation. She started working at 亚色影库allup in 1996 as a librarian, and transferred to the Business Management Tech program in 2000. Most recently, she has been researching bioinformatics, the application of computer science to biology/genetics.
Sharma has a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the Oregon Graduate Institute of Science and Technology in Portland, Oregon. She previously received a Master’s degree in chemistry from University of Oregon in Eugene. She joined 亚色影库 in 2000. Sharma is the Project Director for the Office of Research Initiative at 亚色影库. The Office of Research Initiative (ORI) at UNMG receives funding from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development at the National Institutes of Health. The ORI provides money for faculty members to work on their pilot projects. I am also the 亚色影库 coordinator for the Bridge Program as well as the Idea Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence at the New Mexico State University.
Stahn was recently elected chair of the Business Technology and Management Department. A high school dropout who got her GED in 1973 from Window Rock High School, she went on to earn an Associate of Science Degree in Business from AAA Business College in Albuquerque in 1976, and a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration from the University of Albuquerque in 1980. She received a post-Bachelor of Arts Degree in Elementary Education at 亚色影库allup in 2000, and has a New Mexico licensure to teach K-12 with endorsements in Information Tech Coordinator and Business. She is now working on a Ph.D. in Organizational Learning Instructional Technologies, School of Education, UNM. She maintains a 3.45 grade point average.
She is also a volunteer educational assistant in a first grade class at Roosevelt Elementary School. For the past couple of years, she has had her college students participate in service-learning activities with Battered Family Services and My Sister’s Resale Shop.
Tenure-track faculty receive a mid-probationary review after three years of employment, and if successful , they are reviewed again for tenure and promotion at the beginning of the sixth year, said Chris Marlow, Dean of Instruction.
“Faculty are reviewed on the basis of service, professional development (scholarly work, research, creative work and disciplinary growth), teaching, and personal characteristics” Marlow said. “Teaching is of course the most important at 亚色影库allup. Once they have applied for tenure and promotion, the rank and tenure committee makes recommendations, and the dean makes recommendations to the executive director, with the Provost making the final decision. Tenure results in a continuous contract.
Some faculty are employed as non-tenure track faculty, and they go through a different review process, Marlow said,, if their performance is satisfactory their contracts are renewed annually.
Harp Duo to Play in Concert
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release September 14, 2006
UNM faculty Anne Eisfeller and Lynn Gorman-DeVelder, a harp duet, will perform at the University of New Mexico-Gallup on Thursday, September 21, at 7 p.m. in Calvin Hall Auditorium. The performance is free.
Eisfeller is the Principal Harpist of the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra, Santa Fe Symphony, and Opera Southwest. She has also performed with the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, Santa Fe Opera, Chamber Orchestra of Albuquerque, and El Paso Symphony. During the summer she is a guest faculty member of the Assisi Festival in Italy and the harpist for the Oregon Coast Festival, Britt Festival, and Sunriver Music Festival in Oregon.
Eisfeller received Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees from Indiana University, both with High Distinction. While at IU she studied with Peter Eagle and was a teaching assistant in harp and music theory. She also studied with Susann McDonald of the University of Southern California and Myor Rosen of the New York Philharmonic. She is a harp specialist for the Albuquerque Youth Symphony and has a private studio in Albuquerque.
Lynn Gorman-DeVelder holds a Master of Music degree and a Performer’s Certificate from Indiana University Bloomington. She was also a student of Susann McDonald. Gorman-DeVelder has performed with the Phoenix Symphony, the New Mexico Symphony, the El Paso Symphony, the National Chamber Orchestra, the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and has been substitute principal harp with the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. She also held a position with “The President’s Own” U.S. Marine Band from 1998 to 2003, and currently teaches and performs in Albuquerque and the surrounding region.
The concert is the first in a Fall Concert Series presented by 亚色影库allup. Other recitals lined up are the UNM Woodwind Quintet on October 19 and Michael Chapdelaine, a classical guitarist, on November 9.
Call the Dean’s Office, 863-7679 for more information.
Groundbreaking for Health Careers II Building Set
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release: September 22, 2006
A groundbreaking ceremony that marks the start of construction for 亚色影库allup's Health Careers II building is set for 9 a.m., Tuesday, September 26. The groundbreaking site is adjacent to and southeast of the existing Health Careers Building.
Jaynes Corporation has been authorized to begin mobilization on the 18,328 square foot building, which is scheduled to be completed in May 2007.
"This facility will enable our nursing program to have the space needed to improve our training of nursing students," said Beth Miller, executive director. "We will be able to admit more students to the program and incorporate more technology into instruction. The building will also house our Health Information Technology program, our Nursing Assistant Program and the newly established Radiology Technologies program."
Miller added that approximately 75 percent of the costs of this building are from the local General Obligation Bond passed by McKinley county voters in February 2005.
"We certainly appreciate the community support; without, we couldn't do the projects necessary to continue meeting the community's higher education needs," Miller said.
"As chair of the 亚色影库allup Local Board, I am thrilled about the opportunities this building will offer our students," said Brett Newberry. "The Health Careers facility will allow us to prepare students for healthcare jobs in this area, and by doing so, contribute to the overall economic health of this area."
"The building will house three nursing/nursing assistant labs, a simulation lab, a computer lab, a student lounge, a self-contained radiology technician program, four general classrooms, 12 offices (not counting the two in the radiology tech area, a small work room/break room, a conference room and a lobby," said Kathy Head, chair of the Nursing Department.
Once construction starts, half of the Career Education parking lot will be fenced off, and no parking will be allowed in the dirt area adjacent to the existing Health Careers building on the northeast side.
"We realize parking is an issue, but given the circumstances there are no alternatives," said Ron Petranovich, Physical Plant manager. "Students should arrive early for class and plan on utilizing other parking lots on campus."
August 2006
- August 11 - Prof Copyrights Solar Oven Plans
- August 11 - Achieving the Dream Initiatives Update
- August 16 - 亚色影库allup 3rd in Country Among Community Colleges Graduating Native Americans with Associate's Degrees
Prof Copyrights Solar Oven Plans
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release: August 11, 2006
By Linda Thornton
Senior Public Affairs Representative
GALLUP--On a sunny day last year at 亚色影库allup’s South Campus in Zuni, one of the major highlights of the open house being held was a jar of beans boiling in a solar oven.
Passersby gasped at the sight of the percolating beans, as well as at a pan of brownies baking beautifully alongside.
Unless you’ve cooked beans at 6,500 feet, and are aware of how much energy is required from the time the beans go in the pot in the morning until they’re done in the afternoon, you may not appreciate the sense of amazement with which the open house visitors regarded this demonstration of solar cookery. They listened incredulously as they were told that they could put an entire meal inside the oven in the morning before going to work, and come home to find dinner ready—all without spending a cent on propane or electricity.
And while saving money and energy may be the major hook for most who would acquire a solar oven, for Jean Martinez Welles, the crusade to promote solar cookery has much deeper significance. A professor in Health Careers at 亚色影库allup, Martinez-Welles is the co-inventor, along with Gallup High School wood shop instructor John Welles, of the solar oven seen at Zuni last year. And, she’s also a strong advocate of alternative ways of cooking to help promote better health in our area.
The solar oven invented by Martinez-Welles and Welles was funded by a Center for Disease Control grant awarded to 亚色影库allup to develop a program to combat diabetes in this region. The ovens were distributed to various persons in the Pueblo of Zuni and on the Navajo Reservation for testing.
As Martinez-Welles explains, people of our region often favor the frying of food, not only as a matter of taste but also because of the high cost of fuel needed for baking. The solar oven project was developed to acquaint rural people with alternative and more healthful ways of cooking.
After introducing their solar oven during the diabetes initiative, the co-inventors were besieged by people asking for plans. It was at that point that Martinez-Welles began to wonder if their invention was patentable.
“There are a lot of different solar ovens out there,” Martinez-Welles said. “I wasn’t sure if ours was different enough to copyright.”
Over the last year, however, Martinez-Welles came to realize she and her co-inventor might have something unique. They were encouraged by Arizonan Barbara Kerr, a leading researcher in solar cooking, who praised the oven’s beehive door. The unique design of the door allows less air to escape than other designs, and allows the cook to set a stockpot inside. Paul Funk, an engineer with the U.S.D.A. Agricultural Research Service and an expert in solar cooking, also applauded the design, which is well adapted to the rigors of the Southwestern region. It has a large base and doesn’t have the solar “wings” that some designs feature—both factors contributing to design stability and making it less likely to become airborne during high winds.
The inventors also tout the oven’s sturdy design as being “rez dog-proof,” a must in a region where roaming canines would be likely to tear apart flimsier construction in search of a chance meal.
Such features helped convince the Science and Technology Corporation@UNM that the inventors did indeed have something patentable. The University began to work with Martinez-Welles and Welles on copyrighting the oven, and undertook the task of creating downloadable plans to be sold on www.foliodirect.net a site where the public can purchase technology, courseware, training materials and the like developed by personnel from UNM and other universities—a kind of eBay for universities, as it has been described. The plans were recently made available on this site for $30.
Martinez-Welles said that she and her co-inventor were mindful, as they developed the plans, to keep them simple.
“We wanted the plans to work for people with only basic skills and tools,” Martinez-Welles said. Some of the tools needed: power saw, hammer, caulking gun and a drill. Basic materials, which include plywood and either regular or tempered glass, she said, could be purchased for around $100.
“The plans are very tight—and anyone can do this,” Martinez-Welles said.
Some of the dishes that Martinez-Welles and other faculty and staff at 亚色影库allup have prepared: roasts, muttons, shrimp, breads, baked eggs, quiche, meringue and rice, as well as turkey breasts and spare ribs.
“It’s not hard to clean, everything is covered and doesn’t boil over,” Martinez-Welles said.
The oven bakes at a temperature of approximately 250 degrees, a little lower than a commercial oven, but more than adequate for a well-done repast. The inventors have tested the solar oven in various sites across the region, and have found that the intense sunlight at this elevation appears to compensate for the cooling effects of the persistent winds that blow across the Colorado desert plateau.
So what are the drawbacks? Well, on a rainy day, you might have to make alternative plans for cooking – but as folks in Dinetah and Zuniland know, that’s usually not an issue after monsoon season finishes.
For more information on how to obtain plans for this solar oven, contact Jean Martinez-Welles at 863-7515.
Achieving the Dream Initiatives Update
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release: August 11, 2006
GALLUP---It’s been more than two years since the Lumina Foundation approved a grant for $400,000 to implement institutional change at the University of New Mexico-Gallup through its Achieving the Dream initiative. Over those two years, the college has launched several initiatives designed to increase the success of underserved students.
Targeting students in high school has been one of the college’s primary goals. High school/college articulation workshops were held last year, and among the goals established was that of dual enrollment, whereby students can start working on college courses while in high school.
COMPASS tests were also introduced in local high schools, so that students can take the tests earlier and discover what kinds of courses they need to take, and what areas they might need extra preparation for.
“That way, they won’t use up all their financial aid taking transitional courses, and then can enter into college courses more rapidly,” said Chris Marlow, dean of instruction and the administrator in charge of implementing change with Lumina funds.
Thus far, two college courses are being offered in local high schools, with plans for more as qualified adjunct faculty are identified locally. There are already signed agreements with two school districts – Zuni and Gallup-McKinley County—and two private high schools.
The college is currently accepting applications for an Achieving the Dream coordinator, whose duties will include overseeing dual enrollment.
Another initiative, instituted this past summer, was a “Lobo Camp” in Zuni. Ten students, who were either high school graduates, in high school, or had taken their GED tests, took college success courses, plus math and English for college credit, and also took the COMPASS test. The tuition was waived, and all the students had to pay was an application fee.
Marlow hopes to expand this pilot project to the Gallup campus next year.
Lumina funds also helped launch a much-appreciated culture series, consisting of four events that were specifically targeted for the college’s largely Native American student population. Those who appeared in the series were actor/physician Evan Adams, the musical group Ulali, psychologist Terry Tafoya, and guitarist John Siqueiros.
“We saw this as a way of engaging students and getting them to connect more closely with the campus,” Marlow said. “Surveys and data had shown the students didn’t feel very connected with the campus and we think this has helped.” The series will be repeated next year.
The establishment of learning communities, which was started with funds from other grants, is being further supported with funds from AtD. Learning communities are groups of 25 students with similar academic goals who study together and give each other support as they learn. Lumina funds have also provided an enhanced faculty development series, focusing on improving teaching.
As a reward for being on the college’s Dean’s List, 亚色影库allup recently awarded students a voucher for $50 – with funds from Lumina -- to use at the bookstore. Each student was also recognized with a personal letter and certificate.
The Lumina grant will be in place through 2009 at 亚色影库allup.
亚色影库allup 3rd in Country Among Community Colleges Graduating Native Americans with Associate's Degrees
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release: August 16, 2006
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release: August 11, 2006
GALLUP---It’s been more than two years since the Lumina Foundation approved a grant for $400,000 to implement institutional change at the University of New Mexico-Gallup through its Achieving the Dream initiative. Over those two years, the college has launched several initiatives designed to increase the success of underserved students.
Targeting students in high school has been one of the college’s primary goals. High school/college articulation workshops were held last year, and among the goals established was that of dual enrollment, whereby students can start working on college courses while in high school.
COMPASS tests were also introduced in local high schools, so that students can take the tests earlier and discover what kinds of courses they need to take, and what areas they might need extra preparation for.
“That way, they won’t use up all their financial aid taking transitional courses, and then can enter into college courses more rapidly,” said Chris Marlow, dean of instruction and the administrator in charge of implementing change with Lumina funds.
Thus far, two college courses are being offered in local high schools, with plans for more as qualified adjunct faculty are identified locally. There are already signed agreements with two school districts – Zuni and Gallup-McKinley County—and two private high schools.
The college is currently accepting applications for an Achieving the Dream coordinator, whose duties will include overseeing dual enrollment.
Another initiative, instituted this past summer, was a “Lobo Camp” in Zuni. Ten students, who were either high school graduates, in high school, or had taken their GED tests, took college success courses, plus math and English for college credit, and also took the COMPASS test. The tuition was waived, and all the students had to pay was an application fee.
Marlow hopes to expand this pilot project to the Gallup campus next year.
Lumina funds also helped launch a much-appreciated culture series, consisting of four events that were specifically targeted for the college’s largely Native American student population. Those who appeared in the series were actor/physician Evan Adams, the musical group Ulali, psychologist Terry Tafoya, and guitarist John Siqueiros.
“We saw this as a way of engaging students and getting them to connect more closely with the campus,” Marlow said. “Surveys and data had shown the students didn’t feel very connected with the campus and we think this has helped.” The series will be repeated next year.
The establishment of learning communities, which was started with funds from other grants, is being further supported with funds from AtD. Learning communities are groups of 25 students with similar academic goals who study together and give each other support as they learn. Lumina funds have also provided an enhanced faculty development series, focusing on improving teaching.
As a reward for being on the college’s Dean’s List, 亚色影库allup recently awarded students a voucher for $50 – with funds from Lumina -- to use at the bookstore. Each student was also recognized with a personal letter and certificate.
The Lumina grant will be in place through 2009 at 亚色影库allup.
GALLUP—亚色影库-Gallup Campus was ranked third in Community College Week for graduating American Indian students with Associate’s degrees for 2003-2004. 亚色影库allup graduated 122 American Indian students with Associate’s degrees, behind Diné College in Arizona with 208 graduates, and Tulsa Community College in Oklahoma with 131 graduates. 亚色影库allup was up 9 percent from the 2002-2003 total of 112 Native American graduates with Associate’s degrees.
Twenty men and 102 women graduated with Associate’s degrees from 亚色影库allup for the 2003-2004 period. The figures for this period were listed as preliminary.
The data used by Community College Week was gathered from the United States Department of Education.
The data was obtained from the U.S. Department of Education.
June 2006
Development Effort Launched
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – June 1, 2006
GALLUP—亚色影库-Gallup took its first steps toward a major campus development initiative last week when it announced the award of $150,000 to the 亚色影库allup endowment at a May 24 fundraiser.
The Allen and Leone Rollie Scholarship Fund was established by the children of the Rollies, all of whom have long-time associations with the Gallup community. The fund will benefit the 亚色影库allup Nursing Program by awarding scholarships to students selected by the 亚色影库allup Nursing Program chair. Participating in the agreement between the family and 亚色影库allup were Charles and Arlene Rollie High, Karen Rollie Head, Margaret Bell, and Dr. Allen Rollie High II.
The gift was announced at the fundraiser by UNM Vice President of Development Mike Carroll, who is also the President of the UNM Foundation.
“Our campus is delighted to receive this gift, which represents the largest cash gift ever given to 亚色影库allup,” said Beth Miller, executive director of 亚色影库allup. “The Rollie family has been an integral part of this community for decades and their support of improved health care in our region is well known. This gift enables our nursing program to continue to bring in talented local students who will apply their training here in their home territory.”
The May 24 fundraiser, held in Gurley Hall Commons, was the first of what is to be an ongoing effort by the Community Affairs Department to both keep the community informed about development at 亚色影库allup, and to seek support.
May 2006
Lobo Days Set June 12-15
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
GALLUP— Start early and start smart—registering for Fall ‘06 classes, that is. 亚色影库allup is offering students the chance to do just through Lobo Days, scheduled June 12-15 from 1 to 6 p.m. The college will waive admission fees, and will offer advisement, enrollment and financial aid assistance, as well as refreshments for enrolling students, raffles and prizes, and entertainment. Among the prizes to be raffled off will be tuition for five classes each day.
Some of the entertainers lined up during the week are JJ Wright on guitar, Rusty Strings bluegrass group, Redfeather Drumming Group, Back Porch Band, and Las Auras Desiertos, a Spanish music group.
In addition, several workshops for parents of college-bound students will be offered in Gurley Hall, Room 1124, with discussion of the Dineh Tradition vs. College, and the Family Educational Rights Privacy Act, and other topics. The times for the workshops are as follows: June 12, 2-4 p.m.; June 13, 11:40-1 p.m.; June 14, 10 a.m.-noon; and June 15, 2-4 p.m.
In addition, the 亚色影库allup Financial Aid Office will assist students in one-on-one sessions to complete the 2005-2006 FAFSA form in Gurley Hall 1154. Students should bring their 2005 Federal Income Tax forms, 2005 W2 Forms, other documentation regarding income for 2005, such as Social Security and unemployment information, AFDC/Public Assistance information, as well as Federal PIN numbers. If all documents are in order and you require financial aid, you will be able to complete your registration during Lobo Days.
Call 863-7663 for more information about Financial Aid, or 863-7671 for more information about Lobo Days.
April 2006
- April 13 - SBDC Workshop on Working With the Government
- April 24 - Programs on Dangers of Meth Slated
- April 26 - Courses Designed to Help Teachers' Aides Comply With NCLF
SBDC Workshop on Working With the Government
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release - April 13, 2006
亚色影库 Small Business Development Center will host a free workshop on “Contracting With the Government” on Tuesday, April 18, from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Code Talker Room of the Chamber of Commerce building, 103 W. Highway 66.
The workshop will teach participants how to become involved in the public procurement process, working with the world’s largest market of goods and services.
For more information call 722-2220.
Programs on Dangers of Meth Slated
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release -- April 24, 2006
GALLUP—Methamphetamine awareness will be highlighted at the University of New Mexico-Gallup on Thursday, May 4, from 9-11 a.m. in Calvin Hall 248, Rooms A & B. Lt. Frank “Moose” Musitano of the New Mexico State Police Narcotics Section will speak about the hazards of meth labs, which are commonly set up and run by persons without laboratory training.
The program is sponsored by the Navajo Health Education Program—Gallup Service Unit and the 亚色影库allup Student Senate.
Any organization who wishes to set up a table in association with this program may do so by contacting Alvin Harvey of the 亚色影库allup Student Senate at 409.9595, or by email at alvin.harvey2@us.army.mil.
Or call the Student Senate at 86307553 for more information.
Refreshments will be served.
Courses Designed to Help Teachers' Aides Comply With NCLF
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release: August 16, 2006
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release: August 11, 2006
GALLUP---It’s been more than two years since the Lumina Foundation approved a grant for $400,000 to implement institutional change at the University of New Mexico-Gallup through its Achieving the Dream initiative. Over those two years, the college has launched several initiatives designed to increase the success of underserved students.
Targeting students in high school has been one of the college’s primary goals. High school/college articulation workshops were held last year, and among the goals established was that of dual enrollment, whereby students can start working on college courses while in high school.
COMPASS tests were also introduced in local high schools, so that students can take the tests earlier and discover what kinds of courses they need to take, and what areas they might need extra preparation for.
“That way, they won’t use up all their financial aid taking transitional courses, and then can enter into college courses more rapidly,” said Chris Marlow, dean of instruction and the administrator in charge of implementing change with Lumina funds.
Thus far, two college courses are being offered in local high schools, with plans for more as qualified adjunct faculty are identified locally. There are already signed agreements with two school districts – Zuni and Gallup-McKinley County—and two private high schools.
The college is currently accepting applications for an Achieving the Dream coordinator, whose duties will include overseeing dual enrollment.
Another initiative, instituted this past summer, was a “Lobo Camp” in Zuni. Ten students, who were either high school graduates, in high school, or had taken their GED tests, took college success courses, plus math and English for college credit, and also took the COMPASS test. The tuition was waived, and all the students had to pay was an application fee.
Marlow hopes to expand this pilot project to the Gallup campus next year.
Lumina funds also helped launch a much-appreciated culture series, consisting of four events that were specifically targeted for the college’s largely Native American student population. Those who appeared in the series were actor/physician Evan Adams, the musical group Ulali, psychologist Terry Tafoya, and guitarist John Siqueiros.
“We saw this as a way of engaging students and getting them to connect more closely with the campus,” Marlow said. “Surveys and data had shown the students didn’t feel very connected with the campus and we think this has helped.” The series will be repeated next year.
The establishment of learning communities, which was started with funds from other grants, is being further supported with funds from AtD. Learning communities are groups of 25 students with similar academic goals who study together and give each other support as they learn. Lumina funds have also provided an enhanced faculty development series, focusing on improving teaching.
As a reward for being on the college’s Dean’s List, 亚色影库allup recently awarded students a voucher for $50 – with funds from Lumina -- to use at the bookstore. Each student was also recognized with a personal letter and certificate.
The Lumina grant will be in place through 2009 at 亚色影库allup.
GALLUP—亚色影库-Gallup Campus was ranked third in Community College Week for graduating American Indian students with Associate’s degrees for 2003-2004. 亚色影库allup graduated 122 American Indian students with Associate’s degrees, behind Diné College in Arizona with 208 graduates, and Tulsa Community College in Oklahoma with 131 graduates. 亚色影库allup was up 9 percent from the 2002-2003 total of 112 Native American graduates with Associate’s degrees.
Twenty men and 102 women graduated with Associate’s degrees from 亚色影库allup for the 2003-2004 period. The figures for this period were listed as preliminary.
The data used by Community College Week was gathered from the United States Department of Education.
The data was obtained from the U.S. Department of Education.
March 2006
- March 9 -'Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest' Includes Works of Ten Artists
- March 16 - Esther Belin to Read Poetry
'Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest' Includes Works of Ten Artists
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release March 9, 2006
GALLUP--“Bodies in Motion, Bodies at Rest,” the latest show on view at the Ingham Chapman Gallery at the University of New Mexico-Gallup, represents the work of 10 artists now or formerly affiliated with UNM-Main’s graduate art program. The figurative pieces on exhibit (were created in a variety of mediums.)
“We want to acquaint people with work coming out of main campus,” Jeff Beekman, coordinator of the gallery program, said.
“Muley Point,” a large oil painting by Rory Coyne, a graduate of UNM’s Land Arts program, tells the story of an arrival to a camp site above Monument Valley. It is representative of the works that have come from Land Arts, a collaboration between UNM and the University of Texas at Austin. Land Arts requires the students to travel together over a semester, exploring the diversity of the Southwest. Student artists from UNM have traveled from the ruins of Chaco Canyon, to the pueblo of Acoma, Mata Ortiz in Mexico, Spiral Jetty, to the VLA and Lightning Fields. Packing their own materials, they either create the work on site or bring back work to finish in the studio. Often the program requires rigorous physical exertion, hiking to remote sites, and working in solitude for several days. Beekman, for instance, spent some of his time in the program studying with a famous potter from Acoma.
Mary Goodwin, whose work has appeared in Art in America, turned her car into a camera obscura by covering it with a black tarp with a tiny hole cut in it. What is presented here is an image of someone looking in the window, seated outside, as well as mementoes hanging from the rearview mirror, adding to the visual interest and emotional impact of the piece.
Justin Lane, a graduate student at UNM, is known for his studio pieces. The work on view is a color photograph of a largely black and white space, making use of low-tech effects with dramatic lighting. A white-clothed man slips into the blackness of Outer Space, clutching a woman dressed in black who is barely able to hold on herself. This surreal scene, although straightforward, also
Erika Osborne’s “Manti-La Sal Spruce Beetle Detection 1 and 2” and her “Drawing of a Spruce” (tree) are three interrelated pieces whose intentions are best revealed through their interaction. The first two are almost life-sized digital prints of a girl’s figure integrated into a topographical map, showing the annual invasiveness of the spruce beetle. Osborne, an environmentalist, literally adds a human presence to the infestation, which both suggests a compassionate viewing of the crisis and also highlights how climate changes due to human intervention have aided this insect’s devastating march through the Southwest. Carefully integrated into the digital prints are the actual coordinates of the spruce tree illustrated in the accompanying drawing.
“Weightless” by Megan Jacobs, a lithographed Xerox transfer, is a work that illustrates this Georgia Southern University professor’s fascination with the body. Almost Buddhist in approach, this ephemeral, floating work seems to contend that the spiritual and bodily are not as easily divisible as we often pretend. Still, the cropped head and off-center orientation of the figure creates a sense of uneasiness that complicates any easy reading of the work. This piece was done with the help of the prestigious Tamarind Institute– an internationally recognized center for fine art lithography that trains master printers, engages in teaching and research, and houses a professional collaborative studio for invited artists from all over the world. UNM has cultivated a special relationship with Tamarind, where UNM has agreed to house its substantial and impressive archive, and Tamarind allows UNM artists to apply to a special program which allows them to experience what a world class print studio can provide.
Todd Anderson, a printmaking professor at Southern Illinois University, brings a wry sense of humor and a highly refined style of drawing to this exhibit. Though normally a committed printmaker, the works shown are watercolors from this “Desert Survival Series,” and patterned as if they are images from a manual, showing the same figure in various situations of desert survival. This potentially dark subject matter is presented with a humorous edge, as the titles suggest: Traveling When No Help Will Come, Signaling with a Mirror To Call Down Planes, Procuring Water.
Tracy Stuckey’s work takes a dark look at how the body can be commodified, made material, and ultimately consumed. In a previous series he carried out this theme by painting headless and limbless mannequins as marbleized meat, which he then photographed and presented to viewers in poses and settings that directly reference a J Crew catalogue. Here he offers a large oil painting called “Body and Table.” The nude figure lies on his side on what appears to be a metal table. The head is cropped and the body’s position renders it lifeless. The high-contrast colors of the body give it a meat-like aspect, and the composition – which crams the body into the bottom third of the canvas, leaves the top two-thirds a sickly pale, institutional green that seems to weigh down heavily on the figure. Tracy, who along with wife Erika Osborne, runs the Wilderness Studio Program for UNM, seeks to bring artists out of the studio and into the landscape as a subject and site for art making.
Karl Hofmann, a first year graduate student, creates colorful, complicated works that explore perspectives of time, space, and narrative through a combination of painting and drawing. In these images one can find images of geese, ambiguous text, police officers, and geometric blocks of pure color, all coming together to create very dense and interesting compositions. Hofmann’s use of often iconographic imagery, intuitive shapes, and pattern create stimulating visual experiences that unfold for the viewer with careful attention.
The body of Eloisa Guanlao’s canoe is hand-carved from a single piece of wood in the Hawaiian style of building. Guanlao, who is Filipino, decorated the surface of her canoe, with etched and sculpted images that come from multiple sources. Included are dancing Filipino women, a tortoise referencing the Oceanic model of the universe, trilobite fossils, scarabs, Feynman diagrams pulled from quantum physics, and Greek, Hawaiian and artist-created constellations of jeeps and jet fighters. The canoe, which Guanlao has actually used with an outrigger, directly speaks to the current situation in the Philippines, but through its specificity also speaks more broadly to the presence of hybridity throughout the world today. Imbedded in the bow of her canoe, Guanlao has also built a functioning astrolabe.
David Leigh, one of the co-founders of the innovative Donkey Gallery in Albuquerque, the gallery director at the College of Santa Fe, and current solo exhibitor at the prestigious Klaudia Marr Gallery in Santa Fe, has three drawings on view at the Ingham Chapman Gallery. These represent well his drawing skill and showcase his willingness to embrace intuitive processes. Often the term “intuitive” has been used as an excusatory phrase for artists whom are unwilling or unable to discuss how they generate their work, but in Leigh’s case this term is appropriate, as it speaks to the non-discriminatory nature of his process. Absurd, dark, comical – the act of drawing, of laying down lines and images, juxtaposing (for example) a beautifully rendered and faintly drawn Revolutionary War uniform with an overdrawing of a ridiculous string of graphically presented hot dogs, trailing horizontally across the paper, one gets the sense that he is as surprised by this combination as we the viewers are. Though potentially disarming, the goal of his work has nothing to do with shocking the viewer or himself, but rather reflects Leigh’s faith in free association, that this practice can ultimately be self-revelatory.
Larry Bob Phillips, another UNM graduate student, is also a co-founder of Donkey Gallery. His colored pencil and pen drawing in this show present an elaborate network of ideas, seemingly confused and crowded as if the ideas are mutating as the artist works, but yielding organization the more the viewer studies it. One image breaks down and merges into another, all the while leading the viewer to different spaces—an underground area, where monsters seem poised to break forth from the floor and into the mid-ground of plants and cathedral-like arches that push the eye further upward, but that has also been invaded by eyes and noses so that the boundaries between architecture and living matter become unclear. The “psychedelic” work of the ‘60s comes to mind, but the work typically coming out of this genre doesn’t adequately express this drawing’s sophistication.
The show will be on view through April 14. There will be a panel discussion with Megan Jacobs, David Leigh, Tracey Stuckey, and talk by some of the artists on March 16, at 6 p.m. in the gallery, with refreshments provided. The public is welcome to attend.
Gallery hours are Monday, Tuesday, and Friday 9 A.M. – 5 P.M., Wednesday 9 A.M. – 12:30 P.M., and Thursday 9 A.M. – 6 P.M. The gallery is located in Gurley Hall, 200 College Road. Call 863-7774 for more information.
Esther Belin to Read Poetry
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release March 16, 2006
GALLUP—Diné poet Esther Belin will read from her work on Thursday, March 30, at 7 p.m. in the Ingham Chapman Gallery on the University of New Mexico-Gallup campus. Belin’s collection of poetry, From the Belly of My Beauty, is published by the University of Arizona Press. The reading, sponsored by the 亚色影库allup Cultural Arts Council, is free and open to the public.
February 2006
- February 8 - Late 亚色影库allup Prof's Dictionary of Navajo Verbs To Be Published in May
- February 16 - Automated Human Model Enhances Learning Process for Nursing Students
- February 22- Legislature Approves $2.5 Million of College's Fund Requests
- February 28- Dual Enrollment Initiated at 亚色影库allup
Late 亚色影库allup Prof's Dictionary of Navajo Verbs To Be Published in May
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release February 8, 2006
The Navajo/English Dictionary of Verbs by Alyse Neundorf, the late 亚色影库allup professor of linguistics, is to be published in May by the University of New Mexico Press. The dictionary provides conjugations for almost 60 percent of all Navajo verbs with English translations. It is arranged in alphabetical order by the verb roots in Navajo and sample sentences of each verb are included as separate listings.
Alyse Goodluck Neundorf, who died in 2004, was a teacher, linguist, interpreter, artist, writer and a former Miss Navajo. This work on the Navajo verb was the last of her many contributions in the field of Navajo linguistics.
The dictionary lists 350 Navajo verbs in paradigm form, conjugated for the imperfective, perfective and future modes. According to a foreword to the dictionary by UNM Professor Emeritus of Linguistics Robert Young, Neundorf intended the work be used both by students of Navajo and teachers of the language.
Neundorf received her Ph.D. in linguistics from the University of New Mexico and devoted her career to the study and teaching of her native Navajo language. She taught at 亚色影库allup until her death in 2004.
The dictionary is available from the 亚色影库allup Bookstore, or from UNM Press, 1601 Randolph Road SE, Suite 200S, Albuquerque, NM 87106, (800) 249-7737, as is a previous published work, A Navajo/English Bilingual Dictionary: Álchíní Bi Naaltsoostsoh.
Automated Human Model Enhances Learning Process for Nursing Students
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release - February 16, 2006
Training for a nursing career has many stresses, but one of the greatest undoubtedly occurs those first few times a student performs procedures on a living human. Taking blood pressure, drawing blood, catheterizing an individual—all can be nerve-wracking to the novice, as well as painful to the patient.
But that’s where SimMan comes in. He—or rather it—is a $30,000 automated model human now in residence in 亚色影库allup’s Nursing Program. Life size, he can be programmed to simulate a wide range of human ills, from high blood pressure to pneumonia to Crohn’s disease. He can also be changed from a he to a she, depending on what the course of study for the day is. Students insert chest tubes, give an injection, perform a catheterization, take blood pressure and pulse, perform an EKG, and a host of other functions. The programmer can cause SimMan’s condition to deteriorate so students can gain familiarity in dealing with a code situation.
Students can listen to heart sounds, bowel sounds and lung sounds. The latter even comes with the presence of detectable CO2. They can learn to perform intubation, and study varied problems such as obstruction of the throat, decreased cervical range of motion, decreased ability to breathe, stomach distension or cardiac arrhythmia.
All this and he can talk too—or rather be programmed to talk as either a man or a woman, depending on the scenario the instructor wants to present.
“The students love it,” said Kathy Head, chair of the nursing program. “They like working on a human model without the worry of harming a real patient.”
That said, the students can get very involved with the procedures—almost as if SimMan were a real patient.
Legislature Approves $2.5 Million of College's Fund Requests
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For Release February 22, 2006
The support of area legislators proved a boon to the University of New Mexico-Gallup, as the 2006 Legislative session drew to a close. Elizabeth Miller, executive director of the college, reported on Friday that the Legislature had supported 亚色影库allup by approving $2,532,500 of the $2,847,000 requested by the college.
Miller and other administrators and faculty from the college spent a good many hours in Santa Fe recently, in an attempt to persuade the Legislature to fund the following: $750,000 for a Technical Center and classrooms; approval of a request for $2 million to be placed on the statewide General Obligation Bond election; $47,500 to fund efforts to preserve and appraise the Gallup Ceremonial Archives, now stored at the college; and $50,000 to go toward a program to bring noted speakers to the Gallup area.
What the college got was broken down as follows:
From SB 415, State Agency Expenditures, $37,500 for the Speaker’s Bureau;
From HB 622, Taxation and Revenue, $445,000 for technical center and classrooms; and $50,000 for Ceremonial archives;
And from SB 301, approval of a request for $2 million for a technical center to be placed on the Capital Projects GO Bond election.
Miller thanked local legislators for their support in the various committees, mentioning Rep. Patti Lundstrom, District 9 Representative; Rep. Irvin Harrison, District 5; Sen. Lidio Rainaldi, District 4; Sen. John Pinto, District 3; Sen. Leonard Tsosie, District 22; and Rep. Ken Martinez, District 69, and Rep. George Hanosh, District 6, of Cibola County, as being influential.
Dual Enrollment Initiated at 亚色影库allup
亚色影库ALLUP NEWS RELEASE
For release February 28, 2006
Dual enrollment, a new program at the University of New Mexico-Gallup, is among several topics that will be discussed at a meeting of the McKinley Area Education Consortium on Thursday, March 2, at 6 p.m. in the Director’s Conference Room in Gurley Hall.
Dual enrollment allows high schools to offer students college credit for high school courses. The New Mexico Department of Education has recently announced that schools may award both high school and college credit for the same course. (It differs from another program at 亚色影库allup, concurrent enrollment, which offers no high school credit.)
To participate in dual enrollment, instructors must meet 亚色影库allup’s credential requirements, and courses must follow the college’s syllabus and standards. School districts must agree to the program requirements in writing.
“Benefits to students are they can earn college credit hours before high school graduation, and ease their transition to college level expectations,” said Maggie Mansueto, coordinator of the program.
Other topics to be discussed at the meeting on Thursday will be financial literacy and planning.
Participants in the consortium include superintendents and board members of all local schools, including Gallup McKinley County, Zuni, Cathedral Wingate BIA and Rehoboth.
Mansueto will discuss dual enrollment at 6:05 p.m. Moderator Tim Karpoff will lead a discussion on an action plan for Financial Literacy 101 at 6:25 p.m. The meeting will adjourn at 8 p.m.
For more information, contact Maggie Mansueto at 863-7651, or the Executive Director’s office at 863-7519.