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Cover President's Column Alumni/Friends Profiles Center Spread 
Campus/Sports Foundation/Development Aggie News Back Page
Back Issues


 
FROM THE PRESIDENT
Dr. Jay Gogue

The Southern New Mexico ENLACE program, which you will see featured elsewhere in this issue of Aggie Panorama, is an innovative initiative that holds great promise for reducing dropout rates among our Hispanic students. An important aspect of this new program is its collaborative approach, engaging the university, the public schools, the business community and students and their parents in efforts to improve the higher education prospects of Hispanic youth.

It occurred to me, as I thought about this new program and how it complements others at New Mexico State University, that we are involved in outreach programs that address educational needs at all levels, from preschool to the doctoral level.

At one end, our College of Education sponsors the Head Start program in Dona Ana County, which last year received a perfect rating from a federal review team. At the other end is the New Mexico Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate, a collaboration headed by our Graduate School that aims to triple the number of science, mathematics and engineering doctorates awarded to minority students in New Mexico.

In between are a number of programs with very successful track records. For more than 25 years, New Mexico State has been preparing minority students for research or medical careers through the Minority Biomedical Research Support pro-gram funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Another proven program is the Ronald E. McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement Program, which prepares first-generation college students or students from under-represented groups for doctoral study.

Unique to New Mexico State is a program called Generaciones, a mother-daughter program for fifth-grade Hispanic girls that aims at keeping these young students in school through high school and college.

Our latest initiative is a collaboration of the College of Agriculture and Court Youth Center in Las Cruces. The Hotel, Restaurant and Tourism program, with a $370,000 federal grant, is developing a “community cocina” for a culinary arts program.

Looking Good

New Mexico State University is showcasing its students, faculty, programs and campus in the 2002-2003 Viewbook, the
university’s primary undergraduate recruiting publication. The Viewbook is designed by Ronnie Garver, ’97, and edited by
Bernadette Smyth, ’98, who as a team won a national Gold Award from the Council for the Advancement and Support of
Education for the 2001-2002 Viewbook. Each year the Viewbook is distributed to high school juniors and seniors throughout
New Mexico. Alumni can request copies for themselves and students they know by calling the Admissions Office at (505) 646-
3121 or (800) 662-6678, or by sending an e-mail to admissions@nmsu.edu.

Missing Classmates

During Homecoming 2001, set for Oct. 11-13, the Class of 1961 with celebrate its 40th reunion. Over the years,
NMSU has lost contact with many members of the class. If you have information on any of the Aggies listed below,
please contact the Alumni Association at (505) 646-3616 or e-mail alumni@nmsu.edu.

Adams, Richard Locke
Alexander, Samuel Carlton
Allawi, Ibrahim Naji
Allen, Orion Conley
Anderson, Gloria Battenfield
Bannister, Margaret Gibson
Barbazette, John Harry
Bennett, Thomas Harry
Berger, Sybil Collett
Berry, Robert Allen
Brooks, Jack Murl
Canaday, Adison McKinsley
Clark, Roberta Spragg
Collier, Edward Lawrence
Cox, Patricia Laturner
Davis, Patricia McClernon
Dax, Raymond Edwin
DeCillis, Philip Edward
Dittmer, Leo Franklin
Donaldson, David F.
Donaldson, Virginia Perkins
Edwards, Jasin W.
Eubank, Ronald H.
Gallegos, Carlos Antonio
Garcia, Lawrence Eugene
Garcia, Silas E.
Gehlhaar, Heinz Guenter
Gilbert, James Jerald
Gilbreth, Lee Edward
Godfrey, Gordy Thatcher
Gonzales, Maria Amadita
Greene, Brook Alexander
Hack, Alice Ruth Jose
Heiber, Arnold
Herlihy, William Foster
Hernandez, Lenore Yow
Hill, Dale Runyan
Hill, Joe Charles
Hughes, Amelia Rundell
Hughes, Frank Allen Jr.
Jareed, Ali Omran
Jordan, William Gerald
Kassner, Bernita Deaton
Klopfer, Paul
Lake, Rita Edith Romero
Lane, Betty McDonald
Lawry, Joanne Tannich
Leven, Andrew Aloysius
Lewis, Barbara
Lowe, John William
Ludwig, Ernest Richard
Marko, Stanley
Martinez, Lydia Elvira
Martinez, Robert Anthony
Mayfield, Irene Frances Knox
McBeath, Pearl Marcia Loebenstein
McCravy, George
McWhorter, Joe Benjamin
Menges, William Arment
Methvin, David Hall
Miera, Antonio
Miller, Wayne Leon
Minzenmayer, William August
Moses, Charles Custis
Mouser, Daine Poeter
Nichols, Carney Dale
Overmier, David Kirk
Perez, Ernest R.
Perry, William Estus
Pierce, James Frank
Powey, Adelaide Majorie
Pratt, Johnny M.
Prentiss, Charles P.
Price, Betty Jean McDonald
Putzi, Roger
Ramadhan, Mohammad
Abulugma
Riley, Hubert
Rivera, Rosendo Robert
Robinson, Gerald Charles
Rosenburg, Harold Zachary
Sanchez, Patricia Nunez
Sedor, Donald Gerald
Seefeld, Betty McNatt
Seibel, Lovita May
Siddall, Burton Eugene
Simms, Sue Jean
Sims, James Rae
Smith, Betty Meek
Smith, Murlene Harris
Smith, Samuel Harrison
Snooks, Thomas Earl
Snyder, Walter Allen
Solomon, Jack Manuel
Streeter, David
Stromberg, Jon
Sullivan, John Thomas
Szema, Li-Chieh
Taylor, Joy Brown
Taylor, Lyle Herman
Thomas, Edwin Charles
Thomas, Homer Downing
Thurman, Donald Hendricks
Tigner, James Garrett
Tinsley, Ronald Gene
Todd, Robert L.
Tucker, Thomas Clifford
Usner, Arthur Anthony
Vaughn, Mary De Long
Vojkovich, John Gasper
Walker, Joan Stewart
Ward, Rex A.
Washburn, Lelia Williams
Whisman, Ermil Lee
White, Leta Fern Cooper
Williams, Joanna Mae
Winn, Carroll Foster
Womack, Sally Gandy
Young, William Lawson

Letters to the Editor

We encourage letters related to issues discussed in Aggie Panorama and issues  that relate to university news or policies. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Mail, fax  (505-646-2099) or e-mail (rpopp@nmsu.edu) letters to the editor. We also seek NMSU historical  photos and recent photos from Aggie gatherings. 

On the Cover

A Western Siberian Khanty man, dressed for a winter hunt, is superimposed on the hot, dry landscape of New Mexico’s White Sands National Monument. See pages 6-7 for an account of English Professor Andrew Wiget’s work with the indigenous Khanty.



Panorama table of contents
Cover President's Column Alumni/Friends Profiles Center Spread 
Campus/Sports Foundation/Development Aggie News Back Page
Back Issues

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