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Bill Lockhart, Assistant Professor
New Mexico State University at Alamogordo
Curriculum Vitae
Education
University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, Texas
Dates of attendance: August 1991-May 1995
Thesis: By a Single Stroke of the Enumerator's Pen: The Demographic
History of San Elizario, Texas, 1841-1920.
B.A., Summa cum laude, 1993
M.A., Summa cum laude, 1995
Academic Emphasis
Graduate, Sociology (History Minor)
Demography, El Paso Area History
Sociological Methods
Undergraduate, Anthropology/Sociology
Historic and Prehistoric Archaeology
Ethnography
Sociological/Anthropological/Archaeological Theory
Sociological and archaeological Methods
Academic Employment History
Aug 1997-present Faculty - New Mexico State University at Alamogordo.
Full-time, tenure track teaching position (tenured 2003), teaching various
classes in sociology. Faculty sponsor - Social Science Club.
Thomas Orf.
Aug 1996-1998 Instructor - Park College, Holloman AFB. Taught
upper-division classes: Minority Group Relations, SO 315, Behavioral
Research Methods, SO 305, Computers and Society, CS 300, and Sociology
of World Religion, SO 390. Peggy McCoy-Emerson.
Aug 1996-Dec 1996 Instructor - New Mexico State University at Alamogordo.
Taught four sections of Introductory Sociology, SOC 101G, Social
Problems, SOC 201, and Cultural Diversity in Health Care, SOC 275.
Mary Waller.
Jun 1996-Aug 1996 Archaeologist in Mission Trail Project, Ysleta, Socorro,
and San Elizario, Texas. Duties include planning, preparation, and
execution of all phases of survey; supervision of survey/excavation crews;
glass artifact and other analysis; writing reports. Dr. John Peterson.
Jun 1996-Jul 1996 Instructor - University of Texas at El Paso.
Taught Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 3102. Cheryl Howard.
Mar 1996-May 1996 Instructor - University of Texas at El Paso.
Taught two sections of Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, ANTH 3102
as fill-in for second half of semester. Howard Daudistal.
Aug 1995-Dec 1995 Instructor - New Mexico State University at Alamogordo.
Taught Introductory Sociology, SOC 101G. Mary Waller.
Jun 1995-Aug 1995 Crew Chief for University of Texas at El Paso archaeological
field school at San Elizario, Texas. Duties included presentations
to classes, local tourist groups, and visiting professionals; teaching
excavation techniques to students; supervising student work; glass artifact
analysis; analysis of a nineteenth century forge; and writing reports.
Dr. John A. Peterson.
Jun 1995 Instructor - El Paso Community College. Taught
Introductory Sociology, SOC 3101 during Summer I semester. Dr. Roméo
Di Benedetto & Saul Candelas.
Sep 1994-May 1995 Teaching Assistant, University of Texas at El Paso,
Department of Sociology/Anthropology. Duties include teaching, preparation
of class materials, assisting students, and grading of papers. Dr.
David Carmichael, Dr. Fernando Rodriguez, and Dr. Jaime Litvak-King.
Courses Taught at NMSU - Alamogordo
SOC 101G Introductory Sociology
SOC 201G Contemporary Social Problems
SOC 248 Special Topics - Sociology of Higher Education (formerly
Sociology of the Student Role)
SOC 248 Special Topics - Sociology of World Religion
SOC 248 Special Topics - Sociology Goes to the Movies (1-credit
hour)
SOC 258 Current Issues in Marriage and Family
SOC 262 Issues in Death and Dying
SOC 273 Sex and Gender
SOC 275 Cultural Diversity in Health Care (1-credit hour)
I. Teaching Activities
• Received consistently high student evaluations for classroom
delivery skills and course design skills.
• Showed ability to design and prepare courses through the preparation
of syllabi and course activities for catalog and special topics courses
• Received positive and unsolicited comments from students and
faculty
• Received positive assessment from administrative personnel
• Designed evaluation approaches to insure continued instructional
quality including: quality control groups (students); in-class student
evaluation; and student surveys
• Developed and implemented the concept of course-specific papers
to prevent plagiarization and improve student interest–now used in all
my sophomore classes
• Designed and maintained a faculty webpage through NMSU-A
• Received NMSU’s Rousch Award for teaching excellence
• Was listed in the 6th, 8th, and 9th editions of Who’s Who Among
America’s Teachers
• Received a Certificate of Appreciation from Holloman Air Force
Base
• Utilized computer listserves in SOC 248 (Sociology of the Student
Role) and SOC 258 (Current Issues in Marriage and Family) in which students
were required to carry on a weekly discussion of class issues.
• Created and developed a one-credit-hour course, SOC 248, Sociology
Goes to the Movies in response to an ongoing need for students who have
dropped a class and are unable to quite fulfill requirements for their
scholarships or financial aid (e.g. a student who has dropped a four-hour
class and can only attend a three-hour class during the second eight-weeks).
In the class, I discuss a sociological principle, we watch a full-length,
feature movie that illustrates the concept, then we discuss what we have
watched.
• Designed a new section on Privacy for the Social Problems course
(SOC 201G), evaluated its effectiveness, and permanently added it to the
course curriculum.
• With the help of Bob Schenk (Audio Visual Dept.), made videos
of all SOC 101G classes for use during conferences, meetings, or for possible
use in a future distance learning class.
• Increased student empowerment and independence in my SOC 248
class (The Sociology of Higher Education) by supervising individual research
projects. Each student designed his/her project from planning through
completion as the main focus of the class.
• Designed a new special topics class, Sociology Goes to the
Movies, targeting students who have dropped a class and need one extra
credit hour to maintain their scholarships and/or financial aid.
The class will use full-length feature films as a means of discussing sociological
principles.
• Developed SOC 273, Sex and Gender, a course in the catalog
but not previously offered at NMSU-A. The course was well received
by the students and provided an interesting look at an important topic
in today’s world.
• Required students in SOC 248 (Sociology of Higher Education)
and SOC 201G (Contemporary Social Problems) to participate in the TILT
program (a library literacy internet page) sponsored by the Townsend Library.
About 80% of the students found it helpful in improving their research
skills. Comments were so favorable that I plan to incorporate the
TILT into my SOC 101G (Introductory Sociology) classes.
• Utilized WebCT in SOC 248 and SOC 273 for e-mail contact and
voluntary use of the discussion board. This is part of an ongoing
experiment to see how useful WebCT will be in my classes. I plan
to experiment with various aspects of the program in my sophomore classes.
• Regularly scheduled classes for late-night time periods to
increase course availability to marginal students, especially those who
work full time during typical class hours.
• Developed and offered HON 233G concurrently with SOC 201G (Social
Problems) as one of two pilot courses to an honors program to NMSU-A.
II. Professional Service
A. To New Mexico State University at Alamogordo
• Started the Social Science Club in 1998 and supervised members
through the process of receiving recognition as a chartered organization
of NMSU-A. Continued to serve as faculty advisor, supervising field
trips and community involvement.
• Led field trips for Social Science Club members to such places
as: Three Rivers Petroglyph State Park, Fresnal Shelter (archaeological
site), Dharma Mountain Zendo (Cloudcroft), Eugene Manlove Rhodes gravesite
(White Sands MR), Southern New Mexico Correctional Center (Las Cruces),
Coulston Foundation (HAFB), Historical Mine Tour (Oro Grande), Gran Quivira
(archaeolgical site), Omnimax Theater, Siddha Yoga Meditation Center (Las
Cruces), the Evening Stroll program (White Sands), and Juárez, Mexico.
• Served on the search committee for the temporary department
head of the Department of Business, Humanities, and the Social Sciences
and for the Assistant Branch Campus Librarian.
• Served on the committee for the “Educating Students in the
New Millenium” Branch Campus Roundup. Co-produced (with Susan Frantz)
the presentations section of the program.
• Created and presented a display of Alamogordo historical soda
bottles at the Townsend Library, NMSU-A for the month of March.
• Helped to recruit high school students to NMSU-A while speaking
to classes at Alamogordo High School, Tularosa High School, and the alternative
high school at Alamogordo (program sponsored by the Social Science Club).
• Aided students in establishing peer tutoring for humanities
and social science (originally sponsored by Social Science Club and National
Education Association) and continue to serve as one of the faculty advisors.
• Served as chair of the Flower Fund Committee.
• Served as chair of the Behavioral Science Academic Excellence
Award committee.
• Served on the Social Science Cluster Evaluation Committee and
created a survey to measure student evaluation of general education courses.
• Served on the Assistant Librarian search committee that selected
Jean Strader as our new Assistant Librarian.
• Served on Jr. Faculty subcommittee for Distance Learning.
• Clipped off and shaved my 13-year-old beard in the Classroom
Building courtyard as a fund raiser for the Social Science Club
• Served as chair for the Publications Committee, Townsend Library
Local/Regional History Webpage.
• Served as chair for special committee to look into copyright
problems associated with copying backup videos by the Townsend Library.
• Served as chair of the Safety and Security Committee, including
the assessment of safety and security issues for the Faculty Office Building
and Classroom Building complex, updating the Safety and Security Manual
(including Quick Guide Reference), and ongoing assessment of campus safety
and security issues.
• Created a listserve to facilitate between-meeting communication
for members of the Safety and Security Committee.
• Served on the search committee for the Library Technician II
position for the Townsend Library (two separate searches).
• Served on search committee for the Psychology faculty position.
• Served on Social Science Cluster and created a listserve to
facilitate member communication.
• Presented a talk entitled “Just What is a Glass Artifact, and
Who Cares, Anyway.” to Vince Lombraña’s Introduction to Research
class (BIOL 241) on Friday, February 15, 2002.
• Presented talks about the social importance of folk singing
during the 1960s accompanied by singing folk songs period (accompanied
by Don Thorp) in classes conducted by Don Thorp and Dee and Larry Beck.
• Served on Sub-Committee D (Course-Level Self-Study) of the
Instructional Programs & Services for Credit Committee (sub-Committee
#7 of the NCA study).
• Served on the Student Involvement subcommittee of the Branch
Roundup Committee (2002) to promote student involvement during the conference.
Also helped as one of the “Ask Me” information people circulating at the
Roundup and sang two solos in the choir as part of the entertainment.
• Officially mentored Carrie Gleasman during her first semester
at NMSU-A.
• Presented a talk and Power Point presentation entitled “Archaeology
Along Bear Creek” at the audio-visual theater, Townsend Library, on April
9, 2003. The talk was attended by students, NMSU-A personnel, community
members, and local archaeologists.
• Presented a class for Don Thorp (MUS 101G) discussing the anthropological
aspects of music in general and specifically what sort of information about
the writer, listeners, and social groups we could learn from specific songs.
• Served as Alternate on Joint Branch Faculty Committee (including
attending meetings and voting)
• Served as a member of the Faculty Consortium Assembly.
• Served as Alternate for the Joint Branch Faculty Council (including
attending meetings).
• Facilitated a workshop entitled “The Role Gender Plays in Underprepared
Students” at the Branch Campus Roundup, August 22-23, 2003, Grants, NM.
Students.”
B. To the Community
• Served as Vice President and President of Tularosa Basin Historical
Society
• Served on the Historical Division of the Alamogordo Centennial
Committee
• Published an article "From Weigele's Pop to Coca-Cola:
The Soda Bottlers of Alamogordo, New Mexico and Their Bottles" in The Pioneer
1(3,4):1-45; and "From Barrett’s Jersey Dairy to City Dairy: Otero County
Dairies 1889 to 1977" in The Pioneer 2(3):1-22 (Journal of the Tularosa
Basin Historical Society)
• Created and presented a display of Alamogordo historical soda
bottles on exhibition from April to December 1998 and a display of historical
milk bottles and paraphernalia on display from January 1999 to August 2000
at the Tularosa Basin Historical Society Museum
• Presented a paper entitled “The Dairies of Otero County” at
the monthly meeting of the Historical Division of the Otero County Centennial
Committee, October 12, 1999
• Researched and created bottle display placards for historic
bottles at the Tularosa Basin Historical Society Museum and for the Sacramento
Mountain Museum (Cloudcroft)
• Served with Pete Eidenbach as co-editor of Volume 3 of the
Things Remembered series (started by the Alamogordo Centennial Committee,
1998). Volume 3 will be published by TBHS in 2004 (target date).
• Delivered talks to the Unitarian Universalist Church of Alamogordo
on Issues in Death and Dying on May 6, 2001 and “How Changes in Population
Will Affect You” on August 19, 2001.
• Spoke to groups of family-related offenders (August 21 and
23, 2001; June 25 and 27, 2002) at Alliance Behavioral Health Services
for Trish Pascale-Woodhill.
• Published “A Brief History of Glass Insulators” in News from
Tularosa Basin Historical Society, newsletter for Spring 2001 (Vol. 6,
Issue 2).
• Served as Chair of the Publications Committee of the Tularosa
Basin Historical Society, including the designing and implementation of
book publication.
• Set up display of historic bottles for Tularosa Basin Historical
Society Museum, June 21-26, 2002.
• Served as consultant for the development of the Bureau of Land
Management Bottle Dating Webpage, authored by Bill Lindsey. I function
as both editor and supplier of information on little-known glass dating
techniques.
• Participated, along with members of the Social Science Club,
in talking to classes at Academy del Sol (the alternative high school)
about college in general, the social sciences, and NMSU-A, October 24,
2003.
• Spoke to a group of alcoholics and drug addicts in treatment
at Recovery Outreach, October 30, 2003.
III. Professional Development
A. Workshops, Seminars, and Conferences Attended
2003
• Attended Branch Campus Roundup, August 22-23, 2003, Grants,
NM, and facilitated a workshop entitled “The Role Gender Plays in Underprepared
Students.”
• Attended the Jornada Mogollon Conference, October 3-4, 2003,
El Paso, Texas, and presented a paper entitled “Brewing, Beer, and Bottles
in El Paso, Texas.”
2002
• Attended “Improve Your Power Point,” a presentation on better
presentations by Al McDonald on January 25, 2002 (CTDC sponsored).
• Attended the New Mexico-Arizona Joint History Convention, in
Las Cruces, New Mexico, April 11-13, 2002, and presented a paper (co-authored
by Mike Miller) entitled “How Coke Won the (South)West: The History of
the Southwestern Coca-Cola Bottling Co.”
• Attended the 12th Mogollon Conference in Las Cruces, New Mexico,
October 17-19, 2002, and presented a paper entitled “Connections: The Interrelationship
Between Non-Alcoholic Carbonated Beverage Bottlers in New Mexico, Arizona,
and El Paso, Texas.”
• Attended Branch Campus Roundup, August 22-23, 2003, Grants,
NM, and facilitated a workshop entitled “The Role Gender Plays in Underprepared
Students.”
2001
• Attended Eva Telles’ presentation on Working in a Hostile Environment,
Supervisor Harassment, Abusive Bosses, Comp Time, and Performance Evaluations,
February 9, 2001.
• Attended the Research Paper Panel Discussion presented by the
NMSU-A English Department and sponsored by the College Teaching & Development
Committee, February 16, 2001.
• Attended the play Wit (March 3, 2001-NMSU-A Theater), a story
about the slow death from uterine cancer of a university professor.
This play provides strong emotional material for SOC 262, Issues in Death
and Dying.
• Attended Winter-Over at the South Pole Station presented by
John W. Briggs and sponsored by the College Teaching & Development
Committee, March 9, 2001.
• Attended the NMSU Branch Campus Roundup in Carlsbad, NM, September
21-22, 2001, and conducted a workshop entitled, “The Forgotten Campus Minority:
The Very Part-Time Student.”
• Attended the XII Jornada Mogollon Conference (archaeology)
in Las Cruces, New Mexico, October 12-13, 2001, and presented a paper entitled,
“The Evolution of a Southwestern Non-Carbonated Beverage Container from
El Paso, Texas, to Phoenix, Arizona.”
2000
• Attended the 2000 NISOD International Conference on teaching
& Leadership Excellence, May 28-31, 2000 in Austin, Texas
• Attended the XI Mogollon Conference, Las Cruces, New Mexico,
October 13-14, 2000 and presented a paper entitled “Lithics and Buldozers:
Mimbres Sites at the Southwest Sufi Community.”
• Attended a presentation, “Mescalero Culture and Customs” by
John Shendo, Jr. from Mescalero Apache Tribal Education, sponsored by the
College Teaching and Development Committee, August 18, 2000
• Attended a workshop on Creating Interactive Forms on the Internet,
sponsored by the NMSU-A Web Page Committee, March 24, 2000.
• Attended the seminar “The Status of Women in the U. S.: A Comparison”
sponsored by the College Teaching and Development Committee, March 10,
2000.
• Attended the Web-based Courses: Issues and Practicalities workshop,
facilitated by Sue Frantz and sponsored by the College Teaching and Development
Committee, February 11, 2000.
• Attended the Learning Styles Workshop sponsored by the College
Teaching and Development Committee, January 7, 2000.
• Attended Blackboard.com distant learning workshop (NMSU-A),
February 11, 2000.
1999
• Attended the 1999 Annual Meeting and Conference of the Historical
Society of New Mexico, April 8-10, 1999 at Alamogordo, New Mexico
• Attended the XI Jornada Mogollon Conference, Las Cruces, New
Mexico, November 11-13, 1999 and presented a paper entitled “A New Twist
for Uncapping Old Information about Glass Artifacts.”
• Attended “Come to the Mountain” Branch Roundup, sponsored by
the faculty of NMSU-Grants, August 20-21, 1999.
• Attended “Financial Strategies for a New Century,” a satellite
teleconference produced by TIAA-CREF and sponsored at NMSU-A by the Distance
Learning Office and Audio/Visual Department, October 22, 1999
• Attended the Rockhurst College Continuing Education Center
National Seminars Group's workshop entitled "Troubleshooting PC Hardware
and Softtware: Advanced Techniques," El Paso, Texas, July 14, 1999.
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Diversity and Multiculturalism on Campus," January1, 1999.
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Wills, Suits, and Probate," January 8, 1999.
• Attended the PBS Adult Learning Service broadcast of the showing
entitled “Faculty Pay in Distance Education,” shown by the Distance Learning
Office on February 23, 1999.
• Attended Web Page Authoring workshop (NMSU-A), January 11 &
15, 1999.
1998
• Attended the 31st Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology,
January 6-10, 1998, at Atlanta, Georgia, and presented a paper entitled
"Glass Line Dating."
• Presented a paper in absentia at the Sixth Biennial Southwest
Symposium, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, February 7-9, 1998: "Cultural
Change and Development in the Suma Indians of Northern Chihuahua, Mexico
and the Border Areas of New Mexico and Texas, U. S. A." (Collected
papers of the conference to be published by the University of Colorado
Press, 2000-2001)
• Attended "The Transition from Prehistory to History in the
Southwest" conference, February 27-28 and March 1, 1998, and presented
a paper entitled "The Suma Indians of El Paso and Northern Chihuahua/Sonora
Mexico: A Case Study on the Need for an Interdisciplinary Approach
to the Protohistoric Period."
• Attended “Educating Students in the New Millenium” Branch Roundup,
sponsored by the faculty of NMSU-A August 1998
• Attended the Rockhurst College Continuing Education Center
National Seminars Group's workshop entitled "Troubleshooting & Maintaining
PC's," April 29-30, 1998 (1.2 CEUs)
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Writing Across the Curriculum," April 17, 1998.
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Using Humor in the Classroom," March 13, 1998
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Promoting Student Organizations," February 18, 1998.
• Attended the College Teaching Committee's workshop entitled
"Master Teachers and Centennial Perspectives," January 16, 1998.
B. Professional and Local Memberships
• Member of the American Sociological Association
• Member of the Society for Historical Archaeology
• Member of the Historical Society of New Mexico
• Member of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico
• Member of the El Paso Archaeological Society
• Member of the El Paso County Historical Society
• Member (past President and Vice President) of the Tularosa
Basin Historical Society
• Member of Historical Archaeology (HISTARCH) e-mail listserve
• Member and List Owner of Glass Artifacts in Historical Archaeology
(HISTGLAS) e-mail listserve
• Member of the NMSU Hotline e-mail listserve
C. Other Professional Activities
2003
• Published “Trials, Transformations, and Takeovers: Tracking
Seventy Years of El Paso Bottling History through Nehi, Seven-Up, and Canada
Dry.” Password 48(2):102-111 [2003].
• Published “Trials, Transformations, and Takeovers: Tracking
Seventy Years of El Paso Bottling History through Nehi, Seven-Up, and Canada
Dry, Part II.” Password 48(3) [in press] [2003].
• Published “A Heart Attack on the Bottling Line: The Crystal
Beverage Co., Alamogordo, New Mexico.” The Soda Fizz September-October:6-9.
[2003]
• Published “The Evolution of a Southwestern Non-Carbonated Beverage
Container from El Paso, Texas, to Phoenix, Arizona.” In Archaeology
of the Jornada Mogollon: Proceedings from the 12th Jornada Mogollon Conference."
Edited by Sonia Padilla and Victor Gibbs, pp. 79-90. Geo-Marine,
Inc., El Paso. [2003]
• Published Searching for the Toolmakers: Excavations at Tipi
Heights, 2000 and 2002, a report on archaeological work conducted at the
Southwest Sufi Community, Silver City, New Mexico. [2003]
2002
• 2002 Published “Nicholson Bottling Works,” Password 47:(1):33-41.
• Published “Lithics and Bulldozers: A Look at Mimbres Sites
of the Southwest Sufi Community, in Mogollon Archaeology: Collected Papers
from the Eleventh Mogollon Conference, 37-65, COAS Publishing and Research,
Las Cruces, New Mexico, 2002.
2001
• Published “John Corbett, New Mexico Soda Bottler (1881-1918)”
in the May newsletter of the New Mexico Historical Bottle Society.
• Published “Magnolia Coca-Cola Bottling Company” in Password
46(2):83-98 (Journal of the El Paso County Historical Society).
• As part of a Q+ project, published two e-books, Just Who in
the Heck is Lula, Anyway? The Alamogordo, New Mexico, Carbonated Beverage
Industry and Its Bottles and You Can Whip Our Cream, But You Can't Beat
Our Milk: The Dairies of Otero County, New Mexico, 1889 to 1977 through
the Townsend Library, NMSU-A in both .htm and .pdf file formats.
Both e-books may be viewed free at the Local/Regional History Webpage http://alamo.nmsu.edu/library/lochistory.html
• To complete the Q+ project, I created a CD-ROM disk with both
e-books in .pdf format, including legal copies of Adobe Reader on each
disk and a self-opening file with instructions for viewing that automatically
appears upon insertion of the CD in a player.
• Published “A New Twist Uncapping Old Information About Glass
Artifacts” in Jornada Mogollon Archaeology: Collected Papers from the Eleventh
Jornada Mogollon Conference, edited by Patrick H. Beckett, pp. 101-117,
Coas Publishing and Research, Las Cruces.
• Published “The Forge at Casa Ronquillo,” The Artifact 38:21-41.
(Journal of the El Paso Archaeological Society) [Note: this publication
has a 2000 date, but it was just published during October 2001]
2000
• Facilitated a roundtable discussion entitled “Class-Specific
Papers: A Good Way to Avoid Cheating at the Branch Campus Roundup, October
6-7, 2000, Las Cruces, New Mexico.
• Attended Introduction to Psychology, PSY 201, at NMSU-A, taught
by Susan Frantz, Spring Semester 2000 (Audit).
• Published “Cache or Trash? Glass Artifacts from the Senate
Office Building Privy” in The State Office Building Archaeological Project:
Testing Report. Anthroplolgy Research Center, University of Texas
at El Paso, El Paso (March 13, 2000).
• Adapted a 600+ page manuscript with over 300 photographs and
tables entitled Bottles on the Border: The History and Bottles of
the Soft Drink Industry in El Paso, Texas, 1881-2000 as a web page to be
published by the Townsend Library, NMSU-A as part of a Q+ project.
To view the completed webbook, see http://alamo.nmsu.edu/~lockhart and
click on the title at the bottom of the page.
• Published an article entitled “Dating Bottles from the Southwestern
Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Deming, N. M.” in the newsletter of the New Mexico
Historical Bottle Society, December 2000.
1999
• Co-facilitated a roundtable discussion group with Sue Frantz
entitled “Beyond Lecture: Exploring the Possibilities” at “Come to the
Mountain” Branch Roundup, August 20-21, 1999.
• Published a chapter entitled “Deposition Lag in Returnable
Soda Bottles and Bottling Trends in El Paso, Texas” in Archaeology of the
Jornada Mogollon: Prodeedings from the 10th Jornada Mogollon Conference
[1997], pp. 157-169, edited by Michael Stowe and Mark Slaughter, Geo-Marine,
Inc., El Paso, Texas, 1999.
• Attended (for credit) Stereotyping and Prejudice, PSY 270,
at NMSU-A, taught by Susan Frantz, Spring Semester 1999. Final grade:
A.
• Attended (for credit) Introduction to Economics, ECON 201G,
at NMSU-A, taught by Danny Taylor, Fall Semester 1999. Final grade:
(expected) A
• Completed a glass artifact analysis project for the University
of Texas at El Paso’s Central Business District project, conducted by Stephen
M’Butu and wrote a chapter for their report (in press).
• Completed a glass artifact analysis project for the University
of Texas at El Paso’s Senate Office Building project, conducted by John
Peterson and wrote a chapter entitled “Cache or Trash? Glass Artifacts
from the Senate Office Building Privy” for their report.
• Completed a glass artifact analysis project undertaken by TRC
Mariah Associates, Inc. for Fort Bliss, Texas, supervised by Richard Holmes,
and wrote a chapter entitled “Dating Purple Glass: An Empirical, Experimental,
and Historical Study” for their report.
1998
• Facilitated a roundtable discussion group entitled "Empowering
Students--Where Do We Go from Here?" at the “Educating Students in the
New Millenium” Branch Roundup
• Presented a talk on Alamogordo soda bottlers and their bottles
at the March 10, 1998 meeting of the Historical Division of the Alamogordo
Centennial Committee
• Presented a talk on the soda bottlers of El Paso, Texas, at
the October 16, 1998 meeting of the Westerners Society, El Paso, Texas
• Attended (for credit) ANTH 297, From Mammoths to Missiles (prehistory
and history of the Tularosa Basin) at NMSU-A, taught by Pete Eidenbach,
Spring Semester 1998. Final grade: A.
• Published "Woodlawn Bottling Company of El Paso" in Password
(Journal of the El Paso County Historical Society), 43(3):in press.143-156.
IV. Other Service
• Served as volunteer archaeologist for Southwest Sufi Community,
conducting ongoing archaeological surveys of 1900 acres, giving educational
talks on archaeology at retreats, creating site maps superimposed on aerial
photos, and conducting one-week and two-week archaeology camps for SSC
members and New Mexico students in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, and 2003.
• Wrote four ca. 50-page reports detailing the archaeological
progress from the inception of the Southwest Sufi Community in 1994 until
the beginning of the summer of 2003: People, Pithouses, and
Projectile Points: A Report on the Archaeology of the Southwest Sufi
Community, 1998; Archaeology at Bear Creek (June 1999); Archaeology at
Bear Creek (May 2000); and Searching for the Toolmakers: Excavations at
Tipi Heights, 2000 and 2002 (May 2003).
• Performed with the NMSU-A Concert Choir and as a duet with
Don Thorp at various community events in 2001-2003.
• Composed a song entitled “We’re New Mexico State,” honoring
our school in a humorous way. A jazz arrangement of the song was
performed by the NMSU-A Concert Choir at concerts during the year and as
part of our final performance on November 30, 2001.
• Performed duets with Don Thorp in the NMSU-A student/faculty
talent shows, 2001-2003, to help increase school spirit.
• Performed as a tenor with the NMSU-A Concert Choir in Vivaldi’s
Gloria on April 12 and 13, 2003, at the Johanneskirche (German Church),
Alamogordo.
• Helped support the NMSU-A student/faculty actors by attending
all school plays from 1998 to 2003.
V. Complete List of Publications
• 2003 “Trials, Transformations, and Takeovers: Tracking Seventy
Years of El Paso Bottling History through Nehi, Seven-Up, and Canada Dry.”
Password 48(2):102-111.
• 2003 “The Evolution of a Southwestern Non-Carbonated Beverage
Container from El Paso, Texas, to Phoenix, Arizona.” In Archaeology
of the Jornada Mogollon: Proceedings from the 12th Jornada Mogollon Conference."
Edited by Sonia Padilla and Victor Gibbs, pp. 79-90. Geo-Marine,
Inc., El Paso.
• 2003 “Trials, Transformations, and Takeovers: Tracking Seventy
Years of El Paso Bottling History through Nehi, Seven-Up, and Canada Dry,
Part II.” Password 48(3) [in press].
• 2002 “Lithics and Bulldozers: A Look at Mimbres Sites of the
Southwest Sufi Community, in Mogollon Archaeology: Collected Papers from
the Eleventh Mogollon Conference, 37-65, COAS Publishing and Research,
Las Cruces, New Mexico.
• 2002 “Nicholson Bottling Works,” Password 47:(1):33-41.
• 2001 “A New Twist Uncapping Old Information About Glass Artifacts.”
In Jornada Mogollon Archaeology: Collected Papers from the Eleventh Jornada
Mogollon Conference. Edited by Patrick H. Beckett, pp. 101-117.
Coas Publishing and Research, Las Cruces.
• 2001 Just Who in the Heck is Lula, Anyway? The Alamogordo,
New Mexico, Carbonated Beverage Industry and Its Bottles. Townsend
Library, New Mexico State University at Alamogordo. http://alamo.nmsu.edu/~lockhart/AlamoSod/index.html
• 2001 You Can Whip Our Cream, But You Can't Beat Our Milk: The
Dairies of Otero County, New Mexico, 1889 to 1977. Townsend Library,
New Mexico State University at Alamogordo. http://alamo.nmsu.edu/~lockhart/AlamoSod/index.html
• 2001 “Magnolia Coca-Cola Bottling Company.” Password
46(2):83-98.
• 2000 “The Forge at Casa Ronquillo,” The Artifact 38:21-41.
• 2000 Bottles on the Border: The History and Bottles of
the Soft Drink Industry in El Paso, Texas, 1881-2000. Townsend Library,
New Mexico State University at Alamogordo. http://alamo.nmsu.edu/~lockhart/EPSodas/index.html
• 2000 “Cache or Trash? Glass Artifacts from the Senate
Office Building Privy” in The State Office Building Archaeological Project:
Testing Report. Anthroplolgy Research Center, University of Texas
at El Paso, El Paso.
• 1999 “From “Chasers” to the Family Trade: Some Early El Paso
Bottlers” Password 44(4):173-180.
• 1999 “Deposition Lag in Returnable Soda Bottles and Bottling
Trends in El Paso, Texas.” In Archaeology of the Jornada Mogollon:
Prodeedings from the 10th Jornada Mogollon Conference, pp. 157-169.
Edited by Michael Stowe and Mark Slaughter. Geo-Marine, Inc., El
Paso, Texas.
• 1999 Archaeology at Bear Creek. Southwest Sufi Community,
Silver City, New Mexico.
• 1999 “From Barrett’s Jersey Dairy to City Dairy: Otero County
Dairies, 1889 to 1977.” Pioneer 2(3):1-22.
• 1998 “Sweeney, Woodlawn, Whistle, Nesbitt, and Pepsi: Evolution
of M. R. Sweeney to Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. (1905-present)” Password 43(3):143-156.
• 1998 “From Weigele's Pop to Coca-Cola: The Soda Bottlers
of Alamogordo, New Mexico and Their Bottles.” The Pioneer1(3, 4).
• 1998 People, Pithouses, and Projectile Points: A Report
on the Archaeology of the Southwest Sufi Community. Southwest Sufi
Community, Silver City, New Mexico.
1997 “Community Development in the Southwest: San Elizario,
Texas - A Case Study.” In Proceedings of the Ninth Jornada-Mogollon
Conference, pp. 179-185. Edited, Raymond P. Mauldin, Jeff D.
Leach, and Susan Ruth. Centro de Investigaciones Arquelogicas, Publications
in Archaeology No. 12. El Paso, Texas.
• 1997 “The Houck & Dieter/Empire Bottling Works: El
Paso's Most Successful Non-Franchise Soft Drink Bottlers.” Part I,
Password, 42(2):93-101; Part II, 42(3):123-134.
• 1997 “Protohistoric Confusion: A Cultural Comparison
of the Manso, Suma, and Jumano Indians in the Vicinity of Paso del Norte.”
Journal of the Southwest, 39(1):113-149.
• 1997 “Empowering Students: An Experiment in Quality Control
in the Classroom.” Innovation Abstracts 19(13):1.
• 1997 “El Paso Soda Bottlers: Wonder Beverage Co. (1946-1954),
Flores Brothers Bottling Co. (1950-1954)." Soda Net Jan.:[7-9]”
• 1996 View from the Escarpment: Report on the Archaeological
Survey of the El Paso Community College Lower Valley Campus. University
of Texas at El Paso.
• 1996 “Casa Ronquillo in San Elizario.” Password, 41(2):70-85.
• 1996 “Dating Glass Artifacts in El Paso's Lower Valley.” In
Living on the River's Edge, Vol. 1, Archaeological Test Excavations at
the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo, Texas, pp. 151-164. Jeff D. Leach, Nicholas
P. Houser, Robert D. Harrison, John A. Peterson, and Raymond P. Mauldin.
Archaeological Research, Inc., El Paso, Texas.
• 1996 “Casual Discard: Glass Artifacts from the 1993-1994
Excavations in Socorro, Texas" and "Socorro: Square Nails and a Mercury
Dime; Analysis of Metal and the ‘Other’ Category.” In El Paso Lower
Valley Water District Authority, Phase II, Water Supply and Waste Water
Project, Archaeological Testing. Draft. John A. Peterson
and David O. Brown. Archaeological Research, Inc., El Paso.
• 1995 “The El Paso Coliseum Collection: A Study of 20th
Century Bottles.” Bill Lockhart and Wanda Olszewski. Password
33(3)i-xi, 1-91. 2nd edition (revised) of the 1993 report.
• 1995 “The Incorporations of San Elizario, Texas.” Password,
40(4):169-177. El Paso County Historical Society.
• 1995 “Gregorio Nacianceno García, 1st: Indian
Fighter and Politician of San Elizario, Texas, 1820-1898" and "Gregorio
Nacianceno García, 2d: Lawman and Constable of San Elizario,
Texas." Password, 40(3)119-125, 126-128, El Paso County Historical
Society.
• 1994 “Excavation and Analysis of a Nineteenth Century Bottle
Pit in San Elizario, Texas.” The Artifact, Vol. 32(1):29-49.
El Paso Archaeological Society.
• 1994 “Antonio Trujillo: San Elizario's Long-Term Constable.”
Password, Vol. 39(4): 179-186. El Paso County Historical Society.
• 1993 The El Paso Coliseum Collection: A Study of 20th
Century Bottles. Bill Lockhart and Wanda Olszewski. County
of El Paso, Texas and the University of Texas at El Paso.
• 1992 “Clovis, Controversy, and a Cave Called Pendejo.”
The Artifact, El Paso Archaeological Society, 30(4):29-42.
VI. Complete List of Papers Presented
• “How Coke Won the (South)West: The History of the Southwestern
Coca-Cola Bottling Co.” Presented at the New Mexico-Arizona Joint
History Convention, in Las Cruces, New Mexico, April 11-13, 2002.
• “Just What is a Glass Artifact, and Who Cares, Anyway.” Presented
to Vince Lombraña’s Introduction to Research class (BIOL 241) on
Friday, February 15, 2002.
• “The Evolution of a Southwestern Non-Carbonated Beverage Container
from El Paso, Texas, to Phoenix, Arizona.” Presented at the XII Jornada
Mogollon Conference (archaeology) in Las Cruces, New Mexico, October 12-13,
2001.
• “The Forgotten Campus Minority: The Very Part-Time Student.”
Presented at the NMSU Branch Campus Roundup in Carlsbad, NM, September
21-22, 2001.
• “Lithics and Buldozers: Mimbres Sites at the Southwest Sufi
Community.” Presented at the XI Mogollon Conference, Las Cruces, New Mexico,
October 13-14, 2000.
• “A New Twist for Uncapping Old Information about Glass Artifacts.”
Presented at the XI Jornada Mogollon Conference, Las Cruces, New Mexico,
November 11-13, 1999.
• “El Paso Soda Bottlers and Their Bottles.” Presented
to the El Paso Westerners Society, El Paso, Texas, October 16, 1998.
• “From Weigele's Pop to Coca-Cola: The Soda Bottlers of
Alamogordo, New Mexico and Their Bottles.” Presented to the History
Division of the Alamogordo Centennial Committee, Alamogordo, New Mexico,
March 10, 1998.
• “The Suma Indians of El Paso and Northern Chihuahua/Sonora
Mexico: A Case Study on the Need for an Interdisciplinary Approach to the
Protohistoric Period” Presented at the Transition from Prehistory
to History in the Southwest Conference, Albuquerque, New Mexico, February
27-March 1, 1998.
• “Cultural Change and Development in the Suma Indians of Northern
Chihuahua, Mexico and the Border Areas of New Mexico and Texas, U. S. A.”
Presented at the Sixth Biennial Southwest Symposium, Hermosillo, Mexico,
February 13-15, 1998.
• “Glass Line Dating.” Presented at the 31st Conference
on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Society for Historic Archaeology,
Atlanta, Georgia, January 6-10, 1998.
• “Deposition Lag in Returnable Soda Bottles and Bottling Trends
in El Paso, Texas.” Presented at the Tenth Jornada-Mogollon Conference,
Mesilla, New Mexico, October 16-18, 1997.
• “Excavation of a Nineteenth Century Forge in San Elizario,
Texas.” Presented to the National Convention of the Society for American
Archaeology, New Orleans, Louisiana, April 10-14, 1996.
• “Dating Glass Containers by Color and Retail Markings.” Presented
to the Doña Ana Archaeological Society, Las Cruces, New Mexico,
January 11, 1996.
• “San Elizario, Texas: A Study in Southwest Community
Development.” Presented to the Society for Historical Archaeology
Conference, Cincinnati, Ohio, January 5, 1996.
• “Community Development in the Southwest: San Elizario,
Texas - A Case Study.” Presented to the Jornada-Mogollon Conference,
El Paso, Texas, November 11, 1995.
• “Jumanos at El Paso del Norte? A Cultural Comparison
of the Suma and Jumano Indians.” Presented to the Eighth Mogollon
Archaeology Conference, El Paso, Texas, October 21-22, 1994. Presented
to Doña Ana Archaeological Society, February 1995.
• “The Story of Incorporation in San Elizario, Texas.”
Presented to the San Elizario Genealogy and Historical Society, April 23,
1994.
• “Clovis, Controversy, and a Cave Called Pendejo.” Presented
to El Paso Archaeological Society, November 1992. Presented to Doña
Ana Archaeological Society, October 1994. |